Lew discusses the fact that the 10-year, all-out assault on President Trump by the corporate media, the academy, the intelligence community, and other Powers That Be can only be equaled by the treatment this element gave to two other politicians who threatened our Fabian masters in the 20th Century.
The infamous Senate investigator of the internal communist threat, Joe McCarthy, and the first conservative GOP presidential candidate of the modern era, Barry Goldwater, each suffered intense, focused, and wildly dishonest attacks from all quarters of the Establishment, led by a controlled press.
Whether you like the way Trump handled the Epstein case, the Middle East conflict, H1-B visas, or the current machinations of “the Tech Bros,” he is obviously still considered a threat by them now. The uniformly negative corporate media coverage and the Establishment demagoguery have not changed.
Nonetheless, recent events have revealed a Special Interest problem within the Trump presidency as we look at events and executive orders related to the Epstein case and the future of Artificial intelligence. Both Big Tech and the Israel lobby have plans to destroy your liberty.
In addition, Personnel, as FDR’s minions first annunciated, is without doubt policy. With that in mind, there seems to be a serious vetting problem within the Trump administration as one embarrassing appointment after another is exposed by Laura Loomer and others.
To compound the seriousness of this issue, the GOP leaders of the House and Senate have conspired to prevent Trump from making recess appointments, showing their true colors. They have made fully effective the current Democrat tactic of stalling appointments by requiring a roll call vote in the Senate for each nominee put before that body.
You can watch this episode of Hour of Decision on Rumble, on the News For America channel. You can find Lew on the web at lewmoore.com.
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Look around you.
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Wrong rules the land while waiting justice sleeps.
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I saw in the congress
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and crossing the country,
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campaigning with Ron Paul.
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Tyranny
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rising,
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unspeakable
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evil,
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manifesting,
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devils lying about our heritage who want to
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enslave and replace us.
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But we are Americans
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with a manifest destiny to bring the destiny
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to bring the new Jerusalem
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of endless
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possibilities.
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But first, this fight
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for freedom.
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Be a part of it. But don't delay
00:00:40
because this is the hour of decision.
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Hour of decision with Lou Moore starts now.
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Welcome to the eighty seventh episode of hour
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of decision.
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My name is Lou Moore. And then this
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afternoon,
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we're gonna talk about some of the confusion
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out there,
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some of the confusion in social media, some
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of the disparate voices that are all over
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the place,
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specifically
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in terms of whether our president can be
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trusted,
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whether he's on the right track,
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and,
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a number of other issues,
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related to those basic questions.
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So, let me just begin by saying
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that, basically, I trust Donald Trump, and
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I'll tell you why.
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You probably heard me talk about
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the Goldwater treatment on this show. We did
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a whole episode. I think it's episode 17.
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It's way back there.
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It's over a year ago.
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One of the first episodes I did was
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a complete the complete story
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of the nineteen sixty four Goldwater campaign
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and,
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how
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he was treated fairly decently by the media
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in the nineteen fifties, early nineteen sixties, senator
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Barry Goldwater was. He was a senator from
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Arizona.
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Interesting guy, pilot,
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air force,
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general
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in the air force reserves.
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You know, he loved the Indians. He was,
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you know, he was an interesting guy, ham
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radio operator, my uncle.
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I say this in that episode as well.
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My uncle,
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my uncle Neil, he served in three,
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in three clubs in Phoenix, Arizona with Barry
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Goldwater in the nineteen fifties and early sixties,
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a ham radio club,
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a, gun club,
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and a club of pilots where everybody in
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the club had a airplane,
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including my uncle and certainly including Barry Goldwater.
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So he was an interesting guy that had
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a lot of interesting hobbies.
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And, he was also an arch conservative that
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did not believe in the foreign policy consensus
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or in the domestic policy consensus for that
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matter,
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as he made clear in two books.
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One, the conscience of a conservative, which he
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did not write, but politicians rarely do write
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their books.
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But, the conscience of a conservative that sold
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millions and millions and millions of copies and
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launched,
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the nineteen sixty four Goldwater campaign.
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And another book he wrote called Why Not
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Victory,
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which was exactly,
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the same type of book only in the
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foreign policy arena. Why do we have this
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foreign policy consensus
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that we must have
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only containment of communism,
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that we should have peaceful coexistence
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with communism
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when they're out to destroy us, and we
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should have victory
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over communism.
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So Goldwater was unique in the early sixties
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because the foreign policy consensus, as I've said
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many times,
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during that time and before and after to
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a great degree,
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was big government at home, more and more
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big government, some new programs maybe if we
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have some new ideas,
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and acceptance of all the previous programs
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like Social Security,
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you know, like the Federal Reserve. I mean,
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yeah, name them. The, you know, all the
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growth of government in Wilson's time and Franklin
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Roosevelt's time, that that was all good, maybe
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add a few. This is both parties had
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this view, folks. But go water, anyway, he
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did not have that view,
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on in domestic policy nor did he have
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the view,
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of that we should just have peaceful coexistence
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with a mortal enemy,
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that met, with an international delegation from around
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the world on, I think, a monthly basis
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plotting
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the destruction of the capitalist system of Western
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civilization
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and plotting the overthrow of every government that
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was not already communist and already in the
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thrall
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of the Soviet Union.
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But, anyway, we know about that. We know
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about that stuff.
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So Goldwater was different,
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and that was all fine. He made a
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great tie he made a great,
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guest on the, late night talk shows
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that they had back in the day that
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they were now finally getting rid of. Yes.
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Think about Stephen Colbert. Good riddance.
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But anyhow, then he decided to run for
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president,
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and there was an
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unbelievable
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groundswell
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of particularly youth
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joining his campaign, but people of all ages.
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And, they overcame the big money,
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the big Nelson Rockefeller money, specifically in 1964
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to nominate Goldwater,
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to be the president from the Republican Party.
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And that's when all hell broke loose. They
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it was getting more and more that way,
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but in the media,
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suddenly, he was crazy.
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Suddenly, he was so extreme. He was probably
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a Nazi.
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Even though the man, I believe, was half
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Jewish, either fourth or half Jewish, Barry Goldwater.
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So he was a Nazi. He was crazy.
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He was gonna use the bomb. Just as
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soon as he could get his hands on
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the nuclear code, he was gonna launch bombers
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all over the place because he wanted to
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defeat communism.
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So which was not true about the about
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the bombers. It was true about the communism
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anyway.
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So that was the Goldwater treatment. And, of
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course,
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coupling that with the martyrdom
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of JFK,
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who was sinking in popularity
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until he was killed, kinda like Martin Luther
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King, but that's another story.
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Anyway,
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sinking in popularity,
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JFK was,
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but then he was assassinated,
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and then he was unbelievably
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popular, and the
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wrapped
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their entire enterprise around the mantle
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of JFK who was a relatively failed president.
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Certainly a failure in getting his domestic agenda
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across, but they did that. And,
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between that martyrdom,
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between the CIA,
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monitoring of every bit of the activities of
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the Go Water campaign and the bugging of
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all their phones and everything,
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and this media assault,
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You know, he was wiped out. Barry Goldwater
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lost
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big.
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I mean, he he was in the thirties,
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in percentile
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in the popular vote. I can't remember now
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even how high. 37 or something like that.
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37%
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in 1964.
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Anyway, he was gold watered. That became a
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term.
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And I said, and not too many weeks
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back, that Ronald Reagan was threatened.
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I was told this by a man who
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worked for him in the White House
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for three years who reported directly to him,
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and he told me that Goldwater or that
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Ronald Reagan
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said
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he was threatened that he would be Goldwater
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if he did not take George Bush
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as his running mate,
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which he did.
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And he was not gold watered, and he
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won. But I won't get into all that
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right now. But, anyway,
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so that was a threat that was out
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there that the media,
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which had a complete monopoly, the corporate media,
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NBC, ABC, and CBS,
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TV and radio, and then we had the
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mutual broadcasting corporation on radio, and then the
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codeier of the large newspapers, Atlanta Journal Constitution,
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The New York Times, The Washington Post, The
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Saint Louis Post Dispatch,
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The Chicago Tribune, once they pulled that out
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of the hands of an America First ownership,
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all of these papers,
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were also pretty much in lockstep
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for the Fabian socialist project and the bipartisan
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consensus.
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So you couldn't be violating that or you
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were in big trouble
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as Goldwater was, as Reagan dodged
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by taking George Bush. And the other example
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I use in past history of the same
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treatment, it was a little different
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because he wasn't a president president or presidential
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candidate, but Joe McCarthy.
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Joe McCarthy had pretty decent press when he
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became a US senator. He was very young.
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He had been, I believe, the youngest,
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judge in America. I might have that wrong
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right now. I don't have my notes in
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front of me, but he was very young
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when he became a judge
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before he became a combat veteran in World
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War two.
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And then as a very young politician,
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he took out one of the most famous
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politicians that ever came from Wisconsin, Robert LaFollette,
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who was,
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anyway, I won't get into his story, tempted
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to do that too. I won't do it.
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But, he beat Robert LaFollette, big deal, in
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1946.
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And,
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McCarthy,
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he was kinda down the middle in a
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lot of his voting initially.
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But once in, at Wesley Invest in West
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Virginia
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in 1950,
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when he declared
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complete war upon communists
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in our government,
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in our society.
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Once he did that,
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it was Katie bar the door, and they
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unloaded on him.
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Unbelievable.
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In the media, in the newsreels that people
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used to see in the movie theaters, you
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know, on the radio, in the TV, which
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is just
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really coming into its own,
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right, during that time.
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And in the major newspapers, there were still
00:10:07
a few newspapers back then. This is a
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few years earlier that were,
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not against McCarthy, but the overwhelming majority, certainly,
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the Washington Post, the New York Times,
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etcetera,
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Time Magazine, Newsweek,
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the Saturday Evening Post, all of the magazines,
00:10:24
which were also very big at that time,
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news magazines, they're all totally against
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Joe McCarthy. And then as we, once Eisenhower
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got in, a so called Republican,
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it actually got worse for McCarthy.
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And Eisenhower is pressuring,
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his friends in the media not to be
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supportive of him, the Republican administration.
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And,
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and then people like Edward r Murrow,
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a complete bastard, folks, and a former member
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of communist front organizations
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before he became a big deal at CBS
00:10:57
News,
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before Edward r Murrow smeared McCarthy
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with one of the first examples of a
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documentary with very selective evidence
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and very selective use
00:11:08
of footage and misleading
00:11:11
footage.
00:11:12
You know, he did a big documentary, which
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was new at that fairly new at that
00:11:16
time for TV on McCarthy, and that was
00:11:18
just before the army McCarthy hearings,
00:11:21
and the big showdown then happened
00:11:24
between the Eisenhower administration and McCarthy. McCarthy
00:11:27
was destroyed,
00:11:29
but it was basically all the same kind
00:11:31
of concentrated
00:11:33
smear
00:11:33
from every corner of the establishment
00:11:36
media
00:11:37
that took him out and took,
00:11:40
took Goldwater out.
00:11:42
So the third example of this kind of
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activity,
00:11:46
concentrated
00:11:47
activity, incredible activity, no pretense of objectivity of
00:11:51
any kind.
00:11:52
The third example
00:11:53
is the treatment of Donald Trump, and we've
00:11:56
all seen it. But there's one difference.
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In between the time of Ronald Reagan,
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and some of this is because of what
00:12:03
Reagan did in the White House, but between
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the time of Ronald Reagan
00:12:07
and the time that Donald Trump came down
00:12:08
the elevator in 2015,
00:12:11
we got talk radio. And then right behind
00:12:14
talk radio,
00:12:15
we got,
00:12:17
the Internet
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and social media
00:12:21
and the ability to speak directly to audiences
00:12:24
and have millions and millions of people in
00:12:27
the audience.
00:12:28
Because this is when Trump was on Twitter,
00:12:31
and it was before Twitter,
00:12:33
excuse me, censored him.
00:12:35
So, yes, the the corporate established media go
00:12:39
watered
00:12:40
Trump. They certainly did and still do today.
00:12:42
I mean, they've never stopped, folks,
00:12:44
from 2015
00:12:46
to '2 to 2025.
00:12:47
Ten solid years of it.
00:12:50
But there's other means of communication
00:12:53
now to get the truth out
00:12:55
to enough people that Donald Trump
00:12:58
is a very successful politician. In my opinion,
00:13:00
he's won the presidency three times.
00:13:03
And I won't get into all of my
00:13:05
feelings about that middle one there, 2020.
00:13:10
But the 2020 still is
00:13:13
an example of the same phenomena that went
00:13:15
on with Goldwater and with McCarthy because it
00:13:17
wasn't just in the media.
00:13:20
It was in the entire establishment that sabotage
00:13:24
was underway
00:13:26
and has been underway with Trump.
00:13:29
So
00:13:30
these are all signs
00:13:32
that he is
00:13:34
as flawed as he is and as much
00:13:35
as you may disagree with him on certain
00:13:37
issues, which I certainly do,
00:13:41
that he is sincere
00:13:43
and more importantly than being sincere,
00:13:45
which is not the
00:13:47
most important
00:13:48
characteristic for a politician to have, folks. The
00:13:51
most important characteristic for a politician to have
00:13:55
is to attack your enemies effectively.
00:13:58
That is
00:13:59
the that is the most,
00:14:01
single most important attribute
00:14:03
for any politician I'm interested in supporting
00:14:06
is are they effective
00:14:08
in prosecuting
00:14:10
our America first agenda
00:14:13
and and and prosecuting and destroying,
00:14:17
hopefully, in the future,
00:14:19
our enemies.
00:14:21
That's all I care about.
00:14:23
And,
00:14:24
Trump,
00:14:26
overall
00:14:28
overall,
00:14:29
despite
00:14:30
incredible resistance,
00:14:32
has been very effective
00:14:36
in doing that.
00:14:37
And it it it isn't just the attack
00:14:39
of the enemy, it's also the issues that
00:14:42
Trump took up.
00:14:43
The big three populist issues that were all
00:14:47
no no's,
00:14:48
they were folks.
00:14:50
You weren't supposed to talk about
00:14:52
these trade deals. I mean, people did, but
00:14:55
particularly in the GOP.
00:14:57
I mean, it was the death penalty if
00:14:58
you wanted any special interest money. You didn't
00:15:01
attack these trade deals. I mean, sure, there
00:15:03
was people, talk show host that did and
00:15:06
and other people in society that didn't like
00:15:08
NAFTA and some of the union guys way
00:15:10
back.
00:15:11
You gotta reach back there before they all
00:15:13
sold out. There were you some union people
00:15:17
that were against NAFTA, that were against the,
00:15:20
GATT situation, the the WTO, the World
00:15:24
Trade Organization.
00:15:26
But,
00:15:27
but generally, you were not allowed to talk
00:15:29
about that within the political system and within
00:15:33
the campaign funding system
00:15:36
that existed
00:15:37
and the media ecosystem of that day, you
00:15:40
were not allowed.
00:15:41
And even more so was to talk much
00:15:44
about immigration. Sure. You could talk about it,
00:15:46
but not in the way that Donald Trump
00:15:48
talked about it, in the way the American
00:15:50
people wanted him to talk about it, about
00:15:52
not just stopping illegal immigration
00:15:54
cold,
00:15:55
but in deportations.
00:15:59
And before Trump had to sell, out a
00:16:01
little bit,
00:16:03
or as we used to say, he may
00:16:05
not have sold out, but he may have
00:16:07
rented
00:16:08
himself a little bit to these tech bros.
00:16:10
Matter of fact, I can tell you he
00:16:11
did before he changed his mind on h
00:16:13
one b visas and some of these other
00:16:15
issues.
00:16:18
Trump was, for whacking a lot of legal
00:16:20
immigration too. He made many statements
00:16:23
over the years that way. Exactly what the
00:16:26
people wanted to hear, but exactly what nobody
00:16:29
who wanted to stay in good graces of
00:16:31
the council on foreign relations,
00:16:34
good graces with the chamber of commerce,
00:16:36
good graces with the RNC,
00:16:40
things that they could you could not say
00:16:43
and stay in good graces with these organizations.
00:16:45
Trump did it anyway. And the third one
00:16:48
was endless wars.
00:16:50
And here, there's a little bit of a
00:16:51
breakout between the Republicans and the Democrats.
00:16:54
But having traveled the entire United States for
00:16:57
a man named Ron Paul in 2007 and
00:17:00
2008,
00:17:01
a constitutionalist,
00:17:03
conservative
00:17:05
Republican
00:17:06
who was standing up against this idiotic
00:17:10
war in Iraq.
00:17:12
You are not allowed. You are not allowed
00:17:15
to do that.
00:17:16
And,
00:17:18
you know, nobody put a gag over his
00:17:20
mouth,
00:17:21
and the establishment media liked the fact he
00:17:23
was mixing it up over in the GOP
00:17:26
area, but had no chance to win.
00:17:28
But that was the point. He had no
00:17:30
chance to win because the party apparatus
00:17:34
would not allow that, and the talk show
00:17:37
universe of the big talkers
00:17:39
would not allow that. Folks, we're going back
00:17:41
to 2007.
00:17:42
I'm sorry. You may worship Rush Limbaugh. You
00:17:45
may think Sean Hannity is just the greatest
00:17:47
thing in the world, but I'm gonna tell
00:17:49
you folks,
00:17:50
they would not amuse that some of the
00:17:51
things Ron was saying, and he was telling
00:17:53
the truth. He was right, and he was
00:17:55
a precursor.
00:17:56
That's why I wrote a book called Forerunner,
00:17:59
the unlikely role of Ron Paul.
00:18:01
But he certainly was because he talked
00:18:04
not exactly in the same way as Trump
00:18:06
did, and he didn't come from the same
00:18:08
philosophic moorings that Trump came from, but he
00:18:10
talked about these international trade deals, Ron Paul
00:18:13
did. He talked about immigration. He talked about
00:18:16
building a wall.
00:18:18
He talked about ending birthright citizenship.
00:18:20
But anyway, these are the things that Trump
00:18:22
came forward with as well,
00:18:25
but gathered huge steam because he had the
00:18:28
three characteristics.
00:18:30
And what I'm again, folks, my my my,
00:18:34
area of this
00:18:35
show right now, we are talking about the
00:18:38
authenticity of Donald Trump
00:18:40
and why I think
00:18:42
regardless of whether he's somewhat corrupt or he
00:18:44
had to make some deals or he did
00:18:46
that or this or that, he is still
00:18:48
the enemy
00:18:49
of our core enemy in the deep state.
00:18:53
And,
00:18:54
I firmly believe it. But, anyway, Trump had
00:18:56
the ability to be viable
00:18:59
unlike Ron Paul, unlike Pat Buchanan,
00:19:02
unlike others that were on the scene because
00:19:04
he appeared authentic,
00:19:06
because he was taking these positions, and by
00:19:08
his mannerisms
00:19:09
overall,
00:19:11
he appeared to be independent because he had
00:19:13
a lot of money,
00:19:14
because he had the number one TV show,
00:19:17
because he has a swagger
00:19:20
like no one else
00:19:22
that I've seen in politics. I mean,
00:19:25
period. I just haven't seen anyone else like
00:19:27
him for swagger.
00:19:29
And,
00:19:31
be because
00:19:33
of those things,
00:19:35
he looked like he was good, and he
00:19:37
looked like he was viable. The third key
00:19:39
point. You know, a lot of people said,
00:19:41
oh, Ron. Well, he's I really kinda like
00:19:43
what he says, but a lot of these
00:19:45
people were whispering this to me in corners
00:19:48
of, convention halls, in corners of meetings, in
00:19:52
hallways, on the telephone.
00:19:54
They weren't saying it in front of a
00:19:56
microphone, folks, all these party officials and whatnot.
00:19:59
But with Trump,
00:20:01
he looked viable.
00:20:03
People started coming out and saying, wait a
00:20:05
minute. This guy could win. And, of course,
00:20:07
he did. And and they poured the money
00:20:10
on him. They they did they established me
00:20:12
the the standard thing. They were all smearing
00:20:15
him in the media. They poured the money
00:20:17
onto his opponents. First, Jeb Bush and then
00:20:20
little Marco, and somewhere in there was Kasich.
00:20:22
I mean, hell, we don't even hear about
00:20:24
him anymore. And, Marco came across, came on
00:20:27
came out to the Trump team. But, anyway,
00:20:31
they poured the money on him. They used
00:20:33
all the best sophisticated,
00:20:36
poll tested, and focus group tested talking points
00:20:39
against Trump,
00:20:41
and nobody cared. They just kept voting for
00:20:43
him in huge numbers In state after state
00:20:46
after state, whether it was a convention state
00:20:48
or a primary state,
00:20:50
it made no difference.
00:20:51
He was moving the mass and moving particularly
00:20:55
the Republican Party and adding
00:20:57
to the Republican Party. I remember
00:21:00
trade union guys. They did a whole segment
00:21:02
on these two,
00:21:04
union organizers from I think it was Cleveland.
00:21:06
Maybe it was Detroit
00:21:08
who,
00:21:09
on their own dime, were traveling all over
00:21:11
the country in 2015
00:21:14
for Donald Trump because they were sick
00:21:17
of the sellout
00:21:18
on these trade deals.
00:21:20
This is and so, anyway, this is how
00:21:23
I come to the conclusion to get to
00:21:25
my point
00:21:26
as I attempt to wander onto many side
00:21:29
points.
00:21:30
My main point is
00:21:33
Trump was viable,
00:21:34
and he won,
00:21:36
and, he had all the right enemies.
00:21:39
All the right enemies.
00:21:41
And he did a number of things in
00:21:43
the first term
00:21:46
that appeared
00:21:48
to show he was sincere. Now I know
00:21:49
there are some people do not like everything
00:21:51
that happened in the first term. My god.
00:21:53
I didn't.
00:21:55
But,
00:21:56
he was sincere.
00:21:58
And then now let me tell you what
00:22:00
he did not have.
00:22:02
What did he not have
00:22:05
in 2016?
00:22:08
He did not have
00:22:10
a movement around him. He did not have
00:22:12
an organization around him. When he started his
00:22:14
presidential campaign, he had, like, five guys on
00:22:17
his
00:22:18
national staff. I mean, it grew.
00:22:21
But, you know, I know how this works
00:22:22
because that's about how we started with Ron
00:22:24
Paul in 2007.
00:22:27
And and, you know, we finally got up
00:22:28
to over a 100 paid staffers in that
00:22:30
campaign.
00:22:31
And I'm sure Trump eclipse that by quite
00:22:33
a bit, but he did not have
00:22:36
an army around him.
00:22:37
George Bush
00:22:40
senior had I was told and I'm not
00:22:42
even remembering the number now. I believe it
00:22:44
was 10
00:22:46
names
00:22:47
in his Rolodex
00:22:49
of people they could pick up the phone
00:22:51
and call that were seasoned,
00:22:53
experienced,
00:22:54
political operatives, well connected,
00:22:57
wealthy,
00:22:59
big time lobbyists,
00:23:00
whatever it took
00:23:03
to immediately
00:23:05
staff whatever he was doing, including, of course,
00:23:08
his administration
00:23:09
where he kicked out all
00:23:11
vestiges,
00:23:12
the ones that all the Reagan people he
00:23:14
didn't kick out as vice president
00:23:17
with his buddy James a Baker for years
00:23:19
as the chief of staff.
00:23:21
He got rid of the rest of them
00:23:23
when he became president.
00:23:24
And why is that, folks?
00:23:26
It's because personnel
00:23:29
is policy.
00:23:30
110%.
00:23:33
Personnel is policy. You hear me say this
00:23:34
all the time because it's absolutely damn true.
00:23:38
You can't do anything as president
00:23:40
if you don't have three or 4
00:23:44
people around you who are totally loyal, who
00:23:46
are totally on the same page,
00:23:49
prosecuting
00:23:50
your agenda and driving it through.
00:23:54
All of the power centers, all the agencies
00:23:56
of government,
00:23:57
all of the agencies in,
00:23:59
all of the, apparatus of the Republican Party,
00:24:03
and many other power centers in society.
00:24:06
You have to have this, folks. You have
00:24:08
to have an army behind you. Trump didn't
00:24:11
have that in '20,
00:24:13
'16. He still didn't have it in 2020,
00:24:16
but very far far farsighted,
00:24:19
dedicated people built it for him
00:24:23
for this election.
00:24:25
It was called project twenty twenty five, folks.
00:24:27
The biggest part of that project
00:24:29
was the database
00:24:30
of vetted individuals. It was not the policy
00:24:33
prescriptions.
00:24:35
But personnel is policy, and we are going
00:24:37
to continue
00:24:39
on that vein in that vein.
00:24:41
Right after the news, you're listening to Hour
00:24:43
of Decision
00:24:45
on Liberty News Radio.
00:24:51
FDR,
00:24:52
his socialist New Deal, his plotting for war,
00:24:55
his plans for a new order fueled by
00:24:57
alien ideas and aided by communists,
00:25:00
and the rotten origins of today's Democrat party.
00:25:04
Lou Moore tells the story in five episodes
00:25:06
on his show Hour of Decision.
00:25:08
Click on the show logo on Liberty News
00:25:10
Radio's website. It's on the front page at
00:25:13
libertynewsradio.com.
00:25:17
This is Lou Moore. Join me each week
00:25:19
on Hour of Decision
00:25:21
where we discuss history, like FDR's history. We
00:25:25
also talk politics
00:25:26
and tactics for committed patriots.
00:25:30
Join Lou Moore for Hour of Decision, Saturday
00:25:33
or Sunday, on Liberty News Radio at 2PM
00:25:36
eastern. Our civilization is on the line, and
00:25:39
this is the Hour of Decision.
00:25:47
Welcome back to Hour of Decision.
00:25:50
My name is Lou Moore, and we have
00:25:51
been talking
00:25:53
about why I
00:25:55
have placed as much faith as I have
00:25:57
in Donald Trump.
00:25:58
Starting with the fact that he's been treated,
00:26:02
like, people in the past who were real
00:26:04
threats
00:26:05
to the Fabian socialist conspiracy,
00:26:08
to the corporate
00:26:09
masters
00:26:10
that we have been living under in this
00:26:12
country and not for five or ten years,
00:26:14
folks.
00:26:15
We're talking a hundred years plus.
00:26:19
One hundred years plus.
00:26:21
And the revolution
00:26:24
against our constitutional government, as I've said many
00:26:27
times on this show,
00:26:29
happened
00:26:29
with the, inauguration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt in
00:26:33
00:26:35
as was clearly enunciated
00:26:38
in a monograph called the revolution
00:26:40
was
00:26:41
written by, at the time, the editor of
00:26:44
the Saturday Evening Post, a man named Garrett
00:26:46
Garrett.
00:26:48
So it's been a long time, folks, at
00:26:50
this slow, gradual,
00:26:53
Fabian
00:26:55
movement,
00:26:56
this stealth,
00:27:00
slow but sure movement to Marxist,
00:27:04
socialist,
00:27:05
total government
00:27:07
has occurred in this country with some pretty
00:27:11
dramatic acceleration
00:27:12
in the past few years, and I would
00:27:14
argue
00:27:14
that was because
00:27:17
of the threat
00:27:19
of Donald Trump and the movement,
00:27:22
built around Donald Trump.
00:27:25
And that is
00:27:28
the second reason.
00:27:30
The first reason
00:27:32
I have it's not so much in putting
00:27:34
my faith in Trump, why I support Trump.
00:27:37
The first reason is I see from our
00:27:38
enemies, he is a threat
00:27:41
to them.
00:27:43
Secondly,
00:27:44
people are waking up on every front, and
00:27:46
they're not Donald Trump clones. They're not in
00:27:49
a cult for Donald Trump. Not hardly. Look
00:27:52
at this Epstein situation.
00:27:54
Holy smokes. That way people have turned on
00:27:56
him because
00:27:58
he didn't behave very well at the beginning
00:28:00
of this
00:28:02
last little Epstein saga that that started a
00:28:04
few weeks ago. But, anyhow,
00:28:06
people are not people are not in a
00:28:08
cult, but what is true
00:28:10
is there are people who are libertarian minded.
00:28:13
There are people who are more nationalist minded.
00:28:15
There are people who are very much America
00:28:17
first minded. There's people whose big issue is
00:28:19
immigration.
00:28:20
There's people whose big issue is manufacturing,
00:28:23
American manufacturing.
00:28:25
There's people whose big issue
00:28:27
is health,
00:28:29
There's people whose biggest issue is what's being
00:28:32
taught in our schools.
00:28:34
And,
00:28:35
you know, and then, you know, there is
00:28:37
there is the core
00:28:39
the core of the grassroots conservative movement that's,
00:28:43
formed long before Donald Trump,
00:28:45
the three legged stool of the gun rights
00:28:48
people,
00:28:49
of the pro lifers,
00:28:51
and of the anti taxers.
00:28:54
I mean, this goes way back, folks. This
00:28:56
is basic politics one zero one,
00:28:58
and Donald Trump built on that core. He
00:29:02
built on that core. He built on the,
00:29:05
gathering,
00:29:06
huge gathering of grassroots people in the Tea
00:29:09
Party
00:29:10
effort where some of these other issues
00:29:14
began to bleed in despite the best effort
00:29:16
of our corporate masters taking over Tea Party
00:29:18
groups,
00:29:19
and keeping them
00:29:21
on message,
00:29:23
immigration,
00:29:24
trade, and endless wars. I mean, not to
00:29:26
mention the fact we had this economic meltdown
00:29:29
where
00:29:30
our our our corporate masters were obviously out
00:29:33
to screw us
00:29:34
and to save their own skins, which they
00:29:36
did
00:29:38
in both,
00:29:40
instances. They screwed us, and they saved their
00:29:42
own skins. Nobody went to jail.
00:29:45
And then the Iraq war. I mean, it
00:29:46
was right in our face
00:29:50
by the time Donald Trump showed up on
00:29:51
the scene. But,
00:29:53
so there was he built on that group,
00:29:55
on the Tea Party group, and then
00:29:58
added a whole another layer of people inspired
00:30:01
by his authenticity, his independence, and his viability,
00:30:05
as I just said.
00:30:07
And so they tried to keep him out
00:30:09
of office. They tried to keep him out
00:30:11
of office the second time, then they tried
00:30:13
to take all of his money away from
00:30:14
him and throw him into prison.
00:30:17
Censorship going wild,
00:30:21
pre communism
00:30:22
going wild in this country,
00:30:24
the mass coming off, particularly of the Democrat
00:30:27
party
00:30:28
and what they're all about.
00:30:30
And, I would argue that that was all
00:30:32
accelerated,
00:30:34
by the threat of Donald Trump.
00:30:37
So, you know, there and then there, you
00:30:39
know, there was another issue set on top
00:30:41
of that first one.
00:30:43
You know, the
00:30:44
absolute opposition to DEI,
00:30:47
which wasn't absolute opposition in the corporate halls
00:30:50
of America folks, including among a lot of,
00:30:53
rhino Republicans,
00:30:55
but it certainly was true among
00:30:57
people out in normal people in society.
00:31:00
The whole transgender
00:31:02
thing, which is totally insane,
00:31:04
And,
00:31:05
that whole thing
00:31:07
that is still playing out with athletics
00:31:10
and in other areas, drag queen story hour
00:31:14
is an example.
00:31:15
And then and and even the climate hoax
00:31:18
and confronting
00:31:20
the Green New Deal,
00:31:21
which most of our previous Republican leaders would
00:31:24
have said, we just need to slow down
00:31:26
on that a little bit. Of course, we
00:31:28
wanna take efforts
00:31:29
to, solve climate change. People like John Curtis,
00:31:32
my senator in Utah, a total phony,
00:31:36
I will not digress and get off on
00:31:38
senator Curtis,
00:31:40
one of Utah's
00:31:41
two senators. But, anyway, there's plenty of them
00:31:44
in the congress, and we're gonna get back
00:31:46
to the congress in just a minute. But,
00:31:47
anyway, so there was new issues that came
00:31:49
up that also had a lot of potency.
00:31:52
You know, moms, the moms in school, and
00:31:55
the COVID scam
00:31:56
had a lot of potency.
00:31:58
And,
00:31:59
and Trump kinda got that all through Bobby
00:32:01
Kennedy
00:32:02
even though Trump went to rally after rally
00:32:05
telling us how great
00:32:07
operation
00:32:08
warp speed was. It was great for Pfizer
00:32:11
and Moderna,
00:32:13
but it was not great particularly for the
00:32:15
children of America or for anybody else that's
00:32:17
suffering from a turbo cancer
00:32:19
or has, you know, all these other problems.
00:32:21
And we're not just beginning to even find
00:32:24
out what problems we're going to have as
00:32:26
a result of 85
00:32:27
of the population
00:32:29
taking that damn
00:32:30
vaccine.
00:32:31
But Trump, and,
00:32:33
again, to his credit, adding to his credits,
00:32:36
he finally shut up about that pretty much
00:32:39
because he does
00:32:41
listen to his base. So anyway, to avoid
00:32:43
wandering further and to get to my point,
00:32:47
Trump is the glue
00:32:49
holding together
00:32:50
a disparate coalition.
00:32:53
It started with the Reagan coalition,
00:32:56
added to by the Tea Party, added to
00:32:57
by the Buchanan movement, added to by Ron
00:32:59
Paul's campaign,
00:33:01
and what was prompted from that campaign.
00:33:04
And,
00:33:05
and then still building
00:33:07
with the issue sets as they changed
00:33:10
from the time Trump went down the elevator
00:33:12
in 2015.
00:33:13
He's the glue, folks.
00:33:15
He's what's holding this whole thing together, not
00:33:17
a small thing. When you've seen
00:33:20
when you see how conservatives can rip each
00:33:22
other apart and be so
00:33:25
divided
00:33:26
and so determined to be pure
00:33:29
than the conservatives sitting next to them. You
00:33:32
know? Once you understand that phenomena, you see
00:33:34
how valuable Trump is, and I and and
00:33:36
more and more criticism is coming his way.
00:33:39
And, he's played pretty fast and loose with
00:33:42
the credibility
00:33:43
he has gained,
00:33:46
but he's still in the main hazard.
00:33:48
Just look at the polling.
00:33:50
He has united the the base and really
00:33:53
the Republican Party, the mass of people who
00:33:56
identify as Republicans, who register as Republicans.
00:34:00
The numbers are incredible.
00:34:02
Still over 90%
00:34:04
is good or better than any other
00:34:07
Republican president than any other major Republican
00:34:10
figure
00:34:12
in any of our lifetimes.
00:34:14
So Trump has been incredible
00:34:17
pulling a disparate group
00:34:20
together
00:34:21
around these issue sets that I've talked about
00:34:24
and around the
00:34:25
overall
00:34:26
overarching
00:34:28
devastating
00:34:30
theme,
00:34:31
devastating to our internationalist
00:34:33
corporate masters
00:34:36
of make America
00:34:37
great again
00:34:39
and
00:34:40
America
00:34:41
first.
00:34:44
So these things aren't small, folks.
00:34:47
Before you even get into his performance
00:34:49
in as in as in his second term,
00:34:53
which in many ways has been magnificent.
00:34:56
Everybody talks about the border, and why not?
00:34:59
We had moronic Republican senators getting on Fox
00:35:02
News saying, well, we may have to make
00:35:03
a deal with the Democrats, so we only
00:35:05
have 5
00:35:07
illegal aliens coming in
00:35:09
a day
00:35:11
instead of the huge numbers that were coming
00:35:14
in at one point.
00:35:16
Now there's none coming in, folks.
00:35:19
None.
00:35:20
This is because of Trump.
00:35:23
Absolutely.
00:35:23
110.
00:35:25
And the active
00:35:28
goal,
00:35:30
very difficult to achieve.
00:35:32
We'll see what happens with the new infusions
00:35:34
of money coming from the big beautiful bill,
00:35:37
but the difficult goal to achieve are
00:35:40
deportations.
00:35:42
But he is on it,
00:35:44
at least to some degree.
00:35:46
So we'll see about that.
00:35:49
And the things that he has done
00:35:51
in the free speech area and the people
00:35:54
he has fired, and we're gonna talk about
00:35:56
personnel in just a minute about the people
00:35:58
he has not fired.
00:35:59
But,
00:36:01
so and, you know, you can go down
00:36:02
the list. The energy, opening up the energy
00:36:04
again as he did in the first term.
00:36:06
Getting rid of 10
00:36:08
regulations for every new regulation, which is a
00:36:11
fantastic
00:36:13
metric
00:36:15
to put in place and strict
00:36:17
sure to put in place
00:36:20
and,
00:36:20
absolutely fantastic.
00:36:23
And, so he has done
00:36:27
many, many beautiful things already. I'm not gonna
00:36:30
take a lot of time going down that
00:36:31
list because, unfortunately, folks,
00:36:33
I'm gonna be going down the other list
00:36:36
of things that are not going
00:36:39
so good, and I'm gonna focus on that
00:36:41
for the rest of the show.
00:36:45
So now to use
00:36:46
diplomatic corporate language,
00:36:49
where are their challenges
00:36:51
in the Trump administration?
00:36:54
Well, we obviously have a special interest problem
00:36:59
in the Trump administration.
00:37:00
Every administration
00:37:02
does unless you are completely
00:37:04
removed
00:37:06
from owing these people anything,
00:37:09
which is I've talked about before. Trump didn't
00:37:11
quite get there.
00:37:12
He still had
00:37:14
to come to Marion Adelson for a $100.
00:37:17
Oops. Israel lobby in the front door.
00:37:21
Elon Musk,
00:37:23
hundreds of millions of dollars, other tech bros.
00:37:27
And it wasn't just with the tech bros,
00:37:29
it wasn't just how much
00:37:31
money they poured on the Trump campaign or
00:37:33
on the super packs or related organizations,
00:37:37
the grassroots effort or whatever to the Trump
00:37:40
campaign, but it's what they didn't do.
00:37:44
What they didn't do to help Kamala.
00:37:46
That might have been almost as important, and
00:37:49
I don't have the whole inside story on
00:37:50
that, but I could just imagine.
00:37:52
And so you get people like, Bill Ackerman
00:37:55
and, you know, a lot of these other
00:37:56
guys. And so you get Trump on a
00:37:58
call
00:37:58
to Silicon Valley saying, oh, I just love
00:38:01
h one b visas.
00:38:03
I just think they're the greatest thing in
00:38:04
the world. Now what do you mean I
00:38:06
was against them? No. I love h one
00:38:08
b visas. We I have them at my
00:38:10
hotels.
00:38:11
I use them in my hotels. And so,
00:38:13
you know, totally
00:38:14
went back on his promise there.
00:38:17
But, you know, this is politics, folks. This
00:38:19
happens. I'm not happy about that.
00:38:22
But,
00:38:24
I think with the tech bros, it goes
00:38:26
just a little bit farther than that.
00:38:30
We've got a big AI
00:38:32
problem as I see it right now.
00:38:34
A big digital tyranny problem, which didn't start
00:38:37
with Trump,
00:38:39
But I was counting on Trump
00:38:41
to hold all that stuff back
00:38:44
at minimum,
00:38:46
if not destroy
00:38:48
the threat to our liberty that is coming
00:38:50
from these people that want to have us
00:38:53
voting on the Internet.
00:38:55
That want our whole life,
00:38:57
on a chip that is gonna become our
00:38:59
ID that's embedded in us.
00:39:02
And all of these other ideas that sound
00:39:04
kinda wacky, but are are about two inches
00:39:06
from happening, folks.
00:39:08
About two inches from happening,
00:39:10
and Trump is pretty much pushing it along.
00:39:13
And this whole AI issue,
00:39:15
with some of the sub issues, I mean,
00:39:18
the biggest AI issue
00:39:20
isn't a political issue per se. It's a
00:39:22
fact that this
00:39:25
technology, we just don't know
00:39:27
the total ramifications
00:39:28
of it, but millions of people in the
00:39:31
workplace,
00:39:32
it's becoming pretty obvious folks, are gonna be
00:39:35
displaced
00:39:36
by AI. It's already happening.
00:39:39
Not by the millions yet, but it's already
00:39:41
happening.
00:39:43
And, you know, yeah, you add the fact
00:39:45
they wanna bring all these Indians in and
00:39:47
give them an h one b visa, and
00:39:48
we got almost a million people with h
00:39:51
one b visas right now.
00:39:53
And then you have this other wave of
00:39:55
layoffs because of AI
00:39:58
at the at the entry level and the
00:39:59
intermediate level at these tech companies.
00:40:02
And at in the tech areas of all
00:40:05
companies,
00:40:06
the area of growth for middle class wages
00:40:09
over the last many years,
00:40:11
as we've seen the receding of manufacturing,
00:40:14
as we've seen the receding of other kinds
00:40:17
of employment where a family could,
00:40:20
live,
00:40:21
make enough money to buy a house.
00:40:25
Yeah. And when you combine that with combine
00:40:27
that with the high interest rates with the
00:40:30
incredible
00:40:31
inflation
00:40:32
of real estate prices,
00:40:34
we got big problem coming. Big, big problem
00:40:38
coming.
00:40:39
And,
00:40:41
you know, Trump is not on the right
00:40:43
side,
00:40:44
where this issue runs up against the public
00:40:47
right now on issues like intellectual
00:40:50
property.
00:40:51
I mean, Trump is sitting there with a
00:40:52
bunch of our worst enemies
00:40:55
the other day,
00:40:56
bragging up this Namibia or Namibia.
00:41:00
There's a company that is totally in bed
00:41:04
with the Chinese Communist Party,
00:41:06
a company that Trump has just decided to
00:41:08
give,
00:41:10
one of the highest,
00:41:13
priority, highest tech, if that's the right term,
00:41:17
chips,
00:41:19
saying that they can sell those to China.
00:41:21
And, of course, this company's in bed with
00:41:23
China. They're in bed with us. They're making
00:41:26
supposedly
00:41:27
our best chips,
00:41:28
and supposedly,
00:41:29
they are not sharing them with China.
00:41:32
When this young kid that Trump thinks is
00:41:34
such a hotshot that runs this company
00:41:37
is totally in bed with the communist Chinese
00:41:40
folks.
00:41:41
It's just a fact. Or you could say
00:41:43
it's just a business reality.
00:41:45
But it's
00:41:46
a problem.
00:41:47
That much I can tell you, a big
00:41:49
problem. And when Trump is saying, well, you
00:41:51
guy wrote a book,
00:41:53
you know, sorry, but we just may not
00:41:55
be able to,
00:41:57
you know,
00:41:58
obey what would have been his intellectual rights
00:42:00
of that book. We're gonna let these tech
00:42:02
guys just suck up all this data no
00:42:04
matter who it belongs to and shove it
00:42:06
into these AI programs so we can stay
00:42:09
ahead of China.
00:42:11
You know? I'm sorry, but that needs a
00:42:13
lot more scrutiny
00:42:15
than it's been getting.
00:42:16
And, of course, they pulled the bill that
00:42:18
said that the states can regulate AI for
00:42:20
ten years, but you watch folks. It's gonna
00:42:22
sneak into somewhere else. Ted Cruz playing with
00:42:25
the big boys, playing with the,
00:42:27
tech bros,
00:42:29
and Trump,
00:42:30
not opposing it, not in any way, but
00:42:33
a a
00:42:34
a groundswell
00:42:35
from
00:42:36
people listening to Bannon's War Room, listening to
00:42:38
Alex Jones, listening to some of these other
00:42:40
shows. A groundswell
00:42:41
from these people,
00:42:43
people who follow Marjorie Taylor Greene and some
00:42:46
of the good members of congress, you know,
00:42:48
they got this whack to where the senators
00:42:50
were afraid everyone of them were afraid to
00:42:52
put their name on this bill
00:42:54
that would have prevented states
00:42:56
from scrutinizing some of these things with AI
00:42:59
like
00:43:00
intellectual property.
00:43:01
So we got big problem there, folks, and
00:43:04
not to mention
00:43:05
where all this digital stuff
00:43:08
is going, and we have this stable coin.
00:43:10
Oh, it's gonna be the greatest thing in
00:43:11
the world.
00:43:13
Folks,
00:43:13
the stated
00:43:15
goal
00:43:16
of PayPal
00:43:17
was to create a alternative
00:43:20
world
00:43:21
digital
00:43:22
currency.
00:43:23
I don't give a damn if it's private.
00:43:26
If it's owned by privateers,
00:43:29
people working who have always worked with
00:43:33
our other corporate masters for global governance,
00:43:37
I don't care if it's some private thing
00:43:39
that if if they are centralizing
00:43:41
things, if they make it to where you
00:43:43
need to use
00:43:45
these other means, these stablecoins
00:43:46
or whatever
00:43:48
for transactions,
00:43:50
folks, that's just one step. That step can
00:43:53
quickly be leapfrogged
00:43:55
to the world digital currency and kiss all
00:43:58
of your freedom goodbye. Kiss it goodbye.
00:44:02
If you don't give a damn about your
00:44:03
freedom, then just let these guys run wild
00:44:05
with this stuff. But I'm telling you, we
00:44:07
cannot do that, and Trump is not protecting
00:44:11
us
00:44:12
in this area.
00:44:14
So that's issue number one. Issue number two,
00:44:17
of course, I've
00:44:18
I had two episodes, and I will have
00:44:21
yet one more
00:44:22
next week
00:44:24
about Israel,
00:44:26
about the organized
00:44:27
Jewish community,
00:44:29
and how
00:44:31
not only
00:44:32
are they intruding,
00:44:34
upon president Trump's stated America first keep us
00:44:37
out of endless wars foreign policy. We saw
00:44:40
that with Iran,
00:44:41
with the near miss we had with Iran
00:44:43
recently.
00:44:45
But now
00:44:46
it's getting serious, folks, because while Trump is
00:44:49
beating down all these left wingers
00:44:52
who were, you know, in the FBI and
00:44:54
in the academy
00:44:55
and in in in the intelligence agencies who
00:44:58
were trying to take away your freedom of
00:45:01
speech, your freedom of associate association,
00:45:04
your basic
00:45:06
fundamental liberties.
00:45:08
While Trump has been good on that issue,
00:45:11
he's gonna erase it all, folks, with all
00:45:13
of this support
00:45:15
for this so called anti
00:45:17
Semitic
00:45:19
legislation
00:45:20
where people are not going to be able
00:45:22
to criticize Israel, where they're equating
00:45:26
criticism of Israel
00:45:28
with anti so called antisemitism,
00:45:31
a word itself
00:45:33
that that is phony
00:45:34
because,
00:45:35
there's a ton of Semites in this world
00:45:37
who happen to be Arabs, and they're never,
00:45:40
you know, that the terms never applied that
00:45:42
way, but that's a that's another thing. Won't
00:45:44
get off onto that right now, but
00:45:46
very dangerous, folks. The idea that certain accounts
00:45:49
of what has happened in the past
00:45:51
are codified
00:45:52
into law
00:45:54
where
00:45:55
no other events in the past are codified
00:45:57
into law.
00:45:59
Historians
00:46:00
are generally free to look
00:46:02
continually
00:46:03
at the evidence and the arguments that are
00:46:05
being made with the evidence presented about what
00:46:08
happened in World War two, what happened in,
00:46:10
World War one, what happened in the civil
00:46:12
war, what happened with the the role of
00:46:15
women in society, or whatever the issue is.
00:46:18
But now we're saying, oh,
00:46:20
you can't talk about certain things,
00:46:24
certain things the Israel lobby and the Jewish
00:46:27
organized
00:46:28
Jewish community don't like.
00:46:31
This is wrong, folks. It's in 15 states
00:46:33
right now.
00:46:34
This law is in 15 states right now,
00:46:37
and it is so dangerous. I can't hardly
00:46:40
describe it.
00:46:42
Very
00:46:43
dangerous.
00:46:45
But,
00:46:47
so that's a big problem, but a
00:46:50
overarching problem that is not just Trump's problem
00:46:53
by any means, but
00:46:55
the personnel is policy
00:46:57
problem that Trump has. I talked earlier about
00:47:00
the fact that he originally didn't have a
00:47:01
whole army of people behind him, which he
00:47:04
now does.
00:47:05
An effective potentially very effective army.
00:47:09
And he's gotten a lot of people in
00:47:10
the administration that don't need to be cleared
00:47:12
through congress,
00:47:14
and he's gotten
00:47:15
most
00:47:16
of his key cabinet picks. He didn't get
00:47:18
the most important one that we needed the
00:47:20
most, and we're gonna really regret we didn't
00:47:22
have Matt Gaetz as we go forward here,
00:47:24
I predict.
00:47:26
But
00:47:26
these intermediary
00:47:29
managerial
00:47:30
positions in the agencies, folks,
00:47:33
that is what is being held up in
00:47:35
the congress right now. The Democrats will not
00:47:38
pass these people out. It used to be
00:47:39
done on voice vote. On almost every case,
00:47:42
they will not give any of them a
00:47:43
voice vote. They're bottling these,
00:47:47
appointees up,
00:47:49
and the leaders in the house and the
00:47:51
senate, so called Republicans,
00:47:54
are preventing Trump from doing recess appointments, which
00:47:57
are constitutional. They're not permanent.
00:48:00
They expire,
00:48:02
but they are perfectly legal and they have
00:48:05
been used before when there's been this problem.
00:48:09
But they're not going to let Trump do
00:48:11
this.
00:48:12
And this
00:48:13
is totally wrong.
00:48:15
And right along with it, and the personnel
00:48:17
is policy problem, is the fact that people
00:48:19
like Laura Loomer could just go on the
00:48:21
Internet and keep finding people that are getting
00:48:24
high positions in the Trump administration
00:48:27
who are no damn good. Who this guy
00:48:29
they're gonna put number two at NSA who
00:48:32
vacations with John Brennan.
00:48:35
What the hell is going on here, folks?
00:48:38
It's not right.
00:48:40
Something is really wrong.
00:48:42
The congress is interfering. We're getting the right
00:48:44
people in the Trump administration, and there's some
00:48:46
people in the Trump administration
00:48:49
who are also interfering at the highest levels
00:48:53
with getting the right people in to prosecute
00:48:55
the America first agenda, and that is a
00:48:58
big problem.
00:48:59
A big problem I have with Trump and
00:49:01
a big problem
00:49:02
that we are going to have to solve
00:49:05
one way or the other
00:49:06
or big trouble.
00:49:08
Big trouble. So we'll see. We'll keep going
00:49:11
here with old Trump. We got no choice,
00:49:13
but we got some problems. We got a
00:49:15
lot of good things to report and some
00:49:17
real
00:49:18
nervous areas
00:49:19
we have to report as well.
00:49:21
My name is Lou Moore. You're listening to
00:49:23
Hour of Decision on Liberty News Radio,
00:49:26
and I'll see you again
00:49:28
talking about that Israel problem again
00:49:31
next week. Thank you.


