- 5/6/2025
📢 Watch as President Donald Trump dives into significant policy changes in his latest speech! In this thrilling 720p video, witness firsthand the power of executive orders taking shape as Trump highlights his agenda and ambitions for the nation. Gain insights into the implications of these actions in key areas such as the economy, healthcare, and national security! 💥 Don’t miss out on the historical context and reactions from allies and critics alike. 🎥 Hit the PLAY button now! Remember to LIKE, SHARE, and SUBSCRIBE for more insider updates! @DonaldTrump #ExecutiveOrders #Politics #CurrentEvents #GovernmentNews #C-DramaMusicDance
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NewsTranscript
00:00It's exciting with the NFL, right?
00:03Well, thank you very much.
00:24We have some important signings today
00:27and some important statements to make
00:29about what we're doing in the world of medicine,
00:33Bobby and the group,
00:34and maybe Will will do something
00:37which will be very enlightening
00:39and I think people are going to like it.
00:41But it was a little gift that's being presented.
00:43So, Will, do you want to take over?
00:45Yes, sir. So, earlier today,
00:47the House of Representatives transmitted this over for you.
00:50This is a record of the Electoral College votes
00:53in the 2024 election.
00:55It shows your total of 312 votes.
00:58And the letter opener at the bottom of this framed display
01:02is actually one of the letter openers
01:04that was used to open the electoral votes during the counting.
01:07That's great.
01:08How many votes did the other side get?
01:10Less than you, sir. Significant.
01:12By how much?
01:13I don't want to get this wrong. It was 226.
01:16Oh. But the news said it was going to be the other way around.
01:21The news said it was going to be a lot closer than that.
01:23No, they said it was going to be a lot closer than that.
01:25It wasn't close.
01:26So, 312 to 226. That's pretty good.
01:30Okay. Thank you very — thank them for a minute very much.
01:34Yes, sir. We'll tell the speaker.
01:35We have a number of executive orders for your attention today, sir.
01:39The first relates to gain-of-function research.
01:42Gain-of-function research is a type of biomedical research
01:45where pathogens are — adulterated viruses are adulterated
01:50to make them more potent or to change the way that they function.
01:53This — many people believe that gain-of-function research
01:57was one of the key causes of the COVID pandemic that struck us in the last decade.
02:03What this executive order does — first of all, it provides powerful new tools
02:08to enforce the ban on federal funding for gain-of-function research abroad.
02:13It also strengthens other oversight mechanisms related to that issue
02:18and creates an overarching strategy to ensure that biomedical research in general
02:24is being conducted safely and in a way that ultimately protects human health more.
02:29It's a big deal. It could have been that we wouldn't have had the problem we had.
02:33A lot of people say that, sir.
02:35If we had this done earlier. Thank you. Okay. Go ahead.
02:42Many actions that you've taken so far in this administration, sir,
02:45are related to on-shoring manufacturing and on-shoring supply chains.
02:50One of the most important supply chain issues we currently face as a country
02:54is our pharmaceutical supply chain.
02:57This is an executive order intended to promote domestic manufacturing of pharmaceuticals.
03:02It streamlines the permitting processes that go into building
03:06domestic pharmaceutical manufacturing sites.
03:09It centers a lot of the environmental permitting process,
03:12which is quite significant within the EPA,
03:14and it takes other actions designed to ensure that we're bringing pharmaceutical jobs
03:19and pharmaceutical manufacturing back to the United States of America.
03:22Okay. Good. That's what it's all about, right? Very important.
03:28We're going to have a big announcement next week on some of this kind of thing,
03:33but more related to costs. The costs of medicines and drugs.
03:38Because we're being ripped off, as you know, very badly.
03:42Being ripped off compared to the rest of the world. Go ahead.
03:45Next, we have a series of proclamations for your attention, sir.
03:48This is a proclamation declaring National Mental Health Awareness Month.
03:52Mental health and that basket of issues has been a major priority for Secretary Kennedy
03:57since he got into office. It's been a major priority for your administration.
04:01This is just a proclamation declaring this month to be National Mental Health Awareness Month.
04:07ever.
04:17See? No other things.
04:19No other things.
04:20Isn't it nice to have a president that doesn't need an autopin
04:23so that somebody that you have no idea who the person is,
04:26who's actually the president of our country.
04:28They have to look into that autopin stuff.
04:30to that auto pen stuff.
04:31That's not right, what took place before years.
04:37Very important. Go ahead.
04:39The President, thank you, sir.
04:43Next, this is another proclamation declaring this week
04:46to be National Small Business Week.
04:49As you've said many times before,
04:50small business is actually big business.
04:52Small businesses are key drivers of the American economy.
04:56Your administration has taken quite dramatic steps
04:59to improve small business, to help small businesses.
05:02This is just a proclamation that recognizes those efforts
05:06and announces the National Small Business Week.
05:09The President, before I go any further,
05:11I'd like to just, as you see behind me,
05:14Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is doing a fantastic job.
05:17Director Jay Bhattacharya, National Institute of Health,
05:21and a very special person.
05:24I interviewed him personally.
05:26I liked him immediately.
05:29I interviewed a lot of people, but I liked him.
05:32Dr. Martin McCary, likewise,
05:34an FDA commissioner who's really in there,
05:37plugging hard, right?
05:38But we have some big things coming up.
05:40And, Will, everybody knows.
05:42So I just wanted to thank all of you.
05:43Vince Haley is around here someplace.
05:45Where's Vince?
05:46Vince is great. Come on up here, Vince.
05:48You should be up here.
05:50He's been with me for a long time.
05:51He's an expert on policy and speech writing, too,
05:56along with Ross, right?
05:57Mr. Yes, sir.
05:58The President is so great.
05:59It's great to have you on.
06:01Bobby, do you have anything to say?
06:02We signed some very important documents
06:04having to do with health.
06:06Do you have anything to say?
06:07Mr. Mr. President, a gain-of-function
06:10is an historic day, the end of gain-of-function,
06:13research, funding by the federal government,
06:16and also controls by private corporations
06:19on gain-of-function studies.
06:22This was the kind of study that was engaged in
06:24by the United States military and intelligence agencies
06:29beginning in 1947.
06:31By 1969, the CIA said that they had reached nuclear equivalency,
06:37that they could kill the entire U.S. population
06:41for $0.29 a person.
06:43That year, President Nixon went to Fort Detrick
06:46and announced a unilateral end to this kind of research,
06:50what they called dual-use research,
06:53research that was for vaccination
06:55and also for military purposes.
06:58He then persuaded over 180 countries
07:01to sign the Bioweapons Charter in 1973.
07:05That basically ended gain-of-function research
07:09around the globe until 2002.
07:13Or 2001, after the anthrax attacks, we passed the Patriot Act,
07:19and the Patriot Act had a provision, a little-known provision in it,
07:23that said that although the Bioweapons Charter is still in effect
07:28and the Geneva Convention is still in effect,
07:31U.S. federal officials who violate it cannot be prosecuted.
07:35And that relaunched bioweapons arms race, and that was driven
07:41by gain-of-function research.
07:43In 2014, three of those bugs escaped from U.S. labs,
07:49and President Obama declared a moratorium on future use,
07:53and instead a lot of that research was moved offshore
07:57to the Wuhan lab, we have launched bioweapons arms race
08:03all around the country, all around the world,
08:05so that China is engaged in it, developing all kinds of weapons
08:09using AI and CRISPR technologies that are really devastating.
08:14Russia is deeply engaged in it, Iran, and many other countries.
08:18It's a kind of weapon that always has blowback, there's always bad news,
08:24and the justification for this kind of weaponry was,
08:28and this kind of research was always that we have to do this,
08:32develop vaccines to counter a future pandemic.
08:38In all of the history of gain-of-function research,
08:42we can't point to a single good thing that's come from it.
08:46And today, I commend President Trump for his courage
08:50and his vision in ending U.S. bioweapons research.
08:55And Jay, I'd love you to talk a little bit about it.
08:58Yeah, Jay, please.
09:00This is a historic day.
09:02The conduct of this dangerous gain-of-function research,
09:06which aims at taking pathogens and making them more virulent,
09:10more transmissible in humans, many scientists believe is responsible
09:14for the COVID pandemic.
09:17The conduct of this research does not protect us against pandemics,
09:22as some people might say.
09:23It doesn't protect us against other nations.
09:26What it does is there's always a danger that in doing this research,
09:31it might leak out just by accident even and cause a pandemic.
09:36Any nation that engages in this research endangers their own population,
09:39as well as the world, as we saw during the COVID pandemic.
09:43This proclamation makes it so that most science actually poses no threat
09:50to human populations.
09:51The vast majority of science will go on under this as normal.
09:54The fraction of this research that has the risk of causing a pandemic,
09:59harming every single person on the face of the earth,
10:02we're going to put this proclamation, this executive order,
10:05puts in place a framework to make sure that the public has a say,
10:09that if such a risk is being taken,
10:12that only scientists alone won't be able to decide that.
10:15That, in fact, the public can say, no, don't take this risk.
10:18And I'm really, really proud to be here with President Trump,
10:20who's signed this order, ending this research,
10:23and for the first time putting in place a real regulatory framework
10:26to make it go away forever.
10:28The President Trump So it can leak out,
10:30like from Wuhan, and a lot of people think that.
10:33I think I said that right from day one, it leaked out,
10:35whether it was to the girlfriend or somebody else.
10:37But scientists walked outside to have lunch with a girlfriend
10:42or was together with a lot of people.
10:45But that's how it leaked out, in my opinion.
10:47And I've never changed that opinion.
10:49So it can leak out innocently, stupidly, incompetently,
10:52but innocently and half destroy the world, right?
10:57The President Trump That's right.
10:58That's right, Mr. President. It's —
10:59The President Trump So, there are, I think, three leaks.
11:03I'm BSL-3 and BSL-4 labs.
11:05Our highest-rated laboratory is almost every week.
11:09There's no laboratory that does this right.
11:11There's no laboratory that's immune from leaks.
11:14And this is going to prevent those kind of inadvertent leaks
11:18from happening in the future and endangering humanity.
11:22The COVID outbreak cost 20 million lives
11:25and cost the world at least 25 trillion dollars.
11:31And this executive order is a precaution against us being involved
11:37in those — that kind of research in the future.
11:39The President Trump That's great.
11:41I'm very honored to do this.
11:43Marty, what do you have to say?
11:44The President It's unbelievable to think the entire nightmare
11:47of COVID was likely preventable.
11:50And you had good instincts early on, Mr. President,
11:53in suggesting it came from the Wuhan lab.
11:55That is now the leading theory among scientists.
11:57It was five miles from the hospital where it first broke out.
12:00So it's crazy to think that this entire nightmare
12:04was probably the result of some scientists
12:07messing with Mother Nature in a laboratory
12:10with technology exported from the United States,
12:13that is, inserting a furin cleavage site.
12:16So I hope this does some good in the world, Mr. President.
12:18Thank you for doing it.
12:19The President Does anybody have any questions on that?
12:21Yes, please.
12:22The Press On your proclamation,
12:23designating this Mental Health Awareness Month,
12:25can you speak to concerns people are having
12:27regarding your administration cutting a billion dollars
12:30in mental health programs from schools?
12:31The President Well, we're looking very closely
12:32at waste, fraud, and abuse,
12:34of which there's a tremendous amount of people on
12:38that shouldn't be on, illegal immigrants on,
12:42people that came into the country illegally.
12:45We have many of them, and we're looking for that.
12:47But for the population that's supposed to be there,
12:51it's perfecto.
12:53And they want us to do that.
12:54They don't want to have the waste, the fraud.
12:57And the fraud is big, by the way, or the abuse.
13:00A question? Yeah, please.
13:02The Press Thank you, Mr. President.
13:03I actually have a question for Secretary Kennedy,
13:05if you don't mind.
13:06The President Go ahead.
13:07The Press You mentioned the anthrax attacks of 2001.
13:09At Zero Hedge, we're working on a piece revisiting that.
13:12And I've heard you speak at length
13:13about how that was likely a conspiracy
13:16from the inside of the Bush administration.
13:18So with your new current position,
13:20would you consider re-looking into that,
13:22given the questions that I've heard you raise in the past?
13:25Well, we're not at this moment going back.
13:27I mean, you know, the FBI has already done
13:31an extensive investigation.
13:32They said that the Ames anthrax came from a U.S. lab.
13:39Their accusation was that it was released by a scientist
13:44called Bruce Ivins, who subsequently committed suicide.
13:48There are many people who believe that Bruce Ivins was falsely accused
13:52and that it was somebody else in the lab.
13:54It's not something that we're currently investigating,
13:57but it's something that the FBI, the fact that it came from a U.S. lab
14:03is something the FBI determined.
14:08Yeah, please.
14:09There have been several Maha-aligned bills being proposed
14:13throughout the country.
14:14And I wanted to know what your thought was on that
14:17and the progress that Secretary Kennedy is making, first.
14:21And second, when you, no, I'm sorry.
14:27Let's answer this.
14:28You want to go ahead?
14:29I mean, we've had a wave.
14:32I think we have Maha legislation now in 36 states.
14:37In the past two or three weeks, I've been to Arizona, to Utah,
14:41to West Virginia, to Indiana, to sign SNAP waivers to get candy
14:46and the soda off of SNAP.
14:48To change the school lunch program so that we're feeding our kids food
14:53instead of food-like substances that are made in laboratories.
14:58And to do a number of other initiatives that are being passed by,
15:05that are being driven by local Maha movement inspired by the president
15:10and that are being signed into law by various governors.
15:13And we're very, very grateful for that.
15:18We've invited Brooke Rollins and myself and invited the governors
15:22of all the states to apply for SNAP waivers so we make sure
15:26that the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program is actually paying
15:32for nutrition and not sodas.
15:34Ten percent is now going to soda.
15:37There's no nutrition in a soda.
15:38And at the same time, you have like 19 attorneys general suing you and the Trump administration.
15:45Like, what do you make of that?
15:46Who are they?
15:48Are they Democrats?
15:49Are they Democrats?
15:50Like, crooked Democrats?
15:54Like, really crooked Democrats?
15:56Is that who's suing?
15:57They know what.
15:58They know what they're doing.
16:00They're just, they're just hurting our country.
16:02These are very dishonest people.
16:05They've lost their way.
16:07They've lost their confidence.
16:08They have no confidence.
16:09They have no idea what they're doing.
16:12They don't even know what they're suing for.
16:15So it's just one of those things.
16:17Yeah, please.
16:18Mr. President, on the pharmaceutical side,
16:20have you made any determination on kind of what those tariff rates may look like
16:24and the timing of those?
16:26I have.
16:27I'll announce it over the next two weeks.
16:29Okay.
16:30Will, please.
16:31Oh, sorry, sir.
16:32Do you have anything to say about this morning, what we just discussed?
16:36We have had this crazy system in the United States where American pharma manufacturers
16:42in the United States are put through the wringer with inspections.
16:46And the foreign sites get off easy with scheduled visits, while we have surprise visits in the
16:52United States.
16:53Well, a scheduled visit is no inspection.
16:55So we are at the FDA delivering on this promise in the president's executive order and switching
17:02from announced to surprise inspections overseas.
17:06We're also not going to have our inspectors hanging out for three or four weeks.
17:09They're going to get in and out, and we're going to do more inspections with the same
17:13resources as a result.
17:14Good.
17:15Jay?
17:16I mean, I think it's very, very important that Americans have a drug supply, pharmaceutical
17:22supply that they can count on.
17:24It's — we saw during the COVID pandemic that the reliance on overseas production of pharmaceuticals
17:31led to shortages of essential medicines, and that's happened over and over again.
17:36Making the American — making America produce the drugs that it's long been able to produce
17:43is a huge priority.
17:44And this executive order that the president just signed is going to make that possible.
17:47The President of the United States, you're a big policy person.
17:49You've done so great for me for so long.
17:50What do you think?
17:51The President of the United States, you've done so great for me for so long.
17:52What do you think?
17:53Well, sir, you've always said it's vitally important that we have national self-sufficiency
17:58when it comes to critical pharmaceuticals.
17:59We learned that in 2020.
18:01It was a key campaign promise.
18:05We've seen shortages in the past of critical cancer drugs, people on chemotherapy.
18:11We have to produce those here at home, and this is an important contribution to doing
18:14that.
18:15Good.
18:17Any questions of them?
18:18Okay.
18:19Will?
18:20Two more, sir.
18:21We have a slate of 39 Senate-confirmed senior officials of your administration.
18:27This slate includes a significant number of new U.S. attorneys.
18:31Those will be the top prosecutors in judicial districts around the country who will prosecute
18:36crime and help advance your agenda.
18:41Okay.
18:42That's a lot of people, and they're very good people.
18:53I hope.
18:55Who knows?
18:56I hope so.
18:57Okay.
18:59And then, lastly, sir, we have another proclamation.
19:04This week, is national hurricane prepared this week?
19:08This is an issue that's particularly important, obviously, to your home state of Florida.
19:12This is just a proclamation recognizing National Hurricane Preparedness Week 2025.
19:21Okay.
19:22Thank you very much.
19:27I want to thank you.
19:36So, we're going to be having some conferences next week.
19:41I'll also be going to Saudi Arabia and other places.
19:46We'll be going to UAE and Qatar.
19:51And some of you will be going with us.
19:53We'll have an interesting time.
19:54But I think we're going to have another conference next week, which will be very important,
19:59having to do with the world of the medical.
20:02And I think we'll be very productive.
20:05Thank you, Doctor.
20:06These are really very important that we sign today.
20:08And thank you very much for being here.
20:09Thank you very much.
20:11Thank you, everybody.
20:12Thank you, sir.
20:13Thank you, guys.
20:16Thank you, sir.
20:17Thank you, sir.
20:18Thank you, sir.
20:19Thank you, sir.
20:20Oh, my goodness.
20:21You can exercise.
20:22Thank you, sir.
20:23You okay?
20:24I kept your camera off.
20:25Thank you, sir.
20:26Thank you, sir.
20:27Thank you, guys.
20:29Thank you, man.
20:30Thank you, sir.
20:31Thank you, sir.
20:32Thank you, sir.
20:33Thank you, sir.
20:34Thank you, sir.
20:35Oh, okay.
20:36Then I will assume that—yeah, it is.
20:38Okay.
20:39Sounds good.
20:40Oh, okay, then I will assume that, yeah, he is.
20:52Okay, sounds good.
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