vimarsana.com

Card image cap



you a little intro, a little bit about -- and some things you probably don't even know about him. he's very special. we are thrilled tonight to have the number one new york times bestselling author -- morris, who is one of the most prominent and political consultants in the united states. he was instrumental in winning campaigns of bill clinton in 1996 and more than 30 senators and governors is nationally. that i could spend probably an entire evening on the list of people that he has put in office. but i don't think you want to hear that tonight. in 2021, -- morris launched a weekly half hour show on newsmax tv called -- morris. democracy. he is also a regular guest on newsmax shows such as american agenda. greg kelly reports. and spicer and company. in 2021. -- morris also launched a one hour radio program on w abc in new york city aired from noon to 1 p.m. on sunday. -- now writes a weekly column for the new york post that is carried nationwide and contributes columns and blogs to both the print and online versions of the hill. a nonpartisan daily newspaper based in washington, dc. this man does an awful lot since 2006 teen -- morris has been a behind the scenes adviser to donald trump. -- played a key role in trump's surprise 2016 win. he did. he did. donald newkirk is one of the top political strategist in the world. in return, the book that -- just wrote and why we're here tonight. -- -- latest bestseller is a fantastic political analysis of what very well may be taking place in the not too distant future. can you guess what that might be? and now i'd like to introduce one of the most special people in the united states today, the greatest commentator and adviser to the most important people in the world, -- morris. thank you. so, you normally have time for tv because what's it like on the set of the program? i don't know. even a week old, right? okay. oh, so it makes your. okay. okay, good. thank you. well, thank you very much for coming. i think this is about my, what, ten appearance here? i mean, see, i've written 20 books and i wouldn't miss you for the world. so probably 20. well, i hope you all are prepared. not for a tidal wave, not for an earthquake, not pursue nami. but you remember in your history when a meteorite hit the earth and it picked up all the dirt and the dust and the dinosaurs couldn't breathe and they all died. that's what's going to happen on tuesday. the magnitude of the republic victory that i'm expected to happen a week from tuesday is beyond belief and it's only unfold long now when you have a trend election that is a party trend. it takes time to take shape and it's like a pitcher who throws a curve ball coming out of his hand. it's curved in a little bit. but by the time it reaches the plate, it's breaking a foot or two feet. and the magnets theory of this victory is only becoming clear to us now. i'm all smug, excited, addicted, all in my book, the return. but it was outrageous when i did it. but now it's coming. more or less true. just to start with the bottom line, i believe we're going to pick up more than 50 seats in the house. and i think the senate will end up at 53, 54, 55 republicans seats. it certainly will take control of the senate. in fact, what we need to be doing now is to expand the map, as they say in politics, which is right now everybody's focused specifically on the few key states, georgia, arizona, pennsylvania. but ultimately, we're going to win those states. what's going to happen? what will eventually become the key states are the states nobody is thinking about now that are solidly blue that i think we can win. and that includes new hampshire, connecticut. washington state and colorado. and i think not oregon. oregon governor. yeah, but not the senate. there's no senate seat up there. but really, the magnitude this wave is incredible. it will amount to the extinction. that's why i use that metaphor of an entire generation of democratic politicians. their talent bench was pretty thin. now it's thinner. they'll all lose their races. this time. it's unbelievable. now, and let me just let you in on the future, okay? i will win both houses. biden will be forced out. the democrats will come to him and say, you can't. you can't lead us to another fiasco like this year. we need you to say you're not running again. we won't throw you out of office, although you could. but because we picked. likely because we don't want to admit that we made any of the big mistake with kamala harris. so. but what we will do is ask you to come out there and say you're not running again. i think he will. and that will kick off the democrat nominating process, which is going to be fun to watch, because the the fulcrum of it will be who the big blame for the catastrophe. and that'll be jockeying to blame one another. and the left is going to come in and say the reason we lost is because we didn't go far enough to the left. we didn't provide free college. we did not provide medicare for all. we did not provide all of the all of the free prescription drug coverage and everything else that we said we'd do. so we were punished by the voters because we didn't go far enough to the left and the history of politics has been that whenever a left wing party loses, it doesn't move to the center, it moves further to the left. the democrats lost with jimmy carter and the next two candidates were mondale and dukakis before they got senator, you nominated clinton and then clinton. the same thing happened that you defeated callahan ford to become prime minister. and then the next two candidates will flip and kinnock will even further to the left. until they got sanity with tony blair. so it's going to take a while for the democrats to get this out of their system. and while that's going on, my old friend, yours, hillary clinton, will get into this race and she will say, look, the left cost us the house, the left cost us the senate. now the left is going to cost us the white house unless we learn to move to the center. like my husband did. i just put it over there. if we can, just like over here, the great. thank you. just like my husband did when he balanced the budget and reformed welfare and so on. and she will pose as the moderate alternative. believe it or not, tipper and sanders to aoc, to gavin newsom into the whole cast of democratic leftist characters. by the way, i don't have pneumonia. this is allergies and i believe that hillary will have an excellent shot at this nomination. the irony of it is, as i explained in my book, that she's using the same memo, the same strategy. i wrote for her husband. in 1992. in 92, i said, you got to go out there and say, hey, you went too far to the left with dukakis and with mondale. now vote for me and i'll move you to the center where you can win. i think that's what hillary's going to say. we have to stifle the laughter when she does that. but that will be her pitch. in any case, the donald trump is clearly certainly going to run. i speak with him several times each week and if he weren't going run, he's wasting a lot of time. and we're discussing the date of the announcement. it'll be shortly after the midterm elections. right now, i have to hold him back. but he'll he'll go then. and i believe that he's got a lock on the republican nomination. i think he demonstrated in 22 when he went to state after state and endorsed candidates and the other wings of the party endorsed their candidate. and with the exception of one race, he beat them all. he won like 180 of those races. and that demonstrates that he has a total lock on the republican nomination set. desantis and pence and nikki haley and all of the others and ted cruz are not going to run, and i think he'll be the nominee virtually by acclimation, which is incredible for someone who's not an incumbent president, not the immediate past incumbent. okay, then you tell me what's going to happen. how many people here think things are going to be better economically next year than they are this year? okay. now that we've passed the iq test, how many people here think they're going to be much worse next year than they are this year? you know, you're right, because the only cure for the inflation that biden has sick put upon us is that this depression, not recession, a depression akin to the thirties, because you have too much money out there. all the government has been printing money and that money is just too much money chasing too few goods. and that forces up the price enormously. and then the price increases themselves force more price increases. like as energy becomes more expensive and as the supply chains become more attenuated from foreign sources and ultimately the only way to break the back of that inflation is to kill the economy. it's like you get someone who has very high blood pressure. only way to stop it is to bleed him to death. and when he has no more blood, he has no blood pressure. and you have to stop right before he dies. but that's okay. it's a little bit like chemotherapy. you have to go and killing the healthy cells until you get rid of the cancer and that's going to be gruesome and grisly process and it's going to unfold in the next two years. and if anybody thinks that the democrats, having presided over this process, can possibly, possibly win, they are absolutely out of their minds and delusional. whoever is the republican candidate in 24 is going to be elected and it's going to be donald j. trump. and a kinder, gentler, nicer donald j. trump won't work. that won't work. you know, my friend here, the hero who is with me coined the phrase. he said, if you want a kinder, gentler, nicer, sweeter. george patton, world war two, commanding the allied armies know that that wouldn't work. and i think we have to understand that trump's so-called defects are really his assets. i mean, just look at north korea. he took office in kim jong un, said arrogantly, i have a button now where i can blow up america. and trump came right back and said, i have a bigger button than you do. bluster and he shut up. he was never heard from again. the three and a half years. as soon as trump left office, he was back hitting missiles again and testing bombs. but he didn't dare do that. there is no way putin could possibly have invaded ukraine if trump were president, he wouldn't have dared. so that doesn't come from being nice and kind and sweet and and charming. it comes from being tough and aggressive and strong these days in washington, it takes a donald trump to get things done, which is a commentary in washington, not so much on trump. and i think that people are realizing that. and in any case, they republican base, which is the vast majority of the party, understands the uniqueness of the accomplishments of this man. i have a chapter in my book discussing them. they are incredible. first of all, he raised the median working class income after taxes, after inflation by. 500 by $100 a week. so put an extra $100 bill in your pocketbook. and biden low is hit by 100 a week because of inflation, literally taking it out of your wallet. and he has his tax cut that was aimed at the middle class and was very, very effective. one of the things that he did that's explored energy that probably you don't know that is he said to he said to mexico, i'll take your cars in for free with no tariffs on them. but you have to be sure that everything the car you make in mexico, the average wage of the workers who make the car has to be above $15 an hour. it's now about two or three bucks an hour. and he said if you have it below that, you're not going to let that car into the us. and his point was, i'm not going to hurt the american worker by letting a mexican car in for free and that was extraordinary. and of course, you know the rest you know about the new mexico policy, by the way, the way he got mexico to agree to that is after he gave them this trade concession, he said, i'd like you to station 30,000 troops on the border and arrest anybody who wants to come into the united states and lopez obrador, the leftist who's the president of mexico, said, dream on. i'm not doing that. and trump said, okay, today's friday. on monday, i'm going to sign an executive order imposing a 25% tariff on all mexican ports to the united states. and that would just totally destroy their economy completely overnight. so they showed the wisdom of his ways and they agreed to put the troops there. and you talk about a problem being totally solved. unbelievable. that that was. but the amazing thing about biden is not so much what he failed to solve, but the problems he created. trump had achieved the magnificent balancing act of economic growth, job growth, income growth, and no inflation. an amazing trick. it's like houdini on the high wire. but he did it. and then biden came in and voted to trillion dollars of new spending, completely throwing the tightrope walker off and he came crashing down to the left. and this inflation, which is intractable and is going to destroy our economy in the near term, as i was saying, was caused by biden because they wanted to pass all kinds of social legislation and they wanted to raise taxes just for the hell of it, because they thought it was a good idea to make rich people pay more money. and then you get to the overwhelm, amazing mind boggling achievement of saving the lives of hundreds and hundreds of millions of people by inventing this vaccine. when you think about it, this thing we've just gone on killing half the human race and he came up with the vaccine that killed it, stopped it. and the way he did it was the europeans said, will develop our own vaccine and the way we're going to do it is we're going to cooperate. we can get all the drug companies together and we'll pass out the research set to work and we'll all work together to do that. and trump said, no way. that will never work. i'm going to pit them against each other as competitors, and only one of them is going to get really rich, really fast and the rest of you will miss out. and it's up to you who's going to be the rich one or not. so they all worked like hell producing this thing as fast as they possibly could. they called it warp speed and it was it was incredible. and then he had it. then he told the bureaucrats, if you stop this thing, except for very good reason, you're fired. and he's he's good at that. and and he achieved this, which is probably the single most important public works project in the history of america since the manhattan project to build the bomb. and he was able to do that, which was extraordinary. so this kind of accomplishment, it's don't grow on trees. when i started to work for trump as president in 2020, i told him that i had just watched his state of the union speech. i said, it's just like the speech you say i used to write for bill clinton. the only difference is, you spoke in the past tense. he spoke in the future tense of his hopes and dreams for the country. you were describing your accomplishments at clinton, so i would hope to increase middle class incomes. well, you did. i would hope to bring black and hispanic unemployment way down. you did. i would hope to curb illegal immigration. well, you did that. and and the point was that it was the same issues just instead of it being aspirational, it was reportorial telling what had happened in what he had already achieved. and this man is extraordinary. i'll tell you something. i believe that he is one of the great presidents of the united states and. i, i just hope there's room on mount rushmore for him. and, you know, he has an oversize view of himself. so got to make a lot of room there. i'll tell you a very cute story about trump that illustrates how his mind works. you know, john and patricia clooney. they are wonderful people and they built they and john clooney before he died, worked with patricia to build this glorious, gorgeous mansion in charlottesville, virginia. my wife, eileen, said it was the most beautiful house she's ever been in, in any continent. and when john clooney died, he left his wife as alimony. the interest on $1 billion a year, the interest. and when rates were seven and eight, 9%, that was 70, 80 and 90 million a year, which was fine. and they kept the mansion in great style, they said. but they knew they produced some fantastic wine and then then when rates dropped two or 3%, who can live on 20 or $30 million a year and they went broke. so, patricia called trump and said, can you help me? can you buy my house? the banks going to repossess it and i'd rather you buy it and quoted a price. and trump said, no, not that that that i won't. then what trump did was he went to clooney and said, i want to buy from you a one year whites trip of land around your entire house. so nobody can enter or leave your house without setting foot on my land and i'm not giving anyone an easement for access. so he then went to the bank and said, you want this house, you can have it. just you can't go in or out. and he got it for a good price. and they set up a wonderful resort there that i urge you all to visit. but that's donald trump in action and it's extra ordinary the way he's done this. but in political terms, he he understood that there's a class of americans that was totally forgotten. the middle class, the working class americans who largely lived between the east and the west coast, and what the elites called flyover country and hillary called deplorables. and obama said they cling to their guns and bibles. and romney said that the other 47% that will never vote for me. and trump said these were americans and they're interested. you're entitled to be central in the american government. and he said, i know the conservative ideology says free flow of goods and free flow of labor that would make adam smith happy. but he said we can have free flow of goods, otherwise we'll put all these people out of work and we can't have free flow of labor because they'll take their jobs. so i'm going to put america first. i'm going to put the needs of these folks first. and he did and galvanized the political constituency. that was extraordinary, that reshaped politics tremendously. now, the media doesn't write about it because they don't know those folks exist, but they do exist. and they're the core of trump's support and then they were latinos. latinos and hispanics were always regarded in the phrase blacks and hispanics, you know, lumped together minorities, but they have vastly different experience inches the hispanics came to this country voluntarily because they were driven that they were old countries by corruption, by drugs and by crime and lack of freedom and they came to america and got their lives back together. so when they saw antifa and the the the blm people coming in and saying america's racist and awful and terrible and we want to make a socialist state out of it, just like they did in venezuela. well, and guatemala and mexico and cuba and even north vietnam. they said, no way, we're not going near that. and where is the democrat said the way to appeal to hispanic voters is through immigration. trump said, no, immigration is in the rear view mirror for them. they will insist it can be the 20, 30 or 40 years ago. what they care about is preserving america as a place to which you want to go. there's no other place left for them to go and and not change the hispanic vote completely. and we don't know yet. but the current polling suggests that republicans are going to carry carry, win the latino vote in this coming election, win. and you can imagine how central that is destroying the democrat dreams. they had looked at the population increase rate among latinos and said, hey, we're just going to write this demographic wave into permanent, long term dominance. but trump changed all of that and made the latinos increasingly republican and in favor of our values and in favor of our policies. extraordinary achievement. and then the democratic party said, well, we'll win with the young people because they're young and idealistic and will take over their colleges and schools and willing to protect them. so they'll be good little socialists when they grow up. but he forgot. they forgot that at age 25. and it's kind of funny in the polling, it's that age they suddenly become conservative. it's like they totally change because all of a sudden earning money, they're having taxes taken out, they're trying to buy a house, they're trying to start a family, they're trying to get married. the most fundamental lifestyle things they're trying to inflation is and high taxes is stopping them from doing it. and when you look at the polls at the age of 25, along with the birthday cake, comes the republican party. and this has a huge long term effect because they're going to stay republicans. and the indoctrination that we've all worried about at the campus level only lasts a few months or years after graduation. and so with that, the the legs that held up the democratic donkey of the hispanics, young people, a gone it's now they're knocked out from under them. and the funny thing that's happened in working class, a funny things happening with the black vote that you're going to see in the election. black men are voting republican, not black women, but black men. at the moment, we're carrying about 30% of black men, but only 10% of black women. and they have to great writers. a guy named conrad tillis, who lives in brooklyn, mr. bedford-stuyvesant, york black and i forget his first name, delanoe, who is a great writer at newsweek and other magazines. and they said that basically what has happened is that the black woman has married the government. the that the government provides the childcare, the income, the security, the jobs, the upward mobility and all of that that a hard working husband used to provide. and you go back to the 1960s when pat moynihan said, the dissolution of the black nuclear family was the greatest threat to the race because of poverty and the way the reaction to that was of clinton and others was to try to increase the income of the black fathers. and that was very worthwhile. and he did. but now the black lives matter has completely reversed. heather doesn't need a father. she has two mommies and heather doesn't need upwardly mobility. and the father, they've got the government to rely on. and that's why biden said he's going to appoint a black woman to the court. a black woman as vice president. not black men, black women. and that priority is showing itself in the polling where we are doing much better among black men than black women. and that i think, is the long term answer to. how will get the black vote to be for us? so this is all a very optimistic picture. and you're catching me very optimistic time. this is an absolutely moment in our history. and i think that what's going to happen is trump will win. i think he'll be able to restore a prosperity to where it was. i think they'll close the border again. he'll do all kinds of great stuff. and we will be very, very proud to be republicans. thank you. to take your amazing and if anyone has a question, could you please come to the mic rather than raise your hand from your seat? because mark from c-span asked us to do it that way. thank you. thank you. from your lips to god's ears. but my actually just trump's. here's an excerpt. my concern is the republicans always seem to fumble. and, you know, even with a landslide. kevin and mccarthy and mitch mcconnell don't make me warm in the cockles. so if we have the same and it's the same old same. oh, i'm wondering if you're still as optimistic. well, come on. we're going to take the congress and that no replacement for taking the white house. you can't lead the country from the congress. doesn't work that way. hasn't since 1868. but you can from the white house. but we're not there yet. so what we can stop. it's anything bad from happening. we can stop the printing of money. we can stop the hiring of 87,000 irs agents to haunt us. we stop the government agencies from passing new regulations. we can stop appointing to the court that reversal of values. we can do a lot of stuff like that. but in terms of rolling it back and getting our country back to where it was, absent them still the slogan should be back to the future. that that's not going to happen until we win the presidency. i think also that the entire thrust of what's going on is such that people are really, really learning what's the problem with democratic party governance, the economic program with zeppelin and now with not a compromise hammered out between the parties with give and take and that is and so on and you can't blame the republicans for it. they voted against every piece of it and democrats voted every piece of it. and four years before, in the tax cut, it was the opposite. the republicans voted unanimously for it, and the democrats unanimously passed it. so now for anybody with, eyes and ears, you look at the economy of four years ago and that was entirely creation of the republican party. and you look at the economy now and you see the incredible difference that democratic policy is make. and i think that's going to be very important. now, there's a real fight coming up in december that i want to talk about for a second. the federal government works on fiscal years. that end at the end of october, the beginning of october, september 30th. so the budget for 22, 23 has already been passed. and we're a month or two into it. but it hasn't passed because they can never agree on it. so instead they passed what's called the continuing resolution, which says will fund the government at its current levels until we tell you differently and the meantime, don't close any government agencies. we'll get around to doing a full budget in january. in december and december will be the last day of the democrat control of congress. and the republicans need to come in and say, okay, wait a minute. will agree to the continuing resolution, but only if expires in january when we have a congress that's reflective of what the people want. it. and the democrats will say, no way, we'd rather close the government down and it will be a government shutdown. then it will be a fierce, fierce partizan fight because we are not about to sit back and let biden's big spending program be the policy of this country. until october of 2023. the god sakes, we've got to do something that and that's going to be a huge fight in congress. and i hope that mccarthy and mcconnell have the stuffings for it. but we'll see. hi. name is lorraine. i, i have several questions, but i'm going to ask only one. okay. hunter biden was involved in deals with ukraine and china with the new republican congress senate. what will be done about hunter biden in the future? he's going to be investigated up the wazoo. i believe he's going to be indicted. i believe he's going to be imprisoned and i think that i think that has a very satisfactory into it. but i want to just tell you something. biden's biggest sin in selling out to the communist chinese was not the bribes that his son took, but the work he's done at the university of pennsylvania, biden set up the biden institute for peace and diplomacy at the university and he got he got launched with a grant from the chinese. of $22 million. that's right. and that paid him while he was vice president. well, after vice president, he's out of office. i just want to say that you answered my question because 1 million, $1 million a year and never showing up on campus and all of his staff in his cabinet worked there. the current blinken the current secretary of state, was on the payroll of this institute before biden appointed him. when he got elected to the presidency of the united states and the secretary of state of the united states were effectively on the payroll of the chinese communist party for four years. that stuff is going to come out. yes, i am, dr. braverman. i enjoyed your book tremendously. thank reading it. i'll pass. i can't write them fast enough for you. well, your father was the same way, right? yes. in real estate. so my dad, by the way, is with eugene maurice. and he was donald trump's lawyer. and i've known trump since i was a little boy. and it's really just a wonderful thing to be working on this now. and he he always comes over to me now with largo and stuff, and he says, your father was the best estate attorney i ever had. and then being donald trump, he said he wasn't anything like you he wasn't politically. yes, that's funny. so a nation that loses its values, loses the value of its currency, doesn't trade its immigrants, and essentially loses moral control of its people and crime. how does president trump restore the american as we approach what i call the quinn jubilee or the fifth jubilee of the united states founding back to where the declaration of independence, the word creator meant something supreme judge meant something. well, our lord meant something to people. providence. i think. and the preamble of the constitution, the general welfare of the children that are obese, depressed, addict and dying. i think it's i think the beginning of it will be with the supreme court in in the fall or in the spring time. january, february, march. and april, when they're going to take up affirmative action and and the challenge that it is unconstitutional because it discriminate on the basis of race. when i worked at the president clinton, one of the states that i really lost. was that i was pressing for gender neutral and racially blind affirmative action that would grant affirmative action to poor people of any race and of either gender and stephanopoulos opposed me on it. and jesse jackson threatened to primary against clinton if he did that. and i lost that fight. but it's not gonna be lost. now, the supreme court, i think, affirm that view. and i think the idea of race based public policies will be over, will be totally ended in terms society. that's a deeper problem because the media is so infected with this with this idea and so committed to it and how we undo it in the media, i don't know. but i do believe in public policy. we're going to be able to do it and i think that the ultimately the tremendous growth income of latinos now and blacks in the future will itself work its magic in changing this. i think that accomplishing it will do that. now, as to immigration and stuff like that, i think that the key thing that trump did was not just the border wall, it was to advocate a merit based immigration system, which didn't matter who your father or who your ex-wife was or where your kids live it, only matter could you contribute something? the united states, were you literate? do you have skills? did you get educated? then we want you. and i think that that's going to be tremendously important in viewing and inspiration and in terms of the country's inspiration, faith comes by hearing the word. what about hearing the declaration of independence, the preamble of the constitution, the founding documents? they're not even taught in any school. well, i hope we do that. and i hope it'll. but i wouldn't parent. donald trump is a preacher. well, that's the point. we need the moral leadership. yeah, proclamation. i think that would be very had 26 names of god. i mean when i'm when he refused to demolish american statues and refuse to rename monticello to take jefferson out of it, i think he's caused major changes. and i think those are likely to stay. yes, sir. a name is michael. i'm from new jersey. your book was fabulous. i listened to it on audible. good, good. and i tape that myself, by the way. so it's i'm i'm glad i'm here tonight to your event. i'm i saw this problem is i can't sign the desk i saw this, uh, film on the internet. the art of the insult. excuse me for one minute. thank you. yes, that's okay. the art of the insult and one of the things was that president trump was saying, i'm going to build this wall. he said to the president of mexico, you're going to pay for it. and there was a big battle of words amongst them. a lot of people don't like the tone that trump has in that's insulting to. what do you think about him toning it down? never happened. he is is what he is what he is. and one of the first things you have to learn when advise trump is to leave him alone. he's never going to change and he doesn't to change because the aspect of him that have this incredible record of achievement and accomplishment and those that are insulting and rude and not conventional are not easily passed apart. for example, when he had to pass his tax cut in congress. he needed unanimous republican support and he had to republican senators that weren't willing to help. bob corker of tennessee and jeff flake of arizona. and he went after them crazy. he destroyed the political careers. he said flake, which jeff flake and corker said, we couldn't get arrested, couldn't get elected dogcatcher anymore. in tennessee. and they were driven out of politics and in the senate caucus room where the republicans meet. i think their portraits in everybody's mind, like ghosts. but what happens when you cross donald trump and but the interesting thing about that is for all of his ruthlessness and all of his aggression, there was no not even accusation that he used the powers of the presidency for coercion. nobody was arrested. nobody was locked up. nobody was censored. nobody was closed down. the internet didn't censor anybody. he just fought cleanly on the playing field. hard and tough, but clean. and that's so different from the way biden is handling this. thank you, mr. morris, for being here with us tonight. we're here at the women's national republican club, an organization formed and founded by suffragettes, feminist ism. the topic of feminism has in the last. several years become subordinate to trans issues and trans women competing in sports. what i am wondering about is to what extent do you see that issue and american women standing up for themselves, standing up for their daughters? wonderful question. thank you. and so well phrased. i think the the answer that the enemy of the feminist movement now is the liberals of the democratic party. they are saying no after we've played and fought for title nine of the civil rights act, that gives equal funding to girls and boys sports. no, no more men can participate in girls sports. we know the medals take all the scholarships. and if you enforce the right of women to compete in women's sports, that's civil rights violation. they turn completely on its head. and when you think about it, the republican the democratic party now is taking the two pillars of social achievement of the last 50 years. feminism and anti-racism. and it's them both completely on their heads and totally undoing them. anti-racism means favor of blacks over whites. it means create racial collective idea for federal aid and federal policies and feminism means subordinate the needs of women to the needs of gays. and it absolutely without divides is everything of importance that we've accomplished. and it completely changes it. you know, it's no longer mlk, martin luther king, it's blm. black lives matter. and it is blm against mlk. and the republican party can proudly stand up and say, we are now the party of racial inclusivity against racial bigotry, of feminism, and of women realizing their goals and desires in a male centric world. that's what they're trying to what we need to do. good evening. it's a pleasure to meet you in person. i'm sandra from new jersey, and i've called your radio show a week and i recognize your voice. yeah. so, by the way, i want to introduce doug dipietro, who appears with me on the radio show. wow. yes. the he provides the music and the humor and the spirit of the show. yes, but go ahead. so i have two questions. first of all, i also have your book on audible with my husband. we share it and i have it. and i listen to it and i read it. and it's great. but i wanted to say the other night, my friend lorraine michael and i were watching a documentary on donald trump called unfit. now, all these psychiatry and psychologists are ripping him apart and really ruining his name, which i don't like, which none of us like. and this happened to gold ward barry goldwater as well. and he decides to sue and he won. i know that he won for defamation. i did not know that he won a million. wow. and i left to look that up. i didn't know that. good for him. i'm thinking, why can't donald trump do the same with this terrible documentary that they have? well, i think his first choice is to get elected president. very good revenge. i think that that the idea of these armchair psychiatrists in going after trump is absurd. the guy is silly. generous. he's different from anybody else. and look at his achievements and understand that he's not a guy. on the other hand, i felt that eric trump had said it best when he said, my dad is a blue collar billionaire. he is really true. yeah. the only other thing. my sister asked me to ask you this question. she watches tucker carlson all the time, like we all do. and there's an article. tucker carlson plays russian puppet. so my sister feels and i do, too, that you don't want to antagonize putin. you know, you don't want to press this button. okay. you don't want to antagonize him. so tucker is like trying to stay peaceful so we don't have a third, you know, big. no. the war. so how do you feel about that? well, i feel very personally about ukraine, because one of my clients is viktor yashin ago, who was the first democrat elected president of ukraine after the orange revolution, they called it. he took over. and when carlson says that the ukraine government is horribly corrupt, he's just wrong. it is true that biden tried to corrupt it. it is true there was corruption left over from the communist days, but not now. and i believe there is not a dime's worth the difference. adolph hitler marching into the sudan land and and vladimir putin marching into ukraine. and and the old argument that goes back to the isolationist days, oh, don't make hitler mad at you, because who will be horrible? what he'll do? that turned out to be so specious. and it is about putin to. so let's cut to the chase. let's say that putin first. let me say that i was alone, i think almost alone in commentators who predicted that ukraine would win this war from the moment it started, i said they going to win, not lose a little win. and i did that because i knew ukraine. so well having run the campaign for the president. and i knew that these folks were not giving up easily and that they and i also have worked extensively for the anti-putin movement in russia. my client years ago was. with boris yeltsin, the president of russia. and and i think that that is so i knew both sides pretty intimately, and they knew that one was an active ideology, the other an act of coercion. and the coercion wouldn't last. and i celebrate these wonderful gains in the ukraine. and the guy who is responsible for that more than anyone else is donald j. trump. you remember that he went to europe in the first three months of his presidency and went to nato, and he said, unless you guys start to pay your fair share and pull your own weight, you committed to spending 2% gdp on defense and not going to be a do it unless you do. we're not going to pick up your load for you and we're out of here and the american media said, oh, my god, what was that faux pas he put his foot in that he had invaded france and germany and everybody else. and trump just went right to and he said, to hell with that. and then when he had this pipeline deal, he stood up for it. and against it in a way that nobody else did. and the result of his efforts is that naito increased its military budget. by $290 billion a year because of the money trump's squeezed out of the others and those are the weapons that ukraine is using now to beat back the russians and it's credit to trump that he did. but let's say that putin uses nuclear weapons. i don't think he's going to use strategic weapons, meaning an attack on the united states, because that is still suicide. i believe it's possible that he explodes a a well, a electronic pulse, a which is an atomic bomb in the atmosphere that paralyzes the circuitry of all communications and the affected area and can't run. you can't have cars, can't have trains, can't rent computers and i think that that certainly is possible. and i think it's possible that he hits a dirty bomb. a dirty bomb is not a nuclear weapon. it's a regular bomb with all kinds of radioactive pedigree debris stuffed into it from like hospitals and labs and, you know, x ray film. i think that's possible. and i think it is also possible that he uses battlefield. tactical nuclear weapons against the ukrainian army. if he does that, he is absolutely destroying the future of his country. russia will never, ever recover because the fundamental fact about russia is that it's interesting. the people from saudi arabia as a country that is totally on somebody buying its oil and its gas, half of their economy is oil and gas. half of their budget is oil and gas. third, their economy is. and at the moment, the europeans are shutting it off. if you ever use nuclear weapons, they would charge you off immediately. and because, again, my idol here, mr. trump, he doubled and tripled lng capacity, liquefied natural gas, which means you take natural gas, you liquefy it, and then you can put it on a barge and send it anywhere in the world you want. there are no pipelines under the atlantic ocean, so that's how we have to export it. and we are dramatically increasing our flow to europe and really pushing them if they begin to cut off all russian imports. but russia can't pay its army. i mean, half the budget revenues from oil and gas sales at you can't sell oil and gas you're cooked. and some would say, okay, they'll sell it to india and to china. but neither india nor china and russia have the pipeline infrastructure to be able to deliver that much natural gas. and the russians will be sitting there drowning in their own oil and gas, not able to make any money from it at all, and the whole economy will implode and fall apart. now, i know something is i said about public opinion in russia and these people are not communists. they're really only marginally russian nationalists. what they always people who leave well enough alone and have been through such hell in their lives and in the history that they don't want to rock the boat and i would say it's like the freedom and democracy in that stuff. as the song says, that's just some people talking and i think that. but i think that if you disrupt their ability to get three squares, they and really stop, they were ability to function. i think russian falls apart and i think the same is true of china. we check across says our big enemy is china and he doesn't realize that china more than anyone else is paralyzed by what we've done to russia. they have a whole northern flank in russia that they have to secure. and now with us defeating russia, it's insecure. that's biggest reason they can't invade taiwan now, because they can't let their whole flank be exposed to united states retaliation. so putin can go through his exercises, but i don't think he'll do it. and if he doesn't i think it's the end of russia. i think at that point it becomes a third world country. and, you know, we just kind of forget about it. hello mr. mars, thank you. my name, rosanna ravello. i live on long island and i'll be a poll watcher on november. good. good for you. my question is, how serious is donald trump on utilizing schedule f in order to dismantle the treasury very serious schedule? when trump was president, one of the things he did that was terrific, is that he said that in the veterans administration, where they said the bureaucracy has been so unresponsive to the need to veterans that he wanted, that permitted him to bypass the civil service system and fire anyone he wanted, hire anyone he wanted, promote anyone he wanted and demote anyone he wanted. and congress passed it and gave him that authority. and he wants schedule to be passed that would do this for the entire federal government. my old boss, bill clinton, said it best. he said being president is like running a cemetery. you have thousands people under you, but nobody listens to. and this really would solve that problem and would make the bureaucracy responsive. and i think schedule f is going to be a huge fight and a very, very important one, because ultimately this is bureaucracies out of control. and when you look the threat to freedom in the world, the most significant i think, comes not from dictators but from bureaucrats. the european union, for example, is not democratic at all. every country gets one vote and most of those countries, none of those countries really elect someone specifically for that. it's just proportional representation. and the party gets a certain number of votes. but the congress in the eu cannot introduce legislation, cannot pass legislation unless it's recommended by the executive and its organization run by bureaucrats. so is the japanese government. i got the prime minister of japan elected and he told me that after he was elected he was allowed to hire one secretary and that's it then that he had to work with the bloc as he was given and schedule left and this kind of thing dismantles that bureaucracy. and when you think about it, the bureaucracy is really the inherent the evidence of the i would stop policy in these countries where you were born to rule, you were born to wealth. and and it was not merit based. and that's really where they're at. and the schedule, that will be a great way of undermining that by the way, we haven't mentioned my favorite word. new york state. we're going to win. governor lee zeldin, here we come. and and i think that what that for aj yeah. yeah. thank you. get rid of that that one note pony whose sole thing was to donald trump. yeah, i think they'll both win. i think that i think that that will be victorious with both zelda and henry let me give you a little bit of background on this issue went to the jobs decision came down in the supreme court reversing roe the democrats had a party because they said, wow, we now have the issue we need we can use this issue to right the picture. nobody will pay any attention to inflation or immigration or crime. they'll all want to protect the right to choose. and in july and august, the republican party did not know how to handle that attack. and democrats ran lurid that saying alley abortions and, you know, coat hanger abortions and all that kind of stuff and. the republicans did not know how to handle it. then in september, they figured out how to handle it. i helped in that process and the way they handled it is i spoke to lee zeldin personally and i said, go up there and say, i cannot and will not change the abortion law in new york state. yeah, and one sentence. his whole campaign went away. i mean, what what's hochul going to say at that point? and that's similar. one sentence is one that herschel walker has used that in arizona, in the masters, has used all of these candidates are using it now. and it totally nullifies what the democratic party is pushing. it's like kryptonite to superman, and it totally offsets that negates it. but the democrats have nothing else to say, so they end up constant repeating this. and one of the reasons that they're falling off a cliff now is it's becoming evident that they have nothing to say beyond abortion, and that isn't anything to say. and then we're able to go on the offense and talking about 40 week abortion and moment before childbirth the boy --, any food that was polarizing because it was never solved in the legislature. they've been bound. we have to compromise. it was called roe v wade. you know, one or the other. and nobody saw the need to compromise. but the american people did. and they came to a consensus allowing for rape and --, allowed with the life of the mother is in danger and allow it for any in the first trimester, but not after that. and the democrat refused to embrace that consensus courageously and insightfully by senator lindsey graham, south carolina and that consensus mirrors the american people want and the democrats are too far to the left. and by the way, our own right to life movement was too far the right. but they let it go. they didn't insist on it. and our candidates were able to be moderate and reasonable without losing their base and good for for letting them do that. hello. unless your mother. hi, i'm i moved to new york seven to go from six, so i know how long you're. seven months ago. thank you. i'm originally from italy, so i'm very happy of what happened in italy with that. when, when you moved, did you notice the moving van had completely clear sailing new york to texas. new york, yeah. but on the other side of the road, there was a traffic jam. exactly that. so i wanted to ask you about, what do you think about the governor race texas right now? i think it up. it's going to win by a lot. and let me say that i think desantis and abbott have both really broke new ground in what it means to be governor they've redefined the job in a way it's an alternative to the presidency and i think that's an enormous service, tremendously creative and i applaud them both heartily that okay, okay, we're going to end this with myself. i just this one question that is i'm sure are on everyone's mind, we understand that donald's going to run. oh, we he won already. what's is he going to be to win? are we going to have a fair election in the united states of america? yes, we are, because there's a real solution coming. and the only person in public who mentioned this is my friend hillary who condemned it and said it was. a secret plan to steal the by the conservatives. but what it is, is that a group of slick of the constitution people who are conservative lawyers who know how to read and they read the constitution and it says the times places and manner of choosing the congress and the senate shall be determined by the state. let legislatures, not by the governors, not by the attorney generals, not by the secretaries of state not by the state legislators, but by the not by the federal legislators, but by the state legislature. and you have really good laws that have been passed down. georgia and arizona that are the model statute for combating the fraud that happened in 20 photo id require really at every stage if you mail a ballot, you have to write the last four digits of your social security number on the ballot. no ballot harvesting, no drop boxes really. good stuff. but in and michigan in pencil dana and wisconsin and north carolina, all the other swing states the legislature passed these bills. but the democratic governors vetoed them and what this court decision will do, the case called more v harper. it'll become very famous is they strip the governors the right to veto these bills. they say the constitution was very explicit. they didn't say the states will do this. they said the state legisla later will do this in history. but it was that when madison and the others wrote the constitution, they were afraid for authoritarian governments, not just at the federal level, but at the state level, too. and they saw the state legislature as the antidote to that, and therefore they bested the legislature with the power to oversee and control. and this case goes back to that. and i think they're going to win, they have four votes already who accepted security to see it, to hear the and i think we'll pick up a fifth vote and we'll probably get roberts, too. and that will end the problem of voter fraud as giuliani backs. i had i had rudy on my show and i said, will this solve the problem? he s i'm honored to be here tonight sharing the stage with commissioner bill bratton and ms.. o'donnell family. fellow rafael manguel. it is great to see so many of our friends in the audience, including mrs. president emeritus larry bone

Related Keywords

New York , United States , Georgia , Taiwan , Japan , New Hampshire , Texas , Washington , Cuba , China , Whitehouse , District Of Columbia , Virginia , Wisconsin , Oregon , Guatemala , Russia , Michigan , Monticello , Tennessee , Connecticut , Ukraine , Brooklyn , Mexico , Arizona , India , New Jersey , Bedford , Italy , Colorado , Pennsylvania , France , Americans , America , Chinese , Mexican , Russian , Ukrainian , Russians , Japanese , American , Boris Yeltsin , Bob Corker , Roe V Wade , Martin Luther King , Jesse Jackson , Lopez Obrador , Greg Kelly , Pat Moynihan , John Clooney , Donald Newkirk , Adolph Hitler , Viktor Yashin , Doug Dipietro , Lindsey Graham , George Patton , Callahan Ford , Tucker Carlson , Conrad Tillis , Kamala Harris ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.