The Tucker Carlson Show - Tucker and Col. MacGregor Warn How Neocons Are Exploiting the Drug Crisis to Drag America Into War
Episode Date: October 30, 2025The prospect of regime changing Maduro is like Viagra to Lindsey Graham. Unfortunately it won’t prevent a single fentanyl death. Paid partnerships with: Eight Sleep: Get $350 off the new Pod 5... Ultra at https://EightSleep.com/Tucker SimpliSafe: Visit https://simplisafe.com/TUCKER to claim 50% off a new system. There's no safe like SimpliSafe. PureTalk: Go to https://PureTalk.com/Tucker to and save 50% off your first month. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Not to be the bearer of bad news, but it looks like we're about to embark on another regime change warlike next week.
There's so much going on right now in this country that you may not be aware that there is a U.S. naval armada steaming toward Venezuela, which is a large oil-rich country in South America, not too far from here, actually.
And the purpose, the stated purpose of this show of military force is to force the leader of that country, Nicholas Maduro, to leave.
and the threat is, unless he leaves, vacates the premises,
gives up his job, turns over the range of the opposition party,
splits Venezuela for good,
the United States will go to war with Venezuela, invade it even.
Kind of a big deal.
You may not even have known that.
Very few people seem to be talking about that.
Again, there's a lot else going on,
but it's a pretty significant turn of events,
if you think about it.
It's not every day the United States.
has another regime change war.
In fact, it's been quite some time.
We'd a narrowly averted regime change war back in June with Iran.
They were telling you the point was just to stop its nuclear program.
Of course, the point was to change the leadership in Tehran.
President Trump pulled back that didn't happen, thank God.
But we are on the cusp of something very similar happening not too far from here.
And an awful law could go wrong.
And yes, we're fully aware that anyone who points out the potential downside
possibilities of a war
is not only a wuss
but unpatriotic hysterical
the fact that
Caracas Venezuela, the capital, by the way,
you'll be hearing a lot more about it if we go
to war there. Caracas
Venezuela, the main population center
and capital of Venezuela, is about
475 miles by sea from
San Juan Puerto Rico,
the American Protectorate.
So really from our country,
pretty darn close, super close.
And that's significant.
not because Venezuela's seal teams are going to blow up Puerto Rico, but because wars tend to
precipitate huge movements of people. They cause migrant crises. They cause massive and irreversible
demographic change. This has always been true, always been true. But we have a couple of
pretty recent reminders back in 2015. With the help of the U.S. government at the urging of our
closest ally in the Middle East, the Syrian Civil War raged. And there were lots of players
in that war, but the United States was certainly one of them. And as the result of the Syrian
Civil War, which most Americans were not paying attention to, Europe got invaded by migrants.
Remember the migrant crisis of 2015? You may not remember because it never ended. In the 10
years since that, 1.3 million-ish asylum seekers arrived in Western Europe. Western Europe has been
completely destroyed. Totally unrecognizable. That's not an overstatement. Go to Paris,
go to London, go to Oslo, go to any capital in Western Europe, and it does not look Western
European, and clearly that entire part of the continent is on the dramatic down swing. There are a lot
of reasons for that, but the main reason is immigration, mass migration due to war.
So that's not a hysterical position. It's not crazy to worry about that, considering we're pretty
close to Venezuela.
So that could happen.
Also, people get killed in war.
Whenever you commit troops to a place,
even if you bomb a place,
there are after effects,
there are ripples,
and people die,
and some of those people are apt to be your people.
So if you have a war,
it's fair to expect
some Americans will die.
And, of course,
we've had a lot of wars
in the last 100 years,
and Americans have been prepared
to bear that cost.
Not usually the same Americans
starting the wars
or cheering on the wars,
They never bear that cost because they never show up at the war.
People like Lindsey Graham, haven't been to a lot of wars.
But most Americans are aware of the fact that when you have a war, people die,
including some of our guys, it's sad, but we tell ourselves it's worth the cost.
But it's close to inevitable.
All of that is just to say, before this happens, it would be nice to know why we're doing this.
Why are we having a regime-changed war?
And by the way, unlike what happened in June, the people pushing this are just saying it right out loud.
The purpose of this adventure is to replace the government of Venezuela.
Now, we haven't liked the government of Venezuela for quite some time.
It's been at least 10 years.
They've been under pretty tough American sanctions.
There have been now publicized efforts to get rid of the leader of Venezuela, Nicholas Maduro.
And before him, his predecessor, Hugo Chavez, who,
claimed as he died of cancer that he was infected with cancer by the CIA, no confirmation
on that. But the point is, this is a conflict of longstanding. The United States, under a number
of different administrations, has said out loud, we would like someone else to run that country.
Now, it's a little strange if you think about it, that one country can just say to another country,
we don't like your leadership leave or will kill you, but that's what we're doing. Is that a precedent
you want to set? Well, we said it long ago. But what's interesting is it's hard to think of all
the regime change affected by the United States and its various agencies whose budgets
you can't know and whose activities are still decades later shattered in secrecy.
Of all those regime changes affected by the U.S. government, how many worked out well?
Would anyone say that hanging Saddam Hussein made Iraq better, made the world safer, made America
more prosperous? Well, it empowered Iran, for one thing, and so on, and so on, and so on.
So to say the U.S. does not have a positive track record of regime change that the after
effects upon examination haven't been worth doing, I mean, that's an understatement.
It never works. But we're doing it again, apparently. So the question is, why? Why are we doing
this? Why are we so opposed to Nicholas Maduro?
So if you ask someone on the street, random person, why are we against Nicholas Maduro?
The answer you're going to get is who's Nicholas Maduro.
But if you find someone in South Florida, for example, who knows who Nicholas Maduro is,
who can identify where Venezuela is on a map, that person will almost certainly say,
well, because he's a communist or a socialist.
He's exceeding the left wing, and that is true.
Nicholas Maduro and his government are very left wing on economics, not on social policy,
by the way, which is kind of interesting.
In Venezuela, gay marriage is banned.
Abortion is banned.
Sex changes for transgenderism are banned.
It's one of the very few countries in the entire hemisphere with those policies.
It is on social policy, not defending the regime, just saying,
one of the most conservative countries in North or South or Central America.
Only El Salvador really comes close, which is much smaller, of course.
And by the way, the U.S.-backed opposition leader who would take Maduro's place if he were taken out is, of course, pretty eager to get gay marriage in Venezuela.
So to those of you who thought this whole project was global homo, not crazy, actually.
So the average person when asked would say, we've got to get rid of the guy because his politics are bad.
His ideas are bad.
We're in favor of democracy.
Of course, that's why we're supporting the unelected dictator in Ukraine because we're for democracy.
That's why we had the 2020 election with the drop boxes
and the fake mail-in ballots because we're for democracy.
But democracy, because we have a moral obligation
to make sure that good government reigns in our hemisphere.
That would be the answer.
But that's not really a compelling answer.
Is that really the reason?
So if we see a leader in our hemisphere
or anywhere in the world who's dictatorial,
who I don't know, cancels his own citizens,
arrest them for saying bad things,
We overthrow that person?
That's not really the standard.
No.
Our closest ally in Europe is the UK.
And famously, last year, the UK sent three times as many people to jail as Russia did for saying naughty things on social media.
So the UK, the government of Great Britain under Kirstarmer, is authoritarian.
Obviously, it's not a democratic government.
You can have a democratic government with censorship by definition, of course.
If people can't say what they believe is true, they're not free people.
It's not a democracy.
They don't own the country.
They're under the thumb of a dictator.
But there's no move to liberate long-suffering Britons from Kirstarmer.
Maybe there should be, but there isn't.
So I think we can discount, we can safely discount democracy as a reason for affecting regime change in Venezuela.
We're not going to go kill Nicholas Maduro because we don't like the way he's treating his people.
it's possible we're mad that he doesn't allow gay marriage that is a distinct possibility but no one
will say that out loud so what could be the other reasons well energy that's the obvious one
Venezuela has the deepest proven oil reserves the biggest proven oil reserves in the world
Venezuela has more oil than Saudi Arabia does now it's low grade oil dirty oil and its infrastructure
its oil extraction infrastructure is in terrible shape after 10 years of sanctions and mismanagement
by the government, et cetera, et cetera.
Again, none of this is a defense of Maduro's economic policies,
but they're not that out of whack with a lot of different places,
a lot of different countries.
In fact, they're not that different from the economic policies
of the incoming mayor of New York.
Actually, to be honest, the big difference is that Nicholas Maduro is a social
conservative and Mamdani is all about transiting your kids.
But whatever.
Oil.
People say, well, of course, it's about oil.
Is it about oil?
Hmm.
It doesn't seem to be about oil.
There are a bunch of American oil companies,
big ones and little ones,
independent and publicly traded,
who would like to get into Venezuela.
They can't because of sanctions,
but they'd like to change that
so they can help Venezuela extract its mineral resources
and make money in the process
and presumably help the United States in the process.
They haven't been allowed to do that.
So if your goal was to show,
secure as much oil as you could, as much energy as you could for the United States and help
American energy companies build their businesses, employ Americans. Of course, you would stop
moralizing long enough to let Americans rebuild Venezuela's aging extraction infrastructure.
But we're not doing that. So is it really about oil? Hmm. Probably not.
Well, then it's about drugs. That's what we've been hearing now. It's about drugs.
drugs. Venezuela is a drug-dealing nation. Its regime is involved in drug trafficking. And by the way,
sounds true. Probably is true. Is Maduro or people around Maduro involved in the drug trade in
some way? Probably would think so. How many Latin American heads of state aren't? That's a good
question. But it's not an excuse. That's bad. But how significant is Venezuela
in the hemispheric drug trade.
Like, if you're looking at the drug trade in the United States,
how much of that comes from Venezuela?
Well, we have a fentanyl crisis famously.
Does fentanyl come from Venezuela?
No, it doesn't.
It actually comes from Mexico.
Huh.
What about meth?
Well, meth also comes from Mexico.
Hmm.
What about cocaine?
That would be Peru, Bolivia, and Colombia.
Not to say the drugs don't come from Venezuela.
Of course, they do.
But most drugs that wind up in this country do not come from Venezuela.
They're not produced there.
They're not trafficked through there.
And the cartels that distribute them and kill people in our country are not Venezuelan.
They're Mexican.
All of them.
The top five drug cartels operating in the United States, including the ones that control entire counties in northern California,
huge parts of the American Southwest, Florida, Texas, all over.
Northern New England, those are all Mexican.
So it's probably not about drugs.
What is it about?
We should know, not simply to argue against it,
I mean, we have no control, clearly.
No one is asking the American public
whether they want another regime change war.
No one is asking Trump voters
whether they want another regime change war.
Nobody cares.
So it's going to happen no matter what people think.
In fact, if it does happen, it will likely happen,
at a time when most Americans had no idea it was about to happen. In other words, it'll be a huge
surprise to everyone if this happens. Except those 18 people, if it's even that high a number,
who still watch the broadcast television Sunday shows. If you're one of those people,
likely someone in intensive care, strapped to a gurney, the attendant's going out for a cigarette
and taking the remote and you can't change the channel, you may have seen this on Sunday.
This is Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, redolent with glee, as he describes our plans to kill Nicholas Maduro.
Watch.
Venezuela is now partnering with Hezbollah.
Hezbollah is running out of money because Iran is weak.
That's not new.
They're partnering with drug cartels in Venezuela.
No, it should have stopped.
Here's what's new.
You've got a commander chief's not going to put up with this crap.
We're not going to sit on the sidelines of what.
boats full of drugs come to our country we're going to blow them up and kill the people that want to poison America and we're now going to expand operations I think to the land we're not going to torture you by replaying that tape but if you rewind it in your spare time to the point where he says and I'm quoting we're going to kill people you can see a little shiver of excitement go through his aging frame we're going to kill people we're going to kill people and we're going to kill people and we're going to kill them as a
Lindsay Graham just explained because has Belaw in Lebanon.
So you have definitely heard about eight sleep by now.
People are talking about the well-rested people you know are talking about it.
It's a company with one mission, improve your sleep, and it is changing the way Americans get a good night
sleep, and trust me, they need it.
So we just received word that their team is launching a new product.
It's called the Pod 5.
The Pod 5 is an original, totally innovative mattress cover plus a blanket that uses precision
temperature control to regulate your body's sleep cycles and give you the perfect night's sleep.
It ranges from 55 degrees for the cold plungers among you to the 110 degrees for the sauna fanatics.
That means no matter what you prefer, you're covered, and the bottom line is you sleep better,
by up to an hour.
It actually works.
The pod also detect snoring and adjusts your bed's position to reduce or stop it.
Whoa, beleaguered ladies across America rejoice as one.
And everyone here can tell you there's no better way to be alert, productive, and happy
that my getting a good night's sleep and eight sleep can help. Visit eight sleep.com slash Tucker.
Use the code Tucker to get 350 bucks off your pod five ultra.
If you don't like it, just return it within a month.
But you're going to love it.
Eight sleep.com slash Tucker.
We're going to kill people in Venezuela because Hezbollah in Lebanon.
And obviously the security of southern Lebanon is a key American objective.
It's probably not five people who voted for Donald Trump, who didn't do so with the security of southern Lebanon in mind.
We've got to get Hezbollah out of southern Lebanon.
And anyone who has any connection to Hezbollah must be invaded and killed, of course.
And as you learned in school, the main funder of Hezbollah is, of course, Venezuela, have a lot in common.
Language, religion, proximity.
What?
I mean, okay.
So they're Hezbollah guys in Venezuela.
Well, there are Hezbollah guys here.
They're Hezbollah sympathizers probably in a lot of different countries.
Okay.
What does that have to do with us?
Have a lot of Americans been killed by Hezbollah in the United States with money from Venezuela?
If so, when did that happen?
Can you prove it?
Can you speak slowly so I can understand it?
Can you show me the receipts?
Can you give me some?
some explanation for what this is
and why we're doing this?
Hezbollah!
Drugs!
So it's a mystery.
Clearly there's something going on.
One obvious partial explanation
is there's a big Venezuelan exile
community in South Florida.
Super nice people, actually.
Some of the nicest people you will ever meet.
Good values, decent people. They're mad
about what happened in Venezuela. They have every reason to be mad
about it. A lot of them had all their stuff taken.
had to flee to Florida, or a lot of it taken, not all of it, judging by their houses,
but good people, for real.
Venezuelan exiles, Cuban exiles, or a lot of Latin American exiles in South Florida.
They're mad about what happened in their home countries, totally understandable, easy to be
very sympathetic to them.
I am personally sympathetic to them.
On the other hand, these are people who just got here, and so why would they be using the
U.S. military to settle some score in a country that's not.
America. It doesn't really seem like the way things should work. America offers you
refuge. Great. We feel good about it. You feel good about it. We feel morally superior.
You work hard and thrive. And that's kind of worked. But the moment when you decide, well, wait a
second, I'm going to use the military power of the country that gave me shelter to fix things in the
country I came from, you're going to have to tell me why that's a good idea for me.
And for everyone else, the hundreds of millions of other Americans who didn't come from
anywhere else who were born here, whose grandparents were born here.
Why should we be paying for that?
How is that good for us?
Shut up!
No one ever asked those questions.
So it's possible that there's been quite a bit of lobbying by Venezuelan exiles in South Florida
it to do this. Of course, we know that that's true. But is that really the reason? It feels like
there must be something else going on. You don't send the U.S. Navy to go affect regime change
because people in three counties in one state want it, do you? Maybe there's something else.
Not exactly sure what it is. Someone should look into this because it's apparently really important.
But let's linger on the last explanation.
The stated explanation.
You know, it was after Lindsey Graham finished hyperventilating about Hezbollah.
Whatever that is.
By the way, he left out the part about why I should care.
Oh, they were behind the 1983 barracks bombing.
Okay, yeah, I remember that.
That was 42 years ago.
There's a lot going on.
UPS just laid up for almost 50,000 workers.
So tell me why Hezbollah is the top of my concern list.
Oh, shut up.
But after you got done with the Hezbollah part and restoring peace,
other Lebanon, key concern for most Americans, he said this is about drugs, bringing boats of
drugs.
Now, we already went through the numbers.
Of course, there are probably drugs coming from Venezuela.
It's a chaotic country.
It's a poor country.
Per capita incomes, like $8,000.
Yeah, there are drugs in Venezuela.
But Venezuela is not where most drugs are coming from.
So if you wanted to address the drug crisis in the United States, what would you do?
Well, first you would acknowledge it's an actual crisis.
More Americans have died, many more Americans have died of drug odies over the last hundred years than in all wars during that time combined, including the Second World War, something like 416,000 Americans died, the Korean War, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, all of them put together.
We've had far more Americans die from drugs than from all conflicts.
back when 40 years ago
when Ronald Reagan was declaring a war on drugs now
widely mocked, it wasn't totally
crazy. This
is
in its effect, in its
death count, in its
toll on America
like a war.
And you don't even need to know the numbers
to know that. There's not a town
in America. There's not a person
in America who doesn't know someone
who knows someone
who's died of drugs. It's
destroyed a lot of this country. And so if you were going to use the U.S. military to fight the
drug problem, you might start here. If you were going to take the national security state
and use its awesome power to fix the drug problem, well, I mean, maybe you could start by
deporting drug dealers. Because in every state with a drug crisis, the people, the people
people trafficking the drugs and in many cases selling the drugs are foreign nationals.
That's true. That is an industry that's been completely outsourced. It's not Americans
anymore. Americans aren't growing weed in Mendocino County. Mexican cartels are growing
weed in Mendocino County and Humboldt County. They're not American citizens are not selling
meth in New Mexico or fentanyl in Arizona. No, it's Mexican nationals are doing that.
Americans aren't selling opioids
Market Square in San Francisco.
No, it's people from Guatemala.
And none of those people are citizens.
Want to deport them.
It shouldn't just be people
with bad foreign policy views to get deported.
Also, we should deport drug dealers.
So, you know, that would be a good, precise use.
A universally popular use of ICE, it seems to me,
is to start with the retail dealers.
Oh, but that's not the root of the problem.
Depends how you think about it.
We don't necessarily have to fix the problem in its root to make people's lives better.
If there are drug dealers in front of your kids' school and then the next day they're not there,
that's a massive improvement for you and your kids.
Did we solve the drug problem?
Did we burn the poppy fields?
No.
But we solved your problem.
And solving people's problems is the purpose of government.
So let's start there.
But maybe even before we did that, we would look clearly at what we're facing, and we would
experience the rage and the shame that comes from acknowledging that your priorities are
completely backward.
Our leaders spend their lives looking across the globe at fading empire and thinking, how do I shore
this up?
How do I affect change here?
How do I knock off that leader?
How do I send the CIA paramilitaries or the Delta Force in to do something?
dramatic, and as they're focused on those problems, they miss what Portland, Oregon looks
like, what Portland, Maine looks like, what San Francisco, what every big city in this country
looks like, degraded, filthy, evil. As a reminder, in case you haven't looked at squarely in
the face, here's Portland, Oregon.
Every Friday, this paraphernalia pop-up opens for business in this busy Northwest Portland neighborhood,
providing clean needles and pipes to drug users free of charge no questions asked.
The goal? Reducing harm by preventing infections and disease.
The problem? The location, right in the middle of a school zone.
Essentially, our message is we want them to relocate. Do your outreach. Just don't do it within 550 feet of a kindergarten.
Is it that way?
Parents and neighbors have since joined forces accusing Portland Street Medicine and the Portland People's Outreach Group, or P-P-O-P-P-O-P, of refusing requests after request to move their operations out of the school zone.
Videos and photos obtained by Fox 12 show why they're so concerned.
They say every week the free giveaway immediately attracts droves of drug users, followed by a swarm of drug dealers with the resulting street party lasting for days.
Drugs like fentanyl and meth sold in broad daylight, users disregarding the presence of children nearby,
and no evidence of outreach workers providing any treatment literature or Sharps containers.
The way I see it, what they're doing is they come into our neighborhood, they pour gasoline on a fire,
and the fire gets worse. And it gets worse every week. It gets worse every month. It gets worse every year.
They drop needles, they drop the pipes, and then they leave.
It's the saddest thing.
That's the society completely out of control.
It's a civilization in collapse.
And the saddest thing of all is the expectations of the neighbors and the parents.
Move it out of the school zone.
The school zone?
The school zone?
How about the city?
How about the state?
How about our country?
Get out now.
If you're giving drug paraphernalia to drug addicts,
you're going to get shut down immediately.
If you're a convenience store selling meth,
and brillo pads, fake opioids,
we're gonna shut you down.
We're not gonna have any tolerance for this.
Normal countries have zero tolerance for this,
zero tolerance for it.
And because they have zero tolerance for it,
when you visit them,
you feel immediately that this is a safe country,
this is a clean country, this is a country under control
with self-respect.
They don't put up with that in Japan.
They don't put up with that in Doha, Qatar, sorry.
They don't put up that in any civilized country.
They don't say, just get out of the school zone.
They say, we're not putting up with this because this is our country.
You can't just live on the street smoking meth anywhere.
School zone, park, anywhere.
We're not doing that because we know where it leads.
It leads to where it's led in this country.
total devastation and death and degradation and loss of self-respect and chaos and filth.
It's not hard.
You don't need to kill Nicholas Maduro to fix the problem.
You need to shut down the NGOs that are making the problem worse.
They're your enemy, your enemy and the enemy of civilization.
Giving needles and pipes to drug addicts?
They'll give you some lecture about harm reduction.
How about we just end the harm right now?
by shutting down those NGOs.
It's not complex.
You don't need the U.S. Navy to do that.
DOJ could do that.
The entire state of Oregon and many other states,
but Oregon specifically,
is in a state of insurrection
by its total unwillingness
to abide by federal narcotics laws.
They just legalized fentanyl and crack
Can you do that?
Can you legalize slavery?
Can you?
Of course you can't.
You can't just ignore federal law.
And if you can, why are you paying you taxes?
Seriously.
If Oregon can legalize crack,
why are you following any federal law?
If it's all optional, if it's a la carte,
I don't think I agree with that.
I don't think I'm going to do it.
Why have a federal government?
Maybe we shouldn't have a federal government.
maybe 50 states can live the way they want.
Okay, that's a totally different system.
Maybe we should try that.
But on the system we have right now, federal law supersedes state law.
You have to obey.
Previous presidents have sent tens of thousands of troops into various states over violations of federal law,
the refusal of a state to follow federal law.
But when it comes to drugs, we ignore it.
the one thing that is most obviously destroying the United States at its core level,
which is to say destroying the people of the United States,
we just ignore it.
This would be a good time to use force.
I know it probably wouldn't fix the Hezbollah problem.
Hezbollah!
Hezbollah!
But it might make people's lives better in our country.
Maybe that's why they're not interested in doing it.
Maybe that's why Mark Levine isn't calling for it.
Because it's just about us and like, who cares?
Shut up and pay.
But, of course, it would be a mistake to pretend it's just Portland, Oregon.
It's also Tampa, Florida.
It's also Phoenix, Arizona.
It's also Oklahoma City.
And it's Bangor.
And it's every single city in this country has a deadly drug problem.
The Terese State has killed.
more Americans in the last hundred years than all wars combined.
Here's Philadelphia. Watch this.
Alarm bells are sounding in Philadelphia about Trank.
You'd see people kind of like walking around looking like animals when their knuckles are touching the ground.
Now Art El Malick's hands and knuckles are swollen to three times their natural size from
exposure to the animal sedative xylasein, street name Trank.
When I was leaving, some matches samples.
and that's what got me stuck, man.
You had sand was a pretty dope.
The xylasein now mixed into 90% of Philadelphia's fentanyl and heroin supply,
drugs that drive fatal overdoses.
Adding a horse tranquilizer, something more sedating, makes it feel like it lasts longer.
But now fentanyl addicts newly addicted to xylazine,
seen nodding out and falling over along Philadelphia's notorious Kensington Avenue,
are also developing dangerous sores on their bodies.
holes all over you these sewers in your legs and go wherever they just pop you out of
anywhere have the doctors told you that you could lose your leg yes and that's not enough to get you
to stop trying it's not it's a lot easier said and done the next time someone lectures you
or Hamas or Hezbollah show them that video that's your country those are your countrymen
those are your people and not only dying it's worse than that they're
living death.
They're so degraded.
You heard the guys say, they live like animals.
Killing Maduro,
I guess you can make a case for it.
It's not going to fix that.
It's not going to even touch that.
So why don't go right to the actual problem,
which is we put up with this stuff, we shouldn't.
Our federal government doesn't care.
Lindsay Graham has zero interest in solving
these problems. But those are the real
problems. They're the problems you can walk
to. They're problems in your
city. They're the reason you don't live in the city
you grew up in anymore. They've
driven you out of your own city.
We're running out of places to run
to. And nobody
cares. They're not sending
the U.S. Navy to
fix the city you grew up in.
Because
it's not has a law.
So the question is,
Are we actually about to embark on a regime-change war in Venezuela?
What is this naval armada doing on its way to Caracas?
SimplySafe stops crime before it happens, which is the way to stop it.
Most security systems work backwards.
They react to a break-in.
They alert the authorities want someone already in your house.
You don't want someone in your house in the first place.
You want to deter that.
That's why you get Simply Safe.
AI-powered cameras detect threats while they're still outside.
your home and then alert real security agents before anything else happens.
Those agents take action right away, confront the intruder, let them know they're being
watched on camera, call the cops, sound a siren, triggering a spotlight, whatever it takes
to get them out of there.
That is actual security.
SimplySafe's monitoring agents have your back even when you're not at home.
Wait for someone to break in in a home invasion.
Yeah, no thanks.
We trust SimplySafe.
Why will there are no long-term contracts or hidden fees?
It's been named Best Home Security System for five.
years running and there's a 60-day money-back guarantee set up is super easy the app is simple to use
the monitoring is reliable real peace of mind whether you're at home or not and right now you can
save 50% on a simply safe home security system at simply safe.com slash tucker simply safe
s i m ply safe.com slash tucker there is no safe like simply safe colonel douglas mcgregor
commanded the last i think the last tank battle uh that the
the U.S. Army participated in during the first Iraq war, a graduate of West Point and a frequent
guest joins us now to assess the likelihood of a regime change war against Maduro. Doug,
thanks so much for coming on. Are we doing this?
It looks bad. In fact, it looks like it could happen on four or five November.
The reason I bring that up, it just so happens to be a full moon, which would lend credence
to the argument that lunatics are ruling us in Washington, D.C.
You know, you've gone down the list of reasons, and there are a couple that I would add because I recently went into D.C. and I talked to some people. Some of the people I talked to are just below the decision maker level. And these are the usual smug resume builders who come in and out through every administration, hoping that at some point they'll get a high level appointment. And they said a couple of things that I thought were interesting. First, they said, well, you've got to understand, Doug. We're flipping the chess
board on Russia and China. I said, what? Oh, yes, don't you understand? By going into Venezuela,
we're saying a very strong message because Russia and China have tried to build up and cultivate
support there and we're telling them that they can't do it. We're flipping the chessboard.
Well, I said, well, I don't think the Russians are prepared to fight for Venezuela. In fact,
I know that Putin has given very explicit instructions to the Venezuelans. You're on your own.
we'll give you equipment and assistance if we can, but forget it.
We're not going to fight for you.
The Chinese certainly aren't going to send the Chinese Navy to the Caribbean to stand
off and fight us.
That's not going to happen.
And I said that.
I said, so you know, you can't make this argument that this has some great
strategic value that justifies this enormous task force.
And, you know, it ultimately boiled down to its time for us to be strong again.
as though bombing hapless people in Venezuela or Colombia or Nicaragua
or anywhere in Latin America is testimony to our greatness as a nation.
And then, of course, the final straw is, well, we've got to destroy the drug problem
where it originates.
Well, I've got a big flash of the obvious.
The drug problem originates here inside the United States.
You're not going to get anywhere by bombing Mexico, just because Mexico provides most of the fentanyl.
Mexico, we're talking about the cartels. And Mexico's an organized crime state. It has been for a while.
They're going to do what they can, but the Mexican army is much more responsive to the cartels
than it is to the president of Mexico. So, you know, bombing these places is going to stop anything.
It's not going to improve anything. It may turn out to rally all of Latin America against us.
The evil Yankee who's intervening yet again inside Central and South America.
We're blamed for almost everything that's wrong down there.
what we're doing. He's saying, I guess you're right. Look what we're doing now. It's not going to
change anything. But that means you've got to come home. This seems to be the thing that no one in
Washington wants to do. Somebody said, Doug, what do you want to come home for? You know, we have
troops all over the place. We have, what do you want to come back here for? I said, because
what happens here is far more important and existential for us than anything beyond our borders.
The world has changed.
Putting little packets of troops or ships here or there, is it going to stop things from happening overseas?
They're going to happen whether we like it or not.
And the good news is most of what happens beyond our borders doesn't matter to us.
It's not a reflection on us.
We need to focus here.
And I said, you know, if you exercise some restraint right now, you bring the forces back to the United States,
defend the borders, defend the coastal waters, and then crack down on.
the peddlers and i would add child trafficking to the drug trafficking of course and i would
influence the death penalty for anybody who engages in it that means you're going to go to trial
and if you're found guilty you're going to face the death penalty or reason oh that's terrible
but it's okay to bomb venezuela you know don't execute the drug peddler or the child
trafficker but let's bomb venezuela doesn't make any damn sense whatsoever that's where people's
Heads are right now in Washington, D.C.
But I worry, I mean, it used to be, well, you're the Army officer, you tell me, but my understanding
was in a democracy, you know, in our republic, the president has constitutional authority to just send
troops and start wars, effectively, even without congressional approval, I've noticed.
But there was always this expectation that someone would explain why we're doing this.
You didn't want to go into a conflict.
because, of course, you never really know what's going to happen without getting the public
on board. And I don't think I know five people who know this is about to happen.
Well, you know, you bring something up that's very interesting. Somebody pointed out to me just the other
day, Benjamin Franklin told the population that was standing out in front of the Independence
Hall when they asked, what sort of government do we have now, Mr. Franklin? This is after the
constitutional convention. He said, well, you have a republic if you could.
keep it. And he said, we need to change that because today, if Ben Franklin came back,
he would say, you have a drama queen republic if you can keep it. We have a lot of frivolous
theatrics in Washington that passes for diplomacy and policy. We have a president, and you know
that I like the president, personally, always have. But everything is about theatrics and optics
and appearances. And now we have the prime minister of Japan who just made wonderful deals
for Japan with us, by the way.
Japan is going to continue
to buy oil and gas from Russia.
There will be no change in that.
Japan is going to invest
more in the United States. We're already heavily
invested here as it is. That's not a big deal.
Although Toyota has since
come back and said, we're not
increasing our investment. Sorry. We didn't make that
promise. But
she gave Donald
Trump the most expensive
set of golf clubs in world history.
They're beautiful. They're magnificent.
And she promised that she would nominate him for the Nobel Peace Prize.
And suddenly, President Trump says, this has been a big success.
We are winning.
So now he goes on to South Korea.
I'm sure he'll get some similar treatment there.
And oh, by the way, I see no evidence that India is going to stop buying oil and gas from Russia either.
And now we have this ceasefire that was declared a few weeks ago that's just completely disastrously violated by the Israelis.
and everybody says, okay, that's fine.
So what are we dealing with?
We're dealing with facades, illusions.
And I think Venezuela is another illusion.
Instead of doing exactly what you've suggested,
turning inward, focusing here at home on what's important,
bring the forces back.
If we'll exercise some restraint now,
we'll build more capability for the future.
But there is no long-term planning.
We launched a tariff war.
There's no stability in the tariff regime.
It's driving everyone crazy.
They talk about the dollar is reserved currency.
That's all shifting into pure gold now.
Ask Nasim Talib.
Ask Ray Dalio.
Ask anybody.
Gold is the new reserve currency.
We're not even prepared for that world.
We're not paying attention to it.
Let's bomb Venezuela.
Let's bomb Colombia.
Let's punish those bastards.
They're the ones that created this drug problem.
No, they're not.
They're feeding an appetite in North America for something that people will pay a lot of money for.
Cracked down on the on the appetite at home, secure the borders, the coastal waters, and stay out of Central and South America.
I don't understand how, I mean, our public conversation is so dominated by Hamas, Hezbollah, all these far away Ukraine, Russia, these far away conflicts, groups that are really?
not connected to the United States and have an overtime posed a meaningful threat to the
United States. You're not even allowed to say that. Hamas does not pose a threat to the United
States. It never has. Like, why am I mad about, more mad about Hamas than I'm mad about the
open-air drug market in Philadelphia? Why don't any politicians in the Congress put the open-air
drug market in Philadelphia above the threat of Hamas? What is that? Well, I think you have an
answer of sorts. And it comes, interestingly enough, from Mrs. Machado. I don't know if she's married or not,
so I call her Mrs. She may just be Ms. Machado. She's the lady that just won the Nobel Peace Prize,
and she's from Venezuela. And she said, if we're liberated by the U.S. Armed Forces,
and they remove Maduro, our first act will be to move the Venezuelan embassy to Jerusalem.
what does that have to do with i'm completely confused like what well you can't be that confused i think
she's she's hit on something very important she's figured out where the power lies and she's playing
to the audience that makes the decisions you're you're talking about this democracy business we've
always been a republic with limited democracy but i think we can pretty much conclude that we're
ruled now by a small group of extraordinarily wealthy people
billionaire oligarchs. Those are the terms they use in Eastern Europe in places like Ukraine.
Yeah. I think they're in charge. I think they're calling the shots. And I think there are
interests in the oil resources, oil and gas primarily, although let's face it, they've got gold
mines and emerald mines as well and other things. I'm told they have a lot of lithium.
There may be a true interest in putting in a puppet government and finding way to extract these
resources because right now for the first time in 30 years all the central banks beyond the borders
of the United States around the world hold more gold than we do that's a very important thing to
understand so how do you begin to reverse this process of managed decline which is really what
we've been on now for the last 25 years well oil is part of it oil is gold and even though the
The oil is exactly what you described.
It's heavy oil, high sulfur content, requires a lot of refining.
But still, we have the best oil engineers in the world, especially for deep drilling.
It will probably, for the same amount of money, we pay for one barrel of oil out of the ground in the United States.
We can probably get two out of Venezuela.
It's still not as good as Iran or Libya, where you can probably get three barrels out for what we spend to drill in the United States.
but it doesn't look like we're going to get control of the Iranian oil fields.
And I think we've bullied the Emirates and the Saudis
not as much as we can at the moment.
And Iran stands defiant.
So look for another war in the Middle East while all of this is unfolding
because Israel's objectives aren't met.
Neither are the objectives of the New York and London banks.
I think we're in a lot of trouble financially
and there's a genuine interest in controlling resources to offset that crisis.
PURTock customers are proud of their wireless company.
Think about that.
You never hear anyone with Verizon or AT&T say,
I'm really proud to use Verizon or AT&T.
No, they're a little embarrassed.
They may be satisfied with the service,
but feeling proud?
No, probably not.
And there's a reason.
Americans with Pure Talk feel proud to use Pure Talk.
It's not some soulless global corporation
with call centers in Pakistan or Bangladesh.
It's an actual American company built by American.
company built by Americans on American values, and they work to support veterans.
This month, Pure Talk is using a portion of its sales to support canines for warriors.
It's an organization that rescues and trains dogs, then pairs them with veterans, and there are
many who are struggling with PTSD.
It's a great mission.
As a veteran-led company, Pure Talk is happy to partner with them and many others like them.
So choose a wireless company that shares your values with plenty of talk, text, and 5G data for
25 bucks a month.
Actually, 25 bucks a month.
You can save a lot too and feel good about doing it.
Visit puretalk.com slash Tucker to make the switch today.
It's puretalk.com slash Tucker and switch to America's wireless company.
Pure Talk.
So you think this is a resource play that this is motivated by control?
I think it's a big part.
But would it actually take an invasion?
I mean, Lindsay Graham was salivating at the idea of boots on the
ground in Venezuela. That'll confuse the crap out of most Americans if that happens. But why not
just go to Maduro? I think he offered. Well, that's what I was just going to tell you that we didn't
have to go to Mr. Maduro. He came to us. Right. And in fact, President Trump was a question in the
Oval Office last week. And they said, we understand that Mr. Maduro approached you through intermediaries,
no doubt, and offered you a very lucrative deal. I'm told it was about a stake in the
oil and gas industry, all sorts of things like that. And he replied. He said, oh, yes. It was not just a
good deal. He offered everything. And so people look, said, was that not enough? No, that's not
enough. I think there's something else going on here beyond that. Clearly. Clearly. That's what I'm
asking. I ask people, and some people have said, well, you remember, Venezuela was involved in that
Dominion software scandal. Remember the Dominion software was developed.
for Hugo Chavez. I said, okay, maybe this is a personal grudge match. I don't know. But I do know
that there's this feeling that President Trump needs a win. He wants a win. He's not going to get a
win out of Ukraine. Doesn't look like he's going to get a win out of the Middle East. So where does he go
for a win? How about Philadelphia or Portland? No, I'm serious. I mean, that would
That was the whole point.
That was why, you know, people voted for that.
It's not hard.
And for the resources we're spending just to send the ships to the Caribbean, you know,
you could do a lot for downtown Atlanta.
Like, isn't that what people want?
77 million people voted for exactly what you're describing.
There's no question about it.
But I don't think that is necessarily the kind of theater that Washington's interested in.
And I don't think people on the hill may also.
include friends of President Trump and others are necessarily going to profit from any of that
activity. I mean, we're watching an awful lot of huge $100 million billion dollar deals
closed all over the place by people connected back to Washington right now. That's not new.
We saw that under the Biden and Clinton administrations, but it's certainly vulgar and out in the
open right now. You don't close those kinds of deals by shutting down the drug trade and the
child trafficking in Philadelphia or Seattle or anywhere else.
I do think it's fair for people to say, okay, you know, do your deals, do your crypto or
whatever, but we don't want to live like animals and we want, you know, our kids to buy
a home and like there should be more balance here.
Like no presidency should be completely dominated by foreign policy concerns.
and yet most of them seem to be.
Well, they're drawn into it because it's a wonderful platform
for them to display their decisiveness, their strength,
their courage, their leadership.
That's the way people think of it.
But you're right.
It's an illusion.
And you know what I know President Trump,
from the standpoint of foreign policy to some extent,
it was very clear to me the last time I spoke with him
and worked with him that he wanted to get our forces out of Europe.
Now, very recently, nobody's paid any attention to him.
it but suddenly we're finally withdrawing troops from Romania and Bulgaria. That's a very wise
thing to do. Thank God. Let's get them out of Poland, get them out of Lithuania, start pulling
them out of Germany. We don't need those forces over there. And the Europeans don't need those
forces. There is no threat to Europe from Russia. I think he knows that. I think he knows that
China isn't going to invade Taiwan. And so you see him moving through Asia diplomatically and
behind the scenes. Everybody is telling him, we're not supporting a war with China.
China is not a military threat to us.
I think he understands that.
So I think he wants to focus at home.
But this thing in the Caribbean basin is clearly not an original idea in his part.
He agrees the threat from Central and South America,
but particularly Central America, it's very serious.
He knows that.
But the issue is how do you deal with it?
And you deal with it along the lines that we've described.
But how do you face people who say, well,
I don't want you to arrest someone and then if they're found guilty, punish them with the death
penalty if they're trafficking children or they're trafficking drugs. But the same people that
object to that will turn around and say, well, I don't want you to bomb innocent people in
Venezuela or Colombia. They need to make up their minds. They need to understand what is required,
what is necessary for the survival of the country. You're right. We had a dispute over this
federal law issue back at 1861. We solved it. It was ugly, but we did it. And we may have to
solve it again. I keep wondering when the John Brown moment arrives. We've got a lot of evidence
that one is coming because we can't let governors and mayors stand there and pour filth and abuse
all over our federal laws and simply say, no, we won't enforce them. And by the way, we regard
you and your police forces as the enemy. It's insane. So since since you, since you're
I just have to ask you a final question about Russia, Ukraine.
When does that conflict end?
My impression is that since President Trump concluded that he wasn't going to get a ceasefire,
that he could tout as another great foreign policy achievement,
like the last ceasefire in Gaza, he's lost interest.
I think he knows that he can't settle that.
But remember, he made remarks before he was elected,
which were very unfortunate telling everyone i can end this with a phone call in 24 hours no
understanding whatsoever of the problem that that is very unfortunate the problem is far more
serious by the end of this week he is going to meet i think it's in the next few days it may be
next week i don't know he's going to be meeting with the leaders of the five central asian
republics you know tajikistan Uzbekistan kazakh and so forth he wants to talk to them about
commercial arrangements with us and trade. This is going to be a real serious issue for the
Russians and the Chinese. First of all, Moscow has not forgotten our attempted coup at about
in January, February of 2022, when we tried to overthrow the government to Uzbekistan.
The Russians went in there at the request of the president and stabilized it. This was another
one of these color revolutions cooked up by the national endowment for democracy, which should be
the National Endowment for Anarchy, and, of course, the CIA, always.
The CIA mucks around in Central Asia all the time.
We're still pumping hundreds of millions of dollars into places like Afghanistan
that are really destined to support subversive elements in Central Asia.
The Russians don't like it.
They don't want it.
They don't want it to the Chinese.
They want stability there.
They want to build the one belt, one road, which they know will bring prosperity to the people of Central Asia.
And they also have a long memory.
They don't want Central Asia to become what it was a few hundred years ago,
which was the greatest force in the world under someone like Jenghis Khan.
And people laugh.
Well, you don't understand Central Asia and the people who live there.
But they could be mobilized.
They could be united and present a real danger to everyone.
The Russians and the Chinese understand this.
They don't want that to happen.
But we're in the business of subverting and destabilizing.
And this visit now will not be treated as something positive in Moscow.
They will see this as another attempt to undermine Russian and Chinese security.
That's a meeting he doesn't need to hold.
But he's going everywhere.
He's selling America.
That's his argument.
I don't think people understand the implications.
So the bottom line is President Trump has great instincts,
but then he walks into the swamp and he gets mugged early.
And people distract him into areas where he's not familiar.
and they put it they're going to put an end to his presidency if they drag him into venezuela that
place is a is a terrible terrible mess for us we can't fix it we shouldn't try let the people that live
there do it and if they say well they can't well that's their problem it's their home yeah remember
venezuela has 1,700 miles of coastline 1,370 mile border with columbia 1,380 mile border with
Brazil. And I'm being told by people with experience down there that you've got 100,000 paramilitaries
along their border in Brazil and Colombia that are just can't wait to go into Venezuela and fight us
if we go into that country. And this sort of thing will spread. It's the last thing that we need.
What we need is stability and peace. I would urge the president to reconsider his rejection of this
proposal from Maduro and get out of this business of regime change, particularly when you know
that somebody like Machado is playing to the wrong audience. Well, what a joke. Why are we trying
to install this woman? It makes no sense. Well, because she'll bring gay marriage to Venezuela,
and that's important. I mean, that's what we stand for. Well, you know, you've got some real
criminals. Let me just finish up here real quick. On the hills around Caracas, you've got as many as
8,000 Colombian drug criminals.
They're there.
There's no question about it.
Maduro has clamped down on them, contrary to what people here think.
He's holding them in check.
That's not an easy thing to do in Latin America.
As you know, you visited El Salvador.
Yep.
You know the region.
You know what it's like.
This woman can't do that.
So my point is that if you don't like it now, it'll get a lot worse if we go in there.
Yeah, but I mean, is he protecting the trans community?
no you know so let's kill him um thank you Doug great to see you thank you Tucker so there are at least
two ways either ends of the telescope to consider the drug problem one is at the level of
countries the root problem and the other is at the level of your experience your daily life
so Washington is very focused on the macro we need
need to sign this treaty. We need to depose this dictator. We need to send military force to this
region. We need to change this policy. But most people understand drugs in terms of like their niece
who is living on the street or their nephew or college roommate's son or their own daughter
who dies of a fentanyl OD. And the truth is it's probably
easier, less expensive, and much more effective to deal with the drug problem on the level
of experience, which is to say in your daily life, than it is on some international level.
Root causes are hard to pin down. Everyone's got a theory what the root cause is for
everything, but no one needs to theorize about what a nodding fentanyl addict looks like
or someone having some kind of manic episode on the subway because he's smoking.
too much math. That is something everybody understands, and authorities, local, state, and federal
have made basically zero effort to fix those problems for the last 30 years. And as a result,
hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of thousands of Americans have died and a much greater
number have had their lives destroyed. For a time, a long time, Ginny Burton was one of those.
She's from the state of Washington. She was addicted to drugs. She was arrested multiple times. In fact,
This is what she looked like.
This is a mugshot from Ginny Burton.
There she is at the height of her drug addiction.
Look familiar.
Our parks and our sidewalks in every American city
are filled people who look exactly like that.
The difference is that Jenny Burton recovered completely.
We've spoken to her before because she has a perspective
that people really ought to hear.
And that perspective is what is it like to be the victim of all of this,
of these root causes?
And what can we do to help people?
people like her, like your niece.
Ginny Burton joins us now.
Jenny, thanks so much for coming on.
Thanks for having me, Tucker.
So these groups that hand out needles and pipes to attics, this started, you know, 40 years ago in
Europe in Switzerland and Zurich and was abandoned because it seemed to make the problem worse.
but in this country, it's only become better funded, more widespread.
No one has really pushed back against it in a meaningful way.
What effect does handing pipes to meth heads have on the meth heads, do you think?
Well, it exacerbates the problem.
It helps us stay stuck in a state of dependency.
So we're actually contributing to the destruction of human life,
and we've made an industry out of it in the United States.
It does seem like an industry.
It seems like it employs an awful lot of people.
It employs more people, these NGOs, employ more people than drug addicts they're saving.
I mean, have you ever heard of any drug addict who's like, oh, a free pipe, I'm going to stop using drugs?
Yeah, it really doesn't happen that way.
A person has to be removed from the destructive path in order to gain that clarity.
I think it's a very, very small percentage of people that can.
and be immersed in the problem in that hypnotic sort of intimate relationship with drugs
and actually find their way out.
And I'm talking a really small percentage.
So, yeah, we're definitely contributing to the problem.
Can I share something really interesting with you, actually?
Yes.
So in 2001, 9-11 happened 2002, early 2002, George Bush extended unemployment benefits.
It was called worker retraining.
And he allowed for, I believe it was a 13-week extension for anybody that was going to receive a certificate because they were displaced because of what happened during 9-11.
I attended at that time, and I had just gotten out of prison September of 2000.
So I'd been working in a doggie daycare at the time, and I made the decision to go back to school.
So I attended an information session at the Seattle Central Community.
University College. And it was during that time that there were two different industries that
were projected to significantly increase within the next 20 to 25 years. One was the biotech
industry. There was a certificate program that was being pushed in that industry, but it was
also the social service and drug counselor or drug treatment industry. So it was projected that
within the next 20 to 25 years that those two industries were going to explode significantly
And that was something that I never forgot. I kind of put that little piece of information
in my pocket. And then when I went to work in social services, which I felt spiritually compelled
to do as a recovering addict, who didn't really have a lot of experience navigating anything
except for that environment, I've watched the decline happen exponentially. And that little
memory was sort of brought to the forefront of my mind. And it makes me really,
believe that this is by design.
So how did you get better?
How long were you addicted and how do you get sober?
Yeah, well, I was on drugs.
The majority of a 30-year period, I started using around the age of seven.
I was arrested for my, I don't know how many times.
I was facing a fourth prison sentence at the age of 40.
And it was at that point that I knew that I couldn't keep destroying my life.
I knew that the system was only going to provide one dimension of what I needed, which was
the separation. And then I utilized, you know, my will. And whatever it is that came into the
institution treatment or 12-step treatment opportunities and church to actually piece together
some sort of process for me to stop screwing myself over. If it weren't for arrest and
incarceration, Tucker, I wouldn't be doing the work that I'm doing today.
do you think you'd be alive if you'd never been arrested uh no i'm i'm pretty sure i'd probably
be dead at this point especially with what's been happening over the last five years um and mind
you we've had this progression uh with drugs and the uh sort of decrease in law enforcement
engagement and court uh system um separation from the real problem um but specifically over the last
five years during COVID and the George Floyd area. I've seen an exponential spiraling of the drain
with the people that make up this portion of the population. What do you mean is spiraling?
Are the drugs more powerful? Are they different drugs? Are they? Yeah, different drugs.
Heroin is no longer, yeah, heroin is no longer a thing. Fentanol now dominates the industry. I think
the majority of our drugs are coming up through Mexico. We used to produce drugs right here in this
country. There were much better drugs. I'll just tell you that than what we're getting today.
We've seen disease and destruction and overdose and insanity like just explode over the last five
years specifically. I believe that the first time I remember somebody dying of a fentanyl overdose was
about 2017, but where we really started to see the increase in the overdose deaths was about
2020. I truly believe that if incarceration and separation were not an option for me, I was arrested
in 2012 and we were not pumping medication assisted treatment drugs into everybody's life at that
time, the way that we are now. I truly believe that I would be dead today because of the
potent nature of fentanyl, the complicitness with the industry.
and making this problem so accessible that people essentially cannot get themselves out of the maze?
Because when a person goes to a social service agency to get help, they're looking for a way out.
And what's happening, and this is why I couldn't work in the industry anymore,
what's happening is when they go to get that help, they're being handed the poisons that continue to destroy their lives.
And so it's like they're trying to navigate through this maze.
And as soon as they get close to the door to get out of the maze, the track door is dropped
and they're rewarded with rotten fish, essentially.
They're given the very thing that's destroying their life.
And, you know, our service structures are helping them kill themselves.
It's really grotesque.
But, I mean, this is not a complex problem to solve, is it?
Just stop making it easy for drug addicts to be addicted to drugs and you'll save a lot of lives.
Yeah. And I think it's a little even more simple than that. It's about accountability, right? So we've removed accountability from, I think, every aspect of everything in this country. We're literally, and first, let me, I also want to say, thank you for the things that you're covering. Thank you for being concerned about the bodies that we're walking over in our own country before you're being concerned about what's going on in other countries. Because we're focusing our attention so much on the lives of others, while we're
we are devaluing the lives in our own communities.
We are saying that the people that we're walking past
that are destroying their lives are less worthy of our support
than the people that are being affected
by foreign policy in other places.
And so that's really, in my opinion,
it's none of our business until we can get our own house in order.
If I was in my home and my family members were ill
and their lives were deteriorating,
And I was being mandated to go out to my neighborhood to help other families first.
I would put a big break on that.
I would not leave my own home to help the people in my neighborhood before I helped my own family.
And I feel like that's what we're doing.
And so we're spending millions and millions of dollars, or excuse me, billions and billions of dollars in other countries while we're spending millions of millions of dollars.
actually $1.7 trillion in dependency creating programs that do not help people to overcome
their circumstances or their underlying causes in this country and ignoring the fact that
these are our community members. We can hold people accountable. That includes the people that
are on drugs. The people that are on drugs, drugs are not free. They're committing crimes. They're
victimizing people in the community. It is our responsibility to love them enough to remove them
from their destructive path and at the same time remove the people that are complicit in pushing
those drugs right and then what we do is we create an industry that actually supports the
overcoming of individuals where we're addressing underlying causes and then we're helping people
to learn how to navigate society successfully outside of the problem is there any government agency
that you're aware of that does anything like that government agencies i am not no i am not aware
of any and I'm going to tell you that NGOs that accept government funding push the policies that
feed this problem which are the two dominant policies are housing first and harm reduction policies
and so our housing first policies have been extremely destructive in the country they're
spreading across the country like wildfire it's kind of insane to me actually so you had named
a few cities I will tell you that when I started to see problems
in cities like Missoula, Montana, and places in Colorado adopting on these policies and the
problems growing those places, I said, this is a problem. And so people are looking to some of the
Western states like San Francisco, Portland, Oregon, and Seattle as examples of best practices.
I don't know how we can ignore the fact that we are walking over the destruction of human life,
and we want to model that across the country and call that some kind of success.
But I don't know any government entities or institutions that are practicing things that are pro-human.
Well, that's it's obvious by the results, but the details, I think, are unknown to most people.
Can you explain what the housing first policy is and why it's bad?
Yeah, housing first means that people just need to be housed and that the intention.
or the thought behind it is that then they will find recovery,
which is absolutely untrue.
So why is it bad?
Because what happens is we're just sweeping the problem on the streets
behind closed doors.
And what I've noticed is because I worked in the industry for a period of time
in the homeless sector, the shelter sector, and housing first is that capacity equals
funding.
So if these spaces, if these beds are not filled, if we're not handing out
as many burritos, if we're not giving these many, this many showers, then we're not going to be
funded through government funding. There are people that are staffing a lot of these buildings,
these housing first buildings, who have absolutely no idea what it's like to be in that kind of
environment, let alone supervise 90 to 150 bodies of people who are victimizers, who are
drug addicts, some who are elderly. They're mixing all of these different people with these
pretty extreme levels of vulnerability inside of these buildings. And what we have is we have
the catastrophic experiences that we're looking at on our streets, all behind closed doors
and trapped. And we're seeing more people actually die of overdose deaths. There's more,
I mean, we have cartel engagement in some of these buildings. We have violence. We have
violent experiences that are going on, murders, rapes, thefts, all kinds of things going on inside
of these buildings. And we have our government officials that are claiming that these places
are a benefit, that they are blessing people's lives, that they are some sort of solution
to the problem. And we're spending a ton of money to exacerbate the problem. And we're snowing
the voter. We're snowing the taxpayer and telling them that these things are actually working.
I assume the landlord is doing pretty well on this deal, like Section 8.
The landlord are the NGOs.
Yeah, the NGOs.
Yeah, the NGOs.
I mean, that's sort of like a crony capitalism sort of piece, right?
There are the builders, the developers that have the relationships with the politicians
who are then going in and building these massive structures.
And then we have the NGOs that are fundraising to get the money to buy these buildings
and then managing these buildings who are also pushing the harm reduction.
you know, processes inside of these buildings where inside of these buildings, they're handing out
the drug supplies. They're doing everything they can to keep the people suspended in the problem
that they're trying to be removed from. Are they allowed to use drugs in the facilities?
100%. Well, I mean, wouldn't it, I mean, why? Why would taxpayers pay for the housing of people
who are continuing to use drugs? I don't, I mean, especially when there are a lot of kids living at
home because they can't afford housing. I don't, I don't get that. Yeah, well, we have to understand
that these, um, these buildings, first of all, house people at 30% of their income. So they're low
income. So they're federally and locally funded buildings. And if you don't have any money,
zero percent or zero dollars, 30 percent of zero dollars is zero dollars. There are significant
amount of residents inside of these buildings who just refuse to pay their rent. And then there's no
eviction that takes place. I mean, in Seattle is a really great place to look at if you want to
see the failed experiment of housing first. So, you know, and arguably, the kids that there's a
building in Bellingham, Washington called 22 North that houses people from 18 on 18 years old
and up where some of these kids have left home and started using drugs in some of the encampments
that are really dominant in this area in western Washington.
And then they go into these youth service agencies,
and then they get placed in these housing developments
and have to pay no rent.
And then these children are often victimized inside of these buildings.
And then they get turned out to, you know,
trafficked what we consider trafficked inside of these buildings.
And then there's like this fortress that's around them.
disabling the family unit to have any kind of contact to be able to advocate for by this time
these kids are so strung out on the drugs i mean it's really really destructive and then our government
is paying for this and they're asking for more money on a regular basis to pay for this and then
they're handing out the drugs and they're doing all of these things and so i've been doing some research
on a lot of this stuff so we have to understand that you know over the last five years i've been doing
a little bit of research, not enough to have a complete story to write yet. But the pharmaceutical
companies that are pushing a lot of these medication assisted treatment drugs, like they have a
business model. And the business model, of course, is to increase funding. We have politicians who are
incentivized to, you know, push that kind of legislation as well as the legislation that supports
a lot of these NGOs and a lot of these housing structures that are popping up everywhere. And so,
And then you have, like in Seattle specifically, Seattle pushes a lot of the legislation for Washington State around harm reduction in housing first.
And so they, a lot of these NGOs are working in concert with academics that are doing research.
Specifically, we have Caleb Bantegrine here in Washington State who's been quote unquote researching medication assisted treatment or harm reduction practices for a period of time.
I mean, there's a lot of money being made, you know, through this process, through these industries.
It's gross to me.
I don't understand why we can't be more intentional and focus on overcoming, teaching people the skills necessary to navigate society.
I mean, that's what I do in prison and it works.
And it's cost effective.
We could evolve as a country as opposed to decline and destroy our human capital.
But no one seems interested in sobriety.
I mean, the official government policy doesn't demand sobriety.
Sobriety's got to be the goal.
Like, I'm not on anything.
I think clearly I'm like a human being again.
Is anyone even trying for that?
No, I was recently out of press release in September in Seattle.
Bruce Harold, the mayor there, had a press release.
He was really excited to talk about $40 million of funding that was going to be spent.
what we're experiencing here in Washington State and across the country in different areas
is a rebranding, right?
After the executive order came out from Donald Trump on homelessness and all of the things
that we're talking about right now, some of the officials that I was just talking about in
Seattle essentially expressed via media that, you know, well, we're already doing these things,
right?
So we're just seeing a rebranding of these harm reduction.
housing first spaces. And so there was this conversation where Harold was talking about how many
millions of dollars were going to this organization, how many millions of dollars were going to that
organization. And after they were done, I raised my hand and I said, how much of this money is going
to be diverted to abstinence-based treatment and environments for people to come to when they want to
get their life together? Because I worked in Seattle in the midst of all of this for a period of time
and person after person wanted out, first of all, it was such a glacial process with so much red tape for me to actually be able to get somebody into treatment.
And this was back in, you know, 2015, 2016, 2017. But I asked him, I said, how much of this money is going to be diverted? And there was a lot of word soup. It was passed from one city leader to another. And eventually, the answer came back and it was zero dollars.
the thing is yeah it was zero dollars um and first they wanted to know are you with the press
who are you who are you with i said no i'm not with the press i'm with myself i said i'm a former social
service worker and i didn't really talk about the work that i do with the state of tennessee and i didn't
really talk about the work that i'm doing inside of our prison system i just represented myself like
i always do when i stand up in any of these kind of meetings i represent the person just like me
whose life is being destroyed because they can't find a way out.
So, you know, we have the executive order.
And here in Washington State, our leaders are saying, well, we're already doing this because
these methods are a path to.
And I can tell you out of the hundreds of people that I served in that industry, I only
know two that got clean and sober.
And it's almost impossible for, yes.
And I'm like not kidding when I talk about that.
it's almost impossible for a person to remove themselves.
And I mean, it was for me.
I knew that my life was deteriorated.
But because I was in an intimate relationship with drugs, Tucker,
it was almost impossible for me to remove myself.
Thank God for the police.
Thank God for the police.
We have hobbled our law enforcement across the country.
We have shamed our criminal justice system into
participating in the illusion that these methods, that these policies are somehow a benefit
to the people on the streets. But there are a lot of people making money off of people being
sick. And that's what we have to recognize. And so, you know, at the end of the day, this is the
thing. I'm not going to be able to dismantle the machine. The machine is big. It is bigger than
us. And so we have to stop selling out for dollars.
because i absolutely refuse to i will not adopt on the practices of any of these harmful policies these
harmful practices i will not do it because i know what people are capable of and so i try my
hardest to utilize the space where people are removed where they're clear of mind and then
implement processes to help them address their underlying causes and connect with the resources
necessary once they have cleaned out the inside and refragmented themselves with common sense
and then and only then are the resources that are provided going to be sustainable and so i've been
busy building this in this i believe it will become an industry um i've been busy building
this playfield over here to the right because spending my energy to try to dismantle is a pointless
endeavor. What I'm doing is I'm collecting data. I'm changing lives. And then when we have some
success, will we be able to say no? And this is how it's done. And these are the human lives that are
connected with the data, not this ambiguous stuff that sounds really good to the person that's
totally confused when they look at the where's Waldo poster that says, where am I supposed to start,
right? And I think that that's our, that's the common sort of response from a voter or a taxpayer or
just your average community member when they are definitely walking over bodies where they have
a family member that's affected because I have been contacted by people all over the world when
they saw my pictures and their question is always what can I do? Because you got to imagine if you've
never been strung out on drugs, how in the hell are you going to know where to start? Well,
you don't. And so in order to do that, we have to have the right people in the right places.
And I truly believe that the only way for us to redevelop a system is to influence the lives of those who make up that system.
We cannot have a top-down solution because, honestly, if you haven't been to hell, you don't know how to navigate your way out of it.
So we can't expect.
And I try to not talk about or think about how ineffective the majority of our political leaders.
I have a hard time calling them leaders.
but I have a really hard time, you know, removing myself from being pissed off all the time
because I have a hard time looking at the destruction of human life.
Like, really.
And so, but my anger has to be fueled appropriately, right?
So I've got to be able to help the people that make up the system change their lives.
Then when we show the numbers and the cost effectiveness, then maybe we can do a shift.
I have a hard time removing myself from being pissed off.
Yeah, I like the way you put that, Jenny Burton.
and I struggle with the same phenomenon.
Thank you for that.
That was totally compelling you
that got the authority to say it
and just bless you.
Your thriving really makes me happy seeing it.
So great to see you.
Yeah, it's great to see you as well.
And what makes the most sense to me
is not my thriving,
but being able to contribute
to the thriving of the people
who would be released from institutions
and end up your next homeless population
we have disincentivized arrest and accountability,
and that is the one thing that enables us to actually be able to change a nation
because we have to understand that all of these people are somebody's sons, daughters,
mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, and they're our neighbors.
So we can either have them living next to us in a tent and dying in our front yard,
or we can do something that actually influence them to be able to,
navigate society successfully. So thank you for having me, Tucker. I really appreciate your
attention to this. Oh, well, I think there's a few things more important. Jenny Burton, thank you
very much. Good to see you. America needs to get sober. Everybody's on something. It's depressing as
hell. And so as long as we're spending billions of dollars to overthrow dictators, maybe we should
pay attention to the actual drug problems in this country. Hopefully we will.
Thanks for joining us. We'll be back live next week.
We've got a new website we hope you will visit.
It's called new commission now.com.
And it refers to a new 9-11 commission.
So we spent months putting together our 9-11 documentary series.
And if there's one thing we learned, it's that in fact, there was foreknowledge of the attacks.
People knew.
The American public deserves to know.
We're shocked actually to learn that, to have that confirmed, but it's true.
The evidence is overwhelming.
The CIA, for example, knew the hijackers were here in the United States.
They knew they were planning an act of terror.
In his passport is a visa to go to the United States of America.
A foreign national was caught celebrating as the World Trade Center fell and later said he was in New York, quote,
to document the event.
How did he know there would be an event to document in the first place?
Because he had foreknowledge.
And maybe most amazingly, somebody, an unknown investor,
shorted American Airlines and United Airlines,
the companies whose planes the attackers used on 9-11,
as well as the banks that were inside the Twin Towers just before the attacks.
They made money on the 9-11 attacks because they knew they were coming.
Who did that?
You have to look at the evidence.
The U.S. government learned the name of that investor, but never released it.
Maybe there's an instant explanation,
for all this, but there isn't actually.
And by the way, it doesn't matter whether there is or not.
The public deserves to know what the hell that was.
How did people know ahead of time?
Oh, I was no one ever punished for it.
9-11 commission, the original one, was a fraud.
It was fake.
Its conclusions were written before the investigation.
That's true.
And it's outrageous.
This country needs a new 9-11 commission,
one that actually tells the truth that tries to get to the bottom of the story.
We can't just move on like nothing happened.
9-11 commission is a cover.
Something did happen.
We need to force a new investigation into 9-11 almost 25 years later.
Sorry, justice demands it.
And if you want that, go to new commission now.com to add your name to our petition.
We're not getting paid for this, we're doing this because we really mean it.
Newcommission now.com.
Thank you.
