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00:00on Saturday. I hope you enjoyed your Christmas celebrations with your families.
00:04Tonight, we're going to look back at some of my monologues from over the past few months.
00:08I know you love them. I really try to take time and great care to deliver to you,
00:13my wonderful audience, important and substantive topics every week. Whether we're looking at the
00:19border and illegal immigration, the Marxist-Islamist attack on our culture, or admiring
00:24President Trump's peace through strength foreign policy. But up first, I take you through the
00:30history of the Holocaust. The horrific Bondi Beach Hanukkah attack in Australia and the meteoric
00:35rise in worldwide anti-Semitism show us it's never been more critical to remember what happened
00:41in those death camps and to remain vigilant and fight back against the hatred. Go.
00:48One of the things that is troubling me a lot, and for which I am blessed to have this
00:54platform and be on this network, is the rewriting of our history, world history, in a way that is
01:02very dangerous and dark. Rewriting of World War II and what took place in World War II.
01:09We have a lot of propaganda going on because you now have a lot of these independent platforms.
01:15You have podcasters, you have the internet and social media, you have this movement on the left
01:20I've been talking about almost forever, the Marxist-Islamist fusion that's taking place.
01:26You have what I'll call this neo-fascist movement on the extreme right. And we constitutional conservatives,
01:31we patriotic Americans, we need to confront this with our ideas and our voices and explain what's true
01:38and what's false. We really shouldn't have to debate the Holocaust. We really shouldn't have to debate
01:46whether there was a Holocaust. And we shouldn't really have to debate that October 7th in Israel
01:52was another Holocaust committed again by Jew haters, America haters, Western haters. And yet here we are.
02:00So I thought, what a better way to approach this. And there's a lot of people out there,
02:05believe it or not, young people who really don't know what took place. So they're susceptible to
02:09all kinds of horrendous conspiracy theories and lies. And so I want to address that. And I thought
02:16that one of the best ways to approach this is with General Dwight Eisenhower. I mean, he was in charge
02:24of our forces and all through the Allied forces, all through World War II. And he reported to George
02:31Marshall. And I want to read some things that he said to you. And this is from the National Park
02:36Service. He said it to you. He wanted every generation to know about this. The generation
02:45that fought World War II knew about it. At some point learned about what was taking place. He wanted
02:52to make sure you knew about it. And your children and your grandchildren knew about it.
02:58And so I start this way. General Dwight Eisenhower was the supreme commander of the Allied expeditionary
03:06forces in Europe, orchestrated the defeat of Germany's Third Reich during World War II. And while his role
03:14as a military leader was important, of course, Eisenhower was equally crucial in the documentation
03:21of Nazi brutality and the truth of the Holocaust. Eisenhower's efforts to document the reality of
03:29concentration camps was driven by a profound sense of duty, both to history and humanity. Eisenhower knew
03:37that history was bound to repeat itself, if not properly addressed, and felt it was his responsibility
03:44to ensure that the horrors of the Holocaust was witnessed throughout the world. So here he is
03:49speaking from heaven to us, to the podcasters, to the so-called influencers, to the Marxists and the
04:00Islamists and all the rest of them who are trying to distort our history so young people don't have any
04:06idea what's taking place. It's our obligation to make sure they do. Having the Jewish population to
04:12blame for the problems that the German people were facing, this is after World War I and their defeat,
04:17was a critical part of the Nazi party and allowed the anti-Semitism to persist and become common
04:23within Nazi Germany. This is written by the Park Service. And they do a beautiful job, by the way.
04:29The Nazis were able to develop their plans for the final solution to their Jewish problem, quote unquote,
04:34based on the hatred of Jews within their country. And you see that building within our country,
04:40don't you? The final solution was the idea that the Nazi regime would eliminate European Jews through
04:46mass extermination, what is now known as the Holocaust. On April 4, 1945, near the end of the war,
04:58as our troops were moving through Europe, well, they found certain things like concentration camps.
05:05On April 4, 1945, the United States 602nd Tank Destroyers Battalion, the 4th Armored Division,
05:13and the 89th Infantry of the 3rd United States Army liberated Ordorff. Ordorff camp was an extension
05:20of Buchenwald concentration camp and supplied forced labor. On the day of liberation, the SS members of
05:27Ordorff evacuated many of the prisoners on death marches. As U.S. troops arrived, they found scenes
05:34of mass murder while also coming into contact with the camp's surviving prisoners. The living prisoners
05:41were starving, emaciated, and desperately in need of medical attention. Liberation did not end at Ordorff,
05:49and American troops would move on to discover and liberate multiple camps, including Dora-Mittebel,
05:58Dachau, Malthausen, and Buchenwald. General Dwight D. Eisenhower, General George Patton,
06:05and General Omar Bradley visited the concentration camp on April 12, 1945. While driving towards the camp,
06:13the surrounding atmosphere was overwhelming, with the smell of decaying flesh and dead bodies
06:19littering the streets. Eisenhower had, quote, never been so angry in his life, unquote, stating that the
06:27English language didn't even have words that could describe what he saw, quote, unquote. Eisenhower wrote
06:34to Winston Churchill following his time at Ordorff, stating that everything you read in the paper does
06:41not adequately describe what has really happened here, quote, unquote. He was profoundly impacted
06:48by the horrors that he witnessed and demanded that newspaper editors, representative groups,
06:54German civilians, and Allied soldiers bear witness. Upon Eisenhower's orders, American troops came in
07:01and photographed the camp to document its horrors. Additionally, U.S. troops in the surrounding areas
07:07were brought to Ordorff to bear witness. Eisenhower was forever changed by the horrors that he witnessed
07:13at Ordorff, so much so that he kept the images that he had taken in the den of his Gettysburg home.
07:22On April 19, one week after his visit to Ordorff, Eisenhower wrote to General George Marshall,
07:28chief of staff of the U.S. Army, insisting that more reporters, dignitaries, members of Congress
07:33bear witness to the same scenes he had experienced. Quote, conditions of indescribable horror prevail,
07:40unquote, Eisenhower wrote. Quote, I have visited one of these myself, and I assure you that whatever
07:46has been printed on them to date has been an understatement, unquote. Eisenhower's message to
07:53Marshall was powerful, and it spurred action. That same day, Marshall met with congressional leaders
07:58and began organizing trips for leaders of both the U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate
08:03to witness these same sites of terror. Departing on April 23, the congressional delegation spent
08:10several weeks in Europe. In the report on the trip, the delegation claimed that the Nazi regime had
08:15committed, quote, no less than organized crime against civilization and humanity, unquote. The delegation
08:23advocated for public release of concentration camp images, public release, to ensure that the American
08:30people and the world witnessed what had taken place. And at Eisenhower's insistence, in addition to the
08:37congressional delegation, members of the British Parliament toured concentration campsites. So did
08:43the American press. Marshall helped organize a trip for 18 American newspaper editors to see these same
08:49sites. By early May, the requests and coordination of other documentation trips became overwhelming.
08:57But we don't play any of this on TV today. Despite these forces of evil and darkness rising
09:05on the Marxist left and the neo-fascist right, despite these debates on the internet and social media and
09:13elsewhere, that the Holocaust occur and the platforming of people sympathetic with Hitler and the Third
09:21Reich, trashing Churchill and our country and our greatest generation, we can't sit silently while this is
09:28taking place, America. It's bubbling up. It's taking place. It's bubbling up. And Eisenhower gave us the way to deal with it.
09:38In fact, in his letter to George Marshall, April 15, 1945, Eisenhower wrote, and here's the relevant
09:47paragraph. First of all, he's writing about, here's what we're going to do to clean up this part of Europe,
09:51this city, as we're ending World War II. And then he adds, in the middle of his letter,
09:56on a recent tour of the Ford areas in First and Third Armies, I stopped momentarily at the salt mines to
10:06take a look at the German treasure. There's a lot of it. But the most interesting, although horrible,
10:12sight that I encountered during the trip was a visit to a German internment camp near Gotha.
10:18The things I saw beggared description. While I was touring the camp, I encountered three men who had been
10:25inmates and by one ruse or another had made their escape. I interviewed them to an interpreter.
10:31The visual evidence and the verbal testimony of starvation, cruelty, and bestiality were so
10:37overpowering as to leave me a bit sick. In one room where they were piled up, 20 or 30 naked men killed
10:44by starvation. George Patton would not even enter. He said he would get sick if he did so. I made the visit
10:52deliberately in order to be in a position to give first-hand evidence of the things, if ever in the
10:58future. There develops a tendency to change these allegations merely to propaganda, which is exactly
11:06what's happening in our colleges and universities and so forth. Now, Eisenhower wrote a very famous book
11:15called Crusade in Europe in 1948. On pages 408 and 409, he says, quote,
11:23the same day, April 12, 1945, I saw my first horror camp. It was near the town of Gotha. I've never felt
11:30able to describe my emotional reactions when I first came face to face with the indisputable evidence
11:37of Nazi brutality and ruthless disregard of every shred of decency. Up to that time, I'd known about it
11:44only generally or through secondary sources. I am certain, however, that I have never at any other
11:49time experienced an equal sense of shock. This is a man who led our troops through all kinds of battles.
11:55I visited every nook and cranny of the camp because I felt it my duty to be in a position from then on
12:01to testify at first-hand about these things in case they ever grew up at home, the belief or assumption
12:07that the stories of Nazi brutality were just propaganda. Some members of the visiting party were unable to
12:14through the ordeal. I not only did so, but as soon as I returned to Patton's headquarters that evening,
12:19I sent communications to both Washington and London, urging the two governments to send instantly to
12:25Germany a random group of newspaper editors and representative groups from the national legislatures.
12:31I felt that the evidence should be immediately placed before the American and British publics
12:36in a fashion that would leave no room for cynical doubt. On page 439 of his book,
12:43of all displaced persons, the Jews were in the most deplorable condition. For years they'd been beaten,
12:49starved, and tortured. And in Ike the soldier, as they knew him, he wrote, or Merrill Miller wrote,
12:57quoting Eisenhower, speaking on April 25th, 1945, to members of Congress and journalists who'd been shown
13:04Buchenwald the day before, quote, You saw only one camp yesterday, he told them. There are many others.
13:12Your responsibilities, I believe, extend into a great field, and informing the people at home of
13:18things like these atrocities is one of them. Nothing is covered up. We have nothing to conceal.
13:24The barbarous treatment these people received in the German concentration camps is almost unbelievable.
13:30I want you to see for yourself and be spokesman for the United States.
13:37Once Churchill learned about what was taking place from Eisenhower and others,
13:42he was appalled. He was disgusted. Hillsdale College, tremendous college under a tremendous
13:48president, Dr. Larry Arnn, who I've known for 40 years, an expert on Churchill, an expert on our
13:55country's history. And they have a Churchill project. And they point out July 11, 1944, Churchill wrote
14:05that he thought should be done about the Holocaust perpetrators. It appears in his memoirs in 1953,
14:12and it wasn't public until he wrote his memoirs. Prime Minister to Foreign Secretary, July 11, 1944,
14:19this is Churchill writing as Foreign Secretary. There's no doubt that this is probably the greatest
14:26and most horrible crime ever committed in the whole history of the world. And it has been done
14:31by scientific machinery, by nominally civilized men in the name of a great state in one of the leading
14:39races of Europe. It is quite clear that all concerned in this crime, who may fall into our hands, including
14:46the people who only obeyed orders by carrying out the butcheries, should be put to death after their
14:53association with the murders has been proved. I cannot therefore feel that this is the kind of
14:59ordinary case which is put through the protecting power, as for instance, the lack of feeding or sanitary
15:05conditions in some particular prisoner's camp. There should therefore, in my opinion, be no negotiations
15:12of any kind on this subject. Declarations should be made in public, so that everyone concerned with
15:18it will be hunted down and put to death. This is one of the reasons many people say that Benjamin Netanyahu
15:28is the Churchill of our time, and certainly in the Middle East, because that's his view. Nine months
15:35after the first authorization reports, this is April 1945, inspection of the scenes. Allied soldiers had
15:42uncovered many more examples of Nazi barbarism. Now Churchill addressed the House of Commons. He goes to
15:47the House of Commons not once, not twice, three times on this subject. No words can express the horror
15:57which is felt by His Majesty's government and their principal allies at the proofs of these frightful crimes,
16:04now daily coming into view. I have this morning received an informal message from General Eisenhower,
16:11saying that the new discoveries, particularly the Weimar, far surpass anything previously exposed.
16:18He invites me to send a body of members of parliament at once to his headquarters in order
16:23that they may themselves have ocular and first-hand proof of these atrocities. The matter is one of
16:29emergencies, as of course, it is not possible to arrest the process of decay in many cases.
16:35He talked about it again, April 26, 1945, and on and on. A lot of public voices of public officials
16:44condemning those who are now propping up the Third Reich, who are denying the Holocaust.
16:50I'm not seeing media organizations push back in any concerted way, showing the black and white films
16:57that Eisenhower went to great lengths to produce. And then when it comes to October 7th and the horrific
17:07slaughter of Israelis, Jews on October 7th, Israel's turned into the monsters, not the people who did it.
17:16These monsters, Hamas, they had GoPros. They videotaped the whole thing. You know,
17:24the Nazis tried to cover it up with lime and other stuff, mass graves, marches. Not Hamas. They were
17:30proud of what they did. They were calling home to mommy and daddy. They had videos. They put them online.
17:38We can't show you those videos. Social media can't and won't show you those videos.
17:45Social media says we have standards. We can't show those videos. I think this is the grave error of our time.
17:54Because if people saw those videos, they would throw up on their feet.
17:59The mass rapes, the debauchery, young girls, guys screaming, yelling for their lives, being shot in the back,
18:08being murdered as they're raped, having body parts cut off and thrown around like baseballs and footballs,
18:16gang rapes, just on and on and on in the kibbutzim, the horrible things that were taking place there.
18:22And so now, and so now the propaganda is the Jews are the oppressors. They're committing genocide in
18:30Gaza. Isn't it funny how little videos we have of genocide being committed in Gaza? We have fake
18:37photos and other things. All the food being pushed into Gaza, all the efforts by the IDF, killing IDF
18:44soldiers as a result, more dying than should, in order to protect the Palestinians in Gaza. And meanwhile,
18:52while the Third Reich was destroyed, Hamas survived.
18:58Do you think Eisenhower would say Hamas should survive?
19:02Do you think Churchill would say Hamas should survive? Do you think they would say that they
19:07should have any say in a post-Gaza government? I don't think for a minute. Hamas survives.
19:16The Third Reich is destroyed.
19:21We have a responsibility to our children and grandchildren and to the future of this nation
19:26to push back against the Marxist Islamists and the neo-fascists.
19:32Much on foreign policy, not enough on domestic policy. What are they talking about?
19:37This guy's got hundreds of executive orders, reversing regulations, tax cuts, the border,
19:44on and on. I said, you know what? I explained on this issue of affordability that blue states are
19:49unaffordable and red states are affordable and Republicans need to run on that. But what about
19:55the people in these states, Mark? What about it? The President of the United States is President of
20:00the United States. He's not running the local pizzeria. He's not running the local grocery store
20:05and all the rest of it. There are things he can do and things he can't do. But there are things he's
20:10doing like we've never seen before. I think he's doing more than FDR ever did at the height of the
20:14New Deal. And it's only eight, nine months in. Let's look at this. He is the general in the culture war.
20:23He's the general in making domestic moves that no president has made, certainly not in our lifetime.
20:29And what am I talking about? He's defunding DEI. He's removing it from federal policy.
20:35And he's removing it from state and local policy in colleges and universities that receive federal
20:40funds. He's depoliticizing the left wing anti-American rewrite of our founding and
20:46history that's taking place in federally funded museums and national parks, which are promoting
20:52hard left ideology. He's removing left wing directives that were coming out of our education
20:58department to local school districts, K through 12 classes. He's doing the same thing. He's fighting
21:04hard when it comes to higher education. In fact, he's dismantling the Department of Education,
21:10something that President Reagan wanted to do desperately. And he was blocked by who?
21:14The Republicans in the Senate. Trump's doing it with the help of his excellent education secretary.
21:20He's promoting school choice like no president in American history options, particularly for poor
21:26people, particularly for poor minorities. He's withholding federal education funds for leftist
21:33agendas and indoctrination being pushed in our schools. He is fighting hard and again using federal
21:39dollars as a whip to prevent men from going into women's sports, boys from going into girls sports.
21:47That was supposed to be protected under Title IX of the Civil Rights Act. He has defunded PBS,
21:53a left wing operation. He has defunded NPR, a left wing operation. And why do we need them?
22:00You got 1200 channels on cable and you got hundreds and hundreds and thousands of stations on radio.
22:07If they're that great, let them get private funding. He has locked down the border, literally locked down
22:14the border. He's enforcing immigration laws against Democrat mayors, Democrat governors who are the new
22:22confederates who are trying to nullify federal law. He's trying to deport illegal aliens, especially the
22:28worst of the worst. He's appointing originalists to the federal bench to try and counter what Biden did,
22:34which is basically destroy the judiciary with activist left wing lawyers. He's rebuilding America's
22:41infrastructure and industrial base through tax cuts, regulation cuts, and yes, tariffs. And by the way,
22:50his tax cuts are for all Americans, including on tips, social security benefits, overtime, middle-class
22:59income earners, and small businesses. What else? Revolutionary changes over there at the Department of HHS
23:07in our federal health agencies, extensive reform of welfare programs, including expanding work
23:13requirements, major overhaul of the student loan programs, including capping them, a complete overhaul of
23:20radical left-wing degrowth environmental rules over at the EPA, massive expansion of domestic energy production,
23:29including opening more land for drilling, speeding up permitting for energy projects, re-evaluating or rescinding
23:36regulations seen as burdensome to domestic energy production. His administration has recently issued executive
23:42orders, signed legislation, provided financial support aimed at significant expansion of U.S. nuclear
23:49capacity. I think this is one of the great answers to energy in the United States of America. He's authorizing
23:55mining for all materials, especially rare earth materials, and we see it bearing fruit in Alaska and in
24:00Pennsylvania, including expediting permitting, prioritizing mineral extraction on federal lands, as well as using the
24:08Defense Production Act to fund projects and reduce dependence on foreign sources like China. He's
24:14consistently promoting policies aimed at massively expanding U.S. artificial intelligence. He's got the
24:21commitment of investments of trillions of dollars in this, so we stay ahead of China, because this is the new
24:28frontier, like it or not. And technology growth through deregulation, increased R&D investment, public-private
24:35partnerships, workforce training. I pulled, Mark, where'd you get it off? I pulled it off the internet. I
24:40looked at all these different sites, pulled it together and said, what do they mean he's not focusing on
24:45domestic activities? Are you kidding me? He's expanding U.S. timber production on federal lands. He's
24:51streamlining permitting processes. He's reduced regulations with a goal of a 25% increase in production.
24:58These actions were aimed at cutting red tape, expediting logging, salvaging operations, purportedly
25:04to reduce wildlife risks and boost the domestic industry. Hey, Nuscom, you could learn something
25:10from this. Pay attention. Reducing regulations and opening previously protected areas to commercial
25:17fishing, aiming to boost the domestic economy and compete with foreign imports of fish. What about
25:24farming? Enhancing farming. The enhanced crop insurance, expedited and expanded disaster
25:30assistance, market access and trade deals with countries in Asia and Western Hemisphere, particularly
25:35China, aiming to remove tariff and non-tariff barriers and expand market access for U.S. agricultural
25:42products overseas, like ethanol, soybeans, poultry, deregulating the agriculture industry and overturning
25:49climate-related regulations that lower farmer input costs. Even the cost of fertilizer was
25:55prohibitive. Now he's bringing it down. What else? He's expanding ranching, primarily by increasing
26:01access to federal grazing lands, expanded grazing access, financial support with more government
26:06guaranteed loans and expand access to capital for producers, predator compensation for livestock.
26:13You know, we've been protecting predator species for forever and obviously it has an effect on
26:18the livestock, increasing funding for small meat processors, reduction of inspection fees,
26:24because he wants more production. Remove unfair tariff and non-tariff barriers and create fair
26:31and reciprocal trade, expanding opportunities for U.S. exports. That's what's meant by reciprocal
26:38trade deals when he talks about them. He's pursued various actions aimed at lowering medical and
26:43prescription drug costs through executive orders, price transparency rules and voluntary pricing
26:48agreements with manufacturers, capping out-of-pocket insulin costs from participating Medicare
26:54beneficiaries at no more than $35 a month for a month's supply, initiatives at the Food and Drug
27:02Administration to speed up the approval of lower-cost generic medicines and biosimilars, which are often
27:08significantly cheaper than the brand name alternatives. States can now legally import lower-cost
27:15prescription drugs if it can be done safely from Canada.
27:23What else has the president done domestically? Oh, I don't know. He's focused so much on foreign affairs.
27:29Executive orders on deregulation, signed executive orders directing federal agencies to identify and remove
27:36unnecessary administrative expenses and rent-seeking practices that drive up housing costs and impede new
27:43development. He signed into law an expansion of low-income housing tax credits, a program that
27:49incentivizes private investors to build affordable rental housing. Federal land development. He supports
27:54plans to make federally owned land available for new housing development. And of course, what he really
27:59needs is for the Fed to get its ass in gear and to significantly lower interest rates as they should.
28:05And he's been pounding on the Fed and pounding on Powell and telling them,
28:08you're killing the housing market. I'm doing everything I can from a fiscal perspective.
28:14You need to act from a monetary perspective and lower interest rates. In the initial months of his
28:20second term, real inflation-adjusted wages for blue-collar workers saw a significant increase, contrasting
28:30with negative real-wage growth observed during the first part of the Biden regime when inflation was high.
28:36And what else is he doing? Education is a disaster. The president knows this and he's been working on it.
28:43Against the teachers unions, against the Democrats in Congress, against Lisa Murkowski of Alaska,
28:48against this massive industrial education complex that is in place. They take your tax dollars at the
28:55federal level. They take your property tax dollars at the state level. And what do they do? We don't want
29:00parental involvement. We don't want school choice competition. We don't want, we're in charge.
29:05Pushing a leftist ideology every step of the way. And the results are seen. And Trump says, wait a minute.
29:12No more. We got to fix this. What is he doing? In K through 12, he is ending the radical indoctrination
29:20of our students. It's being monitored. It's being fought. And he's being opposed every step of the way.
29:26School choice and vouchers. The proposed Education Freedom Scholarships and Opportunity Act by allowing
29:32tax-free withdrawals from 529 education saving plans for a K through 12 cost. So you can take that money,
29:39the money you put aside for college and university at one day, which your kids may never use for that or you
29:45may not, and apply it to school choice at the elementary, middle school and high school levels.
29:51School discipline. Reinstate common sense school discipline policies that focus on objective
29:57behavioral misconduct rather than DEI principles. Thank you, Obama. Parental empowerment. The
30:03administration has supported policies aimed at giving parents more control over their children's
30:08education and school options. Higher education. Dismantling the Department of Education. It's going on
30:15right now under a great secretary of education. And that means transferring many of its functions to
30:22other agencies, block granting funding to the states, that sort of thing. That has been a desire
30:29of conservatives and Republicans since the late 1970s, when this monstrosity was created as a gift to
30:36the NEA and the AFT. And this is the first president, the only president to actually do something about it.
30:42As I said, ending DEI in affirmative action, the Department of Education removed or archived
30:47hundreds of guidance documents and web pages related to DEI. And they directed schools to comply
30:53with the Supreme Court decision that ended affirmative action in college admissions.
30:59Accreditation reform. Initiatives were proposed to reform the higher education accreditation process
31:05to encourage a competitive marketplace and potentially lower college courses. You know,
31:10we conservatives, I for one, these are things I have supported and advocated for decades.
31:17And you know where they went? Nowhere. They were on white papers. They were in seminars. They were in
31:22debates. This man, Trump, is actively enforcing these ideas, these principles, these proposals,
31:30trying to get America back from the hard left. That's what it is. I love it when they say,
31:35look what he's doing. He's imposing his will. He's attacking free speech and academic. No, he's not.
31:41He said, enough is enough. You radical left wing kooks, you don't own the country.
31:45You don't own the culture. You don't own the government.
31:51In D.C., whether they are business leaders, union leaders, whether they are so-called conservative
31:57influencers and podcasters, sports, you know, figures and entertainment figures, they've sold us out.
32:05They've sold us out. They've sold us out. And many of our enemies and adversaries have figured out
32:12the best way to defeat America is not through military action, although some believe that's
32:19still the case. Don't get me wrong. It's with money. You know, Lenin was said to have said,
32:28we will sell the capitalists the rope with which to hang themselves. He actually never said it that
32:33way. He said something like it, but it seems to make sense, doesn't it? What else explains Qatar
32:41spending tens of billions of dollars? Why are they so interested in our colleges and universities?
32:45What do they want to do? Graduate American rocket scientists? Why aren't they spending that money in
32:52their own country? Why are they spending it in our country? We know why. To buy influence,
32:58to brainwash our youth, to defeat us from within, the enemy within. Why are they spending so much money
33:06buying businesses, so much money on sports and athletes, so much money on influencers and this,
33:12that and the other? Why do you think? Because they have figured out that the best way to defeat the
33:20West in the United States is through the almighty dollar and they will be celebrated and praised and
33:28defended even by so-called conservative influencers who are now pseudo-conservative influencers, phonies,
33:36fakes. Just one trip over there, a couple of five-star hotels, five-course meals. Wow, fantastic. Of course,
33:46it's a slave state, but that's a whole other story. Now, why am I talking about this? The reason is simple.
33:53This involves immigration. This involves the survivability of our country because we are being
34:00slowly but surely destroyed from within. The prior regime, the Biden regime with open borders,
34:07the Democrat Party. The Democrat Party is all about the Democrat Party. It's not about the country. It
34:13takes that from Marxist regimes. The party comes first. Everything else comes second. The country,
34:19the people serve the party. That's the power base. That's the one-party system. Look at Newsom in
34:26California. That's what it is and so forth. So I want to get into this with Afghan immigrants and
34:31Somalian immigrants the president has rightly focused on. This raises two issues simultaneously,
34:38immigration and Islamism. And I encourage you to look up the word Islamism so you can see the radical
34:45nature of that word. Self-identify terrorists and terrorist regimes that use it.
34:51So first, the issue of immigration. The purpose of immigration is not to serve the interests or
34:57desires of the foreigner who wishes to come to America, but the interests and desires of you,
35:04Mr. and Mrs. America. We, the American citizenry. This government exists for us. You and me.
35:12That's not to say that we as a people turn our backs on those who seek refuge from genocidal regimes
35:19that seek to exterminate them. As our own history has shown, we open our arms to people like this.
35:25We can't take in everybody, but we take in more than any other country on the face of the earth.
35:29We're the most moral, beneficent country on the planet. Period.
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