The Tucker Carlson Show
The Tucker Carlson Show

Rep. Thomas Massie: Battling the Treachery of Trump’s Republican Party, AIPAC, and the Epstein Class

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Thirteen days from now, Thomas Massie will prove whether or not pro-American politics are allowed in Donald Trump’s Republican Party. U.S. Representative Thomas Massie entered Congress in November 20...

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Now in your filial. ID, Otis, Fial. So how's your Ron War Bin so far? You enjoy in the Iran War? Well, that really depends on who you are.

We like to think as Americans that we're all in this together. And big events like wars or economic booms or crises or natural disasters affect all of us equally.

But that's not true and it never has been true.

How you experience something big really depends on where you sit. And again, that's been true since the beginning of time. When Rome fell in 476 September, 476, it of course was a history-changing disaster that we're still talking about books have been written about it ever since, more than 1500 years. And for most people, it was really the end.

It was the end of a civilization, the world's largest empire. But there were some people you can imagine on New Year's Eve 476 sitting around the table with their families assessing the year that just went by. And they looked around the table and said, "You know, that was the best you we ever had."

Of course, the Germanic hordes are plundering the city of Rome, but for us honestly is pretty great.

And that's just the nature of it. Not anything inherently wrong with that is just a fact. You saw it during COVID. COVID was a massive disaster for most Americans, for most people in the West. Addiction rates went up, suicide rates, divorce, kids didn't get educated for over a year.

It destroyed a whole generation of young people affected them badly anyway.

On the other hand, if you were fortunate enough to have a second home, like a weekend house

in a rural area that didn't have COVID restrictions or enforcement officers capable of enforcing them, it was pretty great. If you lived in a traditional world, like say where your wife didn't work, because she didn't have to, because you made enough money, you could live a kind of 1950s family existence, and you catico-hearant family and children who still liked you sort of, and they were all

home for months. Just like the best time you had in the last 20 years, people don't want to say that out loud, but that's real. And the Iran war is a little bit like that. It's an event that is affecting our lives right now or certain to define our lives in

important ways going forward, an event that's changing the world for all time, an event

that people will write books about. And for most, it is a disaster, a true disaster, not just for the thousands you've already been killed, or the dozen countries that have been bombed, or for the hundreds of thousands of Britons in the UK who've dropped below the poverty line already two months in, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.

It's a disaster, but for some small, select group of people, it's been awesome. Let's check in with our old friend, hedge fund manager, Bill Akman. This was him two days ago in CNBC. Here's how his war is going. Iran has been, I think, a major funder of sort of anti-American protests, and kind of otherwise.

I think, you know, that war is a very good one, and a war is a very good one. It's, I think, we've very unpopular, though, I don't know, I don't know, surveys to trust. Look, I think most Republicans, many Republicans support the president, and it shouldn't be a bipartisan issue. The Iran war is a very good one, really, says the interviewer on CNBC.

No, really, yes, a very good one. Is it an unpopular? I don't know about that.

And the truth is, Bill Akman probably doesn't know.

He may not know anyone personally who thinks this is a disaster because for Bill Akman, and his friends, the Epstein class, it's been a massive win. And that's been pretty obvious, increasingly, if you're following markets. So there's this phenomenon that people are starting to catch on to, where a certain news organization predicts, seriously, many times in a row, over the past 20 or so days, an imminent

piece of agreement between Iran and the United States. Now, that agreement has not materialized, apparently we're not actually close to getting one, but at the moment when that's announced every single time you've seen a massive move in global energy markets and an equity market stock market, because people are betting that that will have direct effects on the value of stocks and/or will or other commodities.

And a little bit before that announcement, every single time you have seen massive bets made on oil futures, you've seen billions of dollars change hands.

You can surmise that somebody is getting rich doing this.

In fact, you can be absolutely certain that you don't know who, really, the only thing you know is A, it's happening, and B, no one will ever be held to account for it. Now, how do you know that?

Because we've seen this a lot, in fact, we saw it and no one ever wants to remember this

on 9/11, shortly before 9/11, somebody put big bets in shorts against airline and bank stocks. Those are two businesses that were directly affected by the events of 9/11. Now, we know this happened because these are public markets, so there's a record of it, but we also know because they admitted it, the FBI figured out who did it.

But the FBI never got around to telling us their identity.

So the largest federal law enforcement agency has known for 25 years who had four knowledge of 9/11 and that's demonstrable because they bet against the events of that day before the rest of us experience them and has never divulged their identities. Now, we can guess as to why that is, why the FBI be protecting people with four knowledge of 9/11.

We don't know for certain what the answer is, but we do know that they are doing it. They did it and they're still doing it. So if the identities of people who bet against 9/11, who shorted airline stocks before 9/11

are somehow classified on national security grants and you're allowed to know them, then

we can bet safely that whoever is profiting from the Iran War in public markets probably isn't going to get any kind of insider trading violation, probably not.

But one thing we also have learned is that these markets are much more vulnerable, susceptible,

maybe based on manipulation than we ever thought. And if you think about it, that's kind of a surprise. Even people who complained about how central the stock market is to the American economy and you can argue whether we have a real economy if it's based on anything. That's a academic argument.

But even people who thought, wow, we seem a little bit over-invested in public equities markets, kind of assumed they were real and markets pretty straightforward proposition. And I've got something to sell, you want to buy it. I'll sell it for what you'll buy it for in vice versa. It's transparent by its nature.

It's self-correcting.

That's the basis of our economic system, capitalism, free market capitalism.

It always finds the right level, the rational level because it's based on the free exchange

of money for assets. But that's not what we're seeing now, not at all. What's your doing things you would not expect markets to do if they were behaving rationally in a free way if they weren't rigged? You would see, well, certain commodities prices, including oil go up a lot more and they

have gold, go up a lot more than it has. And yet gold and oil and other commodities have stayed far lower than you would rationally expect them to stay after 60 days of terrible news out of the world's center of cloud energy production. So the straight-of-form news has been closed for months now in effect.

And yet oil, as if airtime tonight was under a hundred bucks, a barrel, much lower than it was in say, 2008, that is bizarre. But it's more than bizarre, it's fake. It is obvious it's become too obvious to deny over the past couple of months that public markets are not what they told us they were, which is to say open and free and equal for

everyone to participate in. It's going to take a long time for that understanding to percolate down to level of retail investors, but the knowledge is there and you can't kind of deny it that some people are getting rich from this and most people aren't. And it's not exactly clear the mechanisms by which they are, but it's very obvious

that it's happening. We're not accusing the lackment of participating in this. It's not like the lackment would talk down share prices in publicly traded companies to make money. Oh wait, he's done that his whole life.

But in this specific case, we have no evidence of a crime, assuming it still is a crime. But we can say with great confidence that in this as in every other war, some people will do just fine. In fact, they will greatly benefit from it, which is one of the reasons we keep having wars because they are enormously profitable.

It's hard for normal people to appreciate that that could possibly be true. People die in a sense die in foreign countries, your own country becomes poor, your own service members die. So you can get rich, could anyone be that dark? Yeah.

And we're watching it now. So there is a part of the population that thinks this has been a very good war. And isn't even aware that it might be unpopular with anybody else because I haven't met any one in the famous words of Pauline Kale who didn't vote for George McGovern, who lost

Very badly in 1972.

We all live in our own worlds.

So Bill Akman doesn't know anyone who doesn't think this is a great, a great thing.

It's a great war. So how's the rest of the country doing? Well, the Chairman of the White House Council and Economic Advisors Kevin Hassett was called to long today to give an account of the American economy. And that's a tough thing to do when we say this with a great sympathy and no personal

animist toward Mr. Hassett at all. But here's the tape. Here's what he said. So the consumer is really, really firing on all cylinders just like the corporate sector you're seeing in the earnings reports.

And they're doing that because they have so much more money in their pockets. In fact, I had the head of one of the big five banks in my office yesterday going through the credit card data and just as Secretary Bessons said, credit card spending is through the roof. They're spending more on gasoline, but they're spending more on everything else too.

Credit card spending is through the roof. That it now again, you feel bad for the man who has to present those data, those data to the public as if they're a win. But think about this for a second. The average interest rate on a credit card, not even a new credit card, but an existing

credit card, which is to say, a credit card held by someone with a track record of paying money every month to credit card companies. These are not a high risk credit card, these are normal credit cards.

The average interest rate in the United States right now is 23 percent, 23 percent.

And by the way, that goes up to 36 percent, probably higher than 36 percent. And officially 36 percent is the highest rate, any mainstream credit card will charge you. You could go get a personal bank loan for 11 percent. So you could borrow money at less than half the rate than you're getting from your credit card company.

So why would anybody use a credit card and roll over the interest?

30 percent of American adults cannot repay their credit card balance. That's 111 million people. And they are paying on average 23 percent interest. So that's not a win. That's a sign of desperation and impending poverty.

And keep in mind, we are living right now in the final moments before whatever AI is going to bring us. Those data centers being erected in your town, the ones that you are paying for through higher energy costs, through the legacy environmental cleanup, you're definitely on the hook for those data centers are being constructed in order to eliminate half of all American

white collar jobs. So you hate to use the hackneyed cliche digging your own grave, but it's not entirely an overstayment at this point. Those data centers going in, destroying the landscape in your town, eating up fertile farmland in some cases, certainly making everything uglier and providing almost no jobs.

Those are going up in order to facilitate AI.

And the only thing we know about AI is it's going to eliminate half of all productive

work in the United States. That hasn't happened yet. It's beginning to happen, but all forecasts from the people who are developing it, who have every incentive to downplay the negative effects of the technology they're creating. All the forecasts suggest in the next two or three years, we're going to see economic disruption

on a scale we've never even conceived of.

Keep in mind that economic change always precipitates, always causes forces, economic forces political change. And if the economic change is profound and abrupt enough, it causes revolution, the first and second rule wars were a reaction to the industrial revolution of course, Marxism was a reaction to the industrial revolution.

But no technological change in all of history matches the abrupt and radical change now being promised by the developers of AI. So all of this, the conversation we're having about the American economy and how much money people have and how much they owe, all of that is taking place in the final moments before the economic cataclysm we've been promised by artificial intelligence.

So it's not like we can wait 10 years for this whole thing to self-correct for markets to become honest again and for people to make a wage sufficient to buy a home in race children. This is all happening, which is to say people are getting poorer and far more indebted on the eve of what we should all be staying up late worrying about and trying to fix.

But instead, known as worried about it in any position of authority, people seem to be

Wholly focused on caching in on it, build the 40,000 acre data center as soon...

can get taxpayers to pay for it in effect by children in the cost of running it through

higher utilities and take as much money off the table as you can while you can. That's what it looks like. Now maybe that's an ungenerous interpretation, maybe there are a lot of people who really trying to build a better tomorrow through AI and that was there are some of those. But big picture that does seem to be what's going on and you know it because no one

has explained to you how this is going to be good for you. Instead they're telling you that borrowing money on your credit card is a sign of economic health. It's a sign that we're on the right track. We have more money to spend.

That's why we're buying more on our credit cards.

No, people have more money to spend by things. People who have no money to spend by essentials on credit. And that's exactly what is happening. Now, some of that is a reaction to the economic changes already wrought two months in by the war with Iran, some of it is the downstream effect of years of bad economic planning.

Years of living in an economy where Bill Aquaman makes eight billion dollars or something with an IQ of 105 with no track record of improving the country or creating anything. Basically it's leaching off the existing system, wondering it effectively, he hates it when you say that.

But he's never explained how what he does for a living is good for the United States or

productive in any sense, it's merely extractive, probably worse than lead mining. But all the gains, the substantial gains over the last 20 years have not been broadly shared by Americans, they've gone upward. Now, that's a moral problem, maybe, probably, but it's certainly a management problem. It is a problem of governance at a certain point because it means a huge number of Americans

will go to the 111 million, the number that can't repay their credit card debt, who have no vested interest in the system. They have a negative net worth, they don't own anything. They are living here, but they don't see a future for themselves or their families or they may not have families and they certainly don't own anything worth protecting.

So what is that out up to, social and political volatility?

So you would think the people in charge of the country who are benefiting the most, the people like Bill Akman who think it's been a really good war would be very concerned about this and they would not want to put any more economic pressure on this beleaguered population and particularly on young people who seem to bear the brunt of it, probably because they have the least political power, so nobody cares what they think.

Healthy society would be totally focused on young people think because they are building this society that will outlive the current leadership of that society, but they're ignored. So if you were thinking longitudinally, if you were thinking about what's best over time for your country, your civilization, you'd be focused on them and you would not casually add to their burden.

But what we're watching is a kind of frenzy of carelessness, of thoughtlessness, of chivalrousness toward people whose lives have not gotten better over the past 30 years, but gotten measurably worse in every category of measurement. Now you hate to pile on and you hate to take the president literally because as Vibes said many times, Trump has not meant to be taken literally sort of like reading poetry.

The theme is what matters, the feeling it evokes is what matters, I've made that argument

and it's often true, but at some point, particularly when you're talking about hard numbers, the prices of commodities, for example, in the middle of a war that is affecting those prices, it is worth paying attention to the president's own estimates of the costs of this voluntary war that he started at the demand of Israel. So here's the president, I think yesterday explaining his view on oil prices.

I also thought oil would go up to 200, 250, maybe 300, and I know it'll be shorter, but I thought it would go, I looked today, it's like 102, and it's a very small price to pay for getting rid of a nuclear weapon from people that are really mentally deranged. It's 100, I thought it was going to go to 200 or 300.

What would $200 a barrel oil mean, what we've never had it, we've never had in the, and

this is these are adjusted numbers, we've never had $200 a barrel print crude period in

World history, but what would happen if we did, well, I don't know, $10 a gal...

unleaded at the pump, more for diesel, much more for jet fuel, what would that mean? Well, it would mean inflation, possibly hyperinflation, what would $300 a barrel oil, which

the president said he imagined we could have, what would that mean?

Well, it's not even worth guessing because no one's even modeled it out, no one's even taken the time to write out the formula or gas as to what effect $300 a barrel oil would have on human civilization, but you can be absolutely certain it would be the end of a lot of things that we take for granted, certainly air travel, jobs. It would be a true disaster on the level of, I don't know, a national tsunami or hurricane,

it would affect every person in the United States making less than a million dollars a year.

It would crush people already at a hundred bucks in the U.S. hundred dollar oil, you just heard the president say it's 97, something like that. People around the world are worrying about famine because, of course, oil is not just used to produce gasoline and jet fuel and asphalt and carousine in all the familiar products, it's also used to produce fertilizer, all kinds of petrochemicals used to manufacturing,

but fertilizer.

And without it, crop yields go down and people starve in the most populated continent in the

world, which would be sub-Saharan Africa. So already you are seeing a massive human cost not well-reported in American media to

a relatively small spike in global oil prices.

And here you have the president say, I thought it could be 300 bucks. That's like saying, well, I thought they might drop a neutron bomb on Chicago, but you know, how do you want to risk it? No president should ever be willing to talk that casually about the economic destruction of his nation, the justification for it. It's worth it, said the president, because Iran had nuclear weapons and you can't let

crazy people have nuclear weapons. So it's almost not worth, rebutting that with the facts, which are as follows, Iran did not have a nuclear weapon, they don't have ICBMs to deliver that weapon here or anywhere near here.

It did not have an active nuclear weapons program and the American intelligence community,

all 18 separate agencies to determine that conclusively after studying it for years and with the motivation to find said nuclear program they couldn't. So no Iran did not have a nuclear weapon. It was nowhere near getting a nuclear weapon, despite the line you have often heard. It was not even an imminent threat. It was not close to an imminent threat, despite the

fact the Israelis had told us and he was Congress for over 20 years that it was imminent threat. That was a lie.

But you have to ask yourself, even if it was true, would that justify destroying the American

economy, would it justify, I don't know, driving 200,000 Britons into poverty in two months, and that's just the opening cell phone, would it justify a famine in Africa? No one wants to say it, there are a lot of countries nuclear weapons. You don't want any of them to have nuclear weapons because any normal person thinks nuclear weapons are bad because they are by definition weapons have mass destruction that

kill innocence. So they are bad as a category. But there are a lot of countries that have them, including countries with, well, leaderships that are filled with religious extremists like Israel and Pakistan and in a way, North Korea. And the world has been able to continue for, now, almost 30 years with a nuclear on Pakistan,

it's not ideal, maybe we should have done something during the Clinton administration to stop it, but we haven't had to destroy the American economy in order to do something about it since then, of course not. And in fact, the deeper truth is that there is a kind of stability as bad as nuclear weapons are when rival nations possess them, India and Pakistan, which are countries with a long,

almost 80-year history of hating each other and many wars in the interim, have managed to fight fairly bitter conflicts since 1947 without using nuclear weapons against each other. How is that possible? Well, the mutually assured destruction principle which, as ugly as it sounds, is real. It's absolutely real.

What you don't want is a nation that feels no constraints whatsoever, that feels it can do whatever it wants, it feels it can roll into its neighbor's sovereign territory and

Expel the population and kill people.

This is exactly what we thought the lesson of World War II, that's bad.

That's kind of what you get when you have a country that feels it has unconstrained power,

it can do whatever it wants, what does it tend to do, well, whatever it wants. And so you could at least make the case academically, even if you disagreed with the whole idea of nuclear weapons and thought they were probably inherently evil, even if you

wondered where they came from in the first place, if you had dark suspicions with the

genesis of nuclear weapons and some of us do, you could still make the case on a pragmatic basis that look at the effects, look at the effects, they are less bad than this. So that's the explanation from the president, you can see why in administration that had higher levels of support from young people a year and a half ago than any Republican in memory, young people came out for Donald Trump to vote for Donald Trump.

Why did they do that? Because they are dissatisfied with the system as it is, they understand it is rigged against them, comma because it is. And they felt here was one man strong enough to stand up against that system.

They tried to put him in jail, they tried to impeach him twice, he was a guy who understood

he was up against and would take it on and was brave enough to do that.

And a year and a half in what they've seen is a guy who got an office and immediately took

the side of the people who persecuted him for the preceding eight years. He took their side and became their most valiant champion and began to persecute their enemies as he himself had once been persecuted, he switched teams. And they look at this and they may not understand all of the details but they look at this in horror and they feel betrayed and that is obvious from the polling numbers.

And these are polling numbers that are so stark that you can't actually lie about them, you can't spin them. Donald Trump's drop and support among voters under 30 is precipitous, it's off a cliff. And there are a lot of reasons for this. The Iran war, the refusal to release the Epstein files, the mounting debt that most of them

carry, how's your average 27-year-old, five years out of college? Hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt from this four-year college was supposed to make the difference between getting ahead and staying in your hometown and stagnating in some dead end job. That kid likely has a negative net worth five years out of college.

And in many cases, they're told, point, like we can't hire you because of how you look. How do you think kids like that feel about Donald Trump? Well, you should talk to some.

So at this point, you have to ask, what's the solution?

What are people like that? Voters like that, young people, not exclusively, but heavily young people, what are they looking for? Well, probably what all people are looking for? Honesty, fairness, decency, a sense of humor, courage, a willingness to actually stand up

and fight and trench the power, that's what they're looking for. And who do they look to? There aren't any. One of them is a guy called Thomas Massey. He's a member of Congress from the Commonwealth of Kentucky.

Not the most important state in the union.

Not when you hear about too much. He's a member of Congress, one of 435. You may have heard his name, why? Thomas Massey is, in his district, and probably nationally, but certainly we know for a fact in his district, the most popular person among young voters, 80% approverating among

young voters. Why is that? Once again, because Thomas Massey has made good on the promises that Donald Trump made to the nation, to these very same people who supported him in 2024, and he's stuck with it.

Thomas Massey is a better standard bearer for Trumpism for the America First ideology that Donald Trump ran on three times. The Donald Trump is a far better spokesman for that, because he is not changed. Moreover, he's a thoroughly decent man. Cheerful, kind, loves his family, his children love him.

He's self-reliant. He is, in short, the American, they told us we should aspire to be a man who doesn't brag about himself, who says what he means, who stays true to his word, and who in the end, if it all falls apart, could take care of himself and his family. That's the American ideal, and that is Thomas Massey.

That's not fake, that's real. And that's obvious in the way that he behaves in public, as a member of Congress, and it's obvious in the way that he lives at home, in the farm he lives in, in the house

That he built with his hands.

He is the man you want your son to be.

And so you would think, at this point, Thomas Massey would have the full support of the

Republican establishment in Washington, oh, no, just the opposite. Thomas Massey has like three allies in the House of Representatives. A lot of people who like him personally, but only a very few who are supporting publicly because he has become the number one enemy of the Trump administration. Well, how did that happen?

How did a guy who ran for office on a clearer, more precise version of Trump's own platform who had 75% approval in the last election from his own voters, how did that guy become the number one person in the Trump administration wants to destroy 13 days from today in the Republican primary in Kentucky? How did that happen?

Well, there are a lot of reasons, but it seems pretty obvious this all began in this room on this show almost exactly two years ago in a two-hour long interview we did with Thomas Massey about a bunch of different topics, including his off-grid home-stead that he built with himself, his own hands, he, at one point, described the experience of serving in Congress and being asked to carry water for a foreign power Israel.

Now, Thomas Massey has never been hot on the topic of Israel.

How much Massey probably has been 20 minutes since his entire life talking about Israel or thinking about Israel. He doesn't hate Israel now. Its leadership is Ray Lee's kind of agnostic on the whole question, even now. But at the time, two years ago, Thomas Massey committed probably the most dangerous thing

you can commit in Washington. He explained how the process works, how is it that members of Congress arrive there with a plan to help their constituents and their nation and wind up spending such a huge percentage

of their time doing the bidding of a tiny Middle Eastern country of nine million people.

How does that happen? Well, part of the process revolves around a group called APAC. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee. Here is Thomas Massey's fateful description of the process in Congress. Watch.

There's a foreign interest group called APAC that, you know, got the ear of this current speaker and demanded 16 votes in April on Israel or the Middle East. We haven't had 16 votes in April on the United States in Congress. It's a group of Americans who lobby on behalf of Israel, there for anything Israel. They're very effective lobby in group.

They get in there, they try to get me to write a white paper as a candidate, for instance, for Congress. They almost get on one, on Israel. Like, and I wouldn't do it, and they said, "Wow," and I'm like, "I don't do homework for lobbyists."

Right? I didn't like writing term papers and said, "Kali, I'm not writing one for you." What did they say? They said, "Oh, well, here's just copy Rand Paul's term paper and put your name on it." We'll accept that.

And I'm like, "No, I'm still not craving somebody else's homework to do homework. I'm not turning in my homework for you." I hear laughing, but I bet I may be the only Republican in Congress who hasn't done homework for APAC, and it's just what it is, it's conditioning. They want you to do something very simple and benign, and, you know, for them, they don't

really, they don't really grade your term paper. They just want to know that you'll do something for them. And if you'll do something for them as a candidate, you're more likely to do something for them as a congressman when you get in there.

You will never hear the Israel lobby, describe more precisely the humiliation rituals included,

which are a key part of the process, to base yourself, and then you serve us always.

But you'll never hear it describe what precisely, but also more good naturedly. As he isn't mad, he finds the whole thing hilarious. I'm a member of Congress. I'm not doing homework for you, and he laughs, and he means it, and his cheerfulness is real.

It's not pose. He's not angry at a pack, he shouldn't have played along. He's an American. He doesn't have to play along, get out of my way, stop. He smiles, moves on to the things he cares about, like keeping the United States from

going bankrupt. That is the way, that is the way, right there. That reveals a total unwillingness to play along with someone else's charade to become someone else's servant or slave without any hatred at all. Thomas Massey isn't mad, because he knows he can't be controlled.

He's not a rich man, but you can't bribe him. He has everything he wants. He's not mad at you. You've got your agenda, but he's not going to serve it under any circumstances. Go away.

This Thomas Massey is not a hater, because his position is rooted in principle and

Good nature cheerfulness and American self-reliance and decency, and that's s...

everyone who watches him, he became the number one threat.

And next thing you know, the president's favored political consultant, Chris Lasavita.

Chris Lasavita is tweeting that Thomas Massey is quote garbage. You just call that man garbage, a political consultant has the brass to call that man garbage. A guy who literally sells his allegiance to whoever will pay him is calling that man garbage. Yes. Now why would Chris Lasavita say that?

Well, because he's been hired by in Israeli called Miriam Adelson, a woman who was married to late Sheldon Adelson, who made billions in the gambling industry. How mostly in China, who was one of, if not the single biggest contributor to Donald Trump's campaign last time, now she may be American citizen, but she was asked point blank by the president on camera, what country are you more loyal to the United States

or Israel, and she indicated very clearly Israel, which is her right, of course. But she kind of, in stating that, gives up her right to influence American politics. Both loyalties self-professed loyalties to other nations should not be involved in our politics. They certainly shouldn't be central players in our politics.

And yet now she is, as she was in the last election, Miriam Adelson was not clear as ever been to Kentucky, is spending through Chris Lasavita, the president's political consultant who has decided Thomas Massey is garbage, human garbage, whatever it takes to take the seat away from him, because he committed the crime of describing how things actually work in the U.S. Congress, and that cannot be allowed.

And as a lesson to others, future Thomas Ratt, Massey's. Anyone who gets the idea that maybe I'll get to Congress until the truth about how things actually work, maybe I'll put my own country, my own community, my own people ahead of other concerns that have nothing to do with this country or its people. Maybe I'll let those people know, don't bother, because you'll be crushed.

You won't win, and if you do, they'll be Chris Lasavita out there calling you garbage, attacking your wife as they have, spending tens of millions of dollars against you just to make sure that no one else tries to be you ever. All of which leads to where we are right now, which is a moment where a Republican congressional

primary in Kentucky is the single most important political race of the year, because if

they are successful in doing this, crushing a man, defaming a man, slandering a man, attacking his family, purely for the crime of telling the truth about them, about how they operate

about the nature of the Epstein class, then you have to wonder, why are we voting in the first

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was built to deliver. So for the second time in two years, here is Thomas Massey in his own words. Thomas Massey, thank you for doing this. You've got a primary in less than two weeks, 13 days, and so to take the time to come here. We're grateful for it.

It seems like this is, this primary is more than a primary. It's a window into what MAGA has become, and it's a referendum I would argue on democracy itself. And so just to frame the conversation around that idea, what was your margin of victory in the last race in Kentucky?

In the last race, primary, I got 75% in the vote. There was somebody that got 13% in somebody that got 12%, 75% of the vote. And in the race before that, I got 76% and then the race before that, I got 81%. Now the race with it, the race you get 81% and you were already having conflict with Trump at the time, right?

Yeah, the time he was saying to throw me out of the party called me a third-rate grandstander to which I claim I'm at least second-rate. Fair.

So I'm going through this because I think it leads to today at it makes a really interesting

point. So what is the current polling in your race?

It's a single point lead for me, it's not very fluid, they've spent $10 million against

me. And when I say they, I hope we get into today, yes. And it's going to be close, it's just going to be, the result is going to be based on who turns out. So it was 81% margin, 76, 75, full on blowouts in the Republican primary in your district

in Kentucky, and now it's within a couple of points and you could lose, and the difference is they have spent $10 million against you. So I don't think anyone would dispute that, that's the difference, the money poured into this race from outside of Kentucky is basically pushing you to the point of almost losing and you may lose.

Where did that money come from? Well, it didn't come from regular people, it's come from billionaires, and 95% of it. At least 95% has come from the Israeli lobby. So I'll give you their proxies, the RJC, which is the Republican Jewish Coalition, A-PAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, Miriam Adelson, Paul Singer, and John Paulson

Went together.

They've funded a PAC called MAGA Kentucky, which is neither MAGA nor Kentucky, but when do you add any of them who are those three people? They have been, Miriam Adelson is the gambling magnet, who's ironically makes money from the Chinese now gambling and not in Las Vegas, and she's literally in Israeli. She was born there.

She's given over $200 million to the president, and he puts her on the stage. She says that she's influenced his own policy and attitudes toward Israel, and so she's trying to buy a congressional seed in Kentucky, along with the rest of these groups that were probably by the way getting her money as well. There's also another interesting faction called Christians United for Israel.

They're really just another wing of A-PAC and RJC that's been used to co-op Christians into supporting their position. And their position is more war, it's more strife, it's more bombs, it's send more foreign aid, and those are the things that I've been voting against. So the real reason that this race is a serious race, and I may lose is because a foreign

lobby has fully funded to the extent that they've never done in any Republican race ever before.

My opponent. It's interesting because you're not, I don't think if he was an opponent of Israel or a hatred of Jews, an anti-Semite, a man with hate in his heart, or anything, I don't think those topics have defined your terms and Congress so far. Have they?

No, you can't go find even a xenophobic tweet or Facebook post for me in my entire life. I'm the least xenophobic. I went to MIT, which is a real melting pot of different nationalities and races and

ethnicities, and it was a meritocracy, and that's what I'm used to, is just, you know,

come to me with your ideas, I don't care what color your skin is, or who your parents were, and let's talk about things.

But it turns out that I've never voted for foreign aid, and in fact, I've always

Israel, for Israel, for Egypt, for Ukraine, for anybody. For anybody. In fact, I've offered amendments, as soon as I got to Congress in 2013, I had an amendment to defund the foreign aid to Egypt, which seemed like a good idea at the time because they were in the middle of a coup.

This is how ridiculous our foreign aid is. We didn't even know who was going to control the capital. There were tanks in the streets, and we didn't know who the leader was, and my colleagues insisted on sending the billions of dollars to Egypt anyway. The question is, who's going to cash the check when it gets there?

So I've got a complete track record evading against all foreign aid, but it turns out there's one lobby that's very upset about that, and that's Israeli lobby. And so you're right, this is a referendum. It's a referendum. The question we're putting to the people is, are you going to let a foreign country, or

lobbyists for that foreign country by a seat in Kentucky, and displaced the one congressman,

who will tell you what's in the bills, who will explain his vote?

I explain all of my votes, especially on controversial bills, on social media to where anybody can see. So your position is that it's not your position, as much as it's the fact you're willing to disclose what's actually happening behind the scenes. Correct.

So to add evidence to that claim, the last time you were on this show was almost exactly two years ago, it was a little later in May. I think you had just one year primary, 75%. Yes.

And so you decide to come up here, and we have this amazing conversation at mostly about

you and your life and the self-sufficiency with what you live, and you built your house and it's an amazing story, we're going to repost that video soon, because I want people to see it before the primary. But in the middle of that conversation, you said, yeah, there's a script called A Pack, and here's how they go about corraling support in the congress, and they have mineders

that follow you around, and I just don't hate Israel. I don't support foreign aid to anybody, and I don't have any Packminder.

And I remember thinking, boy, I've never heard anybody explain how this works in the way

that you did. I felt like that conversation was a pivot point, getting your political life. It was, and you know it's interesting, in the two years that have transpired since then, not one of my colleagues has said, I'm wrong. Did anybody come out and say, oh, he's full of it.

I don't have an A Pack person that I go to dinner with every time they come to DC and back in the district, nobody said that. I mean, they all have an A Pack person. Mel, some of them may not, you know, know it's that they're A Pack person, but they've all got an A Pack person.

By the way, I have a lot of Jewish friends, and since that interview, they joke that they're

Secretly my A Pack person, right?

you voted against A Pack's priorities, or some of them anyway, which you did, because there

are people who have done that before, but you described and you open to public view the

process. You pulled the curtain back. Correct. And that was the crime. Right. The crime is transparency. It's not obstructionism, because the votes they're most upset about me for were 420 to 1, or 421 to 1, or 410 to 5, right? Like you showed me in any of those cases where my single vote out of, you know, 435, if everybody had been present, was obstructionist. It wasn't. What happened, though, is people said, "Who's the one person

that voted against that?" And then they go to my social media, and then they read the bill, and they're like, "What the hell? Why did my congressman vote for that? What are the other 420 smoking, right?" And so, or, what are they getting for that vote? Why did they take that vote? Why were they intimidated into taking that vote? And that's the problem

that I'm causing this foreign lobby is I'm causing people to ask questions for the first

time. Who is my congressman's A Pack person? For instance, how much money do they get from A Pack? Why did they vote for that bill? That band's passage is in the new testament, you know, that infringement on the first amendment. Now, we care about supporting companies whose values align with ours. We do not want to show, firstly, the companies. It is better to give business to like-minded Americans than people who hate us. That's our rule.

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you got this swarm of big donors laying down big money to get you out of your seat. And you said basically revolves around three Paulson, singer, and Adelson. Have they described what they're doing?

That's why would a casino magnet or a hedge fund manager, private equity guy,

distressed debt buyer like Paul Singer, like why would they care what happens in a Republican primary in Kentucky of all places? It's, it's, it's, um, to silence me. It's, so the right shut up. Look, if I lose on May 19th, I'll be out of Congress on January 3rd next year, and nobody's going to follow my Twitter. Nobody's going to go to my Facebook page to see what's going on. I won't be invited down into the secret skiffs to read the secret

interpretations of the laws that the executive branch is using to spy on you. I'll be gone. The one whistleblower, if you will, in Congress, will be gone. And let me tell you who's on the other side of this. Who's funding me? I've got, and this is miraculous. I think, you know, you called it a referendum. I think it may be a movement within the magma movement is what we're seeing, because I've got over 33,000 donors. And the average donation is less than 94 bucks. These people,

they don't have a lot of money to give, but they can't be intimidated, right? By the White House, they can't have their environmental permits pulled on a big data center. The, the, the, the, the, government of Washington, D.C. doesn't have that kind of leverage on individual normal people. So those

are the people who are funding me in this race. And if you, and if you want to be one of them,

you can go to massemoneybomb.com. Massemoneybomb.com. Yeah, because we're, we've raised almost $200,000 in the last two days, just by going out there and saying, you know, help me fight back. We've got to have some ads to run against these billionaires. So what do you think the, the full money breakdown is? And without getting boring about it, I don't think people understand exactly how these campaigns are funded. So there's, you can send money to someone running for office, but they're

limits to how much you can send. You can send us something called a super pack. And they're no limits at all. So it's hard to kind of figure out, isn't it? Exactly. I think it'll be, yeah, I think it'll

be, and after the race, when people finally are able to compile the spreadsheets and look at the money,

a lot of the donors won't be disclosed until July. The super pack donors, because they're on a six

Month reporting cycle, whereas I have to disclose big donors every two days n...

of a window with a campaign. But you get super packs on each side. And there's a super pack helping me, not as large as the Israeli super packs, which of which there are three. But there's a super pack helping me now, as far as hard dollar campaign money from real people. I've raised over $5

million this election cycle, which is probably more than I've raised in the entire time that I've

been in Congress. Really? Oh, yeah. I usually raise a couple hundred thousand, maybe four hundred thousand dollars in election cycle. This time I've raised over five million, it's because this situation

is dire. Now the other side, you might say, okay, well, how much money has he raised for his campaign?

He's raised about one or 1.2 million per quarter for two quarters. So he's maybe raised two and a half million dollars at most. But if you go, look at where did that money come from? I think because of the show I did with you two years ago, a pack sort of gone in hiding, and they're trying to secretly funnel money to campaigns. And what we've realized and deduced is that they're funneling money hard dollars, not the super pack dollars,

but they're funneling money from their donors to his campaign through a vendor, a payment vendor, called democracy engine, who started by one of the people who started Act Blue. It's not a conservative if you wouldn't. Act Blue, the Democratic, yep, Bundler. Yeah. So this primarily a left-leaning payment vendor, I use a payment vendor called Anadot, and some people use win-red,

probably you familiar with that. So when you see something come through a payment vendor called

democracy engine, you particularly $50,000 per quarter. So if somebody's reported $50,000 of expenses to democracy engine, and if the payment vendor, democracy engine, has been charging five percent, that means a million dollars of money came through that payment vendor. And we've seen that

in both of his quarters. So basically, as far as we can tell, about a million dollars of

he's 1.2 million every quarter, that you would think may have come from grandmalls who are digging deep in their pockets when they get an email from Trump that says, "Give to this guy." That's not where his money's coming from. It's coming from APAC dinners. And then APAC donors were using a democratic fundraising operation to get the money to your opponent. Correct. By the way, one of these super packs that's aligned against me, United Democracy Project,

UDP, they are a pro-abortion, pro gay rights left, not just left leaning, majorly left a super pack. And they are full on in my race, funding my opponent against me. This is insane. It is insane. I do think it might be a couple years from now when AI gets smart enough and honest enough in the competition of AI's, that it will tell you exactly what happened in this race.

Whether I win or lose, it can go back, look at the data and tell you, well, here's what happened.

A congressman from Kentucky was challenged in 95 or 99% of the money came from and is really lobbied to take him out for merely telling the truth. And not even attacking Israel. That's the thing you didn't even attack Israel. You're not even hostile toward Israel. You're not muttering about the Jews. It's nothing to do with that at all. It's just you just don't think the US government should be sending money to foreign countries. Right?

I mean, right. And by the way, that's the position of my constituents. So what kind of TV ads are they running against me back in Kentucky? Are they saying congressman Massey doesn't vote to give money to foreign countries? You know, let's fire him. No, they don't run that ad. They run ads that distort my record. They'll take a bill that had 3,000 pages in it, pull a page out of that bill and say he voted against this. You know, it could be a

pay raise for the soldiers or something like that to try and trin you into a liberal. Correct.

That's what they want to make it look like, which is hilarious. By the way, if I could make

one reform to congress, so I voted for balanced budget amendment. I voted for term limits, but the biggest constraint, the most helpful thing for our republic would be if every bill had to address only a single issue. Amen. Amen. Because right now we take, we take thousands of votes, but they're post offices and non-binding resolutions and things like that to make it look like we're busy all year round, but it usually boils down to two or three votes every year

that are consequential, must pass pieces of legislation that have everything in them and that's the problem. Let me give you an example on the big, beautiful bill. By the way, there are maybe

Three or four sins and I'll put that in air quotes that I committed against t...

that got me into this situation. One of those is I was the only republican who didn't vote

for Mike Johnson to be the speaker. The second was, you were the only republican. Mike Johnson

is sure to be the worst speaker of the house in the history of this country. Ever. And we've had some bad ones. Yes, John Wayne or one can rise. Yeah. So I didn't vote for the speaker. They twice, at least twice, they brought up a continuing resolution of Joe Biden's budget. And I'm like, wait, I thought we controlled the house to send it and the White House, why are we just going to keep going on autopilot with all the things Joe Biden did? Yet they did and I voted against those

things. In fact, in one of those bills, they attached an amendment that had nothing to do with the budget to kill the hemp industry in Kentucky. Like the hemp industry is almost dead. It's like hundreds of millions of dollars, thousands of jobs wiped out in one continuing resolution because everybody was afraid not to vote for it. And I voted against it because number one, it was Joe Biden's budget. Number two, it killed the entire hemp industry in Kentucky.

That was another of my crimes against the swamp. And when I voted against the big bill, they're using, they're picking things out of it to run ads against me right now. Let me give

you an example. So the draft version, the first version that passed the House of Representatives,

defunded transgender surgeries, sex changes, basically, for minors. There was lots of good stuff, and lots of bad stuff in that bill, but I voted against it because I said it'll bankrupt the country. Okay, but it had that good provision in it. The Senate took the good provision out that defunded sex changes for minors. And then everybody voted for the big beautiful bill again except for me, but it had the money first sex change for minors. So because I voted no against both versions,

they preferred to use the first version and run ads and say that I voted not to defund sex changes for minors. When in fact, everybody who voted for that damn bill and the end put the money back in for sex changes for minors. What liars? It's a total lot. Put out that ad saying that these superpacks. Again, they're not talking, they're taking, they're distorting my record instead of telling you why they're trying to flush me out of Congress. They want to flush me out of Congress,

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stopboxusa.com. Use the code Tucker for 10% off your whole order. Now, if you purchase feel free to mention that you heard about it right here on the show. It's just, I guess what I find head spinning

bewildering and honestly infuriating is that a bunch of serious committed liberals are trying

to kick you out of Congress on the basis of the lie that you were a liberal. Liberals are calling you a liberal. Correct. These, um, you know, if you look at Priscilla Savita who's a liberal, who's the president's consultant is calling you a liberal and he's too liberal for the district says the guy whose values have no connection at all to your district. Well, look at Miriam Adelson, Paul Singer and John Paulson, the three people that fund MAGA Kentucky,

they've funded transgender activism partnered with George Soros. They've funded abortion candidates. They've done fundraisers for Chuck Schumer. Like, it's true. They are Republican super mega donors, right? But, um, they've given money to Liz Cheney after she voted to impeach

Trump and now they've co-zeed up to Trump and they're influencing foreign pol...

and trying to take me. They're controlling foreign policy to the United States and I never got

resolution to the big questions. Sorry. What do you think the total of your opponent has received

both directly and on his behalf? So, the super package. I think all in, um, they've spent about

10 million, their super packs and their campaign. All in, we've probably spent about eight million so far and I would guess all in by the time this is over, there's going to be 30 million dollar spent in a Republican primary. It's right now the most expensive Republican primary for Congress in the history of Kentucky, um, by the time it's done, right now I hear it's the second most expensive primary in the United States for Congress, but I believe by the time it's done, it'll be the most

expensive primary in the United States. That's just absolutely incredible to me. The commercials have

commercial breaks and Kentucky now. There's so many damn commercials. So, I just, I just saw a spot they put up, um, and you tell me who did this, but it was AI generated video of you with Ilon Omar and Alexander Acasio Cortez, suggesting that you were having sex with both of them, and basically saying you've got the same politics they do. Yeah, it's a 30-second spot, created with AI. There's the disclaimer at the beginning in font that no buddy over the age of 65

could possibly see on the TV that says it's AI. And it's not cartoony at all. It looks like a real camera, you know, recordings that shows me walking hand-in-hand with the two of them, dining with the two of them, and checking into a hotel with the two of them, and uses the word frapple. I'm hoping it will backfire on the, just horrible individuals who've come up with this idea, and think that it will get their rubber stamp, their puppet for Israel into Congress.

It's disgusting. Who is, so we haven't even named the man running against you,

not that I guess it matters, doesn't really matter. Who is this, who is running against you?

What we've found out, he looks good on paper. He's served in the Navy Seals. He's a, you know, a boomer, originally from Kentucky, and he looks great on paper, but the president comes as he's from central casting, and that he's a warm body. And I don't think the president understands those or not, like terms of endearing. And the most, it's not like that's true, though. Here's the most interesting thing. Yeah, he is a warm body, and he, he may be able

to fall a mirror, but he can't put three sentences together. His own commercials don't even have him talking to camera. He's turned down eight debates with me, and two of these debates, or televised debates, they went ahead and had the debate, and I went and debated the moderator because I'm comfortable with what you've accepted no debates with you at all, zero debates. And conventional wisdom is, if you're me, if you're the incumbent, and you're ahead,

even by a small amount, that you should never debate the challenger, because you're just

giving him a platform and giving him some notoriety and status to speak, and a chance to take you out. I'm willing to debate this guy anywhere. I've said, I'll let President Trump moderate the debate, and I'll still win it, because this guy doesn't know what he believes in. He won't fill out any of the questionnaires from the pro-life groups, from the pro-secondary amendment groups. Those are sitting in his basement. He won't tell anybody where he stands,

is he for exceptions on abortion, is he for red flag laws, because those are the president's positions. So he's caught in a tough position right now, and he's not really, he doesn't have an ideology. I don't think. In fact, he was in the Republican Party until 2016 when Donald Trump got the nomination for president, he, my opponent left the party for five years, while Donald Trump was president. He wouldn't even call himself a Republican, while Donald Trump was president. When Joe

Biden won the election, that's when my opponent came back after Donald Trump lost and called himself a Republican again. So he's got a lot of questions answered. They found a liberal guy who's taking money from liberal guys to be, I know you call yourself a little bitterian or whatever, but

I mean, conventionally, you're one of the most conservative America first candidates, the Congress

has had in my lifetime. So basically, you're running against a liberal. Yes. And let me talk about the association of my donors and his donors with Democrats. So they started saying, oh, mass he's taking money from people that also give to Democrats. So we went and we did a core sample.

We looked at the people who give me money.

of the people who've donated to me have also given to Democrats. We went and looked at his numbers, it's 85% of his donors have given to Democrats. And it's because it's a core sample of

apak donors. And that's why you've got 85% overlap in his donors with Democrat donors

is because it's just a core sample of apak. In fact, he's given to Lindsey Graham. Actually, yes, like 500 or a thousand bucks. Like he, why would he inspired by Lindsey Graham that he gave him his own personal money, not from his campaign, before he was campaigning. And think about this, he's promising to, he's promising to be a rubber stamp for the Republican party. This is the main charge that's been leveled against me that I don't vote with the party

enough. I vote with the party 90% of the time. But listen, there's 10% of the time where I don't care who the president is. I'm not going to change the position that I promise to take to my constituents. So for instance, when the party votes for warrantless buying on Americans, I don't vote for that. When the party votes, warrantless spying on Americans. Yes, it's, and by the way, each of all of these circumstances that I'm going to describe to you, where I don't vote with the party, I'm actually

taking a position that Donald Trump had less than two years ago. He was against the foreign intelligence surveillance act being used to spy on Americans without a warrant because it was used against him. He found out. So I'm sticking with that position that you need a warrant that the fourth amendment hasn't expired to the Constitution when they're covering up for pedophiles. Look, the president's own children, the vice president, the FBI director, and the president

himself said that they would release the Epstein files. And now I worked harder than anybody else to get it done and got it done. And that's part of the 10% where they say I have betrayed the Republican party. Because you voted to this close Epstein's crimes. Correct. So it's now a

Cortana, the Republican party that you have to hide the crimes of a leftwing Democrat who was

touching kids. It seems to be. And the president himself and has said it's a hostile act.

This was before he signed my bill. He ultimately did agree with me. And now it seems like the first

lady agrees with me. The Jeffrey Epstein did not act alone. And the files show that he did not act alone. And you've got a Prince who's lost his title and been indicted. You've got the British Prime Minister to the United States. You've got the former Prime Minister of Norway, the minister of culture and France. There's accountability. All of those people have been arrested or indicted or being investigated. But nobody in the United States.

Or Jeffrey Epstein lived and worked. Yes. He spent ninety nine percent of his time. Even the U.S. Virgin Islands is part of the United States where Epstein Island is. I just want to linger on this for, I mean, there's someone's talk about it. I just want to linger

on the Epstein question. So, why was that important to you to push for disclosure?

It, so there's a claim that I didn't care about it before President Trump was president. I want to clear that up. You can go find on my social media at least three times where I posted about it.

And I always assumed that Pam Bondi would release the files, right? People are like, well, why weren't

you interested sooner? Why didn't you try harder sooner? Because I've heard the FBI director say he was going to do it. I heard the attorney general say she was going to do it. And then I found out the binders were a force. I serve on the judiciary committee with this is the committee that Jim Jordan chairs, which by the way has authority over DOJ, the attorney general for instance, and the FBI. And so we went on a dinner to the DOJ to Pam Bondi's office every Republican member

of the judiciary committee. This was in April of last year about a year ago. And I told Jim Jordan on the way over. He said, everybody gets one question. You can ask the attorney general a question. I said, I want to ask you about phase two of the Epstein files. Would that be two to confrontational? And Jim said, I'm not going to tell you what you can and can't ask.

Go ahead. So I was one of the first people as we finished dinner to ask a question and I asked

Pam Bondi where the rest of the files were and when would they be released? And she said, there was nothing left but child pornography and nobody wants to see that. And made it sound sort of like I was a lawyer or pedophile myself if you were creepy for asking. Yeah, that I was creepy for asking. And so I didn't ask any more about it than I saw in the news as things played out, the story kept shifting. And I said, well, there's some there there. And I introduced my resolution,

Which is a discharge petition.

a vote on whether to release the files or not. I did that in July. And we did a press conference.

The reason I'm telling you all this is my motivation changed part of the way through this. Can I say something? If it was child pornography, did you get a sense that there was any effort

to find out who these children were, who shot the videos like who's responsible for this?

They said most of it was stuffy and downloaded from the internet, not original, you know, crimes of his, but even so, right, wouldn't that stuff be things that you would investigate, even if he hadn't created it, if he had got it from a friend or some black, you know, black site on the internet, wouldn't you want to, you know, the dark web, wouldn't you want to go find out where this stuff comes from? You get a sense that they were doing anything about it. No, in fact,

this is what this was the final straw for me. A day or two, before I introduced the discharge petition, the, uh, either the Attorney General or the FBI director said they were closing all the cases, they were done with Epstein and there would be no more. And then, so what happened is after August recess, we came back and Rokana and I held a press conference with the survivors.

And it was to motivate this issue in Washington, DC, and to give these women a platform to tell

their stories. And in fact, women who had never spoken up before came to this and spoke up and

women who had fought all their lives to be heard and believed and to say their story and they gave witness to the FBI and it all got suppressed. They came and told their stories and a strange thing happened. I had intended to motivate my colleagues and I was brought to tears by their stories and became doubly motivated to get this done because at that point it became more about just us for them than even before. You know, it does, in some way, me say, well, that sounds pretty cold.

You mean you weren't doing it for them to start with? Well, I was doing it to uncover the creeps, right? And pedophiles, the rapists, and the sex traffickers. But once I met the survivors, it became

even more personal to get justice for them. Well, of course, it's less academic and more real.

So then you initiated discharge petition and to force to force a vote on this. And what was

the response you got from the White House? So I actually had at least a dozen co-sponsors on my Epstein file's transparency act. And I thought, well, I've got to get a dozen, by the way, dozen Republican co-sponsors. I thought, well, this will be easy. I've already got a dozen who'll sign the discharge petition. Well, it turns out most of those people chickened out would not sign the discharge petition under pressure from the president. In fact, I ran into the legislative affairs

director for the White House on the street on Independence Avenue, Jeff Freeland, just randomly while I was trying to get more signatures. And while he was trying to keep people from signing it, we just randomly met at a crosswalk. And I said, listen, I know what you're job, I know you're just doing your job. And I'll be with you 90% of the time. But in this instance, I'm compelled to do this. And I said, and by the way, I made a mistake. I got co-sponsors on this bill. So now you

got your whiplist. I know you're going to the 12 people who originally co-sponsored it. If I ever do this again, I'm not getting co-sponsors and showing you my roadmap. And there was, you know, there was mutual respect there as two people working on two different things. He said to me, he said you're moving too fast for me. Like he couldn't keep up. There was only one of him. And I was moving around and getting people to put their names on it and getting people not to take

their names off. By the way, I have to give credit to the three absolute three bravest there. There's nobody. If I go back to Congress next week, and somebody comes up to me and says, I saw you on Tucker Carlson and you didn't say I was brave. I'll say too bad because you weren't. There's three women, Nancy Mays, Marjorie Taylor Greene, and Lauren Bobert, who signed their names on that discharge petition and all suffered, Marjorie practically gave up her political

career over this. Yes, she did. She got, she and her children got death threats. Oh, I know. Over this. Not from the left, from the right. And then, and she went to President Trump and said, my, one of my children is getting death threats. And he said, that's your fault. Yeah, despicable. He also told her that if she insisted on following through this with this, she was going to hurt his friends. She told me the day, he told her that.

Her, whose friends?

been hurt. Howard Lutnik was shown to be a bald-faced liar, right? And it turns out that,

John Paulson, one of the three billionaires who've put money into Magga Kentucky, was in Epstein's phone book, but also was implicated in these files as doing of a fundraiser and reaching out to Jeffrey Epstein to get money from him to honor Howard Lutnik. So, it's, by the way, it's just a really small world when you get into the billionaires. And they're not partisans. They're above party, right? The Epstein class, they don't associate themselves as Republicans or Democrats.

So much as they do among the class of billionaires who are above all of that, above the judges, they've, they've got visa waivers, they fly private planes. They don't mingle with the public,

whether it's on a plane or in a courtroom. And so anyways, that's my hats off to, to Marjorie

for taking on those threats, Lauren Bobert. They took her over to the situation room, right?

Like, this is where if they're trying to kill or capture a soma bin Laden, this is where they are at the White House, they took her into the situation room and tried to whip her into taking her name off of the discharge petition. Over Epstein, over Epstein. Yep. And then the president vetoed a bill that would have brought water to a large portion of Colorado. Lay, over Epstein, over Epstein. And this isn't even, at this point, it's not just about Lauren Bobert. Why are people in Colorado

deprived of water because their representative wants to expose the sex trafficking ring? I mean, none of this makes any sense at all because it's a losing issue for Trump and has been, that was the beginning of the end, really, I mean, I think we're at the end of the 2024 campaign. It's a total betrayal of everything, but that began with Epstein last summer. And Trump's now famous attack on his own voters. If you think this is important to no more

about Epstein, I don't want your support, why do you think Epstein of all issues is the one that Donald Trump was willing to destroy his presidency over? I don't know. It's, I mean, I did it because it was the right thing to do. Of course, I understand your motive, but my president push back now, he's endorsed this campaign against you and your family. But really just sort of hurt himself on

behalf of the memory of Jeffrey Epstein, like, there's something here, no? What is this?

I think he's changed some. And he's the promise of Donald Trump. I'm willing to negotiate on anything including immigration. It's like no problem. Give them citizenship. But when it comes to Epstein, it's like no. And it does raise questions about, like, how did Epstein die and who signed off on that? Why was Epstein re-rested, actually, for crimes he'd already been convicted of and brought back from France to the United States?

And then gets murdered in prison less than two months later. Like, what is that? And maybe there's a connection or I don't know. I'm just guessing like, what is this? It's the people who are funding the ballroom, the people who are funding the arch, the people who are funding the rebranding of the Kennedy Center, these are the people who are also funding my opponent, these are the people who have the ear of the president, these are the people who are changing,

dominating our foreign policy decisions, they're the billionaires. And these are also the same people who are in the Epstein files by large part where their friends are. They're so people want to say stop. And I, I want everyone to just stop and rewind the time. He said, okay, maybe just

answer the question. I think I did. I tried to answer the question.

There are my arms just one up. Um, okay. So the other way, my way, you touched on something that I, that I want to comment on. There, there are still a lot of files that haven't been released.

I don't care whether it's 3 million files or whether it's 300 files that they still need to

get out there. But the kind of files they haven't released, they are breaking the law by not releasing them. They, they, you mean Department of Justice, Department of Justice, Todd Blanch now. And he's, he, he, by the way, could be criminally prosecuted by the next attorney general. This is the great thing about passing a law instead of issuing a subpoena. They didn't do this in Watergate. They didn't do this in Iran, contra, they had commissions, they had committees, they had subpoenas,

whether it was, you know, Bill Clinton's issue. This is the first time the Epstein files transparency act where a member of Congress or members of Congress got a law pass passed in the House and the Senate signed by the president to compel the release of documents. What does that

Mean?

This law never expires. This law, unless they can get a house and a Senate and a president to

repeal it, is in effect for infinity. It 50 years from now. If there's an attorney general who, just like cleaning out a drawer and find some Epstein files, they have 30 days to release them. It's incumbent on, we didn't name Pam Bond. We said the attorney general of the United States, as long as there is an attorney general of the United States. That cabinet position may go away before the Epstein files transparency act goes away. Because it's forever. But let me tell you

the category of documents that will eventually be released that haven't been released that you touched on.

We said in the Epstein files transparency act that you have to, the DOJ FBI and US attorneys

have to release internal memos and emails about decisions on whether to prosecute or not prosecute.

About decisions on whether to investigate or not investigate. And right now, the attorney general is claiming something called deliberative process privilege that they use when they want to keep freedom of information act files from getting out or to redact them. They say that and it's a longstanding rule for freedom of information act that the government only has to give you the final work product. They don't have to show you their math, the internal deliberations of a policy.

It just have to give you the end point. But anticipating this and having served on the judiciary committee for a long time and having had merit garland and Christopher Ray tell me, well, that's the subject of an ongoing investigation. And we don't have to give you that or that's deliberative process and we don't have to give you that anticipating that. I put into law that they have to give me that. And the president signed that law and yet they are serving that my law doesn't apply

to their deliberative process privilege. And they're wrong. It won't withstand 30 minutes in a court

room, their legal thesis. Every first year law student knows that new laws overwrite the ones

that existed before. And so I think eventually there will be a forum. Some survivor will sue

the attorney general or the government for not releasing those particular files and they don't get adjudicated and we'll get more files. Because do you ever ask anyone in the administration of the Congress like why is this a hard thing for a Republican administration that was elected to quote, drain this swamp to do? Why would it be hard? You would think since most people identified in the Epstein files were partisan Democrats and donors to the Democratic Party, it'd be pretty

easy for a public and silly like, yeah, this the other guys did this and there were some Republicans, but not really, it's mostly Democrats in those files. So why would it, why is it so hard? Look, what the hell are we, what is this? Well, Pam Bondi, when I crossed examined her in a hearing, while she was still attorney general about the Epstein files, she protested to me that, you know, this also went on under the Biden administration and I said, of course, it did. And it went

under the Obama administration and the Bush administration, like it's spanned for administrations, five administrations, counting Trump twice, and I told her, you're just responsible for this portion of the cover up, right? So the reason they, I think they don't want to admit that they have covered this up is then they've admit that there are two tiers of justice in this country and that every administration, at least every attorney general, has been in on it. That is exactly,

right? There are two tiers of justice and some people seem to be immune from law and some people are just

head pecked to death by the law. And that's why I want to know their decision process,

because then we'll find out in 2008, why did they give Jeffrey Epstein a light sentence when they heading dead to rights locking them up? I think they will find out. I think eventually, because the law goes forever and I think, which is my random selection will eventually end up with an attorney general if they don't delete the files before that attorney general sits in the seat, whoever that may be. Do you have any sense of how much hasn't been released from that case?

Well, I know that set of particular files haven't been released. I know that they put some files up and took them back down and they've not put them back up again. And you may say, well, don't you didn't people get archives of those files while they were up? Why do you care that the files haven't been put up again? Yes. It's because I have the ability to go look at unredacted files over at the DOJ. And some of the files that I wanted to look at unredacted because I believe

they implicate co-conspirators for Jeffrey Epstein haven't been put back up onto the public site nor the private site. So I can't go look at documents unredacted that may contain the names of co-conspirators until they put those files back into the application for protecting co-conspirators.

Well, they said they're protecting victims, okay?

had to take the document down, then what you do is you redact all the information that would hurt the

victim and then you put it back up, but they haven't put it back up. So I haven't been able to look at

that. Then there are files over there. The DOJ claims were redacted before they came into their possession. And so when I try to unredact them, I can't see beyond the redactions. And the DOJ says, sorry, that's just the way we received them. Well, the fact of the matter is they need to go back to the U.S. attorneys and the FBI that gave them those redacted documents and say, give us the unredacted documents, but they haven't done that yet. And then there's another category

of files that are missing. In talking to the survivor's lawyers, the survivors have indicated that there's no evidence of their testimony in the files. Like they know it exists. They sat down with the FBI. They did an interview in the FBI agents or obligated to summarize that interview. At least provide a summary in a 302 form. Well, they can't even find their own 302 forms in the release of information. So we know not everything has been released. And I also know they're releasing more stuff just

quietly doing it because when I go over there and look for things and find that they've redacted a man's name, who may be a co-conspirator and threatened on the internet that they've done this, then they have released files. For instance, with Leslie Waxner, he's the billionaire who resides in Ohio. Pam Bondi, when I pointed out to her that she had redacted his name from the files, she said, well, we've his name appears thousands of times in the files. I said, yes, but in the

one instance where it appears on an FBI document listing him as a co-conspirator in a child sex, trafficking ring, his name has been redacted. In the only one place where it implicates him, you redacted it. And so I know what your question is. It was my question to her who redacted it. They're not giving interns a bucket of sharpies and a bunch of documents spread out and saying, "Go, draw a line through anything you don't think should be released. It's all on a computer

and you have to log in and every redaction belongs to somebody." So what I want to know,

and I ask Pam Bondi, and she refused to tell me, is who? Particularly redacted that one instance of Leslie Waxner. If you were going to, if you were the least bit curious, you'd want to know. Do you know if the Department of Justice in this administration has spoken to Leslie Waxner? The oversight committee called him over there and asked him some questions. The Department of Justice did not. They mysteriously lost interest in Leslie Waxner after listing him as a co-conspirator.

They never even talked to him. Never. They had some correspondence with an attorney and decided

they didn't need to talk to him. And he paid for the whole thing. Yeah. And so they should be wondering, like this is why I want to know about that decision. Why did they not talk to Leslie Waxner? That's in an email or a memo somewhere and the clear language of the law that I wrote

requires them to release it and they won't, they haven't. And that's what we need to know.

Is why did they, and why do they continue to cover this stuff up? Do you ever have conversations with your colleagues in the Congress about this or others bothered by it? They're not bothered enough by it. I mean, ultimately they voted 427 to 1 to pass the bill after fighting it for so many months. And then to the Senate realized it had been political malpractice on the part of Mike Johnson to lead the whole GOP conference against the Epstein files released merely because the president

wanted him to. And so when it got to the Senate, they passed a by unanimous consent before it even got there. Like the bill was still in the house. And the Senate heard it was coming over. And they made a motion to pass the bill before it got there. So they just said when it gets here, we're going to deem it past. So we don't even have to repeat the name of it. So Mike Johnson really was leading the charge to hide the facts of the Epstein case. He was lying about my bill.

He told everybody it was dog crap. It was poorly drafted. It would hurt the victims. And then he would hurt the victims. When the in fact of victims love my bill. And but he would stand up. He would say these lies to a whole gaggle of cameras. And then one day, my Johnson told the entire conference vote for Macy's bill. What changed? We won the argument in the public. Like if there is hope. And I know I'm giving people hope. And this is one of the reason I'm finding so hard to win.

Is there will be not tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands. If not several million people who

lose hope if I lose. But what gives me hope. And frankly, what gives me even more religious

Conviction is that we, in spite of all the odds, we got this bill passed.

three million documents came out after we had been lied to and told that everything but kiddie porn had been released. Right. That gives me hope. That was after Pam Bondy told you everything had been released. Correct. Did she ever explain? I think she was largely in the dark most of the time.

I always have a question. Is it ignorance or is it malfeasance? Right. Right. When something's

doing the wrong thing. In her part, on her part, I think it was ignorance and blind allegiance. I think when she released those binders, she really thought she was releasing the Epstein files. I believe she thought that. And then she found out very quickly, somebody came and told her, oh, no, no, we have four not releasing those. We are not going to do that. And then she had to adopt blind allegiance without even, in fact, really, she, at one point, she said they're on my

desk for review. Do you remember that? Very well. How do three million files sit on your desk?

They, they weren't on her desk for review at any point. Also, I don't think Cash Patel can be the FBI director and anything ever happened with these Epstein files. Because he testified in the Senate to Senator Kennedy, the Jeffrey Epstein acted alone. Even Melania Trump does not believe that. Right. But he testified that Epstein acted alone. And then the next day, yeah. And then the next day, he came to the House Judiciary Committee where I asked him to double down. And he said,

there's no evidence in these files that anybody was a co-conspirator with Jeffrey Epstein, other than Julian Maxwell. So, again, here we go, ignorance or malfeasance. He, he's purged himself in the Senate and the House. And so his, his defense could either be ignorance. Well, that's his only defense is to say, well, when I told you that, I didn't really know what was in the files or people working for me misled me. Those are his only defense. And then that's

why I think you will never get to the bottom of this as long as he's FBI director. And the

driveway, the Trump administration could redeem themselves on this, but not by releasing three million more files. They've got to indict somebody. They've got to go in there. Look, tell him, go in there and investigate Leon Black or just daily. There's enough information, even in the redacted files that anybody with common sense knows that there needs to be an investigation of those two men. On what grounds? On that witnesses said they were sexually abused by those men.

And they'd never been investigated, so far as, you know, as far as I know. And by the way,

on what grounds, that's a good question. On what grounds did Prince Andrew lose his title, did the British ambassador have to resign, did the former prime minister of Norway get indicted on what grounds? Not for pedophilia or sex trafficking, but for misabuse of state power and state secrets and state authority. And this gets to what I believe Epstein was. My background is technology. I'm not a hacker, but I went to school with a lot of people who are

hackers and I still know people who are hackers. It's actually very difficult through wires to break into most of these systems. The guys who get the biggest breaches of data are able to get a human on the phone and convince them to give up their password or get a human on an email, right? Like fishing is, but if you can get physical proximity to somebody's phone or their computer, that's the that's the holy grail of hacking. If once you get physical proximity or if you can get

somebody so comfortable, maybe they're in another room having sex or doing a line of cocaine and they leave their laptop in that room without logging out, then that's the holy grail of hacking.

You don't have to be good. You got to be lucky or have really good human. I believe that's what

Jeffrey Epstein was a perveyor of, was direct access to individuals. He was interested in meeting with market makers, people who were going to move markets, hedge fund managers, that sort of thing, and foreign officials and dignitaries who were going to make laws and make decisions that would move markets. It seems pretty obvious that the Jeffrey Epstein was not acting on his own.

First of all, there's no evidence he ever made money. It's not clear even now seven years after

his murder, what he did for a living. Where did the income come from? You know, in the probability, in my mind, that Jeffrey Epstein killed himself went from 5% to 0%

Is when I heard the recording that he serendipously recorded of a hood baroqu...

to leave as defense minister of Israel. Jeffrey Epstein was advising him on his next career steps.

And in this recording, just cool as a cucumber, he says, "Make a list of everybody that owes you something for all the things you did for them while you were in government." And then go get on these boards and draw a check and like he was explaining like how a hood baroque could make money once he left the employee of the government of Israel. And this is a recording. It's, it's an insight into Jeffrey Epstein's mind that you don't really get otherwise even through emails.

And it was, it was revealing to me, Jeffrey Epstein strikes me as the kind of guy who wouldn't be that

worried that he was in prison. I think in his mind, it was a temporary condition that he either

needed to blackmail somebody or maybe had enough blackmail or more likely than blackmail. He just had enough connections that somebody would spring him pretty soon. And I don't think he would have lost. So if he was murdered, and I think it's, I mean, I'm totally convinced he was murdered. It seemed very obvious that he was murdered. But if he was murdered in federal detention in Manhattan, like how could that have happened without the knowledge of highest-level federal officials?

It was never an investigation into it.

Who, who are the highest-level federal officials, whether they're not always the elected people? Like when we talk about the deep state, these are the Victoria Newlands of the world. Those are the people who are causing coups. And is that the highest-level, are we talking about the highest-level of the permanent government, or are we talking about ostensibly the highest-level, the people who get elected and pretend to wield power like Pam Bondi? Yes. Because she's never been the highest-level

at the Department of Justice. Who do you think is? I don't know, but Todd Blanch in a way is working for them. I think it's the people directly below Todd Blanch. The people that we were told Trump would fire and get new people. The people that did all the bad stuff on January 6, the people that the DOJ who prosecuted those folks, why are any of those people still around?

And they are. And they are. And they shouldn't be. Is that true in other key federal agencies?

I think all federal agencies. What do you think happened? How do you go from campaigning against all of this to becoming its greatest champion as the President of the House? I don't know. I do think, and by the way, he doesn't need to run again, right? Well, exactly. People argue that term limits will work because once somebody knows they don't have to run for election again, they'll do the right thing. It'll be in their nature. Yes. And they

won't be subject to taking money to get their, you know, to win their next election. We're doing favors. They could just act in their good conscience. I think what's happened is they've convinced him that he needs a ballroom, that he needs an arch, that he needs a Kennedy Center renamed after him and multiple other things that that these take private money. And the order of magnitude of private money that you need for these things obligates you to those individuals. You think that's

part of what has happened. I also think he's aligned himself with Lindsey Graham and Marco Rubio. These are the Neocons. He got, he got close to this with John Bolton,

eventually got, he tired of John Bolton, I think. Yes. Most people do.

Some of us never lied to you. I'm with you. But I think he's basically gone from

pushing those people away. The Dick Cheneys of the Republican Party to inviting them in the tent. And it's given him more power, interestingly, to align with these folks on certain issues, whether it's spying on Americans without a warrant, whether it's spending more than we can afford, whether it's starting another war in the Middle East, that's going to be hard to end. He's listening to too many of those people right now. Why would the president who was

spied on illegally by the intelligence and law enforcement agencies of this country back in 2015, 2016, 2017, why would he put so much of his authority behind more while warrantless spying on Americans?

That's hard for me to understand some people think it's because he wants that...

to, you know, as long as he's president to use his own FBI and DOJ to have these same tools.

But then that begs the question, why would the Democrats, the Uniparty, right, if you will,

why would they want to give president Trump this authority? You would think they might agree to a three-year hiatus on spying without war, right, but though they don't want any laps in the program and the president doesn't want any laps in the program. But if Democrats are so afraid of Trump, if he's really hitler or he's in the authoritarian, crazy person is going to eliminate celebrities, why would Democrats be giving that guy

the power to spy without a warrant on American citizens? That exactly. You've

rephrased it better than I said it. In fact, I found myself in a really weird position last week

on the floor of the house on flyout day. Most people had already booked their planes to leave before this debate was going to happen. The House of Representatives sent the Senate a deal to

reauthorize FISA if the Senate would ban central bank digital currency. Now, I would ban central

currency and not reauthorize FISA, but some of the freedom caucus decided that was an okay trade. It's a trade part of the fourth amendment for another part of the fourth amendment. And I am terrified of central bank digital currency. It's an on-off switch for your participation in society, right, of course. It's starved at death if you just obey. Yeah, just they won't let you put gas in the tank. You won't be able to travel. They'll just, you know, they can control everything

if they can control the currency. It's bad enough. But we sent that deal to the Senate. I didn't vote for that deal, but some people did it went to the Senate and the Senate laughed at that deal through it in the trash and sent a clean reauthorization of FISA back to the House with the 45-day expiration. And everybody said, everybody, but me suggested we should just let that pass by unanimous consent and folks could get on their airplanes and go home.

And I said, I don't think so. Like an infringement of the Constitution for 45 days is still an infringement of the Constitution. And by the way, we've known about this problem for as long as I've been in Congress. I've been offering and passing amendments to defund this part of the FISA program. It's not something new. It's like a florist being surprised by Valentine's Day. We knew this state was coming. And so I stood up and I objected and they said, okay, well now

we got to have a debate over this bill. And Jim Jordan got 20 minutes and Jamie Raskin got 20 minutes as the chair and the ranking member of the committee of jurisdiction, the judiciary committee. And at that point, I stood up and told the speaker that I want 20 minutes in actual opposition. Wait, wait, I'm confused. You have one of the most liberal Democrats in the House, Jamie Raskin, and Maryland. You have one of the most conservative Republicans in the House, Jim Jordan of Ohio.

But they're on the same side on, they were hanging on Americans for at least 45 days. They're on the same side. Well, how could Jim Jordan, this ferociously conservative freedom guy, be in favor of spying on Americans without a warrant? Well, the president told him to.

Yeah, but that's like a core, that's a core. It's always been a core issue of his

and in the debate of his specifically. Correct. It was a condition of being on the judiciary committee when I joined, like you had to believe that we needed warrants on FISA, or you couldn't be on the judiciary committee that he chaired. That was like the first interview question when you applied for judiciary that the Constitution still real. Right. And particularly with FISA, 702, this particular program, and he battled last Congress for rociously to get warrants.

And it came down to a tie vote where Mike Johnson was the deciding vote. And we, I don't know why, again, because Biden was president, but enough Republicans voted to Biden have the power to spy on Americans without a warrant. Because a lot of information that intelligence that's spying on Americans because directly is real, like fact. Absolutely. Right.

So that's what this is really about. Is do we allow foreign country to spy?

Does our government make it easier for a foreign country to spy in Americans? Does it have ultimate betrayal? Another fact when X decided to show you where accounts were based, where they were set up, and where they were operated from, the DHS account showed Israel that it was set up. The US Department of Homeland Security's X account was set up using an IP address from Israel using an Android app for purchased in Israel. And that doesn't trouble people,

There should be an investigation over why when the DHS set up its Twitter acc...

it was set up in Israel. Now they claim, if you ask Grock about this, he'll walk around the bush with you. Of course. And say that, well, there were some glitches back in the old day,

and there were some contractors involved. And you can, you can never get to the bottom of it.

So, but back to the last week, I was able to claim. So, but just because Jordan was on the same

side as Jamie Raskin. Correct. For the clean 45 days. Did you think your head was spinning?

As you watch this, it's DHS. But I've been here before, where it's me versus the Uniparty. And by the way, when they call me an obstructionist, you can put this in the column of things that I tried to obstruct, like violations of your fourth amendment. So, the speaker said, okay, each side gets 20 minutes, and I rose up and I said, well, in fact, each side is for this. So, this is no kind of debate. Like, I want my 20 minutes. It's like the perfect metaphor.

It's like a fake debate where both sides agree. Right. So, and it is in the house rules,

they had to give me 20 minutes. And so then it was going to be me with 20 minutes and Jim Jordan was 20 minutes. Ironically, a guy that I like, who has been leading the charge to get warrants and fights. But in this situation was for reauthorizing a program for 40 days, 45 days without warrants. And at that moment, one of the staffers came over to me. This is where it's getting surreal and says Jim Jordan would like to give half of his time to Jamie Raskin. This is the last scene

an animal farmer. The farmers in the pigs are like, "Get it together." And they said, "Would you object?" And I said, "No, what to hell? Let them both have time." So, I had 20 minutes and Jim had 10 and Jamie Raskin had 10. And then to their credit, Keith's self from Texas, Chip Roy from Texas, and Warren Davidson from Ohio joined me in this debate. Some other people in spirit came and sat down to offer their moral support. They didn't need time to debate. And we had a good debate on this

issue. Look, the FBI has used this program to basically run their dating app prospects through the

database to see what they can find about them before they swipe writer swipe left. What? Yeah, that's the kind of abuse that's gone on. They've used it on Congress. They've used it on the president. They've used it on political parties. And people say, "Well, if you're not doing anything wrong, why do you care if the government spies on you?" Well, it's the government's opinion of whether

they like what you're doing or not. Well, they used it on me and they got caught and know right?

Right, punished. Yeah. They've used it on Sherlock and Sin, spying on her, you know, spywear on our computer. They use it on the press. Like this should concern everybody. And we, and right now, we're in a 45-day extension, because I did call for the vote. And we had too many Republicans and too many Democrats that voted for a clean extension. So, let, can we just go through the issues on what you've disagreed with the president? So, my redesign, non-contarchy citizen,

is that this race comes down to the question of who is more on board with Trump? Who's more the magga guy, you or the liberal you're running against funded by the casino owners? Funded by Israel. What are the issues that have separated you in Trump? Can you just go through the lists where the big issues where you've disagreed? Let me start with the ones I agree with, just real quick. I voted to fund the wall. I voted to keep men out of girl sports and the

Olympics. I have voted. I've read that you were totally for mass migration, illegal migration, that you love transgendryism. You were encouraging people to castrate their sons. That's not true. Absolutely false. I signed an Amiki brief to the Supreme Court to support the repeal of birthright citizenship for the children of illegals. I've done all of these. I voted for the

SAVAC, which is to require photo ID in federal elections. If you want to run for schoolboard or HOA,

do whatever you want. But if you're going to vote in a federal election, you got to have an ID and prove your an American citizen. I voted for these things. I voted for Doge. I voted for all of that stuff. But let's talk about the things where I have been an obstructionist. Most recently, they tried to put immunity for pesticides and herbicides in the farm bill. Immunity. Immunity from liability and a ban on any state. Let's say a state finds out that one of these chemicals

causes cancer. And if it's applied in a certain way, right now they're trying to ban any state's ability to warn its citizens that that product causes cancer. What? Yes. So it would

Be a violation of the First Amendment, a violation of the 10th Amendment.

base. It is second. So if you say something crazy on this show, you can be sued. But if you make

some poison that gives people cancer and kills their kids, you can't be sued because you have quote, immunity along with the vaccine makers given by Congress. Correct. And well, they were, by the way, that's in front of the Supreme Court right now. I went and listened to the oral arguments in the Supreme Court on this issue. And they said in the oral arguments that Congress could decide this issue, right? And so it was stuck in the farm bill. And I did work with Democrats to offer

an amendment to strip this out. Anna Paulina Luna offered an identical amendment. Her amendment was allowed a vote. And we got enough Republicans and Democrats to vote to take this out of the bill. So if you're saying that I'm an obstructionist and I work with Democrats, it is true if you're trying to poison Americans that I will cross out. And they get immunity from tort law, like why don't not get immunity? Which is state law, by the way. This would be, they're not, they're, the vaccine

immunity is wrong. It's bad enough, but at least they pretend there's some federal court where let's take care of the problem. Here they were proposing that nobody, you could get a venue nowhere. By the way, that's a violation of the seventh amendment to the Constitution. It's in the bill of

Rights as you have a right to a jury trial. And they're taking away, first amendment, seventh amendment,

and tenth amendment. Why would Trump want that? I think he's a busy guy. And I think he's not

paying attention to this, although I will caution listeners that when I went to the Supreme Court, it was very much like the debate that I had in Congress on FISA. There were actually three attorneys, not two. Usually in the Supreme Court, their attorneys are arguing the plaintiff side and the defendant side. In this case, the US DOJ joined the German company, Bear, Bear Monsanto, who it makes glyphosate in arguments. So the DOJ helped a German company make the point that they should be

immune from any state liability. A German company should be immune from lawsuits by Americans if

it turns out their product kills them. Correct. This is so bonkers. It's hard to believe. I mean,

you can, you know, there's an argument about is it worth it to put dangerous chemicals on farmland because maybe the benefits outweigh the risks or, I don't know, there's like an argument. What could possibly be the argument for stripping people's rights to redress if the product is faulty. It's because we've got corporate capture of the EPA. And so the EPA was set up ostensibly to protect people in the environment. But now they've morphed into an organization that would give

immunity, they would give get out of court free cards to any company that could convince them to put

a light label on it that says, you know, a warning label instead of a danger label, right?

Which, so the EPA was in favor of giving full liability protection to bear Monsanto at a Germany, correct. Who's running the EPA? Lee's album right now. And he was for that. This case predates him, but it's going on right now under him. And you might think the EPA, the federal EPA is going to argue for as much authority as they can get. And so they would let and the corporations would love to have one stop shopping. They don't want to be subject

to court rooms and 50 different states. They want to be able to say, well, we've got to get out of court free card because the EPA said, we don't need to put a skull and cross bones on this product. All we need is a little warning label on it. I know we've got deep into that issue, but let me tell you why it's important because the president is the president and we're in the majority because there was a coalition formed. I do believe that he and his advisors were genius

in setting up this coalition. And I was part of it when I endorsed the president to try to bring on libertarians and independence, but we also brought on Maha, which is, I was one of the

people who helped put that together. Yeah, because I believe. Well, then you're the genius.

Not a genius. It's just like that seem like an obvious issue. It's obviously they told his banning smoking was going to make us healthy and life expectancy went down. I just noticed that. And I'm like, this country's super unhealthy and why wouldn't you make it easier for people to be healthier if they want to? So, and by the way, I have a standalone bill too to this is no immunity for glyphosate act. And I have Republican and Democrat co-sponsors on that,

but that's what Maha is. And here's the problem. If you keep if you're DOJ and your USDA

Your EPA are all going to be captured by a German company and argue that Amer...

deserve their day in court if they're harmed by a chemical that's being sold and mislabeled according to their state, then you're going to alienate that part of the Maha part of the coalition. Yeah. And that's another thing that could lead to a blood bath in the November election. It's going to be going to. Yeah. There are a lot of sort of liberal moms or moms who thought they

were liberal, but they just watched too much media, but they basically had good values.

They're for their kids. They're for nature. You know, those are good values.

Those people are very disappointed and betrayed, I think. Yeah. Don't you? I think so.

By the way, you're a farmer. I should say this. By the way, and there is one good thing in the Farm Bill, by the way, I've worked for 11 years on it. I've worked four years on this part of it. I got my primact, a pilot program for it in the Farm Bill, which means that here in Maine or in Kentucky or any of the state in the Union, you could have a small farmer, use a small processor and sell their beef pork and lamb locally to consumers without the USDA being hovering over

that transaction. As long as you comply with the local health inspections,

their stake houses in Washington, D.C. that cut up more beef than most small processors in Kentucky in a day, right? Yeah. They don't have to have a USDA inspector. And the reason the big corporations, I call it the Industrial Meat Complex, once a big, once all these regulations on the little guys is to keep them out of the business. And so my primact just says, you can sell a stake or a hamburger to your neighbor using a local processor, as long as you comply with the local

health requirements, and you don't need the USDA involved, and we got a pilot program for that in the

Farm Bill. That's Maha. Completely. And the confluence of Maha with conservatism, right?

Because it's a bipartisan bill, and it's one area where Democrats realize that the little guys are being regulated out of the business. Yes. And if they want healthy food, more sustainably, raised food, that you've got to break up the meat monopoly, I'll call it. Now, the White House is recently announced they're going to use the DOJ and the full force of the federal government to break up these big meat packers. The problem with that is if you don't let the little meat packers

exist, you're just going to raise the price. Of course. Right. I don't be more of it. It'll be from Brazil. Yes. Argentina. Yeah. So really quick, since you do run a farm, a working farm, the chemical and question made by Bear Monsanto, would you use it? So I don't want to ban it. What we're talking about is the misapplication of it, or the mislabeling of it.

Let me tell you a use. I would never use. So I don't do it, but I would spray fence lines with it.

Yep. If you had a respirator and something like that to to kill weeds in the fence line, yep. I would not spray my fields with it, because I'm afraid that the cattle might the residue from that might be taken up in the meat. I would not tell my neighbor. You can't kill the

weeds so that you can do no till farming of your corn. Okay. But here's one place where I would never

ever use it. And I don't think it should be legal. They spray it on ripe wheat to dry it out before they harvest it. Like this is the food you're going to eat. It's like the next step is to grind it and bake it into bread. And they are just one step away from you eating it and they're spraying it with glyphosate, the whole plant so that it will die quickly and dry out quickly and save them some money. Maybe they can get the next crop in there four days earlier into that land. And by the way,

that's been banned in Europe. But not here in the United States and they say, oh, Congress mess. This only used on 3% of the wheat crops in the United States. First of all, I don't believe that. But if it is true, then why don't we just grow something else there in that 3% where it's too wet to grow wheat? I don't we grow soybeans or something instead of wheat at that place or something you don't need glyphosate to dry it out with or maybe you'll get 80 or 90% of the

yield you would have gotten if you hadn't sprayed poison on it to dry it out quickly. That's disgusting. So I do think there are areas where I wouldn't ban it. But I wouldn't tell my neighbors, you can't use it. But the company needs to have the right label on it. And if they know there are if we know scientifically that it can cause harm, that needs to be disclosed. So that the farmers are using it. I think it's a threat to the farmers more so than the consumers.

Well, they're the ones I know we're afraid of it, but it's also effective.

fence lines, for example. So okay. So glyphosate weren't was spying Epstein. What are the other

issues on which you've discreet with the president spending spending? So this is probably my biggest issue. And people want to know why food so expensive, why is housing so expensive, why is fuel so expensive, why did things get so expensive so quickly? And it started back during COVID, we just we put spending into overdrive. We used to say that we're of a free market economy and we're not socialist because we spend 20% or 24% of GDP, the federal government things. And that Europe is socialist

because they spend 30% or more. Well during COVID, we jumped up to like 35%. We were clearly, if there's a spectrum and you draw a line on it and say above this much federal spending as socialism and below this is not, we crossed that line for several years after COVID. And it has gone down some without the big stimulus spending, but the stuff that's baked in is state high. So we're like probably at 29%. We've gone, we've gone bonkers on federal spending. And I will tell you this.

This is the fact that debt and has gone up $2.7 trillion since in the 16 months that we've controlled the White House, the House and the Senate. It's gone up. So by the way, in some years, they go

but I think I find it interesting. They try to blame the president for spending even when let's say

the party, there's a different party in Congress and the different party in the White House. They always

blame the president for the spending. I think they should blame the Congress. But in this case, there's no ambiguity. We control the Senate, the House, and the White House. And when you say, "Oh, it takes 60 votes in the Senate to pass anything." Yeah, it takes 60 votes to spend money. Like, the money would stop if you can't get 60 votes in the Senate. It's like the other way around because the money expires every year unless you do a CR and omnibus. So these, this is the place where

I have diverged with Republicans because they took Joe Biden's budget and used the big beautiful bill at at hundreds of billions of dollars of spending to it. And this is where I get the

ads run against me. You know, even though I voted for a wall and I voted most recently to fund

DHS, there was extra money for DHS and DOJ, which includes FBI in the big, beautiful bill.

And I said, "We can't afford this." And that's why they can run the ads that say I voted against.

Well, not just when the ads, like they've attacked, and I almost don't want to even go here, but I'm so shocked by it. The president attacked your family, and repeatedly, in a texture personal life, it's a little odd, you know, who decides to attack other people's personal lives. But what did you think of that? Well, it's ironic because I defended him when he gave stormy Daniel's money. This came up in front of us when I was on the oversight committee, and they were

trying to turn it into a crime. And because they said he should have run it through campaign, a campaign account instead of paying her personally, but I can tell you this, if I told my treasure, I wanted to pay some woman to be quiet with my campaign money. You'll go to jail for that. So they were actually trying to prosecute the president because he didn't do a certain way, which certainly would have gotten him in jail. And I pointed that out, and also at the time,

I pointed out, in that hearing, this was three years ago, I think there was a congressional

slush fund that did the same thing, but with taxpayer dollars, to pay off people who had been harassed or sexually abused by congressmen and their staff. And nobody wanted to hear that in that hearing, but I blew the whistle on that, too. What happened to the slush fund? We were able to recently force a vote on disclosing. Not getting away, not getting rid of the slush fund, just saying who, which offices have paid out of this slush fund, and it failed because Republicans and Democrats

voted against the measure to disclose the names on the slush fund. So it still exists. It still exists. And if I remember a congressman, I get sued for sexual harassment or blackmailed. I can use tax dollars to pay off the accuser. They pay off the accuser to avoid the lawsuit, because if it becomes a lawsuit, then it's public. And by the way, this is, I'm calling it a slush fund, and it's appropriate to do that because every office, congressional office gets a budget

every year. We have to divide it among office expanse and salaries and travel and postage and, you know, toner cartridges. We don't even have to take it out of that money to if you

Were trying to pay off a claim before it goes to court, it comes out of an ex...

got money somewhere. Anyways, we failed on that, but I'm the one that exposed that in the context

of defending Donald Trump from the stormy Daniels allegations that they had tried. They really, it was a tortured legal logic. They were trying to come up with to convict him of something. And yet, he has turned around and in one social media post dishonored my late wife, dishonored me and dishonored my current wife by alleging that I shouldn't have gotten remarried.

I got remarried 16 months after my wife passed away. I think this is common among men who are

widowers, who have wonderful marriages. If you, you've, you've seek that out. You find out that you know what? God had a good idea here when he created man and woman and that you're better off in a monogamous relationship where two people care about each other and when one gets sick, the other takes care of that person. And so I sought that out again, but the president who himself

has had affairs, I've never had an affair, I'm faithful to my wife for we were together 35 years,

married 31 years high school sweethearts. Here's somebody who I defended when he was trying to cover up his affair, criticizing the fact that I got remarried in, you know, in a church in the eyes God, according to Christian religion. But I didn't retaliate, I didn't tweet back, my wife tells me it's my fault anyway, I should have invited him to the wedding

and that's why he's mad at anything. We're a good man to laugh about it. Well, that's a pretty

heavy thing to say about somebody. He called me a moron at the prayer breakfast. Well, that's funny because you're obviously not a moron. Well, and so I said I'm glad I'm in his prayers because it obviously wasn't a prayer he was saying and at the prayer breakfast. It's just,

I think what's so revealing about all of this is he, you've never attacked him never suddenly,

you don't seem mad at him personally. You're aligned on the issues that I think most people who voted for Trump in 2024 really believed in, you're way more America first than anything this current administration is doing and he's mad at you because of like Epstein and spending, right? Those are my main infractions and those are things that he and I both campaigned on and promised to eliminate, you know, to disclose the Epstein files and to eliminate the wasteful spending.

And I'm just trying to keep my promises to the people that I represent and he's keeping his promises to APAC. So what do you think's going to happen? Am I race? Yeah. It's going to be really close.

It's going to depend on turnout and I think the most stark difference that we can discern in the

cross tabs, you know, when you do polling, if you've ever been poll, maybe people haven't got to look at the results of a full poll, but there's 200 pages of cross tabs that come from a poll, when you just poll 500 people because at the end of the poll, you ask, "What's your race? What's your religion? How old are you?" You know, if sometimes in the poll, you ask the income, your household income, and you look at the cross tabs and try to find out, is there a group of people

we're doing better with or worse with, what do we have to work on? And the most stark contrast in my cross tabs is age. And if under 40, I win like 80, 20. 80, 20, it's like it doesn't even look real. Okay. And those folks are getting their news from social media, from podcasts, from you, I think, between 40 and 65, I do really well. That's the age group you and I are in. Yes. Those people, I think, watch the news, but they're suspicious of what they say. And then the folks,

not all of them, but I'm not doing that well with 65 and up, and I think that's because they're watching Fox News 24/7. And Fox News has blocked me out. I used to be on there every week. I've went on your show when you were on Fox. I've gone on Laura Ingram's show, Shannon Brain's Show, I've gone on, you know, Hannity's show. I've been on all those shows, but not in the last 18 months. Why? Because Fox wants access to the White House. They want to scoop. They want to make sure they're

in the press gaggle. They want to be there when the Marine One lands to ask a question. They want

To get called on.

be deprived of those things that they want from the White House. And that's just how it works. So to get on Fox, I have to buy ads to be on Fox. I can't be on the TV shows. It's a wonder,

they'll still let me buy ads, but I think that's just because it's federal law.

If you'd asked most Fox News voters, viewers, who are Trump voters, if you'd asked them two years ago, like, stay where you believe on the issues. I think there'd be pretty close to 100% overlap between you and those people. Absolutely. Yeah. So I don't feel like your views have changed.

Mine have never changed regardless of who the president is, or who the speaker is.

But Trump's have changed dramatically. At least the disconnect between what he said he was going to do what he's doing is shocking. I, you know, when I endorsed him, I thought we wouldn't have a new war. I thought we would get warrants for Pfizer that they had used to spy on him. I thought that Mahab would be front and center at the HHS with Bobby Kennedy there. I thought that we would have sane foreign policy. I thought that where we put America first, that's my definition of sane.

I thought we would end our involvement in the war in Ukraine. I thought we would release all the

Epstein files and indict some of those SOBs. And those are all the things I'm still fighting for.

Do you feel like there's more corruption now than there was?

Oh, what is corruption? Well, I don't know. It's using the power of the government in this case, the federal government to advantage your business over others or using, say, foreign policy. Like the idea that our foreign policy might be used by donors to make money for themselves is a shocking idea. I think the conflicts of interest are increasing and not adequately disclosed. And that the line between business and government is becoming blurred.

Let me give you an example. The government's taken a 10% stake in Intel and the bragging that they're making money on this. I remember when they took a stake in general motors and then bragged the same thing. The problem once you co-mingle government ownership and private ownership is that the government is now predisposed to see that company succeed over the companies that haven't given them ownership. In fact, the reputation of the person whose name is on the ballot

is at stake if the company does well or doesn't do well. And so if there's any preferences that can be given in contracts with the government and permits to make buildings and trade deals, then they go to that company that the government has a stake in. It's fundamentally on American

and I think we're seeing more of that and I don't think we should embrace it. I think we should

reject it. I concerns at the beginning of January when the U.S. government overthrew Maduro and arrested him and his wife and brought them to New York, I predict he will not testify in open court because that would not be good for the U.S. government if he did that. But whatever that happened and then there was a scramble to get rich off the oil assets of Venezuela and I noticed that one of the people who's funding the campaign against you now, Paul Singer, one of which people in

the world already, always eager to be a richer for some reason, was involved in a Venezuelan-related

business deal shortly before that exercise. Am I misremembering this? This is the one exception. This is why I have to say 95% of the money motivated against me is because of Israel. I've got to reserve 5% for Paul Singer in Venezuela. He's known for buying troubled assets, distressed assets. And then a lot of times destroying the company or leveraging the company to get things or the country. -Yes. -Our big player in this. And it should not be lost on the

voters in Kentucky that this billionaire bought SICO, which was the formerly nationalized oil company of Venezuela for pennies on the dollar and completed that transaction just a few weeks before we invaded Venezuela. And it was such a good deal to get this company because it looks like well under the current

Regime and the current rules and the current deals that SICO has that this st...

pennies on the dollar. But it goes from pennies on the dollar to dimes on the dollar and somebody

can triple quadruple or get 10 times their money for that distressed asset that they bought at a bargain basement price. If the political forces change and then the U.S. government, in fact the U.S. military gets involved in making sure that SICO's assets are safe and can be producing oil

and refining it into gasoline. So if you can ask an AI, this is one of the cool things about AI, right?

Like if you're sitting at home watching this, ask how many, how much money did Paul Singer stand to make by the U.S. invasion of Venezuela? And it will tell you he stands to make at least when I

query that he stands to make more than anybody else on the overthrow of Maduro and that it could

be in the billions of dollars. And that's the guy who's paying for the ad that says I'm having a throttle with AOC and Ilhan Omar and running the AI of it in Kentucky so that the older people who's still think that AI is artificial insemination for their cattle are going to wonder how that was created with artificial insemination. And that's like from some start to finish. That's the corruption. There it is. And they're going to try to buy this seat. And if they get away with it,

it's like this is a referendum. I don't think you're going to vote your way out of this. If if I

lose, I think it's Blake. Well, yeah, because it means that people with business before the government

can use part of their proceeds to crush anyone who questions the deals that they're benefiting

from, correct? And it's happening. My concern is that this is even bigger concern with what's happened in the current administration. If the lesson is that no matter who you vote for, things stay the same or get worse, then there's no pressure relief valve for the society and people get radical. Let me give you another example of where this is happening with these data centers. So twice, I have seen and stopped special provisions from being inserted into US law to help data centers

over all other types of businesses. In the big beautiful bill, Marjorie Taylor Green and I noticed that there was a couple pages that would give immunity for these data centers from state law, like all state law, but also went down to the local level, including planning and zoning. So in other words, they were trying to get in the big beautiful bill, a federal law that wouldn't just tramples states rights, abilities to regulate AI, but it would trample your local city commission

or planning commission or county commission from being able to decide where the smoke stacks and the cul-de-sax go and keeping them separate. And so we fought and got that taken out of the bill. The margin of passing the big beautiful bill was so slim that we were able to insist that they take that out there, Marjorie would held her vote and tell they took it out. And then most recently, in the Judiciary Committee, which has no jurisdiction over the EPA, I was sitting there in a

markup that's where you bring like eight bills in front of the committee and you're going to sit there for several hours and you're going to debate and amend the bills in the committee of jurisdiction. And like the sixth bill out of eight was to give immunity from law suits from environmental

lawsuits to data centers. And then it immunity for data centers for data centers. So I believe

over to a few of the Republicans on that committee and it's, did you see this bill? What is this bill about? And then I asked Grock, I'm like, who would five companies would benefit the most from this bill? And I mean, that's a great thing about AI. It said Oracle, Amazon, AWS, like it gave you five companies. Now, Grock didn't incriminate itself at any expected wood, but there's probably probably benefits from data centers. You think? It's on surprise that was as honest as it was to me.

And so what I did is in real time in this hearing, I tweeted that these the five companies are going to benefit from this special provision of law if it happens. I also said that, look, there's eight environmental laws here that it sites and, and I may not even agree with these environmental laws, but if we're going to give a reprieve, if we're going to give anybody relief from it, we need to give farmers and factories relief and, you know, house builders,

the same kind of relief that you're proposing to give the data centers. Like, this is un-American.

This gets to, is it corruption or not?

for corporations to be able to insert this. It's an environmental provision having to do with data

centers, but they figured out a way to get it through to judiciary committee. And then I drafted a provision, but where was Jim Jordan? He was chairing the hearing. But, and he, or to his, you know, in his defense, he may not have been looking very closely at this. The chairman of the committee might not have read legislation. Okay. Well, he does have to farm out some of this stuff. I drafted an amendment in real time. You try to think of creative ways

that would brain damage the cronyism that they're trying to achieve. And I thought, you know, they probably want to build these data centers in farms and farmland. And so I drafted amendment

that said, okay, if this bill passes, excluded, is any data center built in farmland?

Which probably, which if I had gotten that successfully passed, right? Which I think would have been a popular amendment, and then probably could have got enough votes for it. And then once it's in there, the data center guys are like, screw it. We don't even want this now. We were going to build these

in all the farms. That's why it was the whole purpose of the bill to screw up the environment on

the farmland, right? You just screwed the whole bill. So, so here's where I'll defend Jim Jordan. He had the good sense to pull the bill before we got to it. Good. So, it got pulled from the hearing, but I don't know that it would have happened if I hadn't got in there and started blowing the whistle. So, what's going to happen if I lose? I don't think anybody would have been there that day to stop that provision to kill it in the crib before it made it to the floor of the house.

On the glyphosate thing, I don't know that if we could have rallied Mahat and let enough people know about it to get that done. Certainly, the primact wouldn't be in the farm bill. There are lots of things, good things that won't happen if I'm not there and bad things that will happen if I'm not there. And that's why I'm running. What do you think, looking back 10 years from now, we're going to think

of this data center transformation the country by data center? I think these are going to be

buildings at some point with vines growing on them, with wild animals crawling through the roofs and the rotted outdoors, because unlike farming, which is something we've been doing for thousands of years, these data centers, they're going to be obsolete in 10 or 20 years. It'll be an outer space, like Elon's already got a plan to put them up there where they can get 100% solar all the time, they get the energy and they beam the answer back to Earth. I think it's a desecration of the planet

that we're going to have a hangover while you and I are still alive looking at these things. And wondering, well, what can we do with this empty shell that was purpose? They won't last as long as the steel mills have Gary and Deanna, right? It's all folly, it's disgusting. So I just want to, I want to end with a story that's like not maybe a world historic story, but it's just such a metaphor for everything. And that's the legislation that recently passed that allows big companies in the

government to spy on you in your car, your car, what was your car? It's now their car, apparently. Well, you're in it. Well, you describe what this is, the technology, the legislation and your position on it. So in the infrastructure, investment and jobs act that was passed under Biden, like tons of money thrown at things that aren't really infrastructure, they also included some new mandates. And one of the mandates that's impractical or well-earned and needs to go away is this mandate

for every automobile made in 2027. Like, we're just a few months away from this to be able to shut itself off. Every car has to be able to judge your driving and shut down if it thinks you're impaired. And this isn't like the thing that, you know, if you've been convicted of a DUI

that you have to blow into to prove that you're not, you know, inebriated, this will judge your driving.

And I've been fighting this ever since. I've been fighting this for years. I've fought it in the transportation committee, which I serve on. I've crossed examined the myths of people who are responsible for this. They will admit to me it can't work. It won't work right. I had a woman

who testified that they're about a billion car trips a day. If the failure, if the success rate of

this technology is 99.9%, that means there's going to be a million cars that won't start on any given day. And I pointed out to her, well, it's not the car not starting because the technology actually stops you mid-trip. So the car's going to, I guess it's going to pull you over and on the highway on the highway, you could be a mom with kids because you swirved a deer and then you got

In the breakdown lane because an ambulance went by, how does the car know?

to have to know what road you're on. It's going to, the technology they're proposing will watch

your face. It'll look for your gaze. It'll look at your pupils. It'll look at your posture. It will look where your hands are and judge whether you are competent to drive or not. My question that I've asked over and over, I can't get an answer to, is if the dashboard, if the AI and the dashboard and the cameras in your dashboard is the judge, the jury and the executioner and you get pulled over on the side of the road and you're a mom with a mini van full of kids, how do you appeal

your sentence? Who's going to start to car back up? Do you, do you press a button and plead

with another AI? But a machine is watching you on behalf of your overlords in your own car.

If the North Koreans did this, we would say this is like classic Stalinist hellscape, right?

Right, I don't even think the Chinese have proposed this yet. It's ridiculous and, you know, I wouldn't trust a government with this power. But who could possibly be for that? It's a coalition, mothers against drunk driving, and parents, like they will bring, if you oppose this or well in scenario, they will bring to your office a very sad situation, the bring, you know, constituents who've had kids that died at the hands of drunk drivers, right? And

it's tough to tell them that this technology isn't going to work, like so Congressman won't tell

them that. It's tough to tell them there are better ways to stop drunk driving or to prevent this. If you don't even prosecute drunk driving when illegal aliens do it, right? So there is no actual

rule against drunk driving anymore in the United States if you are from a preferred ethnic group.

So like this whole thing is crazy. It gets that gets to the extra layer of justice or to the bifurcation of justice. We've got a system of justice for billionaires. We've got a system of justice for illegals. Yes. And then we've got a system of justice. The rest of us are expected to, you know, operate on. Joe Biden said, oh, loudly, it's not a big, you know, illegal's get busted for DUI so what? When I was a county executive, I saw them come to our jail and say, you got to

let this guy go. He's an illegal. Like there's no way to prosecute him in a regular court system. And that that is crazy. But this, this or wellian kill switch system twice, I have forced to vote on this on the floor of the house. I forced to debate and a vote. And this is why we lose the uniparty. I can't get 218 people to take this provision of law out of law. So there were Republicans who voted for this. Yeah, 50 in the last cycle. The victory by the way, and this is for me

and the reason they want me gone is I can't force those 50 Republicans to do the right thing. I can't even compel them. I can compel, I can compel to, you know, 170 of them to do the right

thing. And there's 50 holdouts. Why did they hate me in the swamp? Why did they want me gone?

Part of the coalition is the people who don't want transparency. Of course. Because twice, I've forced that vote twice, they've stood there and taken the wrong vote against their constituents against the Constitution for a dystopian future. And now they're outed. You can go look at that list of 50 Republicans and more than your Republican is among them. But then go to the ballot box and vote against them. But you can't do that if I'm not there. Because who's going to

force that vote to happen? 13 days from today. 13 days from today. I need to raise money to go up against these billionaires, hedge fund managers, gambling magnets that are making money from Chinese gambling and controlling our government. Masseymoneybomb.com is where we're raising the money. It's all the average donation is $94. And we've had tens of thousands of donors. If this is the biggest battle, the biggest electoral battle this year, it's all the marbles. Everybody's pushed

all their chips in. The APAC is pushed in all their chips. All of the cronies have pushed in their chips. And we're pushing in our chips. I'm doing everything I can for the next 13 days. That's speed. I'm certainly rooting for you so perfectly. Thanks talk Thomas Massey. Thank you. Thank you, sir.

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