CIA Employee Atttacks Government Gaslighting |EP043
The Big Mig ShowDecember 23, 2024
43
00:49:5445.9 MB

CIA Employee Atttacks Government Gaslighting |EP043

ELI CRANE: I had a hearing this week in Homeland Security about foreign adversaries using direct energy weapons against U.S. citizens….Havana Syndrome. When I went down to that SCIF, that was one of the most terrifying briefings I’ve ever been a part of.

Microwave Weapons Targeting US Officials at home and abroad


00:00:09
Welcome to the Big Mig Talk Radio show, broadcasting live

00:00:13
from the Mile High City, Denver, Co.

00:00:16
We are the tip of the spear, cutting through the noise and

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delivering an hour of unfiltered news, guests, and truth that

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transcends boundaries and unites the nation.

00:00:28
This is the Big Mig Talk radio show.

00:00:33
Welcome back to the big big talk radio show.

00:00:36
I'm your host Lance Miliacho with my Co host George

00:00:39
Ballantine. And of course we are the tip of

00:00:41
the spear. Our plan is to educate and unify

00:00:44
the country one episode at a time.

00:00:47
On this show we believe it is better to be hugged by the truth

00:00:50
than comforted with a lie. We are live in Denver and NYC.

00:00:54
George Ballantine, what's shaken in the NYC?

00:00:58
How's the weather? What's going on with you,

00:00:59
brother? Well, we had a little snow

00:01:02
covering, nothing major, maybe like inch and a half, maybe 2.

00:01:07
I doubt it. But already the roads melted

00:01:09
because I was out and about early this morning getting the

00:01:12
Mac studio repaired. So you know it's cold, what, a

00:01:17
little windy, but you know it's winter.

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And I know you've been, I know you've been nursing a little bit

00:01:21
of a cold. So yeah, handle in the Mac

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studio #1 it sounds like you finally got that sorted out,

00:01:27
hopefully. We had a little issue with our

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main server for our main show over on Rumble.

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The big main show on Rumble. If you guys haven't checked it

00:01:33
out, you should. But how's that cold, brother?

00:01:35
You went to bed a little bit early.

00:01:36
I got the show organized and ready for today.

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So what happened? Well, I laid down in my bed

00:01:42
early, as far as falling asleep early did not happen.

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No, you couldn't fall asleep. How come I don't?

00:01:47
Know my brain just doesn't want to.

00:01:51
That sucks. You needed you needed the extra

00:01:53
sleep. I know.

00:01:53
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Well, there's a crazy story that's been out for years, but

00:02:44
it seems to be coming to a head and it seems it's another.

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I have to say, originally a lot of people thought it was

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conspiracy theory. If you guys know about the

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Havana Syndrome and the Do's attacks, which are directed

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energy weapons, that came out. We talked about, I think it was

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2017. Lot of people were skeptical.

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They thought some people were just trying to shake the

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government down for some kind of a personal injury case.

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These were government employees that had lots of issues.

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But it turns out there's been a six year investigation going on

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and this is Catherine Herridge and she's talking about maybe

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the biggest story of the year. I'm not sure, George.

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It's crazy, right? Even Eli Crane's talking about

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it. It is, but you know, after they

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investigated the havanicism from Cuba, they, they did say that it

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was something, some kind of weapon or something.

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They didn't really know what, but they do know that something

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was used against the people in our embassy that just that

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screwed up their equilibriums or brains.

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I mean I think some are still recovering from it or still.

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Permanent injuries. We're hearing these people do

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have permanent injuries and they're talking about pulse

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microwave energy. Now you know that that a lot of

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people talk about it. But when one guy, Mark, and he's

00:04:01
got a really tough last name, his name is Polymerophilus.

00:04:06
Polymeropolis. I think he's a 26 year veteran

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of the year, veteran of the CIA. He was forced to retire as the

00:04:12
CIA's official for clan assigned operations in Europe after

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suffering a mysterious traumatic brain injury and debilitating

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solid side effects following that trip to Moscow.

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Let me give you the quote. This is pretty, pretty

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frightening stuff. I woke up in the middle of the

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night with an incredible case of Vertigo, of of tinnitus, which

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is ringing in the ears. I was falling over.

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I was nauseated. There was no mistake that

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something really, really terrifying happened that night

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in Moscow. I had been in Afghanistan.

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I spent time in Iraq. This was the most terrifying

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experience of my life. Wow.

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I mean, look at it like you're just talking about they targeted

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small areas. Imagine if they were able to

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release that in this country right now.

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Well, it might be that who, whatever country or who,

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whomever this is, they are trying to do that because look,

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when this happened, that that CIA officer was staying at the

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Marriott Hotel near the US Embassy.

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You know, his case resembles exactly what happened for the

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symptoms described by the 40 US diplomats in Havana.

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They were all serving at the US Embassy and a dozen US diplomats

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serving in China in 2016. So they began experience the

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same thing. Extreme Vertigo Nausea following

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a loud and piercing sound that experts now believe was a result

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of a directed radio frequency energy in the form of a

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microwave. If I if I had to guess, Lance,

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I'm going to say it's either China or Russia behind this.

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It would seem that that would be the pattern.

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It does make sense. They don't know that for sure.

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But look, Eli Crane even said he had a hearing this week in

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Homeland Security about foreign adversaries you're using

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directed at energy weapons against U.S. citizens, Havana

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Syndrome. And they went down to that

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skiff. That was one part of the most

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terrifying briefings I've ever been part of.

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These guys are talking about it. It's now coming out.

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Catherine Herridge has done some pretty good investigations.

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So let's play the Eli Crane clip first.

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Let the audience hear that, George.

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Here we go. I had a hearing this week in

00:06:06
Homeland Security and this, this hasn't even become very

00:06:09
mainstream yet, but it was about different foreign adversaries

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using direct weapons, Direct Energy weapons against U.S.

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citizens that completely incapacitate citizens of the

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United States. You guys might have heard of it

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called Savant Havana Syndrome. And then we went down to the

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skiff and we got a classified briefing from some of the people

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on the on the panel. And it was one of the most.

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I'm a former Navy SEAL, so I've traveled around the world and

00:06:41
haunted bad guys for a long time.

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But I can tell you this, when I went down to that skiff, it was

00:06:46
one of the most terrifying briefs that I've ever been a

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part of. OK, This is how brazen our

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enemies are becoming because of how foolish, corrupt,

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incompetent, and I would actually say wicked we have

00:06:59
become and our leadership has failed us at every turn.

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So this next election is going to be important.

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Thank you guys for coming. Mr. Chairman, thank you for

00:07:10
allowing me to speak. Let me get on top of this also.

00:07:16
So Senators Mark Warner and Mark Rubio, Marco Rubio, the top

00:07:20
Republican and Democrats heading the Senate Select Committee on

00:07:23
Intelligence, they've issued a really stern statement

00:07:25
acknowledging for the first time U.S. officials had been

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attacked, George, and they're suggesting these attacks are

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ongoing and increasing. Now, what's interesting, George,

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is it's not only on foreign soil.

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There's two cases that are being investigated on US soil, one

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that allegedly took place last year near the Ellipse outside

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the White House and another one that targeted a National

00:07:47
Security Council official. Now, this is pretty crazy.

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They're pressing them. They're trying to get this

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information out. Let's play that clip from

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Catherine Herridge. This is a story that she's been

00:07:56
working on for six years now. Some stories are just difficult

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to report. This story about attacks on our

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intelligence, military and State Department personnel, I've

00:08:08
really been picking up on and off for maybe 4-5, six years.

00:08:17
The working title for this project right now is Government

00:08:19
Gaslighting. That is what the US intelligence

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community and the CIA has been doing to injured personnel.

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And it's more than a dozen countries across the globe where

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these events have happened. There are these common threads.

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They're common threads, but the type of injuries they're having,

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the evidence is building, and it appears likely that a foreign

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adversary is behind these attacks.

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This is a highly vetted group, and they're trusted with some of

00:08:55
the US government's most closely held secrets.

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And if you acknowledge that U.S. government personnel are being

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targeted overseas while on assignment and it sends the

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message that nobody is safe. Wild.

00:09:12
But let me give you this. George David Relman of Stanford

00:09:15
led the National Academy of Sciences study.

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This was this was a report that was actually requested by the

00:09:19
State Department, which should remain classified until just

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recently. And that report concluded that

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these US diplomats had definitely been targeted by a

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pulsed radio frequency. And I guess that's some form of

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microwave energy that we don't typically see, you know, around

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us. It's not common.

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It doesn't, it's not continuous wave energy that comes out of

00:09:37
like a cell phone or out of a microwave.

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It's a, it's, it's like a high energy, very short delivery of

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the of a microwave energy. And it's not common.

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It's not something you would ever see.

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It's only used for examples by militaries, for radar, etcetera.

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It's pretty clear that something really terrible is going on, I

00:09:54
think. What do you think, George?

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Listen, I mean, this was close to the White House and it seems

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like whatever they're using, they can direct it at a person

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and and control it. Because if you think, let's say,

00:10:05
like the person in DC, the the one that was hit with it, but

00:10:09
nobody else was just one person. So that's a scary thought.

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Just think about if our president goes abroad, can they

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target him? What's to stop them?

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Nothing at this time, you know, we're talking about a

00:10:21
conventional, like a conventional weapon, basically

00:10:23
that they, they, they know the Soviet Union, Russians and China

00:10:26
have potentially been working on, it's designed to

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incapacitate. It's pretty insidious if you

00:10:30
think about it doesn't leave any wounds or scars.

00:10:33
And who knows how small the device is.

00:10:35
We don't know if it's big or small or if it has to be in a

00:10:37
vehicle, how it's deployed. So this is a, this is definitely

00:10:41
a 911 report. You want to share this with

00:10:43
everybody that you know, get the word out.

00:10:45
Interesting stuff. Diabolical tech for sure, and

00:10:49
it's not something that I think we're going to resolve

00:10:51
immediately being investigated but not solved.

00:10:53
The big Ming talk radio show, we'll be right back, Don't go

00:10:55
anywhere because when we come back, we'll be covering Biden's

00:10:58
commuting sentences of all 40 federal death row inmates.

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children. All right, a big, big talk radio

00:12:55
shows back. We're coming to you live from

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Denver and New York City with your hosts Lance Miliaccio and

00:13:01
George Bounty. We are the tip of the spear.

00:13:05
You know, Biden is going to do in a lot of commuting of

00:13:10
sentences. We all see the pardon for his

00:13:13
son Hunter. But beyond that pardon, it's a

00:13:15
blanket pardon. But now he's talking about 40

00:13:20
federal death row inmates about commuting their sentences from

00:13:25
being executed. Now some of them are the Boston

00:13:29
bomber. I was just watching reading a

00:13:31
report where he's not. He's mulling over doing this,

00:13:35
but not all 40 like he's like the Boston city bomber, the the

00:13:40
church shooter shooting. I think it was in Texas.

00:13:43
But you know what? This is an iffy, I think

00:13:46
actually people sitting in death row are suffering more than just

00:13:51
being executed. Being executed to me, in my

00:13:54
opinion, is the easy way out. Sitting in that prison cell,

00:13:57
being told what to do, where to do, how to do what to eat, all,

00:14:00
all that stuff, That's misery. That's not fun.

00:14:05
So you know what, I, I, I can toss the boil up on this one.

00:14:08
It's, you know, some may deserve death there, but give him the

00:14:13
misery, I think let him live in misery.

00:14:16
That's the real that's a real punishment.

00:14:19
Prohibitively expensive, though, you're talking about $100 a

00:14:23
year per inmate at the current expense rate.

00:14:26
So, you know, these, these are some costs that I don't think

00:14:28
the American public should have to foot.

00:14:30
I, you know, my, my problem with Biden is that his, his pardoning

00:14:34
policy so far with these blanket pardons, these lifetime pardons,

00:14:39
the discussions, he's going to be giving it to a lot of

00:14:41
government officials that need to face consequences for what

00:14:43
they did over the last four years.

00:14:45
It's not good. I mean, let me give you some

00:14:47
comparisons here. I, I know why he's trying to do

00:14:50
it. I, I think he's just trying to

00:14:51
cause more havoc. Trump's already said that he was

00:14:53
going to escalate the efficiency of these, these death sentences,

00:14:58
which I don't blame him. I mean, this is, again, the, the

00:15:01
way the prison system is run right now, it's prohibitively

00:15:03
expensive. And there are lots of people at

00:15:05
the lower end of the spectrum. If there was somebody that you

00:15:07
get pardoned, there would be a lot of people that faced, you

00:15:09
know, excessive drug charges or excessive sentences by

00:15:13
overzealous judges. But here's an interesting

00:15:16
statistic that a lot of people don't know.

00:15:18
During Donald Trump's entire term of presidency, he gave out

00:15:21
237 pardons or commutations of sentences.

00:15:25
Barack Obama gave out 1927, George W Bush 200 Bill Clinton

00:15:33
459, George HW Bush the lowest of all 77, Ronald Reagan four O

00:15:40
6, Jimmy Carter 566, Gerald Ford four O 9 and Richard Nixon 926.

00:15:48
George, where do you hear the number that Joe Biden gave out

00:15:52
it since since he started not including what he's getting

00:15:55
ready to do or not the potential for him to do more before he

00:15:57
heads out the door. He's already given out 8062

00:16:02
pardons and commutations of sentences.

00:16:06
Whoa. That's.

00:16:09
Probably more than all the presidents combined.

00:16:12
It is. And you know, I'm going to you

00:16:15
know what the reason that this is happening is?

00:16:18
Listen, you know, Joe, Joe Biden and his Biden crime families pay

00:16:21
to play you, you know, you give them money, they'll pardon them

00:16:25
just like I mean, let's look, let's talk about this ridiculous

00:16:28
pardon of this. The judge that's was, you know,

00:16:31
I forget, it was with all the kids they were sentencing.

00:16:34
Yeah, he was getting paid to over sentence the kids to give

00:16:37
them stiffer sentences. And putting these kids away and,

00:16:40
you know, his friend owned a facility.

00:16:41
They're making money. I mean, some kids kill

00:16:43
themselves, committed suicide. That's on Joe Biden's head for a

00:16:49
releasing this judge. There's no way that judge should

00:16:51
be commuted. He hurt kids.

00:16:54
I mean, it's where are we going with this?

00:16:56
But you know what, it's greed. It's money and it's shown right

00:17:00
there in the numbers. 8062 mean. I didn't realize it was that

00:17:03
high, Lance. You just shocked me right now.

00:17:05
It's crazy. And here's the point.

00:17:08
Federal, you know, federal death, you know, death

00:17:11
convictions. Usually those people the, the,

00:17:15
the case is there aren't that many because you know, murder

00:17:17
and homicide to become a federal case, it's a trickier, it's a

00:17:21
different set of subject matter jurisdictions.

00:17:23
So these people, a lot of these people have committed serious

00:17:26
crimes, you know, the kidnapping with murder, you know, the

00:17:30
shooting people in a church, you know, like they got this one

00:17:33
guy, you know, Robert Bowers, a white guy that convicted, he

00:17:36
convicted and sentenced to death for mass shooting of the Tree of

00:17:38
Life synagogue. You know, these are people like

00:17:41
here's another guy, a guy named Brown Meyer, Jason Brown, he was

00:17:45
convicted and sentenced to death for fatal stabbing of a postal

00:17:48
worker. Here's another guy that killed

00:17:50
the federal prison inmate. There's another one that killed

00:17:52
the federal prison guard. But, you know, and the list just

00:17:55
goes on and on. These these are people that

00:17:57
committed some pretty serious crimes.

00:17:58
If I was going to see pardons, George, or commutations or

00:18:01
sentences, I'd like to see some of these people for these

00:18:02
excessive drug cases. I'd like to see some of the

00:18:05
cases where, you know, the DOJ lied or prosecuted people at the

00:18:08
lower end of the spectrum. I don't know that letting out or

00:18:11
commentating or pardoning murderers is the right plan of

00:18:15
of, you know, doing something that maybe Biden thinks is just,

00:18:20
do we really want to take the highest end of the spectrum, the

00:18:23
worst of the worst, and do this? No, and he shouldn't be doing

00:18:28
it, but unfortunately, that's the power of the pardon.

00:18:32
But listen, I'm with you, Lance. Like there's a lot of guys that

00:18:37
are behind and behind the wall in prison, like for these

00:18:40
excessive drug crimes, which is if you got arrested today and

00:18:44
you would be doing 1/4 of the sentence maybe, And there's

00:18:48
people that are there for life or 4050.

00:18:51
It's crazy. I mean, marijuana cases where

00:18:53
marijuana is legal all over the country and they've got people

00:18:56
still sitting in jail for marijuana convictions.

00:19:01
I mean, it's just not to me that's the problem.

00:19:03
The system just it's, it's tremendously flawed.

00:19:06
And at the end of the day, the prosecutors, especially those of

00:19:09
the DOJ, they don't really care. They don't want to fix their

00:19:13
errors. They don't want to fix the

00:19:14
mistakes. I'll bet you if I could go

00:19:15
through the case records for all the federal inmates, I could

00:19:17
find you 1000 guys that were extremely deserved of being

00:19:23
released early, maybe more than 1000.

00:19:26
Who knows. I don't know what the total

00:19:27
federal and Carson rate, federal incarceration rate is, but

00:19:31
that's a crazy thing, you know? What's the thing like you talk

00:19:33
like you made a point before, like it costs $100 a year to

00:19:36
housing inmate, right? These guys on death row, they're

00:19:39
on death row for how many years before they get executed?

00:19:42
Decades. Yeah.

00:19:44
I mean, I know they have the appeals process that

00:19:46
automatically goes through and all that, but what the hell,

00:19:49
it's taking so long. But granted, you know, there's

00:19:51
some people that been on for 30 years, 40 years, and they got

00:19:55
freed to go over new evidence, new technologies.

00:19:58
So it's like it's, it's a, it's very tough call situation on

00:20:03
this because let's face it, you also have like corrupt DAS,

00:20:06
corrupt cops that manufacture evidence, lie, you know, convict

00:20:10
people and you know. No doubt.

00:20:12
And it's. Sarah, I, I would venture a

00:20:14
guess that George, that 20 to 40% of the current, the

00:20:19
incarcerated population, both state and federal, are innocent

00:20:22
in one way or another. Or the amount of entrapment or

00:20:25
corruption in the case was excessive.

00:20:27
And that's why they're here. You know, that's why they're

00:20:29
there now. And they got sentences they

00:20:30
didn't deserve. Maybe they did commit a crime,

00:20:32
but it wasn't to the level it was because let's face it, many

00:20:35
of these guys, federal agents and you know, police officers

00:20:38
are all bucking for that next level of promotion.

00:20:41
In, in, in the state level. They're all trying to become a

00:20:43
detective. They're all trying to become a

00:20:44
higher level senior detective on the agent level, they're trying

00:20:48
to become supervisors and you know, regional and and national

00:20:52
and they want to move their way up the food chain.

00:20:53
The only way they move their up is with convictions.

00:20:55
And, and they put a lot of time into these cases.

00:20:57
And when the cases don't start to pan out, they get frustrated.

00:21:01
And with that frustration comes the corruption, comes the lies,

00:21:05
comes the planet evidence, comes the Brady material that isn't

00:21:09
given or the Giglio material, the destroyed evidence or the

00:21:11
coaching of witnesses. And before you know it, they've

00:21:14
created a completely fake case. And look, the sentence is so

00:21:18
excessive that everybody pleas out.

00:21:20
The plea system is in full force and effect in the federal

00:21:23
system. Everybody's going to plea out

00:21:25
because otherwise they're going to get a superseding indictment,

00:21:27
They're going to get more excessive charges.

00:21:29
They're going to get no plea negotiations.

00:21:31
And the sentencing guidelines that were put in are just awful.

00:21:34
They even now the judges don't have the adjudication level they

00:21:36
need to. They always say Booker and Fan

00:21:38
Fan fixed it. Booker and Fan Fan didn't fix

00:21:40
it. The problem is those sentencing

00:21:42
guidelines. And I agree with you.

00:21:43
There's a lot of corporate money and there's a lot of people that

00:21:46
owns own commissaries. They're all trying to make money

00:21:49
off the inmate population. So it's pretty ugly.

00:21:52
It is. I mean, you just look at, if you

00:21:54
ever look into commissary, if you look on the county level,

00:21:57
what they charge and then to the state level, it's a huge, big

00:22:00
difference. The corruption is like crazy.

00:22:03
I remember in my state, Governor Whitman, she opened up a

00:22:06
commissary. Her and her husband, they're,

00:22:09
they're running that out of the state in New Jersey And now in

00:22:11
some other states. This happened when she was

00:22:14
governor. Her husband got that.

00:22:15
And this, you know, come on. And that's the problem, right?

00:22:18
Because now wouldn't they want stronger sentencing longs?

00:22:21
Don't they want larger populations of incarcerated

00:22:25
because isn't that financially benefit them?

00:22:27
So when you start having financial benefit that goes to

00:22:29
the leadership that's making the decisions about the

00:22:32
incarceration rates and or the laws that cause those rates that

00:22:36
you can't do that. You can't, those two can't mix

00:22:39
and that's the difficulty. The Bush's own part of one of

00:22:42
the largest commissary companies in the country.

00:22:44
Did you know that? Yeah, that I knew too.

00:22:46
You know, Speaking of pardons, I just thought I just popped in my

00:22:49
head. I wonder if Senator, well ex

00:22:52
Senator Bob Mendez from New Jersey is asking Biden for a

00:22:56
pardon. I don't know.

00:22:59
I'm sure, I'm sure when you start looking at those

00:23:02
statistics, when you start thinking about 8000 pardons, you

00:23:06
can imagine that the, you know, the, the number of pardons

00:23:09
they've probably received has increased dramatically.

00:23:11
When people heard heard that Biden was giving away a lot of

00:23:13
pardons because in general, getting a.

00:23:16
Pardon. He wasn't.

00:23:16
First of all, he wasn't giving them away.

00:23:18
He was selling them away. Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.

00:23:21
But here's my point, right? You know, in most cases, a

00:23:24
presidential pardon and that's the Holy Grail that's winning

00:23:28
the Mega Millions lottery. It just doesn't happen very

00:23:30
often, as you can see by the numbers we just reported.

00:23:33
And normally it happens for the very powerful, the very wealthy,

00:23:36
or when you have a case like a Kim Kardashian that goes to

00:23:39
battle for you. It happens for people that have

00:23:41
celebrity, what I would call celebrity support or

00:23:44
representation where they make a big deal out of somebody that

00:23:46
they think was wrong happens sometimes.

00:23:49
But the but the higher end of the spectrum is the wealthy and

00:23:51
the well connected political. I wonder who's going to advocate

00:23:54
for pardons for let's say hey Diddy Jay-Z when their time

00:24:01
comes. I don't know, maybe, maybe Biden

00:24:03
will give him a blanket pardon on the way out the door.

00:24:05
Maybe he'll give the the Diddy lifetime pardon that could be

00:24:08
coming up. We don't know.

00:24:09
Haven't heard much about that. You know, on the Fed side, we're

00:24:11
not hearing much. We're hearing some stuff on

00:24:13
civil look cases, but we aren't hearing much from the feds about

00:24:15
Diddy. We're not hearing much from the

00:24:17
feds about Epstein. All crickets because that's the

00:24:20
way they do it. But of course, that's always

00:24:22
talking about accountability and consequences.

00:24:24
When are we going to have accountability and consequences?

00:24:26
And when we come back, that's exactly what we're going to talk

00:24:28
about. CNN, of all places, Scott

00:24:31
Jennings. When is accountability coming

00:24:33
for those who lied to the American people about Biden's

00:24:35
condition? Staying tuned.

00:24:37
Big, big talk radio show. I'll be right back.

00:25:10
All right, it's your favorite show, the big, big talk radio

00:25:14
show. We're your hosts, Lance

00:25:15
Migliacho and George Banzi. We are live in Denver and New

00:25:19
York City. We're talking about

00:25:21
accountability. When will we see accountability?

00:25:25
That's a big question because you know what, we have yet to

00:25:28
see any accountability, especially with any government

00:25:31
figures that are corrupt, known criminal organizations like the

00:25:36
Biden crime family, but it goes on and on.

00:25:38
I mean, we're talking about people in his administration,

00:25:42
people in the media. But Lance, I want to bring

00:25:45
something up. You know, we're just talking

00:25:48
about Biden pardoning, pardoning people, right?

00:25:51
A lot of pardons and we knew about his cognitive decline

00:25:59
since since he got into office, even before he got into office.

00:26:02
And yet everybody hit it from the public, from all his aides

00:26:07
to all the media. They just hit it until it came

00:26:11
on stage in the debate and they couldn't hide it no more because

00:26:13
it was live. But here's you know, I don't

00:26:16
even think Joe Biden knows who he's pardoning.

00:26:19
You can't you can't put him at fault because according to all

00:26:23
the reports have been coming out about his cognitive decline that

00:26:27
all his age were keeping him hidden from everybody.

00:26:29
He wasn't really making decisions because he's not

00:26:32
really mentally capable of doing it, which is a scary thought.

00:26:35
It's like here's a guy that hold that can has the nuclear codes

00:26:39
in the football and let's say it comes time where he's got to

00:26:43
break his little card and read off the codes.

00:26:45
You probably couldn't even read them off to verify that it's a

00:26:47
nuclear launch in that sense. So I don't really put blame on

00:26:53
him for the last few years about decision made because let's face

00:26:57
it, I don't think he was making decisions.

00:26:59
Who was making those decisions, whether it be staff, I don't

00:27:03
know. But there needs to be

00:27:04
accountability right there. And shame on his wife, Jill

00:27:07
Biden and his family's kids for even allowing their father or

00:27:11
husband to even go through this. They're just using this man.

00:27:16
They allowed, let's say the other puppets, whoever running

00:27:19
them, to use them, whether it be Obama, Soros, whoever it is.

00:27:23
And it's crazy. But well, here's the bottom

00:27:26
line. Even dementia and Alzheimer

00:27:28
patients have moments of what I would call lucidity when they're

00:27:32
actually lucid and know what's going on.

00:27:34
He knew he was struggling. People have made it obvious that

00:27:37
he was now, you know, Scott Jennings, which of course he's

00:27:40
he's the conservative breakout media star of 2024.

00:27:43
Jennings. He's he's been doing some great

00:27:45
work. Even though he's on Cnni got to

00:27:46
say that the guy's really put some stuff on front St.

00:27:49
You know, he's just calling out the Democrats and the media for

00:27:52
repeatedly covering up Biden's condition.

00:27:54
And the question is, when does covering up become a crime?

00:27:58
When do we say that these people committed seditious conspiracy

00:28:02
treason against the United States because they covered up

00:28:04
the mental state or the mental deficiency and maybe even the

00:28:08
health state of Joe Biden? We've heard lots of rumors that

00:28:11
he may not even live out a year based on the way he's declining

00:28:14
right now. And you got to admit a couple of

00:28:17
his public appearances. He looks just like he's out of

00:28:19
out of his gourd. You know, So this may be the

00:28:21
biggest scandal in America. And you have to look at the

00:28:24
facts of it. This is went on for a very long

00:28:27
time. The, and what Jenny says is and

00:28:30
the level and volume of people who dedicated themselves to

00:28:33
lying to everyone at home about this man's condition for four

00:28:37
straight years up to the summer is breathtaking.

00:28:40
Now, the Wall Street Journal's even talking about interviews

00:28:43
with nearly 50 people and current and former White House

00:28:45
staffers who interact directly with the president revealed that

00:28:48
Biden's stamina issues were apparent even during his first

00:28:51
few months in office. I mean, this guy was napping and

00:28:55
vacationing like nobody's business.

00:28:57
He's taken more vacation days than any other president in U.S.

00:29:00
history. So that's pretty, that's a

00:29:03
pretty stunning, you know, stunning clan.

00:29:05
Stunning fact, really. It's this is an absolute

00:29:08
scandal. Let's play this media clip.

00:29:10
As for the scandals, the national security risk, here we

00:29:12
go. I just have to ask when the

00:29:14
accountability is going to come for every single person who sat

00:29:19
in front of a television who held some position of

00:29:21
responsibility and lied their rear end off about what they

00:29:25
were seeing behind closed doors. People came on television and

00:29:28
said, oh, I'm with him all day and he's really engaged and he's

00:29:32
doing the job. He's running circles around us

00:29:35
and these videos are cheap fakes.

00:29:36
And on and on and on. Brazen lying by people who work

00:29:40
for our government, and they lied to us about it.

00:29:44
I mean, I'd like to see him start off with, let's say,

00:29:46
Champasaki Afro Chucky, you know?

00:29:50
I just have to ask. Sorry, there's no doubt.

00:29:52
I mean, there's no doubt. You're right.

00:29:54
What about? What about they?

00:29:55
Need to get started. The question is, is the Trump

00:29:57
administration, even though they're not in yet, are they

00:29:59
prepared to have these people face accountability and

00:30:02
consequences? And that's my biggest concern.

00:30:04
We talked about it the first time President Trump ran.

00:30:07
He was going to drain the swamp and he didn't drain a puddle.

00:30:10
And now here we are. Is is this going to be the turn?

00:30:13
Because I believe this, if these people don't face consequences,

00:30:17
what's that's just enabling the next round of people to do the

00:30:21
same thing. A little fear in them, maybe the

00:30:24
fact that these previous people, maybe even Jen Psaki, maybe Afro

00:30:28
Chucky, The truth of the matter is maybe KJP, if if she faces

00:30:32
these consequences, will the next round of press secretaries

00:30:35
maybe behave in a different manner?

00:30:37
I think so. If after Chuck, he was, let's

00:30:39
say Trump gets through his four years and KJP was sitting in

00:30:43
jail for a 10 year sentence and the next round came in, I think

00:30:46
the next press secretary would be a much more honest person.

00:30:49
I think that's the problem. When you don't have a

00:30:51
consequences, when you don't have accountability, when you

00:30:54
don't have oversight, you've got nothing but a bunch of brazen

00:30:57
criminality. And that's what we've got in DC

00:30:59
right now, George. Listen, we're going to take it a

00:31:02
step further because let's look at our Intel agencies.

00:31:04
You can't tell me that they didn't know about Joe Biden's

00:31:07
cognitive decline and they're and, and they're allowing

00:31:11
whoever it is to make national security decisions for the

00:31:17
American people in this country when his when his mental

00:31:21
capacity is that so diminished, Isn't that a national security

00:31:25
threat? 1. 100% I mean, look what look

00:31:28
what they did in Afghanistan. The botched withdrawal got

00:31:32
killed. What was it, 8 shoulder, eight

00:31:34
soldiers, 12 soldiers, I think it was, yeah.

00:31:37
I mean, if we had a president that was mentally capable, would

00:31:40
they have done it that way? Probably not because you know

00:31:42
what? They just did another softball

00:31:44
interview with him and they asked him, you know, is there

00:31:47
anything you would do different? And he and he didn't come up

00:31:49
with anything. He didn't say anything.

00:31:51
No, he ran the whole country perfect.

00:31:55
I mean, yeah, first thing called in my mind was the Afghan thing

00:31:58
where where people lost lives. Let's let's switch gears and go

00:32:02
to this next story. Let's talk about Christmas for a

00:32:04
minute. Let's talk about, you know,

00:32:06
getting together with your family members, going shopping,

00:32:08
going to events, going to parties.

00:32:11
And let's look at it on a global scale, how people all around the

00:32:14
globe are, you know, getting ready to enjoy the holiday.

00:32:17
This terrorist attack in Germany is just another example of the

00:32:22
miserable situation we're within with a lot of people around this

00:32:25
globe. The stair sector right now,

00:32:27
they've got 11 dead and 80 injured.

00:32:30
And so, so I mean, this is a crazy one.

00:32:33
Adult and toddler died after a car plowed into a crowd.

00:32:35
That's only one example. There's serious injuries.

00:32:38
Some people might not make up. 68 people in all were hurt.

00:32:41
At least that's the number so far.

00:32:43
And the guy that got arrested, he acted alone.

00:32:46
He's supposed to be a 50 year old man and a doctor from Saudi

00:32:49
Arabia who works in one of the towns there in, in in Germany.

00:32:54
And it's about 100 miles West of Berlin where he works.

00:32:57
I just can't figure out. Now, of course, they're saying

00:33:00
that the perpetrator of this Christmas attack, George, is a

00:33:03
fugitive from Saudi Arabia. The German government refused to

00:33:07
extradite him despite requests from the Saudi government many

00:33:11
times exciting human rights concerns.

00:33:13
So the government had the opportunity to get rid of this

00:33:16
guy. They knew he was that he was a

00:33:18
fugitive for Saudi Arabia. Why didn't they do it, George?

00:33:22
Why did they allow this guy to stay and then go ahead and do

00:33:25
this? Do you have any idea what the,

00:33:27
what the, you know, the complicity of the government is?

00:33:30
I mean, these people that got injured and died, their

00:33:33
families, the government is going to owe them, I believe,

00:33:35
hundreds of millions of dollars. I didn't know he he was a

00:33:40
fugitive wanted by Saudi Arabia. I didn't.

00:33:42
That's something new. I just heard that.

00:33:43
Yeah. Wow.

00:33:45
But he was a doctor too, right? Yeah, when he was given asylum,

00:33:49
when he applied for citizenship in Germany, he was given asylum

00:33:52
by Germany. And and of course, when they

00:33:54
came back to Germany, Germany refused to extradite him.

00:33:57
So this is how he repaid the favor by committing this mass

00:34:00
massacre. This is this gets interesting.

00:34:05
They should, you know what the people should sue him because I

00:34:07
know there's claims of two dead but I'm hearing there was like 8

00:34:11
dead people die. No, no, the death, murder, I

00:34:14
just talked about that one toddler and that parent.

00:34:16
You're right. I think it might even be 11 now.

00:34:18
They've got a lot of people that are in very bad shape because

00:34:20
this guy, if you saw the video, which was just horrendous, he

00:34:24
plowed through the crowd at a high rate of speed, but people

00:34:27
were just flying in the air. I know, I've seen it.

00:34:29
It was crazy. And nobody really knows why he

00:34:32
did it other, I don't know if it's a Muslim, Christian thing.

00:34:35
I don't know what happened. But this guy should have been

00:34:37
extradite. The truth of the matter is he

00:34:39
was wanted by the Saudi Arabian government.

00:34:41
Why did Germany refuse to extradite him?

00:34:44
And this is the problem. Europe is really destroying

00:34:47
itself from within. This is a pattern where

00:34:49
government officials are getting involved with this and they're

00:34:53
promoting and supporting this illegal immigration invasion.

00:34:56
They've got flat criminals just like we did here in the United

00:34:59
States. I guarantee if we ran a

00:35:00
background check, if we were able to do it and we could

00:35:02
locate all 30 or 35 illegal invaders in our country,

00:35:06
if we could even find them, I'll bet you if we ran background

00:35:09
checks on all of them, they're probably 50.

00:35:11
Sixty, 70% of them are probably people with criminal histories,

00:35:15
long criminal histories on Interpol lists that have been

00:35:19
ejected from other countries, just like like, like them just

00:35:21
dumping their trash here in the United States.

00:35:24
And this is the same situation all over Europe.

00:35:29
It is. I mean, we're all facing that,

00:35:31
but what are you going to do? You're going to live and learn.

00:35:35
You got to learn the hard way. What we need to do here is take

00:35:38
action, support the new administration, support Tom

00:35:42
Holman. Let's get these people out of

00:35:44
here. If they want to come in legally,

00:35:46
that's one thing. I want legal integration.

00:35:47
I want doctors and engineers, but I don't want people that are

00:35:51
wanted in other countries. I don't want people with long

00:35:53
lists of felonies from other countries.

00:35:55
I don't want murderers and rapists and kidnappers and

00:35:58
Carkel connected and transnational gang members.

00:36:01
And that's what we're getting right now.

00:36:03
Stay tuned. Big, big talk radio show.

00:36:04
We'll be right back. When we come back, we're going

00:36:06
to talk about the generosity of a superstar NFL quarterback in

00:36:10
the making. Christmas Big week talk Rio

00:36:14
show. Be right back.

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OK, the big, big talk radio show is back.

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00:40:11
We make it simple for you, right Lance?

00:40:14
No doubt, you know, and that that new crypto product of

00:40:17
theirs is going to be unbelievable because for those

00:40:19
people that don't really understand crypto, it creates a

00:40:22
very Safeway to transact, put your IRA in there and your

00:40:26
investment and really take care of your your investment.

00:40:28
Have somebody watching it for you that is an expert like the

00:40:30
Genesis Coal Group. So that's going to be an amazing

00:40:33
product. You have to check us out.

00:40:34
We'll be giving you more details and don't forget to catch us on

00:40:36
Rumble for a lot of that. We'll be happy.

00:40:38
We are on our global finance Forum show that's every Friday

00:40:40
at noon. So I George, it's It's rare that

00:40:44
the word generous, an NFL quarterback can get used in the

00:40:47
same. Sentence it's not really Lance,

00:40:49
you know really no, I I've seen this over the over the years.

00:40:54
You just don't see so much in the news.

00:40:56
But I'm I'm. Going to go here.

00:40:58
Maybe you're right. 49ers Brock Purdy, the quarterback he

00:41:02
impressed, his offensive lineman, he bought him brand new

00:41:04
cars for Christmas. Yeah, I've always, I've always

00:41:06
seen either quarterback, quarterbacks buying their

00:41:08
lineman, either they buy them Rolex watches.

00:41:10
There's always something they do for their lineman.

00:41:12
You just don't, you know? You don't see or hear about it

00:41:15
too much. But you know what's interesting

00:41:16
about this one? This guy was a third string

00:41:18
rookie and then and all of a sudden he's just been killing

00:41:20
it, right? You know what happened those the

00:41:22
guys in front of him got injured, he moved forward.

00:41:25
What's interesting is he's only making $1 a year right

00:41:28
now, which I think is quite interesting because 10 cars at

00:41:32
80 or 90 grand apiece, because they were, five of them were to

00:41:35
Toyota Sequoias and four of them were Toyota Tundra pickups and

00:41:39
basically his offensive tackles like Nick does Keshi said he

00:41:45
was, Oh my God, I can't believe this.

00:41:47
And they were all listen to the Purr Purdy.

00:41:49
That Purr is Purdy and they're joking around.

00:41:52
You know, it's probably the greatest gift I've ever got in

00:41:54
my life. But this is some serious money.

00:41:56
We're talking about those Tundras and Sequoias.

00:41:58
They've got to be 8090, maybe 100 grand apiece.

00:42:01
So it's pretty incredible. But don't get me wrong.

00:42:04
I hope they gave him a deal. He bought like 10 cars about,

00:42:07
you know? And and who knows, maybe, maybe

00:42:09
Toyota chipped in. I don't really know what.

00:42:11
And don't get me wrong, this guy's on his way to probably a

00:42:13
monster contract because you have to look at his track record

00:42:17
here. You know, he's, he's a, you

00:42:19
know, he was the he, I think he was one of the last picks in the

00:42:21
NFL draft. Mr. Irrelevant, you know, and of

00:42:24
course he's stunned fans during his rookie season when he took

00:42:27
over the starting role, you know, for that as a third string

00:42:29
quarterback following injuries to Trey Lance and eventually

00:42:32
Jimmy Garoppolo. And he just killed it, right?

00:42:36
Took him all the way almost. And then he got a little injury.

00:42:39
But he's playing at a really high level.

00:42:41
So let's face it, he's going to get a major contract.

00:42:43
No big deal. I'm sure these guys appreciate

00:42:45
it. But I love to see goodwill like

00:42:46
this, especially when the guy's getting ready to make tons of

00:42:49
money and he's and he's making sure the guys that are helping

00:42:51
him achieve that goal, you know, do it also.

00:42:54
So it's great news. Listen, Haktua, we talked about

00:42:59
it before. You know about that massive

00:43:01
crypto rug pull on this meme coin.

00:43:03
She was involved that they say she made 10 million.

00:43:05
I don't know if she did, lawyers have ramped up.

00:43:09
She put herself into a self induced sleep coma and that's

00:43:12
that's sarcasm. She said she was going to sleep

00:43:14
on a very, very not well controlled spaces event, went to

00:43:19
sleep and then weeks later she was still nowhere to be seen.

00:43:23
She's now retained counsel. George, what do you think?

00:43:25
What do you think is going to happen here?

00:43:27
Well, it's rightfully she should retain counsel because she's

00:43:31
going to get sued whether she knew it or not.

00:43:35
It's her own. She's got to take responsibility

00:43:37
because when you allow somebody to use your name, you better

00:43:39
know what they're going to be using it for.

00:43:41
Do your homework and research. You are complicit.

00:43:44
It's your response. You're responsible because

00:43:46
you're making your, you made a big name for yourself off of

00:43:50
something that's really stupid, but you got some fame and, and

00:43:55
now you just took advantage of all the people that were

00:43:57
following you and, you know, trusted you just threw them

00:44:00
under the rug. Well, she went to what happened

00:44:04
was it was on this on that December 3rd podcast, I think,

00:44:07
and she went anywho, I'm after it got launched, she went,

00:44:11
anywho, I'm going to go to bed and I'll see you guys tomorrow.

00:44:13
And then two weeks later, she was nowhere to be seen.

00:44:15
She wasn't doing any of her podcast episodes.

00:44:17
Now she's made a statement. I want to read this and then you

00:44:20
guys can make your own determination.

00:44:21
She said. I take this situation extremely

00:44:23
seriously and I want to address my fans, the investors who have

00:44:27
been affected in the broader community.

00:44:28
I am fully cooperating with and I am committed to assisting the

00:44:31
legal team representing the individual impacted as well as

00:44:33
to help uncover the truth, hold the responsible parties

00:44:36
accountable and resolve this matter.

00:44:38
If you have experienced losses related to this, please contact

00:44:40
Berwick Law using the link below.

00:44:43
Now to me, that's kind of her just trying to make sure that it

00:44:47
doesn't get directed at her, that gets directed at other

00:44:49
people. The lawsuit.

00:44:50
What do you think, George? Well, you know, she made what

00:44:53
did she pocket off this 50 million for herself?

00:44:56
Nah, they said 51 guy that was kind of is kind of an expert

00:45:00
Coffee Zilla who's out there that researches a lot of the rug

00:45:02
pulls, He's kind of a big deal on YouTube for rug bulls.

00:45:05
He said something to the effect that he thinks she walked with

00:45:07
10 million. Now they've identified a lot of

00:45:09
wallets that were part of the team where these were wallets

00:45:13
that benefited tremendously from the rug pull because the coin

00:45:16
started to really take off. And then of course it took off

00:45:18
and everybody rug pulled. So it's one of those things

00:45:21
they've tracked back a lot of it.

00:45:23
I don't know where the, the, where the, you know, the law

00:45:25
firm is seeing it. Maybe she just got taken

00:45:27
advantage of. I have no idea.

00:45:29
But there was a couple of statements going around that she

00:45:31
was only paid like a like a fee, a flat fee to to.

00:45:35
Pull the coin. My my, my point is did she, did

00:45:39
she forgo her fee and and that money she made didn't give it

00:45:42
back to the people that lost their money?

00:45:44
No idea. You know, she is working with

00:45:46
the law firm that's got that's come out that's looking for

00:45:48
everybody that got damaged because they're going to sue the

00:45:50
hell out of this. Because I guess the guys that

00:45:52
promoted the coin, the company behind it, supposedly they've

00:45:56
had a pattern of doing this and they've also made a lot of

00:45:58
money. How come there's no arrests?

00:46:00
How come this is fraud? This is fraud, isn't it?

00:46:03
Yeah. Wouldn't you characterize this?

00:46:04
It was almost like insider trading in in in essence.

00:46:07
Well, and that's the difficulty, right?

00:46:09
You're talking about the wild, Wild West right now in

00:46:11
cryptocurrency. So there isn't really like the

00:46:13
SEC really doesn't have any laws in place.

00:46:16
They try to use stock laws, but they don't really apply to

00:46:18
cryptocurrency. So it's a tricky situation.

00:46:21
And I think when you look at this it, you have to, you have

00:46:24
to think that, yeah, you have to wonder who did this?

00:46:27
Why did they do it? Of course it was to make money.

00:46:29
We know why they did it. But the point is, did she

00:46:32
benefit? Was she part of the strategy?

00:46:34
And now is she just trying to cover her tracks?

00:46:35
We'll have to wait and see on this.

00:46:38
Well, listen, she's going to be in for a big surprise because

00:46:42
regardless, she's going to be held accountable because it's

00:46:45
her name. She should have been.

00:46:46
She should have known what she's signing her name to or allowing

00:46:49
him to use her name. I'm not.

00:46:50
I don't want to hear her. She's a dumb blonde girl.

00:46:54
I just don't want to hear it. No.

00:46:56
Well, at least you're not to worry.

00:46:57
She's committed to continuing her podcast as soon as she

00:47:00
clears up what her involvement in Hawk actually was.

00:47:03
I mean, I can't see that podcast going anywhere.

00:47:05
I mean. Weren't you stressing?

00:47:06
Weren't you stressing about that podcast not being available,

00:47:09
George? No, I never even listened to

00:47:12
her. She sounds, she sounds like Bart

00:47:14
Simpson, by the way. Yeah, she does have a little

00:47:17
that Bart Simpson. Yeah, well, Bitcoin's on the

00:47:20
move, but in the wrong direction for the moment.

00:47:22
I don't, I think it's a temporary flip, but Bitcoin slid

00:47:25
below 100 this morning. It's at 97 and change of

00:47:29
course, the global crypto market took a big dip, 1.2%, reducing

00:47:37
it to only 3.5 trillion, which is still a giant number.

00:47:39
It's way up for the year. We know that already, but that's

00:47:42
they took a big plunge. I think it went to 92 the

00:47:44
other day and that was from a high of 108.

00:47:47
But that was catalyzed by, of course, once again, the Federal

00:47:49
Reserve who said they will not hold Bitcoin in its reserve,

00:47:54
dropping the world's largest cryptocurrency to dip the 7%

00:47:57
we're talking about right now. It said we're not allowed to own

00:48:00
Bitcoin now. Since when is the Federal

00:48:02
Reserve ever decided that they're not allowed to do

00:48:04
something, Georgia? They ever said that?

00:48:06
Ever. I never heard them say anything

00:48:08
like I I'm. It's mind boggling.

00:48:11
I think you know what? I know why.

00:48:13
Trump should do them all a big favor.

00:48:15
Just abolish the Federal Reserve.

00:48:19
Yeah, I agree 100%. This is what they use, the

00:48:21
Federal Reserve access that we can own.

00:48:23
And we're not looking for a law change.

00:48:25
What we can own and we're not looking for a law change.

00:48:27
That's the kind of thing for Congress to consider.

00:48:29
But we're not looking for a law change at the Fed.

00:48:31
Yeah, because they don't want their their their Fiat currency

00:48:34
to be undermined by cryptocurrency because at the

00:48:37
end of the day, that would be the most damaging thing for

00:48:39
them. If the US dollar wasn't it

00:48:41
wasn't the wasn't the exchange of choice for the United States

00:48:44
government, they'd be out of business.

00:48:46
I think it's time to put them out of business.

00:48:47
And the Fed, as Ron Paul would say, enough is enough.

00:48:52
We'll see what happens. Of course, Bitcoin exchange

00:48:54
traded ETFs, there's they made their debut.

00:48:57
So I think this is a limited dip.

00:48:58
We'll see it come back. Go back to the gold standard.

00:49:01
I agree. All right, listen, you guys, the

00:49:03
big Ming talk radio show is just about out of time.

00:49:05
Don't forget to find our regular show on Rumble.

00:49:07
That's right, Rumble, the big Ming show on Rumble.

00:49:09
Great interviews, great guests, lots of great information.

00:49:12
And don't forget to file follow G Ballantine on X, Lance

00:49:16
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00:49:22
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00:49:26
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00:49:29
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00:49:36
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00:49:39
God, Country, family. I want to wish everybody a very

00:49:42
Merry Christmas to you and your families.

00:49:44
God bless.