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The letter this is how we started our day. was this letter started our day like this.
So we had uh He said that he was stepping down. He was leaving his post, Joe Kent, who works in Intel. As director of the National Counterterrorism Center. effective to day, he said. and he wrote this letter and he was saying that He's b blaming Israel.
Basically, it's he's dry humping the Israel excuse. There's the letter. And basically, all you need to know is Israel, Israel, and never-ending wars. Israel. And is some Israel.
I'm not gonna read it because for the same reason. That I'm not going to entertain this as anything more than a performative exit from a leaker. That's the same, I mean, that's kind of exactly why I don't like to. go and debate the homeless, the hobo sitting in his own filth, next to a dumpster behind the cutie. for the same reason.
So, this is, I'm just gonna tell you, this guy is apparently, this is, well, now we know where the leaks are coming from. I was wondering who was leaking stuff to Axios. And I was wondering maybe where Tucker Carlson got some of his stuff, because it seems like is this the guy who was trying to leak stuff to Tucker? Fair question. I want you guys to understand there's a shadow war happening in the administration right now.
Absolute shadow war that's taking place in the administration right now. Uh this You basically have the Tulsi Tucker camp. versus Trump and everybody else. That's happening right now. And they're trying to overrule Trump and undermine him every way that they can.
I don't trust Tulsi Gabbard at DNI. I don't. I have never trusted Tulsi Gabbard. I have not trusted Tulsi Gabbard since she came out hardcore against the Second Amendment and then decided to switch and act like she was very much in favor of the Second Amendment without explaining why she made her switch. And I was told by all of these people: well, just trust us.
She's good people. I don't trust you. I don't know who the F you are. What makes you think I'm going to trust you? I had friends of mine who worked in government who were saying, no, no, no, it's okay.
I felt like I was getting used or manipulated because people were telling me to not ask questions about her. People that were involved on the periphery of this administration, and even some other people who did some military consulting, were telling me to not ask questions about Tulsi Gabbard. The moment, I don't care who you are, I don't care how long I've known you. You really need to understand when I say that I like dogs better than people, I don't trust anybody. Nobody.
Maybe my own family, my own immediate family, that's about it. But everybody else, it's why you gotta keep folders on everybody. You gotta keep files on everybody. Because you can't trust a single person. And the more you get into it, you still can't trust them.
I'm telling you right now that they're trying to gut him, rhetorically speaking. They are trying to undermine him and tank the remainder of his term, and they're going to screw up midterms for everyone so that they can come in in 28. And they feel like that's going to be the time that they can actually come in and get some people that are more like-minded on their side in place. That's what's happening right now.
So you have the Tucker Tulsi faction, and then you have the people who are like POTUS and others, and the Fettermans and things like that. That's what's happening. And this guy is part of that first camp that I had mentioned. And it's so weird to see this happening. Trump had problems with leaks in his first term.
He's having problems with leaks this term. Because he's got people trying to undermine him, because they think that Iran should be left alone. Let me explain something very simply. Nobody likes going to war. I don't like war, and I've been incredibly consistent in this, as has POTUS.
I mean, for crying out loud, anyone who thinks that POTUS didn't dislike Iran has never paid any attention to this man. They are Johnny Cumbleys. They are a day late and a dollar short, and they need to shut the ever-loving hell up and sit down and allow the people who have been paying attention to this, who have watched this for more than just a half second on TikTok, actually provide the analysis because you're just putting turds in the punch bowl of national discourse.
So stop. It is absolutely infuriating.
So This is why war war is bad. War is bad because you got to do bad things. You got to break stuff and kill people. That's what war is. It's always supposed to be a last resort.
We're not in a war. But what do people want? What did they expect to happen? You had a combatant state, you had a state. that wanted to actually Use their missile capabilities in order to attack the United States.
And you can say, well, they've always been wanting to attack the United States. They actually never had this much cooperation from countries like China and Russia previously for all the precursors, for all of the inputs, for even the sequencing, everything that they were getting a lot of help from some of these other geopolitical foes. They were going to amass an arsenal to where even if they were able to enrich enough uranium and able to go full nuclear, you weren't going to be able to do anything about it because they would have rained down all hell on you with missiles. You wouldn't have been able to get close and we would not have had enough interceptors in order to deal with it. In fact, China wanted to wrap us up in this crazy manufacturing war, focusing on the Middle East while they made moves over in the Pacific.
Being America first does not mean shoving your head up your backside, sitting in the corner, sucking your thumb, and hoping that all the big, bad outside world goes away.
Sometimes, peace through strength means being the biggest dominator on the world stage. Mm-hmm. It doesn't mean using force, but it means having the ability to use it. This goes back to that old axiom about how. Are you actually peaceful or are you harmless?
There's a difference. People who are peaceful have the ability and the choice to commit great violence upon others. They have that ability. They have the ability to wreck lives. They have the ability to send your reality sideways.
But they choose. not to do so. It is a choice to be peaceful. And then there are the people who couldn't bust a grape in a fruit fight. The people who can't do anything.
Who aren't able to do anything, either through sheer will, lack of discipline, or just. Physical inadequacy. They are unable to do anything. And they're not peaceful. Because peaceful That's a choice.
These people are harmless.
So apply the same thing to the United States. With great power comes great responsibility. I want a nation, and in order for a nation to be truly dominant, it's a nation that absolutely has to be able to choose peace. not just be harmless. Look at Germany.
They're utterly harmless right now. In fact, the only damage they've been able to do to anybody is open their borders after they got into the EU, and you can thank Angle and Merkel for that. The UK. is harmless. They had one destroyer they were able to send to the Med to Cyprus, and this was after Iran droned it.
That's harmless. That's not peaceful. Don't mistake the two. Harmless people like to inflate their egos by thinking that they're peaceful when really they're not. They're just innocuous.
NPCs. in this world in which we all share. And that's the truth of it.
So you want a foreign policy to where we are peaceful but not harmless. And that is the way that you deter attacks. It's the way that you deter threats. It is the way that you promote sovereignty and security. Choosing peace.
but having the ability. to commit great destruction. If need be. And it's that threat. That keeps the peace because there are people out there, there are entities out there, there are regimes out there, there are nations out there that are not evolved enough.
To recognize this, they are not evolved enough. for regular diplomacy the way that civilized people are used to diplomacy. These are people who are brutes. and they only recognize brutal strength. I was listening to When I was on Jesse Waters last night, they played the sound bite.
And I think it was those broads on the view. And they were talking about how It's mean to say, to talk about the regime as though they're barbaric because that's dehumanizing, or to say that Islamism is incompatible with the Western world.
Well, it is. Islamism is a barbaric third world structure. of oppression and jurisprudence that is entirely incompatible with the thinking man's way of life. It is barbaric. I read a story Daily Mail yesterday evening.
That discussed how the nurses that were working in one of the biggest hospitals in Tehran that were treating the protesters that were being targeted by the IRCGA, by their guard. They were being raped to the point of death. I mean, I'll go into the details if you would like it, but suffice it to say that when you have to exist forever with a colostomy bag, because your insides were. Blended up by multiple rapists with the Iranian Guard, then yeah, that's that's a f that's bad. And that's what they did.
And it wasn't just to one nurse and it wasn't just to two nurses. It was any medical professional that was assisting by providing first aid to the protesters of the regime were being targeted. That is barbaric. it is animalistic, and it is not bigoted or bad or in any other way awful, to correctly note it as such.
So I go back to my first point. as it relates to this guy, Joe Kent, stepping down as the director of the National Counterterrorism Center. You have this shadow war that is happening in the administration right now. where you have the Tulsi Tucker faction that think There's one or two ways to go with this. That either, if you just ignore Iran hard enough, they'll go away.
When does that ever happen? That's the first thing. The second thing is They don't want Iran to go away. The second likelihood is that they want Iran to stick around. They want to see multipolarity.
They want to see the communist Alexander Dugan's Putin advising idea to come entirely into fruition. The diminishment of the West on the international stage. The rise of China and the rise of Russia That is what they're looking for. That's what they would like to see. That's one of two things, perhaps both.
But this guy's exit is entirely performative. He immediately goes on and says, Iran posed no threat to our nation. We started this war because of Israel. You know what? I don't know if you guys were aware of this, but there's an amazing test that was created to determine.
The purity of your genetics. Did you know that? Mm-hmm. They can actually do a quick blood test now to determine. How retarded you are Based on statements.
of a geopolitical nature. Did you know that, Kane? Oh yes, it's a very, very big. Very big test. Very important.
And what they discovered is that people who like to blame absolutely everything on Israel, including any instances where they might stick a stick into the spokes of their bicycle while they're riding it and crash and then blame Israel. Did you know that that's the sign of a positive test? I had no idea. Yeah, it's pretty amazing what can be done. That's one of the first symptoms.
You can test them and guaranteed it'll come back positive. It tracks. Yeah, yeah, it tracks. It's completely accurate. I think this is performative.
And you're not America first when you issue performative statements where you're attacking the administration. you're promoting woke Reich narratives. And you're trying to undermine the strength of the nation on the international stage with an appeal. 2. Authority And that's what this guy did.
So that's why there's no respect here. Our partners over at Chapter, which helps to bring you the program. You understand, I mean, a lot of people find Medicare confusing, and it's confusing on purpose, and that's exactly how people end up in bad plans, overpaying, undercovered. Finding somebody on your side matters. Chapter exists to cut through the confusion.
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Pound 250. Say Medicare plan. Yeah. Hello, hello, I'm Malcolm Gladwell, host of the podcast Smart Talks with IBM. I recently sat down with IBM's chairman and CEO, Arvind Krishna.
And I asked him, how can companies use AI to its fullest potential to create smarter business? My one advice to them. Pick areas you can scale. Don't pick the shiny little toys on the side. For example, If anybody has more than 10% of what they had for customer service Ten years ago?
They're already five years behind. If anybody is not using AI to make their developers who write software, 30% more productive today. with the goal of being 70% more productive. Yeah. Wow.
So we are not asking our clients to be the first experiment on it. We say, you can leverage what we did. We're happy to bring out all our learnings, including what needs to change. in the process, because the biggest change is not technology. is getting people to accept.
that there's a different way to do things. To listen to the full conversation, visit ibm.com slash smart talks. Lately, car buying has become a pretty dull experience. But on eBay, behind every car and part is a story waiting to be shared. There was a guy who bought a 2020 Porsche Cayman GT4 on eBay.
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Things people love. I wanted to give you a little insight, and we're going to have a piece rounding up some of this information for you. On um This story of Joe Kent, because this, I feel like they overplayed their hand with the way that he exited the administration.
So Joe Kent from some of my sources. They're saying that he was a horrific leaker.
So all of the stuff that we ended up getting, you know, all of the stuff that was leaked. That POTUS would have to deal with apparently came from this guy. Like, well, one of them. And he had leaks. In his first term, He's had a lot fewer in the second term.
But for this guy to get out and say, well, blame Israel while. uh saying that he can't support the uh ongoing conflict with Iran. It seemed performative and disingenuous.
Now a few things to know.
So Joe Kent. His previous wife, he's been married twice, his first wife. was killed in January of 2019. It was a suicide bombing. From ISIS.
I ran back to ISIS, by the way, and it was in Syria. They were targeting U.S. personnel. During a meeting, and she was killed by ISIS in this suicide bombing at the time. And it was part of supporting uh operations against ISIS as part of Operation Inherent Resolve.
She was later listed as the first female service member killed in combat in Syria. And the first by Enemy fire over there in three years.
Now It was This Individual The wife he ended up he remarried. Uh Heather Kaiser, I believe. And there's Some very interesting background about her. She works with. Max Blumenthal, who is a Clinton remember Max Blumenthal was a Clinton toady.
And Blumenthal has platformed uh Dugan or has retweeted Dugan, things of that nature. It's all related. All of this stuff is so incestual. And so The current wife is apparently part of what they call the gray zone, which is uh in in reporting entity. with Max Blumenthal and several others and She's has always within the publication.
Apparently, it has promoted spending in Ukraine and has tried to make the case that this is something in which the United States should be involved, etc. And there's just a lot of questions as to the motives, considering the affiliations and what they do and what they have written. And we'll talk more about this this week, but there's a lot of questions to be had over this. And I just think too. That the way that He exited.
Was not a principled maneuver. It was one. To get sin, it was one to be sensationalized. It was supposed to be sensational. His former campaign manager.
Well I don't even I mean it's part of the woke Reich. Uh Another advisor of his. attended the conference that was hosted by Nick Fuentez.
So that gives you some insight into this stuff. I just think when you have a lot of these affiliations and you promote this stuff in your writing and on social media. That it's pretty fair to judge you as being part of that group, I think, King. Doesn't that sort of. Yeah.
And I think this is all part of this shadow battle that is trying to undermine POTUS. on Iran and on the Middle East. Remember, this is about Reducing America's dominance on the world stage. Limiting us to a particular sphere. While encouraging growth with China and Russia.
There's a piece if you want to dive into it or listen to previous podcasts about it. We've done deep dives into the whole issue of multipolarity, and it's incredibly important to understand this stuff. It's important to understand it because you're dealing with it now, and you're going to be dealing. Excuse me, dealing with it as it relates to foreign policy, also. You're going to be dealing with all of it.
But this is all it all comes back to multipolarity. It all comes back to. Reducing the United States to being just one of many powers instead of the United States' dominance. And we're seeing this happen with the Woke Reich. The Woke Reich promotes this.
In addition, you see Tucker Carlson promoting it, this issue of multipolarity. Uh It is a it's a Major issue that I think takes supreme importance right now. Especially because They're seeking to Undermine every step Trump takes. Whether it's on foreign or domestic policy. And one of the reasons why you're seeing the increase in the discussion on this.
as because there's an increase in the activity on it. Is there trying to act swiftly? as POTUS's last remaining term starts to diminish as he starts to transition from Being out of the White House, they want to be able to have someone in there that they can control. Trump was supposed to be the guy that they could control. You know, I look back now.
There's a lot of weird stuff that I've seen, and a lot of it now starts to make sense because I told you guys, I grew up. in this industry. I started in this in my early 20s and I'm in my 40s now. And you see a lot of things. I was there with when Andrew Breitbart was rising, and I was there when I saw Bannon try to take over, and I have been there to watch Trump's ascent, and I watched these.
Vultures try to swarm in, and they're all on the outs with Trump now, but You know, I made the mention earlier my big criticism of Trump is The people that he hires to be part of his kitchen cabinet, you can't trust necessarily. My biggest criticism of his first term and the one that gave me a lot of hesitancy was that he had Bannon in there. Everybody that's ever had Bannon be a part of their circle has been burned. without exception. Pretty horribly.
And he ended up bouncing him because typically Bannon burned him. And then all these emails with Jeffrey Epstein come out. He's been trying to undermine Trump from the beginning. It was almost like he was a double agent. Really weird stuff.
I've just seen a lot of things, and I've got a lot of questions. I'm just saying. I'm not going to get into some of the French conspiracy theory stuff, but There's some conspiracy theories out there around all of this, if you guys are interested in it. There are some serious ones.
Some of it I've never spoken about, but there's some really weird stuff out there. And it starts to make sense when you see these people who were in Trump's kitchen cabinet, meaning they're your tight little group of people that you keep with you. That are uh Now on the outs. on the periphery. And this Joe Kent guy leaving, I think that he actually undermined his.
Mission by doing so in such a sensational way. Apparently, there's DNI testimony that's going to be coming up within what, the week, I think, Kane? Is that a distraction for it? I don't know. There's questions.
I'm looking more into that as to the details, but it does kind of throw a little wrench in the works, little stick in the spokes to this whole thing. And He's having to do all of this while also dealing with Britain and Canada. Dealing with Britain and Canada on top of it.
So we really are. Like, for instance, I've seen this Marjorie Taylor Greene, who I. I am not a fan of Marjorie Taylor Greene. I did a video once. With other female candidates.
And it included a number of female candidates. You might remember it. It's the one that involved a flamethrower on a tank. And We had a lot more female lawmakers that wanted to be in it, but then when they heard when they got when that Marjorie Taylor Greene was going to be involved, they absolutely rejected. They did not want to have anything to do with her.
Because they said she wasn't serious and that she was opportunistic, and apparently, and a lot of them are in Congress now. They had said that publicly she puts this face forward, that she's very supportive of POTUS, but they said behind the scenes, she's knifing him in the back. I've been hearing this for years. from very trusted sources. and not even just lawmakers.
some conservative journalists that see certain things while they're up there on the hill. And she was saying that nobody in MAGA wants a war. Here's the thing: they're all trying to claim ownership of MAGA. It is the movement that Trump built. I've never.
I've always thought, like, I like MAGA, but I've never thought of myself as a member. I'm not a joiner. And even with, like in the primary, when I liked DeSantis, I always get really weird when people push you to get very, very. uh fervently Excited about a candidate to the point where it seems inorganic, and I don't do that. I get really hesitant and reluctant when people push you to do that.
So I kind of like staying on the outside. and being able to call balls and strikes. It's just you have a lot more uh freedom to move that way. But she's trying to hijack MAGA. She's trying to say, well, MAGA doesn't like this.
I hear others say, oh no, MAGA doesn't I see a lot of these, like one of my Catholic friends calls them Timu Catholics. Because they just became Catholic and they think they speak for all Catholics, right? And they're out there saying, oh, MAGA doesn't want this. I've talked to all MAGA.
Well, actually, the polls show that they do want it. They actually agree with POTUS. on his moves. And according to whether you're looking at Rasmussen, whether you're looking at RCP, it doesn't matter where you're looking at it. But there are numerous surveys out there, pretty, you know, widely cast net.
That showcase that the majority of Americans actually do right now they are supportive of POTUS's position. on Iran. And Tucker Carlson tried to undermine it. Can I also just throw out too, who in the world thinks that they're going to influence Trump to view Israel as an enemy, considering his grandchildren? Who thinks that they're going to do that?
Who thinks that he's going to be moved by some of the speech? That has been made. About people who are Jewish or Israel. And I'm going to just say it now. These people are not drawing distinctions between the Israeli government and between Jewish people.
A lot of the people talking about it are so stupid they couldn't even spell Netanyahu, much less tell you the difference between the president and prime minister over there or how their governing body even functions.
So drop the pretense. Don't insult our intelligence because we sure aren't overestimating yours. But Trump is not going to be moved by that. I think it's hysterical that somebody like just the. Hubris to think that you're going to be able to convince The President of the United States to actually act in interests that would maybe conflict with what.
His son-in-law and daughter and his his kids what they know and what they live. It's just bizarre to me. But they're trying to hijack Trump's own movement. And excommunicate him from it. That's the op right now.
That's what they're trying to do. They want to run public approval of Trump into the ground. It is Trump derangement syndrome, just like the left has. And now it's infecting people on the right. And I'm telling you, if there's one thing he's been consistent on, it's these issues.
It's this specifically. We have a lot more on the way because I haven't even gotten into guess what's happening in Canada. They're banning kids from eating in the cafeteria lunchroom. During Ramadan, because it offends the Muslim students.
So if your kid's hungry, you don't get to eat. Because it offends the Muslim students during Ramadan. They're actually doing that in Canada.
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I recently sat down with IBM's chairman and CEO, Arvind Krishna. And I asked him, how can companies use AI to its fullest potential to create smarter business? My one advice to them. Pick areas you can scale. Don't pick the shiny little toys on the side.
For example, If anybody has more than Ten percent of what they had for customer service Ten years ago? They're already five years behind. If anybody is not using AI to make their developers who write software 30% more productive today. with the goal of being 70% more productive. No.
Wow.
So we are not asking our clients to be the first experiment on it. We say, you can leverage what we did. We're happy to bring out all our learnings, including what needs to change. In the process, because the biggest change is not technology. is getting people to accept.
that there's a different way to do things. To listen to the full conversation, visit ibm.com slash smart talks. Lately, car buying has become a pretty dull experience. But on eBay, behind every car and part is a story waiting to be shared. There was a guy who bought a 2020 Porsche Cayman GT4 on eBay.
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Things people love. Joining us now, Senator Rand Paul, because all of the action right now is in the Senate. With the SAVE Act, and he joins us now. He's doing hard work for the people on behalf of the voters in Kentucky and the rest of us. Senator Paul, always good to see you.
So, I just wanted to kind of get your reaction to Hakeem Jeffries there because he's saying we don't even need to do this, Senator, because you know, we've got the Constitution, it's already protected. He says New York is protecting that only citizens vote, but as I recall, New York had a head of the state board of elections who was a non-citizen.
So they don't have a requirement that you be a citizen to be the head of the state board of education, but I also think she was allowed to vote.
So I think New York says, well, yeah, you have to be a citizen in the federal elections, but in the state elections, we don't care who votes. I think they also have proposed in New York, I think it just went to court, that you could vote at age 16 as well.
So I don't know if New York's doing a very good job or not, but if someone is the head of the state board of either education or election, I can't remember which one it was. But if a non-citizen is one of those positions, it doesn't sound to me like they're very serious. The other problem is this, is that many states have based voting on showing when you register a driver's license. But then they don't have anything on the driver's license to indicate whether you're a citizen or not. In fact, they like to give them to everyone.
I spoke recently with the Republican minority leader in Minnesota, and he said we had a bill we wanted to print on the licenses. They said, well, everybody can get them, but if everybody gets them, they want to put non-citizen on there. But that was defeated in a party-line vote. The Democrats wanted nothing to do with non-citizen being on your driver's license. But then they want to use the driver's license as how you get to register.
So, no, I think there's a great deal of evidence that certain states don't seem to care who votes or not. Yeah, definitely, definitely so, which is why there's so many different fights over this. Talking with Senator Rand Paul in the Senate, this is the fight is happening with the SAVE Act. Is this, where does it stand currently right now? Because I know there's been a debate over the filibuster.
I think the debate even proceeding over the filibuster, there has been debate over the filibuster, but even before we get to the debate, we're going to have to see if there are 50 votes to get on the bill. If we have 50, then it's a tie vote, 50-50, and the vice president can come in and we can get on the bill. If we don't get to 50, then there's no discussion of a filibuster because you can't break the filibuster or do a talking filibuster if you have 49 votes.
So the very first vote will be the big vote. And there's between three and four who are saying they won't vote for it. I will vote. I'm a co-sponsor of the Save Act, I will support the Save Act. But there's three or four who have said they won't.
Part of the problem, though, if you want to pass this, and if your goal is to pass the citizenship part. is the more narrow the bill, the better chance you would have. They've added into it that you can't vote by mail. I'm against voting by mail. I think voting by mail is terribly and perhaps inherently more prone to fraud.
So in my state, I worked with the Kentucky legislature and we passed law saying virtually everybody votes in person. It's a felony to lie about needing to vote absentee if you don't really need to. And we have like 97, 98% in-person voting. But there are some states, and I'll just give you Alaska as an example, people live out in the bush country and they have to fly a plane to go vote. And so they like voting by mail.
But I think you're excluding one or two of the senators, probably just one of them, by including that.
So if it gets close and you aren't there, one way to get legislation passed is to narrow your legislation.
So if you're losing somebody, if you're losing two voters because of the mail-in voter aspect, You may not want to give it up. And in my state, we did it. We fixed it in my state, but you may have to remove that from the national education. You might pass it. There are a bunch of states out west.
For example, Utah, almost everybody votes by mail. They're a universal mail vote. It's a Republican state.
So it's going to be hard to understand how. We're going to pass this at the federal level against the wishes of a Republican state. Arizona's been a Republican state for 15 years. And look, if I were there, I'd be the leader of getting rid of mail-in voting because I don't like mail-in voting. But we should have made this a national priority 15 years ago.
And when we had all three branches in Arizona, we should have done it. But guess what? The Republicans had the state house, the state senate, and the governorship. They did squat because. A lot of Republicans like the mail-in voting.
I think mail-in voting is so rife for fraud that you should only have it in extraordinary circumstances. In Wisconsin, in 2020 election, there's like over 100,000 votes where there was no witness signing them.
So people go time after time to someone's house. They go four times. They never fill it out. Then they say, I'll fill it out for you. Then there's no witness.
And then you have no idea who actually voted. It's a terrible way to vote. That is the great thing about. Go ahead. I was going to say, that's insane.
I didn't realize it was that bad in Wisconsin. Yeah, it's bad anywhere you can harvest ballots because you go over and over again. And I just think it's a, think about it this way. When you vote in person, there are some immediate, very simple checks and balances. One, there's a book, it has everybody's name in it.
So you have to be in the book to vote. You would, it's kind of hard not to be in the book. You got to be in the book. If you have to show an ID to and be in the book, that's another thing. But then there's a Republican and a Democrat sitting at the desk.
They both have to agree that you're in the book and that's you and you have an ID.
So there's an immediate adjudication of fairness and veracity. But when it's mailed in, Particularly if it's mailed in without a witness. How does anybody know who voted? And what if that person's deceased and somebody filled it out for them? What if that person has moved and someone filled it out for them?
And so there's a great deal of problem. It's why you should really only have one, two, maybe 3% voting by mail: elderly, infirm, soldiers, things like that. But virtually everybody else should vote in person. And to my understanding, Senator, too, that's all included in the SAVE Act. I mean, there are carve-outs for those accommodations in the building.
It is. And the only reason I bring up narrowing it is if it doesn't pass.
So if we get 49 votes. If you don't want to give up, narrow the bill. Go to the four people and say, if we got rid of the mail-in voting, would you vote for just citizenship? And they might. And then, you know, maybe there's a a chance we could pass it.
Maybe a few Democrats. I think there was at least one Democrat who said they would vote for it if it were just the voter ID. Them. Yeah, they got it.
So, you know, that gets you up a bit. You still have to get to 60. But instead, we went the opposite way. At the president's behest, we threw a bunch of other stuff in there. Stuff that I agree with.
I mean, I'm all for, I don't think minors can consent to trans surgery. I'm not, I don't think adults can consent for a minor to some permanently disfiguring surgery.
So I'm for that. But I think if you put it in a thing that you're trying to attract Democrats or more Republicans to, it may not well not be strategically the best way to pass something. It seems crazy that we're having a debate on making sure people are American citizens before they vote in American elections. And it just seems that COVID contributed so much to the. Erosion of that integrity.
I remember when Georgia suspended some of their safeguards, double-checking signatures, things like that. And then they went and they decided to codify it in their Constitution, put it on the ballot and it passed. They decided to keep all that stuff, which is crazy. And it seemed that that made it so much easier to just throw all of those safeguards right out of the window. And that's kind of contributed to a lot of the roadblocks for you now.
So, you know, immediately after the 2020 election, the president was very vocal. The election, according to him, was stolen. And I acknowledged a lot of the points. There were several books written on this. There's a great deal of information that there was cheating in the election.
But I took a different approach. The president somehow was going to reverse that election. And I've been around elections. I've been around the cheating. I know what happens to these people.
The courts are terrible. And the courts were terrible. They didn't hear any of the valid arguments. But I immediately flew down about two or three weeks later to the National Republican meeting and I said, All right, at the very least, we need to go to every Republican legislature we control, which is about 35. and we should pass election reform.
The pandemic swung from maybe a handful of states doing mail-in ballots to all of a sudden the vast majority of the country was doing mail-in ballots. My state, I think we did over 50% mail-in ballots, and I wanted to make damn sure that it wasn't permanent, that we would go back to the traditional you vote in person.
So I worked hard in my legislature, we passed it. But we have probably a half dozen other Republican legislatures who haven't passed significant reform.
So I want to succeed with the SAVE Act, but I also think that we should also have a national Republican sort of agenda that is in the state legislatures where we control. Let's battle it out, even if it's among ourselves. Let's battle it out and have a voter ID. But even more importantly, let's go to voting in person. Yes.
I love that. I mean, I would support it even being a national holiday to go and vote and then still including, you know, again, some of the accommodations for the, you know, the infirmed and elderly, military, whatever. But I mean, is there any idea that we could have like a national holiday for voting? That seems like it'd be easy for everybody. I haven't seen it proposed.
I know some states do it that way already.
Some states already have holidays for people to vote. But I think most employers are pretty accommodating, too. I can't imagine an employer saying, oh, you can't take an hour, extra hour off to go vote, or I'm going to be an hour late today if I'm standing in line still. I like the idea of the employers controlling that, not the government. There is that aspect of it, too.
I wanted to ask you. There's a lot of things we could do. Yes, I wanted to ask you as well if I could get your attention on DHS for a moment, because we now are going to, we have a new recommendation or a new nominee for DHS after Christy Noam had, I guess, resigned, been removed from that position. And Mark Wayne Mullen is the nominee, but I also know that there's a little history between. You and Senator Mullen as well, because previously I know when you had been attacked by a leftist, he had said, Well, I can see why that happened.
And I'm just kind of curious as to your thoughts on him with DHS. Because if I were you, I don't know that I would want to vote for a guy, to be honest, as Secretary of DHS who said, Yeah, I actually see why that neighbor, that crazy leftist neighbor, maybe attacked Senator Paul. I don't know how I'd feel over that if it was me. I think it's an important question to know whether or not people support political violence, whether they can settle things in an intellectual manner, or they think that. Violence is an acceptable form.
I think it's particularly important to leading ICE agents, CPP agents, to have a good example set. We will find out more about what his opinions and attitudes are tomorrow. But there'll be a clear Um And fulsome discussion over this tomorrow. Yeah, I think that's a fair answer. That's a fair answer.
It's way more generous than I would have given.
So I think that's a very, it's a very fair answer. I wish we had more time. We'd love to have you back, though, Senator Paul, because there's so much to discuss. I mean, we could talk for an hour. I haven't even gotten into some of the foreign policy or some of the COVID stuff.
I mean, there's still so much to hit.
So we'd love to have you back, but we're going to be watching tomorrow, especially on that issue that you just mentioned. Senator Rand Paul, always a pleasure from the great state of Kentucky. Thank you for your time. Thank you. All right, kids, if you have ever fought with a garden hose, and you know exactly what I'm talking about, like the kinks and the tangles, and sometimes it looks bad after a year, and the whole thing turns into a rubber knot the second that you need it.
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Pata. We discussed his vision for the future of quantum computing. At IBM Research, what we always do is answer what is the future of computing. Whether it's coming up with new algorithms, coming up with better AI, coming up with quantum, or coming up with just how do different accelerators go together. It's our DNA to answer the question of what is the future.
Isn't it a perfect problem for IBM because you kind of need to have a legacy of building stuff? Yes. Building actual Physical machines. Yeah, it's why I came to IBM. I wanted the experience The culture of building hard things.
that others have not done before. Where do you imagine we are in the timeline of this technology? There will come a point. When it will mature, right? Yeah.
My cell phone is a mature technology at this point. How far are we from that point with content? By 2029, we'll build the first fault-tolerant quantum computer. That is one that can run a very, very large, large problem. To learn how IBM is building the future of computing, Visit ibm.com slash quantum.
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Things people love. Can I ask you, Juan, can you play Cut 18 for me? Since it is St. Patrick's Day. Let's go ahead and hear Mandani talk about genocide in Gaza, because that makes sense somehow.
I say this as over the past few years, as we've witnessed a genocide unfold before our eyes, there has been deafening silence from so many. For those who have long cared about universal human rights and the extension of them to Palestinians, silence, however, is nothing new. For Palestinians are so often left to weep alone. Yet former President Robinson has never been silent. Not when she was president, not when she was high commissioner for human rights, and not in the decade since.
As she once said, commemoration is a moral act. They're trying everything that they can do to bend over backwards.
So he's ripping. Genocide. on St. Patty's Day. And then he was asked a question.
About a united Ireland. This is cut 17. Listen to this. This is even more ridiculous, or as ridiculous. Listen.
And then on Ireland, you've talked about the importance of self-determination in international law. Do you support a united Ireland? It's funny. Wow.
I I gotta be honest, I haven't thought enough. On that question, I have to say though that I am incredibly appreciative of the privilege to lead a city where Irish Americans have played such a critical role in this city.
So Why would you ask him that question? I mean, he's An anchor baby mayor. Who Is being asked about a United Ireland right after he decides to try to compare it. Two. Gaza?
And the false accusation of a genocide, which honestly, people need dictionaries. That should act, maybe that should be like the little gift St. Patty leaves. is uh a dictionary for people.
So this is so he botched this answer. And then he went on to try to compare the plight of the Irish to genocide in Gaza. No mention of Hamas though. Also, no mention of the crazy people that his wife did illustrations for. They apparently knew that author a lot better than they let on, which is not going to be a surprise to anybody who's been.
Following it.
So he's out there. He's getting attacked by some of the left because they're going, oh, he's look at him wearing a shamrock and he fails to pledge support. I'm just like sitting back watching the left consume their own. And I. I enjoy this pastime.
I haven't thought enough on that question because he has no cl he has no clue. He has absolutely no clue. I mean this this is What a weird question to ask him. I had not thought enough about it. And then he decided to later on say, well, who can better understand those who weep than those who have been made to weep for so long?
Haney tried to act like the story of the Irish is just like what they're going through in Gaza. No, it's not even remotely. That's not even comparable in any way. That is not in any way even remotely accurate as a comparison. That's a crutch that he went to because he had no answer.
He is an anchor baby who's never had to work, who's never had to study, who has never had to actually obtain an answer that he sought himself. His parents provided absolutely everything for him, including his worldview that he still holds today and the animosity which he harbors against other individuals for simply having a different faith. Yes, he's thought quite a lot about it. But you're just not going to like any of his answers. And the left apparently didn't think that he went far enough.
So he hijacks the breakfast this morning there, the St. Patty's breakfast, to rant about genocide. That was done by The political entity that rules Gaza that he unabashedly supports and that his wife supports and that his wife liked the posts of.
So, I've been paying attention to what's happening with gold and silver lately, and honestly, it's pretty shocking. Gold and silver have risen to record highs in relation to the dollar. And after talking with Colin over at Noble Gold Investments, I really get it. This isn't about trying to time the market, it's not about chasing some get-rich quick opportunity. It's about protecting what you've already worked so hard to build.
And when the economy feels uncertain, and when currencies start weakening, when people get nervous about their retirement accounts, historically, they look for stability, and physical gold and silver have always been a part of that conversation. You know, I appreciate, I think, maybe the most that Colin and his team don't pressure people, right? They don't use hype, they didn't use that with me. They just simply walk me through my options, they answer questions, and they treat you with respect. And that matters.
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Hello, hello. I'm Malcolm Glabwell, host of Smart Talks with IBM. I recently spoke with IBM's new director of research, Jake M. Pata. We discussed his vision for the future of quantum computing.
At IBM Research, what we always do is answer: what is the future of computing? Whether it's coming up with new algorithms, coming up with better AI, coming up with quantum, or coming up with just how do different accelerators go together. It's our DNA to answer the question of what is the future. Isn't it a perfect problem for IBM because you kind of need to have a legacy of building stuff? Yes.
Building actual Physical machines. Yeah, it's why I came to IBM. I wanted the experience. The culture of building hard things. that others have not done before.
Where do you imagine we are in the timeline of this technology? There will come a point. When it will mature, right? My cell phone is a mature technology at this point. How far are we from that point with content?
By 2029, we'll build the first fault-tolerant quantum computer. That is one that can run a very, very large large problem. To learn how IBM is building the future of computing, visit ibm.com slash quantum. Lately, car buying has become a pretty dull experience. But on eBay, behind every car and part is a story waiting to be shared.
There was a guy who bought a 2020 Porsche Cayman GT4 on eBay. It was well loved. There are plenty of Caymans in great condition on eBay, but this one needed some work. That's just the start of the story.
So, after this guy gets a great deal on his dream car, he rebuilds the whole thing with all these parts he found on eBay: performance brakes, suspension, body panels, the works, guaranteed to fit.
Next thing you know, this nearly scrapped Cayman was out there on the track as a full blown race car. You're ready to go, daily driver, your next Restamont. Hello, Lotus Salon, and the parts to finish it. eBay has thousands of cars and has the largest online selection of vehicle parts and accessories. eBay.
Things people love. And now, all of the news you would probably miss. It's time for Dana's quick five.
So I just saw that Disney CEO Bob Iger is going to be stepping down from Disney tomorrow for whatever reason. If experts stop auto-refreshing and killing all of our souls, it would be flipping amazing.
So I don't know who's taking over. Do I care? No, I literally don't care. If the world's survival depended on all of us caring about who was going to step into that spot. Then we'd all die because nobody cares.
But Bob Iger's stepping down.
So we've got that. Additionally, the I remember, do you guys when I was young, I remember watching Showtime at the Apollo. And I remember Kiki Shepard. She's passed away, 74 years old. She was kind of like the Vanna White in a way, like co-host of.
Uh, Showtime at the Apollo. She apparently had a massive and completely unexpected heart attack in Los Angeles. Her representative confirmed the news. And so, Kiki Shepard, that's kind of sad because she was like a fixture. She was there for like 20 something years, or I don't remember how long, but quite a long time.
A stomach virus has ripped across Northern California.
Well, actually, cruise ships particularly and Northern California. The Norovirus. This is why I get really weird with, I went on one boat my whole life. To Norway, and I will never. I just, I'm not a cruiser, just not.
I am not. But 153 people got sick with the norovirus on a princess cruise ship. And they said that it's rife in the Bay Area as well, wastewater scan. That measures this stuff in wastewater. They said it's incredibly contagious.
And when people don't wash their hands, this is what happens. And so, if you are terrified of buffets, as I am, that's what a cruise ship is: it's a giant buffet of norovirus. That's what it is. You're gonna get norovirus. You're gonna get something.
Everybody sits here and they don't wash their hands after they touch themselves, and it's disgusting.
So, no. Oh, let's see. Flight cancellations. 3,000 flights canceled. Eastern U.S.
braces for high winds and tornadoes. And this, according to Flight Aware, actually, it's well over 3,000. It's like 3,573 have been canceled that were destined within, into, or out of the United States as a core as to just check the damn thing. Just check it. Godly.
Uh let's see here. New York City. The average age of a homeowner, particularly in New York, has jumped. I mean, you're basically going to be like short of death. To buy a house.
It's 58 years old, average age. That's insane. Stick with us. We have a lot to unpack. As we move, our partners, our friends over at Burner Gun, you know, I've told you a million times, I don't even know how many times I gotta say it, I have no problem carrying a gun or using lethal force to defend myself.
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I'm Malcolm Glabwell, host of Smart Talks with IBM. I recently spoke with IBM's new Director of Research, Jake Empada. We discussed his vision for the future of quantum computing. At IBM Research, what we always do is answer: what is the future of computing? Whether it's coming up with new algorithms, coming up with better AI, coming up with quantum, or coming up with just how do different accelerators go together.
It's our DNA to answer the question of what is the future. Isn't it a perfect problem for IBM because you kind of need to have a legacy of building stuff? Yes, sir. building actual Physical machines. Yeah, it's why I came to IBM.
I wanted the experience. The culture of building hard things. that others have not done before. Where do you imagine we are in the timeline of this technology? There will come a point.
When it will mature, right? Yeah. My cell phone is a mature technology at this point. How far are we from that point with content? By 2029, we'll build the first fault-tolerant quantum computer.
That is one that can run a very, very large, large problem. To learn how IBM is building the future of computing, Visit ibm.com slash quantum. Lately, car buying has become a pretty dull experience. But on eBay, behind every car and part is a story waiting to be shared. There was a guy who bought a 2020 Porsche Cayman GT4 on eBay.
It was well loved. There are plenty of caimans in great condition on eBay, but this one needed some work. That's just the start of the story.
So after this guy gets a great deal on his dream car, he rebuilds the whole thing with all these parts he found on eBay: performance brakes, suspension, body panels, the works, guaranteed to fit.
Next thing you know, this nearly scrapped Cayman was out there on the track as a full blown race car. You're ready to go, daily driver, your next Restamont. Hello, Lotus Salon, and the parts to finish it. eBay has thousands of cars and has the largest online selection of vehicle parts and accessories. eBay.
Things people love. Playing a little bit of YouTube's Beautiful Day. That song came out some years ago. It's a great track, and I remember this song. was super popular.
When right around the time that we were having our firstborn. And I always think that everybody has their their uh own theme song. You know, like you're the song that you would play if you were walking out onto the field. Like, this is your song. And I always felt like that was his because I'm like, what?
I mean, it's your first kid, and it just perfectly. Encapsulated the whole feeling at the time. I think it's one of their most brilliant tracks. It's a really good song. Um but uh you know we're rounding out our Irish Artists.
There's a ton of Irish artists we could play. There's so many good ones. But St. Patty's Day. So I wanted to.
I have a piece that I'm working on that's going to be a part of the battle for the soul of the right that's coming out about this. And I have another standalone that gets into some of the myths as it pertained to like some of the Israel stuff that we had a week and a half ago that I was going to do as a different series, but I'm going to fold it into this because it's all different spokes on this wheel. But I really think That this Joe Kent resignation is a little bit more than it's being made out to be. Because this was designed to Kickstart. Opposition, to make it look like there was more opposition to the president's foreign policy.
Then Intended, right? They wanted it. A friend of mine who I retweeted said this was supposed to be, it was supposed to intimate an internal groundswell against Trump by America first patriots. You know, Kent had the service industry, the John, the new wife, and he who was to microwave his latent radicalism. And now It was supposed to be a demoralization operation, but the pushback has been pretty fierce because I think the alt-right is the woke-reich.
I think I do agree that they misjudge their popularity. And as James Lindsay said when he was on with us last week, the constitutionalists' immune system has kicked in. To fight back against this virus, it's a mind virus, just as the wokeism is. It's all the left. That's all it is.
What this was was an op. I. I I'm not a betting person, but I would bet. This was an absolute op. It was an op designed to Undermine the President of the United States.
It is an op that's designed to erode his support as his final term wanes. There is a faction whose Trump derangement syndrome. was only placated by temporary power adjacency. And now they're coming up for air because they think this is the time to start power jockeying. That is what this is.
Anyone who tells you any different is lying to you, or they're not paying attention, so they don't know. That is what's happening here. This is 100% exactly what is happening. It's It is all designed. That's why online it seems like there are more people going off on POTUS.
But then, when you do a meet space survey, the majority of Americans are supporting his moves. Nope. We he followed the War Powers Act. Congress hasn't declared war, so we're not in a war. It's a conflict.
And it was done, and I'm trusting his word on this. His and Rubio's. They didn't want Iran to develop this capability of massive ballistic missiles. They have the ability, as they've been showing, to hit outside of Iran. And they didn't want this with these, you know, that you can easily affix a nuclear warhead to.
They didn't want them to be able to have this ability. to where they would be untouchable and we would be behind The cart. In terms of playing catch up with manufacturing. And that's what China was hoping for. That's why China was trying to basically inject steroids into their production with precursors, with their inputs, with everything else, so that they could help them manufacture.
Uh faster and we would be playing catch-up. And then we wouldn't be able to defend against anything. Should we decide, oh my gosh, they're threatening to kill us again, should, you know, or they're killed more service members, or they try to kill the president again. You know, I mean, I. They've been very clear about it.
The people who have been saying, oh, we're not dying for Israel, they want you to die for Ukraine. They're fine with that. They want you to die for everything else. They want you to die for Wogury. They don't care.
They want you to die for Islam. Because that's really what this is about, also ceding the ground for Islam while diminishing the United States on the world stage in terms in favor of this idiotic, you know, commie-regurgitated multipolarity. But make no mistake, this is an op. He's got snakes underfoot in his own administration, and they're starting to out themselves because they're misjudging their popularity, and they think it's safe to groundhog their heads up. That's what all of this is.
And I'm gonna have a piece coming out about it. All right, in the meantime, today and stupidity came. All right, Juan, this is cut number 13. Debbie Wasserman Schultz. She doesn't think voter ID is important.
Matter of fact, she thinks it's detrimental. Listen to this. This is about one thing. Ensuring that it is much harder for people who are unlikely to go to the polls and vote for Republicans, and that making it much harder for them to cast their ballot. Putting obstacles in the path of people who simply want to exercise their right to vote, which is the most precious right we have.
So she believes people who can't get an ID or whatever projected problem she's making up are voting for Democrats typically.
So she thinks it's going to hurt Democrats because we expect people To prove they're American citizens before they vote in American elections. That's so telling. Isn't that weird? Wow, that's so weird. Hmm.
Maybe they're being honest accidentally. That does it for us today. Happy St. Patty's Day. And I'll be back behind the mic with you tomorrow.
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