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cover of episode Tucker Carlson, RFK Jr, and Larry Elder React to Second Trump Shooting

Tucker Carlson, RFK Jr, and Larry Elder React to Second Trump Shooting

2024/9/17
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The Tucker Carlson Show

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Tucker Carlson
通过深入调查和批评,卡尔森对美国和全球政治话题产生了显著影响。
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Tucker Carlson:媒体对特朗普第二次遇袭事件的报道充满谎言和刻意遗漏,试图掩盖袭击者与新保守派和美国政府机构之间的联系。他呼吁人们相信自己的直觉,因为直觉可以感知到欺骗。在新冠疫情期间,他通过直觉判断出媒体的谎言,并强调了真相的力量和直觉的重要性。他还建议人们警惕政治人物的谎言,并关注那些重视真相的人,并推荐使用ExpressVPN保护网络隐私。 Larry Elder:他认为共和党全国委员会(RNC)操纵了共和党总统候选人辩论的资格标准,以减少候选人数量。他谈到了美国面临的严重的父权缺失问题,以及加州的政治和社会问题,包括他竞选州长的经历。他还批评了对乔治·弗洛伊德事件的媒体报道存在偏见,夸大了种族因素,忽视了其他重要事实。最后,他鼓励人们独立思考,批判性地看待新闻,并利用替代新闻来源获取信息。 Robert F. Kennedy Jr.:他认为美国社会存在着对抗和暴力,这部分源于将民众对立起来。新冠疫情期间,大量财富和权力向富人转移,而这被用来维持现状。他的孩子激励他继续从事政治活动。他认为政府机构需要进行改革,以提高透明度,并认为政府对公众撒谎,这始于沃伦委员会报告。他还认为新冠疫情期间,人们参与了一场大型米尔格拉姆实验,政府利用权威来操纵民众的行为。他呼吁抵制政府的暴政,并警惕新技术的滥用。他对特朗普总统的评价褒贬不一,但他认为特朗普总统可以纠正之前的错误,并希望在特朗普政府中发挥作用,帮助选择合适的人来领导政府机构。

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Tucker Carlson expresses his fondness for the Midwest, highlighting his love for hunting, fishing, the region's accent, and its people.

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Fairlington deals brands, wow. Thank you. Thank you. I'm really happy. I'm really happy to be here. It's .

i've spent.

Thank you. Ah .

and.

It's so funny. I was just in this building in july. I had no idea was the same building until I was pulling up tonight.

They don't very familiar. I'm so grateful to be here I am actually, and I just want to be clear, I like every part of the united states. I'm from here.

I was born. I will die here, hopefully not too soon. But i've made that commitment and i'm be buried near my dogs.

So, but I love the whole country. I grew up on one coast. I live in the other.

Who ever clapped for me being buried next to my dogs? I'd like you. I feel that way.

But I have to say, and this is not pandering, this is totally sincere. I especially love this part of the midwest. I just love IT. And I .

love IT for incredibly .

shallow reasons that all this be first. Well, I love to hunt and fish here. I love your mosques. I love your growth.

The friends who I go on an animal, animal hunting trip with in two weeks, the first thing i'm doing when I get off to is coming back to his concert to catch your fish and try to shoot your birds. I probably won't. Don't know they're safe.

But the real reason I love the midwest, particular this part of this, because I married a girl from this area and I just love the accent. I'd think it's hilarious. I've been whether forty years next week, i'm over forty years ago next week.

And when I first started dating and I thought, you know, i'm sure the accent will sort of late, not a little bit. Now, over time, IT has not at all still a car, a car which is like a motor vehicle. If I say to my dogs, let's go to the park.

They look at me like what? But if I say the park and they're up and so I associate that accent with nicest and particularly nice women so i'm walking through downtown the Walker today and I hear people speaking in the sex and I almost want to walk that I reduce myself and be like, oh, it's so nice to meet you and I thought, you know, maybe maybe you can shot doing that, but everyone actually was nice. I just think it's it's just the sweetest part of the country.

So thank you so much. We have IT even in my kitchen, the middle stern sensibility were very big on meet up in my house. Actually, I don't even know if they still serve in here. But in the seventies and midwest, everyone ate meet love every day. And so we still do.

So the reason that it's funny, the reason that we're doing this tour, we're doing this, is this our eighth night, and we're doing the entire month of september in the real reason I wanted to do IT was that became newkirk internet. And before then I worked in television. And the frustrating thing about I know yeah okay.

The frustrating to think about both of them is, you know, there's a lot of censorship and now more than ever. And so I just talked to myself, the one thing that you can't sensor is a live event. You can really be completely honest because the people are right there.

And if you're in a room full of thousands of people, you can feel very strong. Now i'm revealing from california but a vive becoming off the people and it's just wonderful. And people can be as honest as they want, which is extremely honest.

And so I thought I just need to do that after spending all day worried about what youtube is doing to our videos. So that is going to get out and talk to people directly. So after eight days i'm thinking, you know, maybe I overstated IT, maybe the censorship, the distortion of the facts, the lying, the massive deception machine i've been a part of for thirty three years now in the media.

Maybe it's not as bad as I thought. And then someone tries to shot trump again. I was here, actually, the last time someone tried to shoot trump up.

I was here in this room and now i'm back again two days after, and i'm shocked watching the lying in real time. Shocked I was, was two days ago. And all sim are getting these reports. I call in there, get all the facts.

And then I thought, you know, what are they saying in the media about it's the first thing, if you tuned in that you land, was that he was shot by a trump supporter, which totally makes sense. Guy loved him so much, brought a rifle to the golf course and tried to murder them. I mean, that's kind of way words like putting belonging up his own natural gas pipelines that make sense totally.

He's so evil. He's attacking himself, right? Cell form.

being liked sort .

of natural. And i'm watching this. There are literally telling me that this guy whom theyve arrested is a trump supporter.

So you flip channels and then you learn that add flip over to channel used to work on and there's linsey graham and I know, I know, I know he's a republican senator from one of the most conservative states. How does that happen, by the way, if democracy is real, how was Linda grammar senator? But whatever.

So i'm watching linsey gram and linsey gram looking right into the cameras like, you know, who did this iran run? So I looked into this, yeah, let's for sure. Well, that turns that someone to see a war monger.

Well, well, the guy whose shot trump was also a war monger. And in fact, to close you look at IT, the more you realized his politics are exactly the same as linsey grams. He's a neocon. He literally volunteered in ukraine.

And this raps like, go around that is like, no, you have no opinions that are different from these guys and you're lying to me and the audience I used to speak to five nights week, you're lying to them. I'm shouting this in my hotel. Nobody heard me.

My wife was brushing your teeth. You like, what is that? They are lying. IT throws me completely .

insane.

And there's no mention of the fact that this guy, who, by the way, has been interviewed by every media outlet in washington, this guy was like a very famous guy. You may not even know this. There's only really one place to learn any facts at all, and that's elon muscles social media.

Is crazy. I don't have a TV at home, so i'm spared most of this. I have no idea what's going.

By the way, I strongly recommend ignorance. If you're looking to stay happy in a moment like this, just no less unfortunate. My job requires me to know more, but if you think about IT, did god punish atam mony for ignorance?

I don't think he, did he punish? Shed them for knowledge. So maybe I shouldn't watch cable news. This was my I don't want to know what they're saying, but this week i've had to pay close attention.

And every single thing is a lie, either directly or it's a lie more in, much more prevalent and much more sinister. It's a lie by omission. There's not telling you the facts and without blistering the point i'm using.

This is just one example among a countless number of examples, where reality is completely distorted and the average person has none only, no idea, but no way of knowing what the truth is. So the guy who is now in custody for attempted murder against the republican nominee, the former U. S.

President donal trump, that guy has been reviewed countless times by every big media outlets in the united states. You got a criminal record, the length of your ARM twenty charges, including possession of weapons of mass s destruction. The new york times didn't bother learn any of that before they held them up as a freedom fighter, ukraine, where he was living.

And then the piece describes the contacts had with members of congress in their steps, other us. Government agencies with a second. That's the same guy who brought a rifle with a scope to a golf course and self forward to murder.

Donal champagne had all these contacts with U. S. Government agencies. Like I don't know what that's about, but I think it's time to find out. No, yes, but no one's .

going to find out.

It's just going to be memory hold in a week. We'll never have happened and you'll be the crazy person for remembering you. Like what didn't some trump supporter bring a rifle because you're against gun control? So it's no, no, no, no, no.

That's not what happened. A guy who was the darling of the new york times, who was the exact same worlds as linsey gram, decided to try and murder Donald trumpet. And it'll be completely gone.

That will have disappeared. And so I guess what I would say is that is a vital importance to get unfiltered information from honest people. Now, how do you know honest people? How do you know if someone is being honest is very hard.

But one of the main reasons, you know, I don't know what you're saying, but I know that I agree with you. If I could hear you, I would shout back whatever you're shouting because I feel like you're from the pitch of your voice. I can tell you on to something. I love you too.

I heard that.

So here's the answer to the question, how do you know if someone is telling the truth? And this has been my obsession for the last year, having worked in the middle of the deception machine and not even realizing IT until the day you get fired, you like what was like having an alcoholic spouse. Everyone knows, except you.

So i'm very fixated on this fact, which is that almost all of the information that we ceived has been created and spun and reduced in size. Relevant facts have been omitted, ted. Irrelevant facts have been pushed to the four in order to manipulate how we feel.

And so how do you defeat that? Well, one of the main way that you defeat that, your first line of defense, are your instincts. I have come to believe this.

You know, when someone's lying, you can feel IT. And I know this because I have so many dogs. Here's no, i'm serious.

My dogs cannot speak english that i'm aware of. And yet, if you come to my house and you're weird, my dogs know immediately. They can smell weird on you.

They can smell deception on you. They don't like you at all. They will bark at you.

They will cower in the corner. Now how is that? They don't. They even seen your tax returns. They talk to your wife, but they know.

And they know, because we all know, if you get a vibe of someone that suggests deception, that person is lying. If you get divide, this suggest weird to walls. For example, i'm just saying.

First, well, I went to a boarding school in the eighties in new england. Okay, we had done masters like mr. walls.

The second I saw that guy is like, not baby sitting in my house. I'm sorry, no way. Oh, that's so unfair.

No, it's not not because my instincts didn't just alert me to this. They screamed at full volume. This guy is a creeper, period.

Therefore, I don't have the evidence necessary to indite in a court of law. I don't i'm not going to press charges and stem all someone made at some point. It's not going to be me because I don't have the information.

I have the instinct and that's all I need. And the same is true, very true for deception. And if you're watching someone I don't want to named named, I don't really mean linsey gram.

And you look at that person and, you know, I think that person is trying to sell me something. I think that person may not be telling the full truth. You are right.

You are right. Our main weakness as people is that we override the truth as delivered by our instincts, by our higher mind. And we talk ourselves out of knowing what we already know, you already know.

And you know, because god gave you those instincts as maybe the most important gift you received that birth to protect you from deception and harm your instincts are not trying to tell, sell you something. They're not trying to get elected to anything. They're only job is to serve you.

So do not ignore them. You know, lying when you hear IT. I felt this during covet.

I don't think I passed high school biology. Pretty sure I didn't. I may have gotten the answers on the test from then girlfriend and my wife.

Actually I did. I'd just be honest. I did. I tried, cheated, and I did. I did. I've never admit that anyone don't tell my children, but that's true. I just didn't understand IT.

And so I cannot pretend to be grounded the hard sciences because i'm not i'm deeply grounded in human nature and in the way that people communicate, because that is my job. And when they started telling me things on television, I knew instantly they were lying. I had no idea why.

I didn't know what the larger purpose was. I still have no idea. I can speculate. I won't do IT here.

What was that? What was the point of that will to increase their power to make weed stores more profitable and close down churches? Yeah, I got that.

But what was the big picture goal of that? I don't know, but I knew the first day when I watched tony fouche talk on my show, I interview them. I had no idea tony pouch was lying.

I book tony fouche twenty fouche was like the longer serving employee lives on my neighbor od in dc. A locked him up. Well, he's not locked up.

He's wandering through our dog park with secret service protection at your expense. By the way, do you have secret service protection? Yeah, no, he hasn't been locked up.

He's been rewarded in George and universities, paging him even more money in federal tax dollars as a hero. But I, on the basis of no evidence whatsoever, only on airing instinct, saw tony fauci in that interview. I was like, you're lion.

I didn't say that on TV, but I felt IT so strongly. I spent the next week trying to figure what he was lying about, and then he became really obvious. All of us are capable of that.

Every one of us is capable of that. And the truth micon trast hits very differently. When you hear somebody tell a true thing, say something out loud, something you never heard before, something you had a million times but never thought about.

When you hear a true word, IT resonates within you like a tuning for IT hums. You can't get IT out of your head. You may not know why it's true, but you know that IT is the word the true word, is the most powerful force in the world in in the beginning was the word.

And when we hear something true, we know IT. And the only reason that we don't act on IT is because we've been talked out of IT by professional liars or we doubt our own got instincts about IT. And so what I would say you is, do not doubt your instincts.

If you see someone, if you see carmella haras up, they are saying, vote for me. I'm actually a farmer from downtown dial and oil. You can see the black earth in my hand.

That's my tractor behind me. Vote for me. I'll give you a tax cut and a free are fifteen or whatever she's basically making that pitch she's running is some kind of right winner if you notice this.

Yeah, the defund the police check is somehow now a conservative right? OK got IT. I don't even need to know her history. I don't need to know anything about her.

I listened to her talk and I think you're lying and this is before even know that he was, you know, monta William side piece or when if I know nothing about her. That's just verification of what I already felt. I knew that without even calling montel and asking him, I knew who you were and we all do.

So I would say home near spice senses these next six weeks because you're going to be lied to out of volume with the level of aggression you've never seen before and the command will always be the same. Ignore what's right in front of your face. You didn't see that.

That's not real. You're crazy. That's really the message.

You're crazy. You can only trust us. The rest is disinformation.

Okay, first, anyone who uses the phrase distance information is a liar. Period we're done. This information is not a category.

There's only one category, truth or false hod, that's IT. This information is another way of saying you're saying something is inconvenient to me. You are criticizing me.

I don't like what you're saying. Shut up or going to jail. That's not a valid category. That's totalitarians. M, that's tyranny. So anyone used where this information is immediately on the liar side, don't listen to another word that person is renomme.

Listen only to people who care about the only thing that is worth caring about, which is, is IT true or not, is IT actually true. And the people who care about whether it's true are your guides through a dark time. And they're you're only guides and they're not many of them.

And I just want to say i'm so grateful that we have two of them tonight. I'm going to induce ce them in order to consider doing this. Imagine going to your computer, looking at your entire browsing history on the web, everything you've looked at now.

Imagine hitting print and then signing your full name at the bottom with your so security number, printing out that browsing history with your name on IT, and nAiling IT to the front door of, say, your house for everybody in the world to see you. Will that be fine? Maybe not.

And what you're added actually take a copy of that same list of everything you looked at on the internet and posted in the break room at work. And then in fact, I farther that blow that up and put them on a billboard over a major highway on your mute dork. Here's everything at the internet.

Would you, anna, do that? Don't have to be a creep to think maybe that's done something i'd want to do. But the in effect, that's what you're already doing every single day.

Unless you already use the sponsor, this video express, you are allowing all of your online activity to become public. why? Because internet service providers can see every website you have ever visit IT.

Yes, even if you're in incognito private browsing, that doesn't really work. And in the united states, your internet service provider can then sell your data to whom ever they please, including the government. And they do, by the way.

So what can you do about that? Well, you can do what people in our office tube chicken were abroad, but also, when were here. And that's encysted your online activity before.

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Once again, privacy is a prerecorded for freedom. You can't be free unless you're privacy. And if you want to start reclaiming your privacy, you do yourself a favor and use our special link to get three months of express VPN for free. Is to express V P N slash tucker that's express E X P R E S S V P N dot com slash docker here guys.

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So the first who's going to join me in just a second is my friend lyre elder, who i've known for a really long time. He's a wonderful man. And of the many things that we have in common, lario, joni, or both from southern california, which used to be the kind of thing that, you know, you bragged about.

Now I tell everyone i'm from cheboygan, no one believes me, but I tell them that actually walk a shop. But whatever it's. But IT used to be fifty five when I was a kid.

We felt very sorry for anybody who was not from southern california. A you wouldn't say IT right to their face cases. You would want to be mean, but we thought they were deeply, deeply unforced.

They just didn't know that they couldn't afford the bus fair or whatever. But if you didn't live in southern alive, nia, that we were sad for you, because IT was such a wonderful place, was the greatest place. IT was the apposite of human civilization, and I still think that and IT matters.

What's happened to california? I find myself, since I live as far from california as you can possibly live in, the data may now it's it's like a distant fact to me, it's like a typhoon and bangladesh, like, I feel sad, but that doesn't really affect me, but IT actually does affect me. It's our largest state actually.

And IT is a bell weather. What happens in california does tend to move the east inexorably. And so we have to care.

And what is happening in california, I can promise you, the entire american news media colludes to hide the truth of what's happening in california from you because they don't want you to know. What they want to do to you is the truth. And Larry elder knows he cares enough to have run for the governance of california.

He's probably the last sensible person, whoever will. It's a one party state. But he made an honorable and good faith effort to dislodge Gavin newsome. Some of us were really rooting for him.

I had him on for his announcement on thursday night, and the next night was my lash show, cause I got fired so I wasn't able to cheer him on from my porch at a TV channel. But I was certainly from the sidelines. So Larry elders could the common in about thirty seconds and tells what the states actually like, because you should know, even if you live here in the beautiful, unchanged midwest. And the second person we're going to talk to is rabbit of Kennedy junior.

And the one thing I would say about Bobby, who i've been friendly with and really admired for a long time before I was even cool, I had some secret opinions about former that I didn't want to share in public and see where are our biggest advertized you. But I have for many years thought he was on the scent. One of my dogs hunt down a fecal coro as like, ah, you're get warmer.

Their bobbi, but Bobby's life is a way I could one for hours. I'll do IT in one sentence. What's happened to bobbi Kennedy over the last eighteen months gives me hope for this country because there's no one, there's no one.

He's more of a democrats than Bobby Kennedy. He's now campaigning for god trump. How did that happen? And IT IT happened because paris, in politics, i'm just learning this in my advanced middle age, is a lie, actually.

So if you wake up in a world where linsey gram goes on cable news and pretends that he's on your sausages these line right to your face to send your children to go die in some pointless foreign AR, and bobbi Kennedy is actually trying to save your children from dying Young, from preventable disease, and if you're like me, you've never voted for democrats in your life and you never are going to, but you ask yourself, like, wait a second, maybe this is all fake, actually. And IT is the real divide is not between republicans and democrats, the real divide is between liars and people brave enough to tell the truth. And bobbi candidate in the latter category as you're about to find out. So with that, I am honored to introduce for update on the biggest, most important state, the golden state of california, my friend Larry elder.

Larry elder, i'm so honored.

You're here. Are you aware that talker does not wear socks .

on your socks? No, I don't. You get to a certain age and you're like, you know, I still paid my taxes and you get to a driver's license. But there are some things i'm not doing.

I don't want to know what else you don't wear.

I'm in a .

commander, you know, let me to say that cute, I think your partner who doesn't take much for me to get right to the vulgar newsroom and deep inside me. So there are you. As I said, I got fired right after you announced .

I kill the show. I came on this show on thursday and announce I was running for president. And by the way, this is kind of the scene, the crime for me.

You had the first G. O. P. Debate here in the Walker, and I was required to get three poles, right at one percent, are Better to qualify.

So I turned in three poles. I had one percent Better. I get a phone call from randomly, Daniel, and he said, one of the poles you can use. I said, which one? He said, race musson.

I said, why? He said, because it's a fillide with the trump campaign and is true that the rules are, if anybody commissions a poll, that person can't use IT, nor can any other other candidate use IT. So after the announcement was made that elder didn't qualify, recent puts out a tweet and says we're not affiliated with strong. There's no reason why older can use me. So I submit a fourth one and he said, you submit a too late.

So my lawyer is the former chair of the federal election commission, tucker, and he told me that by fAiling to apply the debate criteria fairly elder, what the r nc did essentially was to give an income contribution to the eight candidates who did make IT on the debate age and based on the value of the time at fox news, that's one hundred million dollars. So I told them I flew here during walking. Anyway, on the evil the debate, I said, if you don't put me up there by two o'clock, i'm going to file a complaint with the fc. Four hundred million dollars and tick, tick, tick, I thought they were onna blink. They did not so they didn't put me on as you know and I hadn't thought their complaint .

so will find that what happens. But I guess my take away would be, are you saying the r nc is not totally .

on the level? Shockingly, I think their goal talker was to reduce the number of candidate. They thought that seventeen was two million in two thousand sixteen.

They wanted to reduce IT to a more manageable number. I guess I don't really know and talk her. I wasn't trying to displaced Donald trump.

I knew he was going to be the nominee, but there are some issues I thought we're not talked about and I felt if I could get those issues from tent and or I do my job. Most notably, the number one domestic coal in amErica by far is the epidemic of fatherliness ens. Forty percent.

Forty percent of all american kids now into the world that a father in the home marry to the mother. Twenty five. A black kids in one thousand nine hundred and sixty five.

Now, seventy percent, twenty five percent of why kids now into the world without a father in the home, married to the mother. And the stats are clear, if you'll raise without a father, your five times will likely to be poor and commit crime. Nine times were like to drop out of school, and twenty times were like you to end up in gel and know what's happened. In the mid sixties, a democrat, lindon Johnson, launched to so called war on poverty. And since then we've insignificance women to marry the government and a synthesize men to a ban in their so and more responsibility.

And nobody's talking about IT. So the .

neighborhood you grew up in, the state you grew up in, you grew up with your dad at home. We have talked about your dad sounds like an amazing guy, but that wasn't weird, was IT.

IT was unusual when I was growing up for a mother and a father not to be in the home. Now IT is unusual for a mother and the father in the inner city to be in the home. And and that's that's the big difference.

My father never knew his biology. Gc, and my last name, elder, is the name of some man who, in his life, the long is maybe three, four years. I'm not even sure that elder formally adopted in my dad, and my dad began using his name.

His mother could neither read nor write. He was irresponsible, lived off a series of boyfriends. My dad, at the age of thirteen, comes home, start cooling with his mom's the end boyfriend. Elder was long on, and the mother cited with the boyfriend and threw my father out of the house, never to return.

Athens, georgia jim crow sale at the beginning of the great depression and my father picked up trash, cleaned up bond, that whatever could became a poor man, porter on the train over the largest private employer, blacks in those days. And this little black boy from athens, georgia traveled all over the country, tucker, and came to the state called california, the city called lost. And as my dad was blown away, you can walk to the front door of a restaurant, sit down and get served.

So made a mida note, may be someday he'll relocate the california. My dad, I was, had packages of crackers in ten tens of tune up because you never knew this south. If you be, probably get a meal, spring harbor.

My dad joined the marines. I asking why there any marines here? There any marines here?

Ura, you know, i'm going to say, I asked my dad why he joined marines. He said, two reasons. They go where the action is. And I love the uniforms.

Good reason.

So my dad was station on the island of guam. He was in charge of cooking for the college soldier because the military was segregated those days, my dear, I can look at a cake and til you, what's in IT? So the war is over.

He go back to chat nucleators ity, where he met, married my mom to get him a job in a shorter to cook. He goes three or four restaurants, and he told we don't hire nicks, goes an unemployment office lady, that he went to the wrong door, my death to the hall and sees color only goes to that door, to the very same lady. And out my day came home to my moment.

This is bs. I'm going to L. A, where I was before the war.

Get me a job as a cook. So he comes out to L. A. He walks around and he's told, you don't have any references. My dad and I need references to make .

hammond .

s goes to unemployment. This time, just one door. Nothing available is said, what time do you open? SHE said, in any clock, what time you close? SHE said, five.

My dad is sitting in the chair. You find something set in a chair for a whole day. Came back the next day that there until lunch.

SHE called him up. So I have a job for you. I don't know whether you gonna want IT my dancer, of course i'm going to wanted starting a family. What is IT the job? Cleaning toilets and the basically brand bread.

My dad did there for ten years, took a second full time job at another bread company, cleaning toilet, cook for a family in the weekend because of one of my mom to be a stay at home mom went a nice school to get his gd. If you getting his gd went a nice school to learn how to Operate a restaurant. The man never slipped.

Which is why he was so granted all the time. And my dad started a little cafe, uh, forty seven years old, ran until his mid eighties. My dad retired.

He owned that building. He owned the property next to IT plus the house is still in our family right now. He retired with the network of above a million dollars.

So I tell you that story talker to say that being raised by a single mom is not a decant. You're still responsible. Life is still all about choices.

My dad was a lifelong republican. My mom was a lifelong democrat. You should have been in the house.

My dad said, democrat want to give you something for nothing. You trying to get something for nothing. You almost always into getting nothing for something.

And my day would say, this hard work wins you get out of a life. What you put into IT. You cannot control the outcome, Larry, but you are one hundred percent in control of the effort.

Before you bitched moon or wine about what somebody did, you were said, you go to the mirror, look at IT and ask yourself, what could I have done to change the outcome? And finally, he said, no matter how hard you work, how good you are, sooner later, bad things are gonna happen. How you deal with those bad things to tell your mother in me, if we raised a man.

And he sounds like an amazing man, but he never made the sale politically with your mom. No.

lived to be ninety five years old during water gate. You should be a fly on the wall. My dad thought water gate was inconsequential, even if nicks on sit the plummers in there to bug lario briant office.

My dad thought I was, so what? No evidence. What to every niche did IT he covered IT up.

My dad thought I was inconsequently. He said, over time, you're going to realize this is no reason to get the president. My mom thought he was horrific.

He hated nixon. The polls now show most people believe that what nixon did does not rise the level of him leading office. My dad was right.

you know.

IT IT turned out the deep throat at was the number two men at the FBI working in concert with the C. I, A to crush your sitting president um so we seen subsequently, but your dad was under that.

you know, graded on a curve. Now look at the biden crime family, twenty seven million dollars, all this corruption. What nick indeed was a inconsequential comparative that what's .

going on right now, he didn't get rich in china, that he didn't california, your homework ate, my homework ate. Give us a status report from the left coast, if you would.

I think this story probably illustrates how bad things are. I ran for governor is talk, pointed out, ran in the recall election. IT was a two part deal.

The first party is, do you want this man recalled in a fifty percent plus? One is said, yes, we ever got the most votes on the replacement side, would have become governor. I got forty nine percent of the vote on replacement side.

The next highest person got nine percent. The forty nine percent was exactly the same percent that at torts nega got in two thousand, three, when he successful recalled a previous governor. Since then, there are five percent more registered democrats, twenty five percent fewer registered republicans, and fifty percent were registered.

Independence and independence in california. Go democrat. He hasn't been a republican elected statewide in california in twenty years.

So the race is over. I collected, I raise ed, twenty seven million dollars and eight weeks, three and a half million votes. California has had fifty eight counties.

On the replacement side. I Carried fifty seven and fifty eight counties. The only one I didn't Carry was seven years ago.

I didn't spend one time or one minute camion ning there because I thought I was a loss, cause I loss said by hundred and forty nine votes. So the race is over. Tucker, I go to a restaurant in the west side of L.

A. To meet a body of mine. He's late, so i'm sitting at a table.

There's a table next to me with two ladies. I think they feel sorry for me. I'm sitting by myself. We start talking.

Turns out there, eighty five years old, they known each other sense of second grade one was Operating her eighty fifth birthday. And they told me they were jewish once, said he was a human write activist, once said he was a cycle therapy. And then about fifteen, twenty minutes of the conversation, what I M say, wait a minute.

I know you you're that guy that ran for government.

You're that Larry elder SHE suggest that we voted for even go for me. She's, how do you know that I said, let's see, on the west side of L. A, uh, your both jews is your human rights activist IT.

Doesn't kate come on board to put that together? He didn't involve me and I said, we did. And let me ask you something. How do you think about the way Gavin knew some shut down the state in a more severe way than did any other governor because of code, while sitting up there at the french lady restaurant, yacking IT up with the very same people that that draft with the Mandates, not wearing a mask, not social distancing. They said, we were outraged by that.

How do you feel about the fact of a million people left california last three years, the first time anybody left the state, and hundred and fifty years we've lost friends? How do you feel about the homelessness? The balls told me that they had a homeless and camping near their homes, and they're outraged by IT.

As how do you feel about the quality of schools? Do you have kids? yes.

Did you put into your kids in the los Angeles unified school district? No, we would not, because the schools are substandard. So here are, you are completing each other sentences.

And you didn't vote for me. I said, if you ever had a conversation with a conservative republican before, they said, no. SHE said, what are you drinking? I said, double about this flash to.

And berry, I don't want to. What do you eating? I said, why? What's gonna stick? Now i'm going to update at the after you pay for the meal.

So we had a marvel this time. They have never had a conversation. Another one, I have some back issues, and somebody might recommend IT a massage services.

So giving you a dress, I assume it's going to be some office building I turned down. A residential street is a house I knock on the door. Lady opens the door.

She's got tattoo s everywhere, ear to things everywhere, but eyeballs. I hear I smell this big flume of of of marijuana. Not that I would know what that smells like, a force i've read about IT.

So she's working on my back, and she's playing mottle youth, which is my favorite jana of popular music. And you name the song I can tell you about IT they played migrants, said that was written by smoky roberson, and he wrote a song for David rough and the leaves singer tipt tions. This song was writing by morvan gay.

Morvan gay was tried to dissuaded from from doing that, what's going on album by very guarded because he wanted to control. I went over every single and he said, I know who you are when you contact with me to make your appointment. I know who you are.

I was going to say anything had I known when you were this funny and this personable, I would have voted for you. I said, do you know any republicans? SHE said, no.

I said, none. SHE said, no. I said, newsboys letton.

We have personal alist. We have since of humor. I mean, honestly.

well, I mean, in heart defense, I remember that came painted very well, and I think the only times called your weight supreme. Es, so maybe SHE did your White premises?

Let's be accurate, I was called the black face of Whites. prema. Y, I worked very hard for the title. Tucker.

what does that even mean?

That never figured. I think as then gone, that's the sound of one hand clapping. I don't even understand IT.

I've been on radio for thirty years, and the first six months I was on radio, every third caller called me ocotal m, or sell out, or a book, or bug IDE boolean ocotal sample time, someone, the radio, for about six months, and walk into a restaurant. And their couple of brother is sitting on a brick wall based on the way they were dressed. They weren't investment bankers.

And one of them said, Larry other, I hate you and I love you. Come on over here now, talker, i'm taking if they were going to shoot me, they had done IT by now I can't out run a bullet might go over there. So when over, you know, I will listen you about so far a much now. And at first I could stand your black .

eyes but the more .

I start little you more, I said he ain't done but telling people to get off the eyes and stop complaining, you're like cater royal IT don't take is good going down, but it's good for you keep IT up.

Lot of bad things going on the world that honestly, not many of us can have an effect on. Rising crime, fAiling schools are tanking economy. What can you do about that? Well, not a lot, but you can get your own house in order.

And above all, you can spend money with merchants, with companies to support your values that are making me is a Better country and not a worst country. But how do you find those companies? Well, that's for public square, I said.

Public square actively creates the best products from america's small businesses to help families lead happier, healthier, more productive and connected lives. That means fewer arrange to big box stores, let's searching to find, pull some alternative to the garbage being offered in our culture, and more quality time. But with people you love most, if you want to fix your country, you've got a strength in yourself, in your home, and you need to spend your dollars where they do good and not bad.

Rebuilding amErica takes place one small change at a time with wise spending, supporting people who support your family, not funding people who hate you. If you want to do that, public square dot com is the answer. Public square 点 com。

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This is the sound of your ride home with dad after he caught your weapon.

Awkward isn't IT most papes contains seriously addictive levels of nicotine and disappointment .

know the .

real cost of babes brought you by the fda.

That's such a great description.

All i'm doing, all i'm doing is telling the truth. You magine truth. George floyd, four months worth of protest, violent protests, twenty five people killed, two thousand police officers wounded, two billion dollars in insured property damage, maybe another billion or two, and uninsured property and damage talker, all because of what happened, a George floyd, however you feel about what happened, a George floyd, ever you feel about what direct show and data didn't do.

There is zero evidence that what happened to George floyd, anything, whatever, to do with this race, zero. The lead prosecutor, the lead prosecutor was a black man and i'm a lawyer. The most important part of a trial is the opening statement.

And in the opening statement, he took pains to say the police in journal, we're not on trial. The mini apps pd in journal was not on trouble. This individual is on true for what he did to what he didn't do to a George floyd.

And he never even intimated that the office were committed a hate crime. He was never charged with a hate crime. Yet you had all these protests all over the country based upon the assumption that what happens a George floyd had to do with this race when there was zero evidence of IT.

Please kill more White every year than blacks. They kill more unarmed White every year in black. Most people couldn't name an unarmed White person because nobody cares if an on one White person gets killed.

As my mother put IT, he's just a dead fly. But an una black person gets killed in comes in in income the near your time, they make a big deal lot of IT without any understanding whatsoever what's really going on. It's been studied for decades.

The police are more hesitant, more reluctant to pull the trigger ground a black person than a White person. By far, it's a lie. There's a web cycle police mag. com. And they self described very liberal people.

How many unarmed black man did police kill? In two thousand nine? Fifty percent of the self described unarmed black people thought the fifty of the unarmed, fifty percent of the self described liberals.

The police killed one thousand on our black men, and twenty twenty eight percent that killed ten thousand. What you ask about the regular liberal people, self described ed, thirty nine percent of self described liberal people thought the police killed one thousand. And our black men in twenty twenty five percent thought that killed ten thousand. The answer, according to the watching in the post database, was twelve, twelve. That's the gap between what the left think is going on, but worse of what is going on, which account why we had four months of protests in the street of .

amErica in twenty and twenty. So the numbers you just say republican available, they were they were right there, but no one cited that except you and a few other people. So this is my last question, the most important question for bring Bobby Kennedy out.

What advice would you give to the people in this room since you are in that one hundred of one percent of the population who says what he really thinks? How would you encourage people to have hard to do the same? What makes you different? Why are you able to just go on the website, see that is incorrect, and just say IT in public when most people are afraid to do that?

What you said in your monologue, think for yourself, use your own judgment, be sceptical, injects the news in a discriminating way. The media research center found that abc, nbc, bs, eighty five percent of their coverage was positive.

Regarding combat heroes and and, and walls, ninety three percent of IT was naked regarding truck events, and abc news was the worst of twenty five stories we've done since common here has became the presumptive nominee. One hundred percent have been positive. Ninety three percent of the ones for Donald trump had been negative. And abc alone from C B S, N B C is the only one of those three that has never referred to come on here as a liberal or even a progressive you're being lie to use your own common sense user own job and thank goodness for alternative sources of news like talker, like a Green back.

Think for yourself.

It's not that hard.

That's not that hard. Larry elder, your hero. Thank you. Thank you. So as noted at the outset, I would like to ask this man to join us, but we thank you for doing this. it's.

So I hate to ask you this because it's almost too sensitive, but I just happened. And so I I can't not ask you there was a second appears to be a second assessed ation attempt under trump in just a couple months. What do you make of this?

I don't know what to make. I think we're in an impact at least partially. I mean, I don't know if the I just unknown of about what's to happen, and i've been reading some of the internet stuff about the connection this man mayor may not have had the intelligence agencies and said A I don't know what to make. I do know that there's there's an an antagonism in of violence in our society now that I feel is orchestrating, I feel that we're living in A.

And you remember a couple of years when they had the walls occupy wall street movement, and they were trying to frame, estimated the ninety nine percent against the one percent. And I think I feel like since then we've all been turned against each other.

Where is fifty percent against fifty percent? And when the king and queen go out of the baLance trades of their castle and they look out across their people and they're all fighting each other, they go back to the bank with all the option of bank works because they know no, but he's coming over the olic at them. And boy, is that true.

And I think now so many of I mean, I I announced by campaign and almost eighteen months ago and what I said at that point is i'm not kind of feed and at the Victory, all at the anger of the name calling, the demonization of my opponents, I can be several told all of them. And i'm going to try to identify the values that all of americans have in common, rather than focusing on these smaller issues that are used, that kind of cultural issues that are used to keep us all at each other throats, because know i've watched what's happening in this country. And there is all these systems that have been important place the shift wealth and power upwards to clamped down totalitarian controls on the rest of.

And they all kind of culminated, didn't cove IT, where we saw all of our three pots, three million business is shut down with no two process, no just compensation. Four point three trillion dollar is shifted from the american middle class. This new, all of archy that of billionaires we created during five, during five hundred days, five hundred new billion airs were were created at five hundred days they walk down.

And the american middle class has essentially been obliterated in this country. And I think. And all this money has been shifted up to the black rock and state street and vanguard and the other big of financial houses and big farmer, big tech and big eyes and big food that are strip mine in the american public of wealth sucking and upward and and leaving nothing below. And the way that they keep that system in blades, that they keep us from doing anything about IT, is to keep IT as all hating on each other.

One of the things that I admire about you is that you have more children than I do, which is not that easy. You have a lot of children, and you have made your campaign about them, which used to be a pretty conventional thing. Politicians would run on children, help the children, save the children, the next generation.

You're one of very few people still talks like that. Explain if you would because I think you're sincere when you talk about IT how children, your children and other people's children, mine have inspired you to stay in politics when you could have just gone away, gone back to L. A.

How my kids inspire bitter. You know, let me finish that thought. I think I left in complete on at last question. I think the anger that we have, that each other are also turns into violence. And you know, when my uncle is running for president, I mean, my uncle was president and sixty three, there was a tremendous anger that was coming out. The civil rights movement and and other things that he was doing, shutting down the world and skeat on the world ends against action was tremendous anger and poison when he ended in dallas and november twenty second, there was a full page ad in the, in the, in the big newspaper and della saying, wanted dead, alive with a picture, my ung on IT. And there were posters all over the street that day, and there was no, my alcohol is clearly killed by the sea, by the world.

But there was also an anger that would had been shown across the american landscapes at that. Behind that, I think, you know, contributed to this atmosphere of violence. We've LED to his death. A modern music came with death, my father's, at five years later, and all the other assassins that we saw during the sixty, sixty. So I just wanted to complete that.

I but that was, I mean, that was over sixty years ago. And that institution, you know, those files are still classified as you well know, the most. And those institutions remain intact. And except for one series of hearings in one thousand nine hundred and seventy five, there's been no meaningful effort to reform them. And you sort of wonder like at what point do we learn the truth about everything federal agencies have done with our money in our name? And at what point are they reformed?

Yeah, I mean, I think it's really know. We pad, there's an act called that J, F, K, S. As nation papers are IT requires as all those documents be released the american public by twenty eighteen and all the documents retaining to my uncle s death and present trump when he and the first time and twenty sixteen promised to release them and then he didn't, which always struck me as odd and then president biden ran promising to release him and I had the opportunity recently as present prom directly why he did not release them.

And he said that my pump hao called him and said, please do not let me read, make me to release these going to be a calamity for our country. President rob says, if he, this time of he, he's going to release them, and I believe that he will. So can I say, why would .

why would mike pompeo, who I don't think was even born or had just been born when your uncle was murdered? Why would he have an interesting keeping those document secret?

Well, clearly, it's not to protect any individual because virtual, all the individuals who were directly involved in my uncles, that and many are not dead, and many of those have gave defect confessions, or gave confessions are various kinds before they die in. But IT must the only, I think the only supposition that is rage, or is that is about protecting an institution.

And I think you, in the last charge of documents that were released, and the new york times even reported this, at which in the times have been one of the major bowl, works against conspiring the that depart from the single shooter. The army oswell killed giant anty. They've been the big bull working, he said. So it's extraordinary that they finally reported that lee harby og world, once A C I A S.

Said, and that CIA made, went to great length to conceal that, not only for the warn commission and as for most of you, probably no Allen dollars who was ahead of the CIA when my own le fired after the baa pigs and then come back in the public life to get IT himself appointed to the warn commission and he was really the only commissioner that was there for every meeting. He was the only one that was paying attention. All of the other ones, like chief justice foregone, what is the chief justice? Supreme court? yet? A full time job.

The other ones were congress and senators that, well, not on individuals who were fully occupied by their work. The only one for home IT was a full time job, was out of dollars. And his function was to make sure any questions about the CIA inform them were caught.

And he conceal the fact that the arbor s well have been recruit into the agency in one nine hundred and fifty seven and ninety fifty eight, and sent on a mission to russia, which was a false defection mission, and then brought back to this country. And so the first, and you know many of us who p and studying the indecent ation knew this and has never been reported in the mainstream present. And after that last one ship to arguments was released five years ago, the new york times finally, finally acknowledge them. And there maybe other information related to to that, that they don't want to release, but I have no idea what what is.

So what does IT take? I mean, you can have a democracy in a system where the public is no idea what its government is doing, and that's what we down. So how do you fix that? What would you take to actually bring transparency to the federal agencies?

Yeah I mean, let me answer second. But IT to follow up on your what you know why this is important for democracy? My, when I was a kid, I was unthinkable that the united states government would lie to the american public IT is in IT was just no american would believe that.

The first time, and we didn't know there had been this tremendous resistance to starting this CIA in this country. The osa had had been created, which is the first intelligence agency that we had during world, were two. But congress, both republican and democrat, were very for you, reluctant to do IT because they said, secret police agencies are associated with totalitarian, an states that can stop all the stars, I saarc and iran people and chilly, and that in the kg, in russia.

And there are not something that are consistent. They are antithetical to democracy. You can have them. They are inconsistent with a democracy. They were very reluctant to do that. And then in one thousand nine hundred and forty eight, and so they just behind the OSS afterworld or two, and then truman became convinced that we had one weapon, really, which was the attack ic on, and he didn't want to use that, and he wanted to be able to fight wars without getting involved in conventional wars, wars.

And so they created the CIA to do certain things that who has be an age which is intelligence gathering in nine hundred and forty eight and dollars had come in very early and change the function of the age, to be kind of a paramilitary agency, to fix elections, a thousand and eight leaders, and do all the dirty tricks I G of fired him. But until when I was a kid was just in complete, the us. Government would lie.

The first time americans had in lings that the government would buy was in may of nineteen sixty, while my uncle is running for president. And and a youtube, a secret CIA plane. A youtube was not air force who was a CIA was shot down over russia and the U.

S. government. IT was a secret program. The those blind flows so high and you couldn't see them with the naked eyes. And we, nobody in the world know that we had them. They've ought flying at sixty years, seventy thousand feet, and we believe they couldn't be shot down.

In fact, there was a mall in lani in the CIA hood, given the plans to the youtube, to the russians, and IT allowed them to shoot IT down. And when they shot them down, the russians accused us of violated their air space. And alan dollars told eyes and how I just lie about IT, because there is no way they had proved.

And the pilot has committed suicide, because they gave him as I and I shot, and they were unordered to kill himself. Well, gerry, Frances powers had checked out and he a parachute ted in the ground and they accompany him. And the russians didn't say that at first.

They just made the accusation eyes and how a dollis in vice when I national tva a and told the world in the american public, this is a lie, the russians are line. We do not have this program. And then the russians produced every Frances powers and americans for the first time said, oh my god, our president lied to us.

And I was shocking. I remember back then and then when my uncle was killed and the intern commission report came out, and about half of the people in this country just said, that's not true, the government's line, but they were dismissed, his conspiracy, theirs. And then in nineteen and seventy three, the pentagon papers were released.

And that was twenty seven volumes of thousands, thousands. The systematic, wise and us. Gun manufactures, including presidents, have been lying to the american people. And that's when everybody just said, all they lie all the time. You since then, we've now been convinced, I think most of the people in this room believe that at any time I got an official tels you, anything, if his lips are moving, is lying to you.

The most interesting and news worthy television show of the year is coming here to t. cn. We are not bragging. That's actually true.

So long time to just in wells and a team have been beta with donal trump on the campaign trail for months of the only through capturing what is going on on the campaign in real time intimately. They're with trump as y campaigns for the presents y across the country. And theyve shot some amazing footage, really like if you're remember, you will soon be able to get this to cover painting the fall of the job.

Never before seen footage from the assassin attempt to the Butler township pencil anian trump ally. And a lot more is going to pull back the curtain completely. They are embedded inside the campaign. I can't wait, see you personally. But to get at first but a tucker carlson and dock on become a member, the greatest television event of the year were to offer IT.

So why did so many people fall for the coffee? was.

You know, I think that the covin covin was was immediate. I won't say the whole thing was as I am, but there was this, I am a company code. And and they were manipulating, they were using these. We are hardwired and our reptile in grave, our brain, to, when we encounter something fearful, to retreat into authorities, into authorities that are gonna teach this.

And those buttons were being pushful time we were seeing on the CNN a kiran, every twenty minutes, the new death counts from carbin, the announcers on TV, and by the way, television and radio and newspapers were calling all of that time when we when we made that big departure. And the government really, it's systematically lying to us, which I think began with a warn commission report. And that's why I think we have to go back and really get the answers on that to write the ship.

During many of those years, the press well as calling government on its slides, but during cover, they completely stop and they were going along with that. And if you try if any of us try to say we'll wait a minute, you know what? Like I in may of twenty twenty, I it's all the gobin agency's resent of vaccines, and you couldn't prevent transmissions.

And I said on my instagram account, the monkey study showed that they cannot prevent transmission. I didn't say that because I was guessing IT or I was in paranoid. I was reading the monkey studies and the monkey studies they had given of vaccines, es to have the monkeys and they had given a placable of the other have, and they all got go in and they all got the same amount of of concentrations and their nature.

Al ferenci, I reported those studies, which were their studies, and I got thrown off of instagram and called the conspiracy irs, you had all the bad. And then, as you know, as you know, for the next year they were telling us you gotten get this because it's going protect gramma, right? You remember when they were telling us that and they knew I was a lie, and yet all the press went along with that and everybody else. And and I think, you know what is where most of americans were terrified? I'll tell you, you and I have talked in the past about about the CIA program called mk ultra.

So the CIA during one thousand nine hundred and fifteen and one thousand nine hundred and sixties, developed all of these programs to do social controls, control individuals and populations, were trying to develop, for example, manian candidates, an unwilling, assessed using IPO ses, using psychology drugs, using torture, using isolation, sensory deprivation, all kinds of methods that they were expLoring, not only for manipulating individuals, manipulating entire populations, how do you get populations to comply? And the group of of studies was called mk, mk omi, mk teatri, K, M, K ultra. Mk adds for mind control.

And that's what they were looking for, a waste control, people's minds and perceptions. One of the studies that they funded was a study called the mill gram experiment that took place, place in year. And IT was a Young associated professor and Mandy milgram, and he brought about seventy subjects into this experiment.

They were from every walk of life. They were black and White. They were students, they were professors, they were business people from the community, every kind of person.

And he would sit the subject at a table, and there was a person at next room who is invisible to them. But he was, they could hear. They said they were told that person has strapped to a chair and that he will give me given an electric shot.

When you tell when you twice this style, the subject would be told to twice the ground. Doctor mill gram was there with a White lab coat and all these kind of ornaments that bespoke is authority and is trustworthy as. And he would tell them, turn IT up, turn IT down, turn IT up.

And when they turn IT up, they could hear of the person struggling, screaming, bleeding. And a lot of these subjects would say that, that program, I don't want to do IT again. And he would tell them, do IT anyway.

Some of them began crying because they did not want IT twisted IT out. Sixty seven percent of them turned IT up to two hundred and fifty votes, where IT was marked potentially lethal. What doctor mill gram says, you guys, you can look this up ml gram experiment on wikipedia.

I wouldn't believe wikipedia, anything, you read wikipedia, but this thing is actually true. And the and sixty seven percent turned IT up to potentially fatal. And what no gram concluded was at a figure of authority can persuade e people, the average person, sixty seven percent of people, to override their most closely and fundamentally held values and do things that they know are totally wrong if they're told that is that authority. And during the cove, and I felt like we were all involved in a giant millgram experiment where we had a medical doctor.

But which doctor to be more specific.

your doctor file, we all know. Who was telling us to do things that we know we're wrong and and he knew they were wrong. He would say, one week massed on work, private and publicly, and two weeks later, everybody put him on, everybody put two of the mind and and he he would say, you know, he said very publicly that if you got, if you get an net factious respite ory illness, you do not need of accent ation.

And yet he changes mind. And he said, the best vaccine you can have is to have to have the disease. There's nothing Better.

You'll never beat IT. Then he said, even if you've had IT, you need to get the shot. So they were telling us things that they knew were wrong.

But we we were doing that because he was an authority telling us. And IT also, there's another phenomenon of that. Anybody who disagrees with thora becomes the enemy.

A become dangerous. They have to be silently. Now, the good news is that thirty three percent of the people in the mill gram experiment got up and walked out. And people.

people in this room right now.

the people here right now.

So how do you break the spell? So I just think it's the most general ing thing about you, if I can say, is an outside of watching carefully, is you don't need to do any of this. You've suffered great personal cost, I would say, certainly in prestige in the world that you've grown up in. And ban from the new york times. And people call you crazy.

but you do IT anyway.

So, no, but it's true. So when you've take a lot of heat from, you know, people who closed you, but you do IT anyway, do you think that telling the truth that wild is enough to break the .

male m experiment spell? I mean, I think that's how we break IT enough. People have to say we're not going to do that.

And and when you do IT, I mean, there is a couple of rules about totality and systems. And one has any any power that the government takes away from us. IT will never relink ish voluntarily rule number to any power that the government takes us.

IT will ultimately abuse this greatest extent possible. And number three, nobody ever complied their way out of totality ism. You have to resist.

What powers does the government now have that I didn't have ten years ago?

They have the power now to to revoke all of our constitutional or right. So and you know, that sounds like I burbling, but think about IT. They figured out the most important right is random of speech.

And about hamilton, madison and atoms said, we puts out in the first amendment for him of expression because all the other rights are dependent on IT. And I ve sent this to occur than any government that has the power to silence its critics license for any attractive. And they knew that, so they put at first, and we saw this dynamic during covin.

As soon as they realized that they could silence us, they could sense your doctors, they could sense your science, as they could center individuals who were injured. IT could stop them from talking about their injuries. They could stop parents from talking about their children's injuries.

I did all these things. He was, and we put up with IT, and the press went along with ashamed for this. They became, they became, they became vehicles in ogen.

S for government propaganda, and we all along with that. And then what if they do? They immediately went after the other leg of the first demand. That was freedom, religion. They closed every church in this country for years.

Could you imagine, can you imagine if somebody told you five years ago the governments could close every church in this country? You would say there is no way that that's going to happen. IT happen. And they went after the third leg in the first amend, and which is free with assembly, with these social distancing Mandates that had no scientific basis. And they went after the fifth amendment, which is probably rise.

They shut down three point three million businesses with no due process, no just compensation, no public hearing, no environmental impacts payment, no notice and comment room, making all of the, all of the the procedures that guarantee democracy and the regulatory ory process were abandoned. And you just had one guy, a fifty year year regret has never been elected to do anything, who says, shut down all your business is just down the small businesses, but keep target and warmer. Shut down the churches, but give the liquor stores open and keep facebook and you know all the people who are who are CoOperating with the government, facebook and scram google and are entering speech or keep all them open and shut down all little guys and and destroy our communities we put up with.

Then they got jury trials. The seventh commandment says no americans shall be denied the right of a trial before a jury of his spires. In case of country versus exceeding twenty five dollars in value, well, there is no pandemic exception.

There is no epidemic exception. And yet they said, shut out, out. Shut down there. Any corporation, any husband or any doctor who injured you negligently, recklessly without who was involved in applying a countermeasure cannot be. So no matter how aggressive their behavior, no matter how agreed is your injury, and for the first, so these are all, and then the forth men and guarantees against the illegal searches and season res IT was all completely abandoned. Ed, with these track and trace surveilLance measures that we all subject to where you and to give your medical records before you leave your home, eventually all of that rights in the constitution, except the second, and probably because there is a second amendment.

I was the only one they didn't mess with, but all the other ones they got rid out of. You're asking, you know what change? That's which change. Now he said to us, oh, we're going to give all those back to you and they did.

So today we have those back, but they've established this very, very dangerous president where if if there's another emergency and they can cook up a pandemic any time they want as what gain of function is all about and any time there's the next the monkey box pandemic or the dani pandemic or you or the ebola pandemic that are all in the why when those happen, we again are going to be asked to a end. And all of our rights and most people are going to put up with IT. And yeah. All people.

So what happens when there is the next emergency? And maybe it's not maybe it's a war.

May be it's a war, may be it's an economic collapse.

That's right. So how do we respond when we're told to abandoned the bill of rights? Are birth right?

How do we respond? As I said, we resist, resist, resist 你。

The the constitution was written for hard times. IT wasn't written for easy times. That was written for hard times. And know, and i've said this to you before tuckers, that during the american revolution, there were there were, there were two large epidemics, one of them in a malaria pidemco that that designated the armies of virgo.

And then there was a small pox epidemic that deserted the army of new england at the very time, a benefit ordinal to do, which is our greatest general, greatest military strategies during the war, and captured the city of montreal and captured canada. And and because of the smallpox epidemic, the american troops, he didn't have the manpower to hold the city and had to withdraw, otherwise canada today would be part of the united. And the frames of the constitution knew that.

And between the end of the revolution and seven hundred and ninety two, when we ratified the built rights through a ten year period, they were epidemics in every city in our country. Malaria pidemco small box yellow favor color a time is typhoid that killed tens of the thousands of people, designated population. All the frames knew about that, but they did not put an epidemic exception in the united states constitution.

And during the civil war they were, the confederates were sending agents provoke to our north word into us cities to draw m up draft riots. And those draft riots were threatened, the entire structure of union society and the military efforts. And an abrim link in an effort to avert any more darrie began arresting is confederate age and provocator age when they came into the northern cities before they did anything wrong.

That was a violation of hay as score pus, but he said we've got to do IT because it's vital for the the life of origination. At that time, over six hundred thousand americans had died in this of a war, and it's an equivalent. Twelve and fifteen million people died today, and our country was being tore apart, and we didn't know what was going to survive.

So the life of the nation was at stake. And that case, that habis orbis habis orbis declaration ation was chAllenged in the supreme court. And just as Roger tiny, and you can do IT, even if the life of the nation is IT same, even if tens of thousands of lives are at stake, you can do IT is the constitution IT was written for hard times. There is no circumstance in which you can be waved. And I think that we all have to remember that.

Do you foresee? You said, resist, resist, resist. Remember, growing up, you know, nonviolent resistance in the name of civil liberties was considered a great virtue, the most americans of all virtues. I don't hear that anymore. But is that what you full sea.

I would say, you know, we all have duty to do that. We all of the duty to resist in whatever way is going to be most effective and resisting the tyranny. And you know.

And right now, docker, it's really more important than ever before, and it's going to take more courage than ever. And you've probably take you know, whatever it's gonna take, it's going to take more than we've ever given. And the reason for that is because of the emergence of all of these new technologies for surveilLance and control, and we all know about that.

I mean, we that AI the emergence of A I is going to allow the intelligence agencies, powerful entities, not only to control us, but to work our vision, our understanding of reality. And we already have all of the, it's been the ambition of every totalitarian system in the history of mankind, control every aspect of human behavior, our interactions with each other, our relationships, our communications, our transactions, our movements, the books we read are our letters to each other, communications or in each other. Of course, they've never been able to do that.

Oh, now they can, they can look at everything. And you know, you all had this experience, experience two years ago, my wife and I, in the privacy of our bedroom, we're talking about the fact that our mattress was was becoming this agi the next morning. Both of us are three matches ads on our cell phones. And that's one to brought at home to me that you they're stenting everything we say.

Did you replace the mattress?

I repeat my shelf one.

Copper knight.

now we have all these devices. You have GPS lot of you aren't GPS watches. We have GPS ourself tracking us all the time. If GPS in our car, there's facial recognition systems with there are now permits issued or four hundred and fifty thousand low altitudes, ateliers tes, that are going to the circle, the globe or station across the globe all the time, bilk ates.

This company has sixty five thousand permits, which athletes, he says, his company alone, his company alone is gonna able to look at every square and edge of the earth twenty four hours a day. And you, we all have theory and relaxes in our home. We know it's very convenient.

A theory is not working for you. Theory is working for bill gades and for, you know, for these companies that are monetizing the data. And every time you cough, every time you sneeze, every time your baby cries, theory knows that.

And that's the being log somewhere. All these communications are conversations with each other are all in log. This is a these corporations are doing this because they're mining our data in order to monetized.

But the same companies that are mining our data are also sharing that data with the nsa and all of its stored somewhere. And for all the reasons that we've always human beings have been in democracies have been paranoid about government keeping track of their, you know, private conversations, of their personal interactions. Know we need to be worried about that today.

And all of this, all of these technologies mean it's going to be very, very difficult for us to hold on to our constitutional rights in in the coming decades. And particularly, I think IT president trump lose this election and come here its wins. I think I don't think there is any consciousness in the democratic party that this is a bad thing.

I think the democratic party now believes that construct and no longer trust the public and don't trust the team as they believe that the public needs to be controlled, that the information weekend needs to be controlled, IT has to be the answered, that a big threat to us is this information and misinformation, which is, is anybody who tells you that is lying to you, anybody who tells you that is trying to manipulate you, but you're a big person, you can make up your own mind about what is true and not true. And my kids do IT. I said to my kids, look at this, look at this.

There's posting on instagram where you, the dog, is eating the alligator and they're that you need to fact check that. So everybody everybody knows that you've got ta do research right and that you don't believe everything you read on the internet. Lui brand eyes are justice supreme, or justice as the remedy, or bad information is more information. It's never answer ship. Answer ship is a man way control.

Bob, speaking of president trump, you've endorsed him for a number of reasons, but he did give us Operation warp speed. To what degree you hold him capable force to coming to the fear you've talked about?

I absolutely hold him callable, but here's what. And for a lot of other things that I disagreed with in the first trumpet administration, no, I didn't like seeing Scott gott cash, fda and alex says, are running hh and oil lobby's running the interior department, coal lobby is running eba and telecomm diction lobby is running, running fcc. It's era I talked to present from adults about this. He said, look, when I get elected in twenty six, I did not to govern. And to tell you the truth, IT was kind of surprising that we got at on the election.

He said I was immediately indicated by lobes and business people, they are all saying, you point this guy, point that guy, point that guy and he said, I did IT and I wish I am and and you know and he he understands that it's got got leave, was cashing in and he did one hundred billion dollar or favorite for fister and then went back to work for fisa on his board of directors. And you know and so I think that a present job is said to me that we're going to do something different this time. And that's why that's why.

And that's why he launched the transition team five months before he takes power. The last time he did his transition team, he started in january. He's I watched and i'm on IT told these on IT.

Donald genre is on IT. And you know a lot of I had an impression that Donald junior was kind of a light way, and i've got to know when he's exactly the opposite of that is very thoughtful. He's really well informed and he understands who the bad guys are.

He does not like the new. He does not like the constant wars. He does not.

He does. He wants to restore a public health. He loves the environment. He loves the rivers in the streams in the waterways, and he wants to protect those things. And I have nothing but respect for him. And it's there's a lot of really, really good energy that is art of this transition team now so that .

that leads to my to I agree with your assessment, have done junior completely and and as you know, having lived around famous people in your whole life, the perceptions of people are sometimes accurate, sometimes the opposite of what you're told. And he's definitely in that category. How do you envision your your role in a trump s administration?

No, I present them as asked me specifically to do these things to one, to help unravel all the. The capture of the agencies by by corrupt influence, in other words, to drain this.

And, you know, I had to say something about president trump, a present trump, as to make ordinary gifts. One of them is that he is very, very good instincts. And that when he came out the first time, you remember he was very against the lockdowns publicly.

He was four hydrox chlor quin. He was, he was four alternative medicines. He, he was against the mass.

He but he, but all of his, he was surrounded by people, craters, who and knowledgeable experts who ultimately pushed back on those assumptions and getting know, got us into some policies that I think we're really bad for our country. He's not going to do that again. And and he wanted down the wars.

He said back then, we don't want to go to ukraine, make a deal that have a war. I think that. And he's asked me to do that, and he's asked me and help them in the childhood disease, craic disease epidemic and make america's healthy again.

And if given the power to do that, what will you do you?

That's unclear because there is no know at this point. Thank you. Like I said, i'm on the transition committee and there is no we don't have and I don't have a post for myself.

It's picked out. I know that i'm gonna deeply involved in helping to choose the people who are who are who can run fda and nih and cdc in a way that restores public health rather than. Other then can you .

imagine if you're at fta and I age and bobbi Kennedy of and they must be dying, they 去 找 你。

All bring in people to run those agencies, like Kelly means, like casey means.

You think there could help me? They have nightmares .

about that.

Yeah, they should. Yeah.

and they should. Bobby, I can only thank you. May they have more nightmares? Larry, thank you very much.

The big tech company's sensor are content. I hate tell you that is still going on in twenty twenty four, but you know what? They can't sensor live events. That's why we are hitting the road on a fall tour for the entire month of september.

Coast to coast, we will be in cities across united states, will be in rosenberg, texas with jessy Kelly, grand rapids with kid rock, her pencil vi with jd vans, reading pens of any of alex Jones or war texas with rose and bar, Greenville, south Caroline with margey, Taylor Green, sunrise 4 with john rich Jackson, wilf with Donald trump junior getting a tickets at tucker r. Carlson dot com. Hope to see there. Thanks for listen to stuck across some show. If you enjoy IT, you can go to stuck across and that calm to see everything that we have made the complete library cross dock.