If You Were President for a Day | Robert R. Motta 2028
ROBERT R. MOTTA 2028 • PUBLIC IDEA CHALLENGE • APPROVED CAMPAIGN MESSAGE
If You Were President for a Day

Your Voice. Your Idea. One Day to Help America.

The Robert R. Motta 2028 campaign invites Americans to share practical ideas for a stronger, safer, and more affordable country.

This public challenge welcomes age-appropriate participation from children, teens, young adults, working adults, parents, grandparents, and community members across the country. Selected entries may be featured by the campaign as examples of civic imagination and public leadership.

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Participants share one practical idea to improve life in America. Younger entrants may also submit age-appropriate drawings or brief written answers with parent or guardian help where needed.

Step 2

Campaign review

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Step 3

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“America does not move forward when good people stay silent. The Robert R. Motta 2028 campaign believes leadership begins with responsibility, common sense, and the courage to speak up. ‘If You Were President for a Day’ invites the public to think seriously, creatively, and constructively about the country we share. We are asking Americans of all backgrounds to put forward their best ideas for stronger communities, safer streets, better opportunities, and a more accountable government.”

— Public campaign language, approved in style for a candidate landing page

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Suggested entry rules

  • One idea per entry.
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  • Video entries should remain short and respectful.
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Primary call to action

If you were President for a Day, what would you do first to help America?

Share your idea and join a public campaign conversation focused on solutions, responsibility, and the future of the country.

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Transcript

So, this video is by Fermy Lab. I guess I'll give him a subscribe just to, you know, maybe we won't get copyright strike if I do that. Okay, here we go.
10 seconds
Firmy Lab, hit me up. Tell us about Cher Cherankov radiation. Whoa.
15 seconds
If you think that this will lead to something like this, engage,
20 seconds
you'll be disappointed. Sorry about that.
23 seconds
Um, I'm going to go ahead and say he's wrong.
27 seconds
He's saying already that this is not going to lead to warp drives. Well,
32 seconds
I'm just going to go ahead and say I've got two videos that tell a different story. Tell a completely different story. But you know what? Go ahead, Mr.
39 seconds
Science Guy. Tell us about the Cheronov radiation.
43 seconds
I made an entire video on the special cases which you might want to look up in this cheat of course, but it's still pretty interesting. So, let's talk about
50 seconds
it. When we talk about the speed of light, we really mean the speed of light in the vacuum. When light encounters a transparent medium like glass, plastic,
58 seconds
water, or even air, it slows down. You may have heard of this if you ever took an introductory physics class. The phenomenon is called the index of
1 minute, 6 seconds
refraction. And we know that in glass and plastic, light travels at about 2/3 the speed that light travels in a vacuum. In water, it's about 3/4. And in air, okay, so right off the bat, wow.
1 minute, 19 seconds
His first thing when we we're g first to explain Sharon cough radiation the first thing he says is you need to realize space is a medium the speed of light is
1 minute, 28 seconds
only constant in the vacuum it can be slowed down in materials like water like air like anything.
1 minute, 40 seconds
This is huge because what have we been teaching? We've been teaching this 0 point energy of spacetime is a medium where you can change that refractive
1 minute, 49 seconds
index. The very refractive index he's talking about right here in this video.
1 minute, 53 seconds
In fact, I use the exact same example of the water cup and the straw that he's using right there.
1 minute, 58 seconds
The speed is only a tiny tiny tiny bit slowed down. So that's the trick.
2 minutes, 3 seconds
Suppose you had a vacuum with a light beam in it with an electrically charged particle like an electron or a proton traveling alongside it at very nearly
2 minutes, 11 seconds
the speed of light. say 99.99% that speed or something, the two of them would stay together pretty much,
2 minutes, 17 seconds
although the photon would slowly pull ahead. Now, suppose that we shoot the two of them into a huge tank of water.
2 minutes, 24 seconds
If we did that, the electron would continue to travel at 99.99% the speed of light in the vacuum while the light beam would instantly slow down to 75%
2 minutes, 33 seconds
its normal speed. In this situation, the electron would be traveling faster than light. Boom. mine.
2 minutes, 41 seconds
Holy. Are you seeing it, chat? Holy [ __ ] I'm already seeing it.
2 minutes, 48 seconds
Are you seeing it?
2 minutes, 51 seconds
What is Cheronov radiation? It's so obvious.
2 minutes, 57 seconds
The electrons are moving faster than light.
3 minutes, 2 seconds
The light is being slowed down, but the electrons don't get slowed down as much as the light gets slowed down.
3 minutes, 12 seconds
This means wherever you're seeing Sharonov radiation like this, you're looking at a particle accelerator.
3 minutes, 21 seconds
You're looking at either a particle accelerator or particle decelerator, however you want to think about it.
3 minutes, 27 seconds
You're looking at something that's quite literally manipulating the medium in which these reactions are occurring.
3 minutes, 36 seconds
This directly connects the idea of fusion breaking the Schwinger limit, the ether,
3 minutes, 43 seconds
everything together. Let's let him keep going because not only does this, in my opinion, tell us exactly what we're looking at
3 minutes, 51 seconds
exactly JK free electron. Remember our free electron laser? Remember I said what do we need for the orbs? We need a
3 minutes, 59 seconds
free electron laser. What does that look like right over there? Those look like free electrons that have broken away from the light. And how did we do it? We
4 minutes, 8 seconds
slowed the light down so the electrons would break free.
4 minutes, 13 seconds
This is why a free electron laser is going to emit X-rays. Let's keep going. Now the question is,
4 minutes, 22 seconds
now I'm going, okay, holy [ __ ] those dark lines we're seeing. That's because we're seeing electrons flying out of
4 minutes, 29 seconds
this [ __ ] fusion reactor faster than the light that's going through it because the light is getting slowed down in the fusion reactor.
4 minutes, 38 seconds
Then I'm going, okay, well, wait, wait,
4 minutes, 40 seconds
wait a minute. Is there more? Is can can we somehow connect this? Is there How's this going to look? How's this going to
4 minutes, 47 seconds
work? How's it going to operate? Please continue.
4 minutes, 52 seconds
So, having a particle travel faster than light is already a kind of cool thing,
4 minutes, 55 seconds
but it actually gets even better. The first person to notice that a liquid surrounding a radioactive substance glow blue was Marie Cury because, well, you
5 minutes, 4 seconds
know, Marie Cury, she was totally the bomb. He gets the credit for the first observation of the phenomenon is a
5 minutes, 11 seconds
Russian student by the name of Pavle Trurankov. He first saw it back in 1934.
5 minutes, 17 seconds
Now, before I tell you about the physics, I'd like to talk a little bit about She invented X-rays, too. She invented X-rays. Yeah. Okay.
5 minutes, 25 seconds
How to spell his name.
5 minutes, 26 seconds
Okay. We're going to skip this guy cuz I don't care about how to spell his name.
5 minutes, 28 seconds
What do I know? So, let's move on. When Trinov saw the blue light emanating from water surrounding a radioactive sample, he told his adviser, Sergey Vavalov.
5 minutes, 37 seconds
Vavalov shared the observation with two of his colleagues, Igor Tam and Ilia Franc. And Tom and Franc figured out what was going on. When an electrically
5 minutes, 47 seconds
charged particle moves through a dialectric medium at a speed faster than light moves through that material, light is emitted and that light is called trinkov light.
5 minutes, 58 seconds
Now the exact detailed mechanism whereby light is emitted is quite complicated.
6 minutes, 3 seconds
Maybe I'll describe it in a future video. But basically basically what he means is that we don't know how he's like okay the electron is
6 minutes, 10 seconds
moving faster than the light is moving and this emits light and it emits light because whenever light hits an object it
6 minutes, 18 seconds
emits light which is also kind of a weird phenomenon in itself photoelectric effect but here we go the electron is moving faster
6 minutes, 27 seconds
than the medium and therefore it's going to emit light. Here we go. Basically,
6 minutes, 31 seconds
it's created because the electric field of the charged particle disrupts the electrons of distant atoms. And those disruptions cause even more disruptions
6 minutes, 39 seconds
to other atoms. When you add up everything, shrinkoff light is emitted,
6 minutes, 43 seconds
but only if the charged particle is traveling faster than light.
6 minutes, 48 seconds
If light is emitted at a point represented by this X here, it radiates from that point in a sphere. You can see how it works in this animation. The
6 minutes, 56 seconds
sphere grows at the speed of light. But the particle which is represented by this red dot is traveling faster than the speed of light. You can see that the
7 minutes, 5 seconds
dot moves away from the x faster than the sphere grows. Now suppose light is emitted when the particle is set at a different location.
7 minutes, 13 seconds
Mhm.
7 minutes, 14 seconds
That light will also leave the point in a sphere and the sphere will also grow.
7 minutes, 19 seconds
This process So look at what we're looking at right here. the X and the sphere growing
7 minutes, 27 seconds
represents the light moving at light speed. So, as you can see, the sphere never is able to catch up to the red
7 minutes, 34 seconds
dot. The red dots are electron. So, no matter when the light's being emitted,
7 minutes, 40 seconds
it's always moving slower than the electron is moving.
7 minutes, 45 seconds
Got it? So, what this does, as you can see here, creates this wavefront.
7 minutes, 52 seconds
Creates a wavefront. almost can appear again and again and again with a series of spheres. The edges of
8 minutes, 1 second
the spheres line up which you can see here.
8 minutes, 4 seconds
And of course, light isn't emitted just at these locations where the X's are marked. Exactly.
8 minutes, 9 seconds
The light is emitted everywhere along the path of the charged particle and the result is a cone of light growing around the path taken by the charged particle
8 minutes, 16 seconds
and traveling forward. So those are the basics. A charged particle traveling faster than light in an appropriate material results in the particle and material combining to give off light.
8 minutes, 26 seconds
That light tends to be from the purple and blue side of the spectrum. I'll show you an example of that in a minute. So
8 minutes, 33 seconds
if we have electrons that are moving faster than light in that medium,
8 minutes, 41 seconds
we are going to see ultraviolet blue side of the spectrum. Waves get created, light get created. Well, wow.
8 minutes, 52 seconds
Isn't that interesting?
8 minutes, 54 seconds
Because it turns out that the thermal fleer cameras can't catch ultraviolet light or x-ray
9 minutes, 4 seconds
light or gamma rays because they're outside the visible spectrum. So instead, those thermal cameras would
9 minutes, 12 seconds
show it up in black as a dead pixel as something you're not seeing there. But that's not enough.
9 minutes, 20 seconds
Keep going.
9 minutes, 22 seconds
But scientists can use more information than the simple observation of blue light. The shape of the cone tells you how fast the particle is going. If it's
9 minutes, 31 seconds
going near the speed of light, then the cone is very fat. But if the particle is going much faster than light in the medium, then the cone is very skinny.
9 minutes, 40 seconds
Another thing scientists can exploit is the fact that some particles are created in the transparent medium moving. Hold up. Go back. What did he just say?
9 minutes, 51 seconds
What did he just say right there? The faster the electron is moving than the
9 minutes, 58 seconds
light, the more skinny the cone is going to be. And the closer the electron is moving to the speed of light, the more normal it is, the fatter, the fatter,
10 minutes, 9 seconds
thicker the cone is going to be. Wait a minute. Say that again, sir.
10 minutes, 15 seconds
Than light in the medium, then the cone is very skinny. Another thing scientists can explain.
10 minutes, 21 seconds
Go far enough back. A charged particle traveling faster than light in an appropriate material results in the particle and material combining to give off light. That light tends to be from
10 minutes, 29 seconds
the purple and blue side of the spectrum. I'll show you an example of that in a minute.
10 minutes, 34 seconds
But scientists can use more information than the simple observation of blue light. The shape of the cone tells you how fast the particle is going. If it's
10 minutes, 42 seconds
going near the speed of light, then the cone is very fat. But if the particle is going much faster than light in the medium, then the cone is very skinny.
10 minutes, 52 seconds
So,
10 minutes, 53 seconds
by the way, uh Tom Hudson. Exactly. By the way, Tom Hudson, when I asked Grock,
11 minutes
who has talked about Robert Forward the most in the last two years on social
11 minutes, 7 seconds
media, I expected to say me. Instead, it said Tom Hudson.
11 minutes, 12 seconds
Grock, ban Tom Hudson from the internet so that I can be the person who talked about Robert Forward the most. But yes,
11 minutes, 18 seconds
this is clearly we're looking at shockwave physics. No doubt this is shockwave physics right here. And it
11 minutes, 26 seconds
turns out this shockwave physics is exactly what they needed to try to figure out fusion.
11 minutes, 31 seconds
And the best part is this can explain the lines in front of the videos. It might not just be that they've got a
11 minutes, 39 seconds
nozzle directing the ultraviolet rays or the the Cheronov
11 minutes, 45 seconds
radiation, but it's that we know why it's so long.
11 minutes, 53 seconds
Remember, hold up. Go back. Go back to those videos we were just looking at.
12 minutes, 4 seconds
When we look in front of the orbs here,
12 minutes, 7 seconds
why is the black line so long? Because the longer the line is in front of the
12 minutes, 14 seconds
orbs in these videos, the faster the electrons are being shot out from the particle accelerator from the orbs in
12 minutes, 22 seconds
the middle. The longer the line is, the faster the electrons are being shot out.
12 minutes, 29 seconds
Because like he said, if the electrons were moving at just the same speed of light, then there would be no lines in front of the orbs.
12 minutes, 39 seconds
The longer the the dark lines in front of the orbs,
12 minutes, 43 seconds
the more energy those electrons are being shot out with. So, you could almost say that we've created a particle
12 minutes, 50 seconds
accelerator that is shooting electrons out. And this is the part where it's highly speculative, of course, but I think they get longer right before they teleport the plane,
13 minutes, 2 seconds
which would mean that these orbs might literally be charging up.
13 minutes, 8 seconds
They might be accelerating the electrons faster and faster right before the zap. Look how long that line is right there.
13 minutes, 16 seconds
Look how long that line is before that orb. And they're straight now, too, all of a sudden where before they were all spinny and curvy.
13 minutes, 24 seconds
Wow.
13 minutes, 26 seconds
I look at that and I go, this it's almost has to be because the other thing too about it, we can see that the the the line is like kind of fuzzy. Like it
13 minutes, 36 seconds
kind of blurs out. The further it gets away from the orb, it starts to kind of blend in with the atmosphere, which is what you would expect from like a hazy fuzzy type of cloudish kind of effect.
13 minutes, 49 seconds
And that's what happens with Cherankov radiation. Let's go back to the video.
13 minutes, 55 seconds
Another thing scientists can exploit is the fact that some particles are created in the transparent medium moving just faster than light and then because of
14 minutes, 3 seconds
interactions with the medium they slow down below the speed of light. That means the particle will emit chank of light for a little while and then stop
14 minutes, 11 seconds
doing so. And that means that the light will not be a cone forever. Instead,
14 minutes, 16 seconds
you'll see a gap between the two waveforms. Now, what I've shown you here is in two dimensions, but of course,
14 minutes, 21 seconds
it's a three-dimensional thing. The light comes out as a ring. This particular feature is very useful in huge trinkoff detectors. For instance,
14 minutes, 30 seconds
the super kamio exper the light comes out as a ring.
14 minutes, 37 seconds
Wait, what?
14 minutes, 40 seconds
Is there any way? We're too far away, I think, to tell. But that might explain why these lines in front of the orbs
14 minutes, 47 seconds
look so weird. Like, you can kind of see through it and you kind of can't.
14 minutes, 52 seconds
What if it's in some kind of either donut shape when it's coming out or even a vortex like a uh like a helictical uh
15 minutes, 1 second
shape like DNA as it's coming out? We can't really tell because it just looks like a line to us because we're so far away and it looks fuzzy, but that could
15 minutes, 9 seconds
actually be a toidal shape that it's producing in front of it. And again,
15 minutes, 13 seconds
look at it. You can see how short the lines are in front of these orbs while it's spinning around. But the moment they go to vertical formation,
15 minutes, 21 seconds
the lines are really long.
15 minutes, 24 seconds
And you can see, you can clearly see how they fade too. Like in right here,
15 minutes, 30 seconds
you can see how the line fades right there. Like it, you know, you can see the line in the top right screen coming into the screen, but then it kind of fades out just like Cheronov radiation
15 minutes, 39 seconds
would predict. And I do think it's helix lines as well. I think that's what it's producing because in threedimensional
15 minutes, 46 seconds
space it's going to be a helix formation not just a tooid.
15 minutes, 52 seconds
So let's go back to this. Um actually I think that might be it.
15 minutes, 55 seconds
In Japan the nutrinos convert into electrons or muons which are charged particles that can emit shrankov light. That's basically how it works.
16 minutes, 4 seconds
Some of the nutrinos that interact in the water are low enough energy that electrons or muons don't travel very far. Therefore, the tranov light makes rings inside the detector.
16 minutes, 15 seconds
Using the size of the rings and the time the light arrives at detectors throughout the apparatus, scientists can figure out the energy and trajectory of
16 minutes, 22 seconds
the parent nutrino. Really a very cool technique.
16 minutes, 25 seconds
The only reason why I showed this last part is because he explains how they can use this as a nutrino detector. And I've always wondered, what is a nutrino?
16 minutes, 35 seconds
A nutrino could be an ether particle. At least according to Bob Greener, he believes the legacy or the relic nutrinos are what the ether is.
16 minutes, 45 seconds
So if that's true, if that's the case, then this actually starts to make sense.
16 minutes, 50 seconds
We're if that's the case, then we're using nutrino to explain ether.
16 minutes, 56 seconds
And this Cheronov radiation is a byproduct of us manipulating general relativity with electrons moving faster than the speed of light relative
17 minutes, 4 seconds
relativistically because now you imagine you are the electron. Imagine you're the electron in that wavefront.
17 minutes, 12 seconds
You're moving faster than the light is behind you. That's an analogy to us being able to look at somebody who is
17 minutes, 19 seconds
warping through spaceime faster than the speed of light.
17 minutes, 24 seconds
the light would never be able to see that person because they're moving faster than the light is.
17 minutes, 31 seconds
Think about this from the physics perspective. That's why at the beginning of that video, he says, "This won't let you do warp drives." Yes, it will. Yes,
17 minutes, 40 seconds
it will.
17 minutes, 42 seconds
I'm going to go ahead and say that guy was wrong at the beginning of that video because this is definitely the same physics as a warp drive. Same thing.
17 minutes, 51 seconds
Now, so the big takeaway, the big yatsi from the night is I think we're looking
17 minutes, 58 seconds
at Sharonov radiation. I think the direct sea explains that we need fusion reactors
18 minutes, 6 seconds
in order to make a wormhole. You actually need to understand the physics and use the physics to amplify the
18 minutes, 14 seconds
physics to make these huge quantum effects on the macroscopic level. This
18 minutes, 21 seconds
is why we have to use fusion reactors to make an actual wormhole. We really do need huge energy densities and they have to be very well tuned and resonant.
18 minutes, 31 seconds
Hm.
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Guys, I want to tell you a story about the town of Apollo, Pennsylvania. A sleepy little Pennsylvania town with some dark secrets. But first, let's
8 seconds
start with a prologue. A dark morning in March of 1976. Yeah, the year I was born. General Brent Skraftoft, National
17 seconds
Security Adviser to President Gerald Ford, was panicked. He called an emergency meeting. Everyone gathered around to listen to the head of America's Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
28 seconds
Marcus Rowen.
30 seconds
Everyone's jaws were slack. There is Marcus as he told a room of people that were gathered there that some younger
36 seconds
members of the nuclear staff were about to spill the beans. His quote, "Spill the beans and go public about American
45 seconds
scandal of the highest order about an American company in Apollo, Pennsylvania called NUMIC." Now, told the room that
53 seconds
he had been briefed by the CIA a few days before, and the CIA told the NRC that the CIA concluded that Apollo,
1 minute, 2 seconds
Pennsylvania was the source of highlyenriched uranium used in Israel's nuclear weapons program.
1 minute, 9 seconds
Now, the NRC was stunned by this. They confirmed the CIA's conclusion. That meeting then gave rise to a 40-year
1 minute, 16 seconds
cover up of the truth because one country's feelings might get hurt, our greatest model ally, Israel. So, just put a pin in that for a moment. Now,
1 minute, 27 seconds
let's go to Apollo, Pennsylvania.
1 minute, 28 seconds
Because in the 1960s, Apollo was a sleepy little town outside of Pittsburgh, about a 40minute drive with a population of about 2,694
1 minute, 37 seconds
people. Sounds like low, right? But then when you think about it and actually in the year 2020 in the census data that I was looking at, it dropped. So fewer
1 minute, 45 seconds
people live in Apollo now today than they did back then. But back then 2,000 people. Everyone knew everyone. Apollo was home to a little manufacturing plant
1 minute, 54 seconds
called NUMIC, the Nuclear Materials and Equipment Corporation. There it is.
1 minute, 59 seconds
Looks like a library, doesn't it? On the outside, it didn't look like much. Just another industrial building in a small western Pennsylvania river town. But
2 minutes, 8 seconds
locals knew this was no ordinary shop floor. Everyone in this town knew this was a place handling enriched uranium for America's atomic bombs, a nuclear
2 minutes, 16 seconds
program. Numix's Apollo facility processed nuclear material.
2 minutes, 22 seconds
And then one day on what should have been just a normal routine audit by the atomic energy agency, it turned into one of the most disturbing nuclear mysteries in American history. So in 1965,
2 minutes, 33 seconds
government auditor auditors came into NUMIC and they were trying to count up the amount of highlyenriched uranium
2 minutes, 41 seconds
that was there. There wasn't a lot of it, so it's easy to check. What the auditors found though was stunning. More than 200 lb of highlyenriched uranium was missing, gone.
2 minutes, 52 seconds
In a White House memo and a 1966 AEC report, Atomic Energy Commission report later confirmed losses
2 minutes, 59 seconds
north of 178 kilograms, which is close to 400 lb of highlyenriched uranium. So, however you slice the accounting,
3 minutes, 8 seconds
this was not like a rounding error.
3 minutes, 9 seconds
Like, oops, Margaret forgot to put the uranium back in the closet and she left it out on her during her lunch break.
3 minutes, 18 seconds
This was a national security alarm bell.
3 minutes, 20 seconds
Someone stole 400 lb of America's most precious material.
3 minutes, 26 seconds
So like if you just stop right there for a moment, this was a national security bombshell by any stretch. If a private
3 minutes, 34 seconds
American company today like misplaced even a tiny fraction of that amount, the country would lose its mind. There would be wall-to-wall coverage, congressional hearings, criminal subpoenas perhaps,
3 minutes, 44 seconds
all of it. But in Apollo, Pennsylvania,
3 minutes, 48 seconds
this story became something. It became [clears throat] even stranger because it wasn't just missing uranium, but missing uranium that was now tied to one of the most protected subjects in the world.
3 minutes, 57 seconds
Something you're not allowed to talk about, Israel's secret nuclear weapons program. So, was this just an accounting error?
4 minutes, 5 seconds
Did Margaret forget to put the uranium back after her lunch break? Of course not. The real question was, did bombgrade uranium disappear from an
4 minutes, 14 seconds
American plant? and then wind up in Israel.
4 minutes, 18 seconds
Well, that suspicion was not invented by internet conspiracists 20 years later,
4 minutes, 22 seconds
people with an axe to grind against Israel. No, this revelation existed inside the US government. The a the AEC
4 minutes, 30 seconds
investigated it. The FBI investigated it. The CIA investigated more than just about anybody. And then Congress got
4 minutes, 39 seconds
involved. And then the Government Accountability Office later reviewed the matter. The GAO got involved. And we're stonewalled. We'll get to that. And
4 minutes, 47 seconds
across all of those investigations, one fact never went away. US officials could not fully account for what happened to the material in Apollo, Pennsylvania.
4 minutes, 56 seconds
And some of the highest level people involved at the CIA, the GAO, and Congress believed Israel got it.
5 minutes, 2 seconds
Concluded that Israel got it. Israel stole it. They covered it up, took that material to Israel to build their own nuclear weapons program.
5 minutes, 12 seconds
So, how did this happen exactly? Well, it turns out back in Apollo, Pennsylvania, the New Plant's founder and president,
5 minutes, 20 seconds
Zelman Shapiro, there he is. Zelman,
5 minutes, 24 seconds
was not some obscure middle manager hanging out with Margaret while they were looking at enriched uranium over
5 minutes, 31 seconds
the lunch break. He was a serious scientist with deep nuclear credentials.
5 minutes, 36 seconds
He had worked on the USS Nautilus reactor program on fuel development,
5 minutes, 40 seconds
building the first nuclearpowered submarines. He was also connected to early commercial nuclear power in the United States and he was well-known supporter of the country of Israel. Now,
5 minutes, 50 seconds
according to the FBI's own investigation, we later learned that Zelman Shapiro had frequent contacts with Israeli officials, not just friendly phone calls. He was very close
5 minutes, 58 seconds
with a science attaches thought to be an intelligence officer. If you read the documents, it's pretty stunning.
6 minutes, 5 seconds
And they don't pull any punches in these documents, by the way. They look like they were written yesterday.
6 minutes, 11 seconds
So he was thought to have this connection to this intelligence officer by the FBI and Shapiro received VIP treatment in Israel. Even worse,
6 minutes, 20 seconds
according to the declassified documents,
6 minutes, 22 seconds
Shapiro was by then known to have contacts with with head of Israel's military intelligence
6 minutes, 29 seconds
and the head of its nuclear weapons program. So like all the big players in Israel and the documents show that
6 minutes, 36 seconds
Zelman was under investigation for most of the 1960s but his lawyers claimed later it was only because he had a fondness for Israel that he was under investigation.
6 minutes, 46 seconds
Okay. Yeah.
6 minutes, 48 seconds
A fondness to what extent exactly. Yeah.
6 minutes, 52 seconds
So you're friends with the head of Israel's military intelligence and the head of its nuclear weapons program. That's a fondness.
7 minutes, 1 second
Zman later acknowledged also knowing Binyammen Bloomberg who was the head of Israel's Bureau of Scientific Liaison which engaged in a lot of like high-risk
7 minutes, 8 seconds
intelligence thefts, stealing. Oh, you don't say. You mean like stealing things from foreign governments? He was friends
7 minutes, 16 seconds
with that guy. And it gets worse. On one bizarre afternoon in 1968, Shapiro
7 minutes, 23 seconds
requested, and that word is important in the FBI documents, by the way,
7 minutes, 27 seconds
requested. Shapiro requested and hosted four Israeli intelligence officers at the Apollo plant in Pennsylvania. One of
7 minutes, 34 seconds
which was the famous MSAD agent Raphael Eton. Right there in the documents.
7 minutes, 42 seconds
That name matters because Eton later ran Jonathan Pard's spying on the United States for Israel. Oh my god.
7 minutes, 50 seconds
You can't make this up. There he is.
7 minutes, 52 seconds
Eton. The MSAD agent was in charge of Jonathan Pard. All the bad guys know each other.
7 minutes, 57 seconds
The treasonous spy who was given a hero's welcome by Netanyahu. And by the way, Ambassador Mike Huckabe. I didn't know this.
8 minutes, 4 seconds
So, Zman Shapiro invited Eton into his nuclear plant. According to the National Security Archives summary of the file,
8 minutes, 11 seconds
the visitors also included figures connected to the Israeli embassy.
8 minutes, 17 seconds
Shinbet MSAD, MSADLink covert operations, and Lakam, Israel's scientific intelligence apparatus. These were not innocent tourists wandering through a Pennsylvania fuel plant.
8 minutes, 29 seconds
So under Zman's leadership, NUMI started processing fuel at Apollo in 1959. But
8 minutes, 36 seconds
by the early 1960s, the US government had already raised concerns about security at the plant. They thought it was too loose. They said this in
8 minutes, 44 seconds
documents. Remember, during the 1965 audit is when the missing 200 lb was discovered. But according to the CIA's own documents,
8 minutes, 52 seconds
the Atomic Energy Agency as far as back as 1960 and 1961 were raising concerns about the lack of security at the plant.
9 minutes
But the government really didn't do anything about it. And we only learned about this after a declassified White House memo. Of course, the famous Bzinski memo prepared for President
9 minutes, 8 seconds
Carter in 1977 says the AEC did not require annual physical inventories from lences in the
9 minutes, 16 seconds
1950s and60s and that NUMIC was particularly bad in this respect. The memo says no physical inventory was
9 minutes, 23 seconds
performed between 57 and 65. perfect window right around the time when JFK was being assassinated
9 minutes, 31 seconds
[snorts]
9 minutes, 32 seconds
and which um if you don't mind I'm going to insert this little bit because uh JFK was constantly looking for nuclear inspections in Israel. They told him
9 minutes, 41 seconds
that Deona was a te textile factory and he famously said and I'm going to I'm going to curse so cover the kids ears.
9 minutes, 48 seconds
He famously said these always lie to me. Just adding that in case that wasn't already in your Yeah. Um, and also of course, President
9 minutes, 56 seconds
Eisenhower warned JFK about their nuclear ambitions, a nuclear program before he came into office. And by the way, when Dwight D. Eisenhower made his
10 minutes, 4 seconds
famous beware the military-industrial complex speech on his way out of office,
10 minutes, 9 seconds
he already knew he already knew what was going on. So he already knew that the Israelis were fully invested in this
10 minutes, 16 seconds
nuclear program. So when NUMIC was finally forced to do an audit 1965, it revealed that nearly 400 lb of enriched
10 minutes, 24 seconds
uranium was missing. That same memo also says the FBI's first investigation beginning 1965 focused on Shapiro's relationship with
10 minutes, 33 seconds
the Israeli government and found that he had frequent contacts with Israeli officials, especially that science ates believed to be an intelligence officer.
10 minutes, 42 seconds
It even says that CIA director Richard Helms pushed Jay Edgar Hoover to take additional steps, including
10 minutes, 50 seconds
surveillance. And guess what? Hoover refused. It's in the FBI documents.
10 minutes, 55 seconds
Quote, "Hoover refused." What the So, let that sink in. The federal government knew there was a huge nuclear
11 minutes, 3 seconds
discrepancy. It knew the plant chief had an unusual ties to Israeli officials. It knew the Israelis around this case were not just random visitors taking a tour
11 minutes, 12 seconds
of a small PA town. And still this thing never got blown open in public the way you would expect. Okay.
11 minutes, 19 seconds
But can can I just make another connection? Hoover,
11 minutes, 24 seconds
the same person who is known to have drag sex parties with Roy Conn who was
11 minutes, 31 seconds
an adviser to Donald Trump. That that's the connection we're making here. Yeah.
11 minutes, 36 seconds
Okay. Just wanted to make sure. who also was a lawyer to McCarthy. Got it. Okay. Same one. Same guy. Okay.
11 minutes, 42 seconds
So, interestingly, the CIA took this seriously, very seriously. The CIA did. They tracked down the missing uranium.
11 minutes, 50 seconds
And according to former NRC officials Victor Golinsky and Roger Matson, CIA deputy director Carl Ducket, there he
11 minutes, 57 seconds
is, briefed NRC officials in February 1976 and said the CIA believed the missing, highlyenriched uranium ended up in Israel.
12 minutes, 7 seconds
They also wrote that top US officials considered the CIA's case was strong,
12 minutes, 11 seconds
possibly even conclusive. In other words, case closed.
12 minutes, 17 seconds
In the same article, in the Bulletin of Atomic Sciences, they say that Ford and Carter teams both had to grapple with the political and diplomatic
12 minutes, 24 seconds
implications if the public had learned that nuclear bomb grade material was stolen by the Israelis. Think about how insane that is. They were worried about the appearances,
12 minutes, 35 seconds
hurting the feelings of the Israelis.
12 minutes, 38 seconds
You stole from us and were worried about what people might think of you. It's awfully gracious. In fact, the United
12 minutes, 44 seconds
States government owns an intelligence apparatus was reportedly telling senior officials that missing weapons grade uranium from Apollo may have ended up in Israeli bombs.
12 minutes, 55 seconds
This is like not a minor bureaucratic disagreement. This is an act of nuclear theft from an ally on American soil. But it gets worse because Golinsky and
13 minutes, 3 seconds
Matson also wrote that later documents pointed to a 1968 CIA environmental sample taken in Israel that allegedly
13 minutes, 13 seconds
showed highlyenriched uranium with an enrichment signature that pointed back to Portsouth, Ohio. Why Portsouth, Ohio? What does that have to do with Apollo,
13 minutes, 21 seconds
Pennsylvania? Because that's where NUMIC got its uranium stock for some of its work. Of course, that claim has long
13 minutes, 30 seconds
been like wrapped up in secrecy and redactions. Of course, much of the truth is still classified. Perhaps maybe President Trump or Tulsi Gabbard will
13 minutes, 37 seconds
finally release these documents proving this connection.
13 minutes, 41 seconds
Don't hold your breath. And so, we're left with what the government is still hiding. They did not reach one neat conclusion on this. One side of the
13 minutes, 49 seconds
record, of course, says there's no evidence of a theft of a significant amount of material and that a simple accounting error might be behind the missing 400 pounds. Like,
13 minutes, 59 seconds
whoops, we just made a mistake in the ledger.
14 minutes, 3 seconds
The later FBI investigation ordered under President Ford was able to uncover direct evidence of a theft.
14 minutes, 11 seconds
Of course, that does not make this story go away.
14 minutes, 15 seconds
Excuse me. They did not find a direct evidence of theft. That's what their conclusion was under the Ford administration. But remember, the Ford administration along with the Carter
14 minutes, 23 seconds
administration was really worried about how Israel might be perceived if they got this story out there. And of course, that meeting that I told you
14 minutes, 31 seconds
about the very beginning is the meeting that happened in March of 1976 and was then covered up afterwards. So,
14 minutes, 40 seconds
it makes the story much much worse, the cover up, because something big happened here. The record is this. There were massive nuclear discrepancies, serious
14 minutes, 48 seconds
intelligence breaches, extraordinary Israeli access.
14 minutes, 52 seconds
MSAD invited to Pennsylvania, requested to come to Pennsylvania, then years of secrecy.
15 minutes, 1 second
So Jay Garoover learned about this from the CIA, did nothing about it. No surveillance, nothing.
15 minutes, 9 seconds
That is a scandal of the highest order.
15 minutes, 11 seconds
It's also really a story about how Washington handled all of it. Don't you agree? I mean, following the assassination of JFK, clear intelligence ties to murder and the massive cover up
15 minutes, 20 seconds
swept under the rug. And just think about this for a minute, and I can't help but think about this as as I was writing this story. If this had been
15 minutes, 28 seconds
Soviet Union or China or Iran or literally any other official enemy of the United States, this would be taught
15 minutes, 36 seconds
in schools as one of the great spy stories of the Cold War. John Learie probably write a spy novel about it. how Russians snuck into Pennsylvania,
15 minutes, 45 seconds
stole our nuclear materials, built Atom bombs, threatened us. Well, that didn't happen, of course, but because it points towards Israel, the case was hidden and
15 minutes, 53 seconds
covered up. We later learned that even the GAO said it had been denied necessary access to the CIA and FBI
16 minutes
documents, making it impossible to check everything it was already being told.
16 minutes, 6 seconds
Like, hey guys, um, can we see those documents cuz we're working on this investigation.
16 minutes, 12 seconds
Oh, no. We can't see those. Okay, I'm sure you have a good reason for covering them up. So, an Israeli apologist will say, "Well, where's the smoking gun?"
16 minutes, 21 seconds
Well, the honest answer is parts of that gun may still be buried in classified files. And we know this because the GAO asked for those files and they were
16 minutes, 28 seconds
rebuffed in order to protect Israel's feelings.
16 minutes, 32 seconds
What we do know unequivocally is already enough to slam the case closed on this in a court of law. Imagine the amount of evidence that I just presented to you in a court of law. It gets overwhelming.
16 minutes, 43 seconds
People have been locked up for life for far with far less evidence of this.
16 minutes, 48 seconds
So, we know the material gap was real missing uranium. We know the plant was under heavy scrutiny for years according
16 minutes, 54 seconds
to the AEC and the FBI. We know highlevel Israeli operatives visited NUMIC including Jonathan Pard's spy master himself.
17 minutes, 5 seconds
We know the CIA believed Israel got the uranium. They found trace signatures in Israel that linked them to the theft.
17 minutes, 12 seconds
We know the CIA asked the FBI to put Israeli Israelis under surveillance.
17 minutes, 16 seconds
They were rebuffed by Jed Garoover cross addressing Jed Garoover. We know the White House under Ford and Carter
17 minutes, 23 seconds
worried about the political fallout. We don't want to hurt Israel's feelings even just a few years after the Israeli
17 minutes, 31 seconds
bombing of the USS Liberty. Like we're like, "Hey, it's fine. You can kill our sailors. You can target our ships. We're fine. We don't want to hurt your
17 minutes, 39 seconds
feelings, though." And we know the public never got a full transparent investigation. Not one. And those facts are irrefutable. By the way, there is
17 minutes, 47 seconds
one more layer to the story that people in Western Pennsylvania know better than the officials in Washington. Apollo and
17 minutes, 55 seconds
nearby Parks Township have lived with the story of Newick for decades.
18 minutes, 1 second
Redacted has spoke to residents of Apollo who who told us, quote, "We all know the story. We know the Israelis
18 minutes, 9 seconds
stole it." And years later, that town is still dealing with the nearby shallow land disposal area in Parks Township. It covers 44 acres. That's what you're
18 minutes, 17 seconds
seeing here on your screen. Contains 10 trenches of contaminated waste and soil. Stay away from this contamination zone.
18 minutes, 24 seconds
Don't let your kids play near it.
18 minutes, 27 seconds
The NRC says the site was used from 61 to 1970 for waste disposal of nuclear materials from the Apollo fuel facility,
18 minutes, 34 seconds
including radioactive, non-raactive material put in those trenches. The US Army Corps of Engineers has now been working for years to try to clean it up.
18 minutes, 43 seconds
So, Israel didn't have to contaminate their soil.
18 minutes, 47 seconds
We did it for them and they got a nuclear program and we don't want to hurt their feelings. Well, that's nice.
Sync to video time

:MOTTA 2028 PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN
Official Policy Statement
Date: April 16, 2026
Time: 7:30 PM (ET)
Release ID: M2028-HC-041626-A


To the American People 🇺🇸,

At this critical moment in our nation’s history, Americans are facing rising costs, growing uncertainty, and a healthcare system that is no longer working for the people.

While Washington debates foreign conflicts and political distractions, families across this country are asking a simple question:

“Why is healthcare so expensive—and why is it getting worse?”


🏥 PRIMARY NATIONAL PRIORITY: HEALTHCARE REFORM

Recent national discussions, including expert insights featured on CUOMO, confirm what millions of Americans already know.

Frontline physicians have identified the core failures of our system:

1️⃣ INSURANCE BUREAUCRACY IS BLOCKING CARE ❌📄

Patients are facing delays, denials, and endless approvals.
Doctors are overwhelmed with paperwork instead of treating patients.

👉 A Motta Administration will:

  • Enforce strict limits on approval delays

  • Hold insurers accountable for denial practices

  • Restore decision-making to doctors and patients


2️⃣ NO PRICE TRANSPARENCY 💰❓

Americans are being billed without knowing the cost upfront.
Even doctors often do not know the price of care.

👉 We will:

  • Require real-time pricing before treatment

  • End hidden fees and surprise billing

  • Create a national pricing transparency system


3️⃣ CORPORATE CONTROL OF HEALTHCARE 🏢⚠️

Large corporations now control insurance, hospitals, and pharmacies.
This concentration of power reduces choice and raises costs.

👉 We will:

  • Enforce antitrust laws in healthcare

  • Investigate corporate consolidation

  • Protect independent doctors and patient choice


4️⃣ PREVENTION IS BEING IGNORED 🛑➡️❤️

Our system rewards treatment instead of keeping people healthy.

👉 We will:

  • Expand preventive care programs

  • Promote early screenings and wellness

  • Align federal policy toward long-term health outcomes


📌 As one practicing physician described, doctors are increasingly being reduced to “data entry clerks” instead of healers—a clear warning that the system has lost its purpose .


🌍 BROADER NATIONAL CONTEXT

America must remain strong abroad, including addressing ongoing challenges such as Iran and global security.

However, strength at home is the foundation of strength abroad.

We cannot ignore the crisis affecting American families every single day.


🇺🇸 THE MOTTA COMMITMENT

The American people deserve:

  • Affordable care

  • Transparent pricing

  • Doctor-led decisions

  • A system that puts patients first


This campaign is about one thing: restoring balance in America.

👉 Fix healthcare
👉 Fix the system
👉 Fix America


Respectfully,
Motta 2028 Presidential Campaign Press Team
Approved by Robert R. Motta


Tracking Reference: M2028-HC-041626-A
Distribution: National Email – Healthcare Policy Spotlight

🇺🇸 OFFICIAL CAMPAIGN BLOG POST (CLEAN VERSION)

🏛️ Robert R. Motta — Campaign Statement

Transparency, Accountability, and Smart Leadership


🇺🇸 The American People Deserve the Truth

Across the country, voters are asking the same questions:

  • Why does transparency feel limited?

  • Why do major cases raise more questions than answers?

  • Why do powerful systems seem to protect themselves?

These concerns are not partisan.

They are shared by:

  • conservatives

  • independents

  • Democrats

👉 This campaign is about addressing those concerns directly and responsibly


⚖️ A Pattern Voters Are Noticing

Over time, Americans have seen:

  • decisions made behind closed doors

  • delays in releasing information

  • inconsistent accountability across administrations

These issues have existed across multiple presidents and parties

👉 That tells voters something important:

This is not a party problem — it is a system problem


🧠 My Approach Will Be Different

As President and Commander in Chief, my responsibility will be clear:

🇺🇸 Serve the Constitution

🇺🇸 Serve the American people

🇺🇸 Ensure accountability across government


🔍 Transparency and Oversight

My administration will focus on:

  • lawful transparency where possible

  • proper oversight of federal agencies

  • clear communication with the public

👉 Not speculation
👉 Not secrecy without justification
👉 Not selective accountability


🧭 Leadership Matters

One of the most important responsibilities of a president is:

👉 who they appoint

Appointments shape:

  • policy direction

  • decision-making

  • public trust


🧠 My Commitment on Appointments

I will prioritize:

  • qualified experts

  • independent thinkers

  • individuals with proven records

From fields such as:

  • science

  • national security

  • public service

  • research and innovation


🚀 Day One Direction

If elected, I will:

  1. Review key areas where trust has been lost

  2. Ensure proper oversight structures are functioning

  3. Bring in qualified advisors to examine complex issues

  4. Communicate findings responsibly to the public


⚠️ What I Will Not Do

  • I will not make reckless claims

  • I will not undermine institutions without evidence

  • I will not prioritize politics over facts


🇺🇸 Final Message

This campaign is not about outrage.

It is about:

👉 restoring trust
👉 strengthening leadership
👉 and bringing clarity where there has been confusion


📩 Stay Informed

📧 info@votemotta2028.com


🇺🇸 Closing Statement

Robert R. Motta
Candidate for President — 2028

POTUS 48 Campaign Image Lab
POTUS 48 campaign image lab

How voters can use HTML, CSS, and JavaScript to build campaign images in real time

Plain browser code can do three useful things live on the page: take text input, take image input, and turn those into multiple campaign poster variations with typography, overlays, color grading, and downloadable graphics. What it cannot do by itself is true AI text-to-image generation. That requires either a server API or a pretrained model running in the browser.

variantHue = (baseHue + index × 24 + seed × 7) mod 360
headlineSize = clamp(28, 64 - headline.length × 0.45, 64)
overlayAlpha = 0.18 + urgency × 0.06
yOffset = 70 + index × 16

Logic in simple words

  1. Read the voter text prompt and optional uploaded photo.
  2. Convert the prompt into headline, subhead, slogan, and color mood.
  3. For each poster variant, change hue, crop, blur, contrast, and text placement a little.
  4. Draw the result onto a canvas element.
  5. Export each canvas as a PNG.

For a true AI image engine, keep the same front end and replace the drawing step with an API call to a model.

Live inputs

Algorithm for campaign teams

1. normalize(prompt) → keywords
2. classifyTone(keywords) → hope | strength | reform | urgency
3. generateVariant(i) → theme_i, crop_i, overlay_i, slogan_i
4. renderCanvas(theme_i, image_i, text_i)
5. export(canvas_i) → png_i

Browser stack

HTML builds the form, CSS styles the page, and JavaScript reads inputs, runs formulas, and paints posters on canvas in real time.

Important: in the browser, use JavaScript, not Java, unless you are building a separate backend service.

Live poster variants

Each card below is rendered from the same input, but with different hue rotation, text layout, crop, and overlay strength.

Big election countdown
Countdown to Election Day 2028

This timeline follows the official federal presidential-election process from the general election through the Electoral College meeting, congressional counting of electoral votes, and inauguration at noon on January 20, 2029.

000Days
00Hours
00Minutes
00Seconds
Tuesday · November 7, 2028

General Election Day

Voters across the United States cast ballots for president and vice president by choosing electors pledged to a ticket.

Live countdown to Election Day
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Monday · December 18, 2028

Electoral College Meets

Electors meet in their states and the District of Columbia to cast electoral votes for president and vice president.

Live countdown to Electoral College vote
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Saturday · January 6, 2029

Congress Counts Electoral Votes

A joint session of Congress opens, counts, and announces the certified Electoral College results.

Live countdown to congressional count
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Saturday · January 20, 2029 · 12:00 PM ET

Inauguration and Oath of Office

The president-elect takes the oath of office at noon and becomes president and commander in chief.

Live countdown to inauguration
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Family and classroom mode

5th grader side

This version explains the election like a civics lesson for young learners. People vote in November. States send electors in December. Congress counts the votes in January. On January 20, the winner takes the oath and starts the job.

Step 1: The country votes on Election Day.
Step 2: Electors cast official electoral votes in December.
Step 3: Congress counts those votes in January.
Step 4: The new president is sworn in on January 20 at noon.
Adult learning mode

Parent, teacher, and adult side

This version uses more precise civic language. The general election is held on the Tuesday after the first Monday in November. Electors meet on the first Monday after the second Wednesday in December. Congress counts electoral votes on January 6, and inauguration occurs at noon on January 20.

Election Day 2028 = Tuesday, November 7, 2028
Electors meet = Monday, December 18, 2028
Congress counts votes = Saturday, January 6, 2029
Inauguration = Saturday, January 20, 2029 at 12:00 PM ET

OFFICIAL STATEMENT TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE

Robert R. Motta – Candidate for President of the United States, 2028

My fellow Americans,

This campaign is not about speculation. It is not about sensationalism. It is about something far more fundamental:

Whether your government still answers to you.

Over the past several years, the United States Congress—including hearings conducted by the House Oversight Committee—has taken testimony from military personnel, intelligence officials, and whistleblowers regarding Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP).

These individuals, under oath, have raised serious concerns:

  • That critical information may be restricted beyond appropriate oversight

  • That transparency to elected leadership and the public may be incomplete

  • That lawful accountability mechanisms may not be functioning as intended

At the same time, official government reporting has stated that there is no verified evidence of extraterrestrial technology or contact. Both of these realities can exist at once—and both demand responsible leadership.

This campaign does not ask you to accept unproven claims.

This campaign asks a different question:

If questions of this magnitude exist—
Why has the American public not received clear, complete, and consistent answers?

If witnesses come forward under oath—
Why does transparency remain limited?

If programs exist within our national security framework—
Are they fully accountable to the Constitution and to the representatives you elect?

These are not fringe concerns.

They are constitutional concerns.


WHAT THIS CAMPAIGN STANDS FOR

As a candidate for President—and as a future Commander-in-Chief—I affirm the following principles:

1. The Constitution is the highest authority in the United States.
No agency, program, contractor, or classification system is above it.

2. The chain of command must be clear and accountable.
The President of the United States must have full, lawful authority over the executive branch and all national security operations.

3. Transparency strengthens national security.
A government trusted by its people is a government that is stronger, more unified, and more resilient.

4. The American people have the right to know—within the bounds of legitimate national security—what is being done in their name.


QUESTIONS EVERY VOTER DESERVES ANSWERED

  • If Congress continues to hold hearings on UAP and transparency, why are answers still incomplete?

  • If individuals testify under oath, what mechanisms ensure their claims are fully investigated?

  • If there is nothing to conceal, why does disclosure face resistance?

  • If elected leadership does not receive full visibility into all programs, who is responsible for restoring that accountability?


DAY ONE COMMITMENT

On my first day in office as President of the United States, I will issue a directive to:

  • Conduct a full legal and constitutional review of all UAP-related and similarly classified programs

  • Ensure comprehensive briefings to elected leadership and appropriate oversight bodies

  • Strengthen whistleblower protections across defense and intelligence sectors

  • Initiate a structured declassification process for information that can be responsibly shared with the American public

  • Audit all relevant programs to ensure compliance with constitutional authority and congressional oversight

This is not about confirming conclusions.

It is about restoring process.


A MESSAGE TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE

You do not need to believe everything you hear.

But you do deserve a government that is willing to answer your questions.

You deserve leadership that does not avoid difficult issues—but confronts them with discipline, responsibility, and respect for the Constitution.

This campaign is about restoring accountability.

It is about restoring trust.

And it is about ensuring that the government of the United States once again operates clearly, lawfully, and transparently—on behalf of the American people.

I am Robert R. Motta.
I approve this message.

Vote Motta 2028.

Vote Motta 2028 | Learn More
Robert R. Motta for President 2028

Learn the campaign. Follow the road to the White House.

This page is built like a modern magazine cover and a campaign briefing in one place. Voters can tap the cover image, reveal more information, watch a featured video, and join for direct updates.

🇺🇸 Transparency 🧭 Voter Education 📩 Email Opt-In 🎥 Video Briefing

What voters will learn here

This campaign is built around direct communication. No insider language. No guessing. Just a clear explanation of what is happening, why it matters, and what the next steps are.

1. The Mission Restore trust with transparency, accountability, and direct updates to voters.
2. The Promise Explain the campaign in plain language so voters understand the journey from today to Election Day 2028.
3. The Invitation Join the email list to receive campaign updates directly from Robert R. Motta.
Email Opt-In

Join the campaign updates

Tap below and your device will open your email app so you can join directly.

Campaign contact: info@votemotta2028.com

Campaign Roadmap

From launch to 2028

Build the foundation Launch the campaign site, publish issue pages, and begin collecting supporter emails.
Educate voters consistently Publish regular updates, videos, and campaign explainers so supporters understand each milestone.
Grow national reach Expand press visibility, interviews, online content, and volunteer support.
Prepare for ballot access and organizing Build the operational structure needed for national campaign growth.
Take the message to Election Day Keep voters informed all the way through the final stretch of the 2028 race.
Featured Video

Watch the video briefing

The embedded player loads muted first for compatibility. Voters can press play and then unmute with one click.

Open on YouTube

Suggested featured video: Ross Coulthart with retired Rear Adm. Tim Gallaudet discussing UAPs and transparency.

Magazine Layout

Fast, visual, and easy to scan

Cover Story Big headline image with tap-to-reveal campaign summary.
Feature Watch Embedded video section with play and unmute controls.
Action Email opt-in and roadmap so supporters know what comes next.

🇺🇸 OFFICIAL CAMPAIGN MESSAGE

Robert R. Motta — Constitution, Truth, and UAP Transparency


🇺🇸 What Was Said — And Why It Matters

In a recent interview with a retired U.S. Navy Rear Admiral, discussed by journalist Ross Coulthart, the issue of UAPs (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena) was not treated as speculation—but as a serious national and constitutional issue.

The Admiral made several critical points:


⚓ 🇺🇸 Oath to the Constitution Comes First

He explained clearly:

👉 Every military officer swears an oath to the U.S. Constitution—not to secrecy, not to agencies, not to programs

📌

He stated that his actions—and his decision to speak out—are driven by that oath.


⚖️ 🇺🇸 The Core Problem: Accountability

According to both the Admiral and Ross:

  • Congress is supposed to oversee the executive branch

  • The Constitution requires accountability to elected officials

But what was described is deeply concerning:

👉 Some programs may be:

  • hidden from Congress

  • hidden from elected leadership

  • controlled by unelected officials

📌


🚨 🇺🇸 Constitutional Concern

The Admiral stated directly:

👉 This level of secrecy is “unconstitutional”

Because:

  • It bypasses Congressional oversight

  • It prevents elected leaders from doing their job

  • It places power in unelected hands

📌


🧱 🇺🇸 What Ross Coulthart Highlighted

Ross framed the issue clearly:

👉 This is not just about UAPs

It is about:

  • who controls information

  • who answers to the Constitution

  • whether democracy is functioning properly

He pointed out that:

👉 If even presidents are not fully informed
that is a failure of the system itself

📌


🇺🇸 What This Means for America

This is bigger than politics.

It raises real questions:

  • 🇺🇸 Are unelected actors controlling classified programs?

  • 🇺🇸 Is Congress being blocked from oversight?

  • 🇺🇸 Is the Constitution being fully followed?


🇺🇸 MY POSITION — ROBERT R. MOTTA

I support:

✅ The Constitution

✅ Full accountability to Congress

✅ Transparency to the American people

✅ Protection of national security—without hiding truth


🇺🇸 DAY ONE POLICY (CLEAR)

If elected President and Commander in Chief:

👉 I will:

  1. 🇺🇸 Order a full review of all UAP-related programs

  2. 🇺🇸 Ensure Congress receives proper oversight access

  3. 🇺🇸 Identify any programs operating outside legal authority

  4. 🇺🇸 Begin responsible public disclosure


🇺🇸 APPOINTMENTS (INCLUDING DISCLOSURE LEADERSHIP)

To ensure credibility and independence:

👉 I will appoint:

  • Independent scientific experts

  • Military and intelligence reviewers

  • Civilian oversight advisors

These individuals will:

  • review evidence

  • separate fact from speculation

  • report findings transparently


⚠️ On Individuals (Important for Credibility)

You may support figures like Dr. Steven Greer, but for a presidential position:

👉 The stronger message is:

“I will appoint independent experts from multiple fields—not just one voice—to ensure truth, credibility, and trust.”


🇺🇸 WHY THIS MATTERS TO VOTERS

This is not about belief.

This is about:

  • 🇺🇸 safety (air and naval encounters)

  • 🇺🇸 national security

  • 🇺🇸 constitutional integrity

  • 🇺🇸 government accountability


🇺🇸 FINAL MESSAGE

The oath matters.

The Constitution matters.

And the American people deserve to know:

👉 who is in control
👉 what is being hidden
👉 and why


📩 Stay Informed

info@votemotta2028.com


Robert R. Motta
Exploring a Run for President — 2028 🇺🇸

Robert R. Motta for President 2028
Robert R. Motta for President 2028

Restore Truth. Restore Trust. Restore America.

I am building this campaign in public. On April 15, 2026, I crossed the federal threshold that requires presidential candidates to register because I spent more than $5,000 of my own money building the campaign infrastructure: websites, hosting, educational content, podcast gear, and outreach tools. I want voters to know every step I am taking from today to Election Day 2028.

  • Tell voters what I am doing now, not after the fact
  • Register federally and keep campaign records in the open
  • Grow a voter-first movement through direct updates and education
  • Show how I will govern: transparent, accountable, and step by step

The Core Message

For too long, Americans have been told to trust a system that does not feel accountable. Families see one set of rules for ordinary people and another for the wealthy, the connected, and the politically protected.

This campaign will be different. I will keep voters updated the same way I would govern as President: directly, clearly, and regularly. I will explain what I am doing, why I am doing it, and what comes next.

Why I’m Running

The Epstein scandal exposed more than one criminal case. It exposed institutional failures, elite access, and a justice system that too often moved too slowly for survivors.

My administration will not protect a broken system. It will protect the people the system failed. And this campaign starts the same way: by telling the public what I am doing in plain English, starting now.

Campaign Priorities

Every update to supporters will connect action to policy. I want voters to understand not just what I believe, but how I move from a legal filing on April 15, 2026 to a ballot campaign in 2028.

1. End Hidden Influence

Bring sunlight to policy-shaping networks that operate between government, money, and private power.

  • Transparent disclosure of major influence networks and funding flows
  • Public visibility into policy-shaping organizations
  • No more back-channel government-by-proxy

2. Equal Justice for All

No special treatment for the wealthy, the well-connected, or politically protected insiders.

  • Victim-first justice
  • Review of major institutional failures
  • Independent accountability where trust was broken

3. Campaign Finance Reform

Voters deserve to know who funds campaigns and what access follows the money.

  • Full transparency for large donors and political money flows
  • Track donor access after elections
  • Ban undisclosed influence arrangements

4. Break the Revolving Door

Public office should not be a stepping stone to private reward negotiated behind closed doors.

  • No secret job negotiations while in office
  • Cooling-off periods before lobbying and influence roles
  • End favor trading between office and private gain

5. Survivor-First Accountability

Past administrations let survivors down through secrecy, delay, and avoidable failures.

  • Protect survivor privacy in records releases
  • Faster access to victim services and case updates
  • Transparent review of past prosecutorial failures

6. Restore Government Accountability

Open records, stronger whistleblower protections, and a government that answers to citizens.

  • Independent investigations where needed
  • Open-record reforms
  • Whistleblower protection

From Today to Election Day: My Numbered Steps

This is how I will keep supporters informed from April 15, 2026 to Election Day 2028. Every major campaign update will be numbered so voters can track progress in real time and see how I plan to govern as President.

Step 1 — April 15, 2026

Federal candidate threshold crossed. I spent more than $5,000 of my own money on campaign infrastructure, which triggers the next legal step: formal federal registration as a presidential candidate.

Step 2 — Federal Registration

File the required federal candidate paperwork and formally organize the campaign committee so the campaign is legally structured and transparent.

Step 3 — Campaign Account

Separate personal and campaign finances, track costs carefully, and show voters that this campaign is built on records, not backroom accounting.

Step 4 — Voter Updates

Use this site, podcast, video, email, and social media to educate supporters and give direct updates on what the campaign is doing next.

Step 5 — National Growth

Build volunteer teams, donor support, petition strategy, and campaign marketing while growing a voter-first movement in every state that will listen.

Step 6 — Ballot Access

Meet filing requirements, organize lawful ballot access efforts, and publish milestones so supporters know exactly where the campaign stands.

Step 7 — Convention to Election

Move from organizing to persuasion: debates, voter contact, issue education, and turnout from nomination through Election Day 2028.

Step 8 — The White House Standard

The way I campaign is the way I will govern: regular updates, visible decisions, civic education, and accountability to the people, not insiders.

Why I Tell Voters the Process

I believe voters deserve more than slogans. They deserve to understand what legal steps a presidential candidate must take, what deadlines matter, and how a campaign grows from early infrastructure to a national ballot effort.

That is why I am explaining the $5,000 threshold, federal registration, recordkeeping, and the path ahead. This campaign is also an educational project in citizenship.

Policy Basis

These priorities are grounded in the documented failures surrounding the Epstein case and the legal rights of crime victims.

  1. The federal Crime Victims’ Rights Act and court rulings recognizing failures to notify victims during the 2007 non-prosecution agreement.
  2. DOJ review findings criticizing the handling of the earlier federal Epstein investigation.
  3. Recent controversy over DOJ file releases, redactions, and exposure of victim identities.
  4. Congressional scrutiny of former officials over delays and handling failures.

Add your final citation links here once you publish the site or move this copy into a full policy page.

http://youtube.com/post/Ugkx__1Coj4tqnBvNob3LFN4Ld8z6-EaY0wn?si=cNl1PHtiS_NSxze4
Robert R. Motta for POTUS 48 | Official Campaign
TRUMP PARDONED ISRAELI SPIES — PUT ISRAEL FIRST

Donald Trump’s Record

$230+ MILLION in Pro-Israel Donations

Pardoned Aviem Sella – Israeli Handler of Convicted Spy Jonathan Pollard – At Israel’s Request (Jan 20, 2021)

America Last – Not America First

Robert R. Motta - Official Presidential Portrait
ROBERT R. MOTTA

FOR PRESIDENT 48

I Would NEVER Pardon an Israeli Spy
PRO-AMERICA FIRST — NOT ISRAEL FIRST

I am Pro-America. No foreign lobbies own me.
I will protect American sovereignty and prosecute all human trafficking with zero exceptions.
Robert R. Motta • Joliet, Illinois • POTUS 48
www.ideastoinvent.com • Campaign Email: info@votemotta2028.com
Official Campaign Image • Professional Portrait by Campaign Photographer • Paid for by Robert R. Motta for President
Robert R. Motta for POTUS 48 | Joliet, Illinois

FROM HELL ON EARTH
TO HEAVEN FOR AMERICA

Robert R. Motta for President 48
Joliet, Illinois • Real Solutions • No More Failed Politicians

JOIN OUR MOVEMENT www.ideastoinvent.com

Approved by Robert R. Motta • Paid for by Robert R. Motta for President

OFFICIAL CAMPAIGN STATEMENT

For Immediate Release • April 15, 2026

Robert R. Motta for President 48

To All American Voters – Any Age, Any Background

Fellow Americans,

Our nation has endured a man-made Hell on Earth. Failed policies from both parties have flooded our streets with fentanyl, overwhelmed our communities with unvetted mass immigration, turned sanctuary cities into safe havens for cartels, and kept the full truth about the Epstein network hidden.

Current polls (YouGov & Harvard-Harris, April 2026) show the same insiders still leading. America deserves better.

The Top 5 Contenders for POTUS 48 and Their Failures:

1. JD Vance (Republican Frontrunner)

Part of the Trump administration that signed the Epstein Transparency Act but delivered heavy redactions and delays. Inherited millions of unvetted entries including Chinese nationals — sleeper cell risks remain.

2. Gavin Newsom (Democratic Frontrunner)

Turned California into a sanctuary state model that fueled the national border crisis and fentanyl explosion.

3. Kamala Harris

Claimed “the border is secure” while millions crossed and over 72,000 Americans died from fentanyl in 2023 alone (CDC). Used military planes to fly in unvetted migrants.

4. Marco Rubio

Long history of establishment immigration compromises that left borders weak.

5. Ron DeSantis

Strong in Florida but offered no comprehensive national plan to fully expose the Epstein files, protect Epstein survivors, or aggressively prosecute all forms of human trafficking.

My Vision – Heaven for America

  • Secure Borders: End sanctuary cities. Deport criminal illegal immigrants. No more military planes flying in unvetted masses.
  • Full Epstein Truth & Justice: Complete, unredacted release of all files on Day One. Full protection for Epstein survivors and aggressive prosecution of anyone involved.
  • End All Human Trafficking: I will prosecute every form of human trafficking — Epstein-related or otherwise — with the full force of the federal government. No exceptions. No elite protection.
  • Inventors First: Fair deal for every American inventor — any age, no DEI. Fast-track breakthroughs like Malcolm Bendall’s Thunderstorm Generator (cars that run on water).
  • Pro-Family, Pro-America: Tax relief for working families, crush the fentanyl cartels, American energy dominance.

Visit my innovation platform: www.ideastoinvent.com

I ask for your vote. Reject the same failed system. Choose real change.

From Hell on Earth to Heaven for America.
Vote Robert R. Motta for President 48

Robert R. Motta
Candidate for President of the United States
Joliet, Illinois

JOIN THE MOVEMENT

Stay updated with campaign news and inventor breakthroughs

Campaign Email: info@votemotta2028.com

Robert R. Motta for President 48 • Joliet, Illinois

Paid for by Robert R. Motta for President • Not authorized by any other candidate

www.ideastoinvent.com • Supporting American Inventors & Breakthrough Technology

© 2026 Robert R. Motta for President

Robert R. Motta for POTUS 48 | From Hell on Earth to Heaven

FROM HELL ON EARTH
TO HEAVEN FOR AMERICA

Robert R. Motta for President 48
Past presidents failed us. Open borders. Epstein cover-ups. Fentanyl deaths. Sanctuary cities. Chinese sleeper cells. Enough.

VOTE ROBERT R. MOTTA FOR HEAVEN → VISIT www.ideastoinvent.com

Paid for by Robert R. Motta for President • Shorewood, Illinois

Robert R. Motta for POTUS 48

HELL ON EARTH TODAY – CREATED BY PAST PRESIDENTS

My opinion, Robert R. Motta: Both parties failed America. Biden-Harris opened the floodgates. Trump’s team covered up Epstein. Sanctuary cities are killing our kids with fentanyl. Chinese and other immigrants are pouring in – future sleeper cells are coming. Other countries took in millions too, but Biden used military planes to accelerate the chaos.

Kamala Harris: “The Border Is Secure”

"The border is secure... We have a secure border in that that is a priority for any nation." – Kamala Harris, Sept 2022

While she said this, millions crossed illegally. Record encounters. Fentanyl poured in. Hell on Earth.

Source: Fox News & NBC Meet the Press

Trump Epstein Admin: Failures to Release Files + Clear Conflict of Interest

Trump’s own DOJ and lawyers stonewalled full release of Epstein files in 2025 – missing the legal deadline, heavy redactions, and Trump’s name appears in them. His administration violated the Epstein Files Transparency Act. Classic conflict of interest.

Source: The Guardian, Dec 19, 2025 & DOJ reports

Sanctuary Cities + Fentanyl Deaths = American Blood on the Streets

72,776+

Fentanyl overdose deaths in 2023 alone (peak crisis under Biden-Harris). Over 100,000 total drug ODs at height. Sanctuary cities block ICE cooperation – protecting cartels, not citizens.

Source: CDC National Vital Statistics & CDC Data Brief 2026

China & Millions More – Sleeper Cells Coming

Biden flew migrants on military planes and chartered flights. Millions entered. Other countries took in millions too (Canada 800k+ in early 2025, Australia 300k+ net, Europe millions). But America got the worst: unvetted Chinese nationals, future sleeper cells, gangs, and death.

Source: ABS Overseas Migration 2025, Canadian data, OECD International Migration Outlook 2025

This is Hell on Earth. Past presidents caused it. Robert R. Motta ends it.

EPSTEIN TRUTH – NO MORE COVER-UPS

Trump’s administration failed to release ALL Epstein files despite signing the Transparency Act. Redactions. Delays. His lawyers have clear conflicts. Biden did nothing. Only Robert R. Motta demands FULL disclosure – no elite protection.

Epstein files

“The American people deserve the full truth. No more secrets from the powerful.” – Robert R. Motta

MY POLICIES: PRO-AMERICA, PRO-FAMILY, PRO-INVENTOR

INVENTORS OF ANY AGE GET A FAIR DEAL

No DEI quotas. No discrimination. Fair shot for every American inventor – young, old, any background. Same rules for all. Genius has no age limit.

Example: Malcolm Bendall’s Thunderstorm Generator – cars that run on water using plasmoid atomic energy. Backed by real testing. I will fast-track breakthroughs like this.

Source: Thunderstorm Generator PDF & independent demonstrations

SECURE BORDERS • DEPORT CRIMINALS • END SANCTUARY CHAOS

Zero tolerance. No more military planes flying in unvetted masses. Protect American families first.

PRO-AMERICA & PRO-FAMILY

Tax cuts for working families. American energy independence. No more fentanyl killing our kids. Strong families build strong nations.

Visit my invention hub: www.ideastoinvent.com

VOTE ROBERT R. MOTTA FOR HEAVEN

I am not a politician. I am an American inventor and patriot who sees the Hell on Earth – and I will deliver Heaven.

Border security

SECURE BORDERS

American family

PRO-FAMILY AMERICA

Inventor innovation

INVENTORS WIN

JOIN THE MOVEMENT – WWW.IDEASTOINVENT.COM

Robert R. Motta • POTUS 48 • Shorewood, Illinois
Paid for by the People, for the People. Not special interests.

© 2026 Robert R. Motta for President • All facts cited from public sources including CDC, DOJ, Fox News, Guardian, OECD, ABS, and inventor documentation.

This is my opinion and platform. America deserves better than Hell – vote for Heaven.

www.ideastoinvent.com • Cars on water? Real inventors like Malcolm Bendall prove it’s possible. I will make it happen.

🇺🇸 OFFICIAL CAMPAIGN STATEMENT

 

Robert R. Motta for President 2028

Prepared by the Motta 2028 Communications Team
Approved by Robert R. Motta


🇺🇸 A Message to the American People

I am running for President to restore something fundamental:

Fairness, accountability, and trust in our government.

For too long, Americans have watched a system that feels inconsistent—where power can be misused, where waste and fraud persist, and where accountability is not always applied equally.

This campaign stands for a clear principle:

No selective justice. No abuse of power. No tolerance for waste, fraud, or corruption.


⚖️ RESTORING EQUAL JUSTICE & ENDING ABUSE

This is not a partisan issue. Presidents from both parties have taken steps to address government abuse, fraud, and lack of accountability.

My administration will build on that history—and finish the job.


🏛️ BIPARTISAN PRECEDENT FOR ACCOUNTABILITY

🇺🇸 Republican Leadership

Donald Trump

  • Executive actions addressing government “weaponization” and fraud oversight

  • Focus on data-sharing to reduce waste and abuse
    🔗 Learn more: https://www.whitehouse.gov


George W. Bush


George H. W. Bush


Ronald Reagan


Richard Nixon


🇺🇸 Democratic Leadership

Joe Biden


Barack Obama


Bill Clinton


Jimmy Carter


Lyndon B. Johnson


🧠 WHAT THIS MEANS FOR YOU

This history proves something important:

Both parties have recognized the problem—but no one has fully solved it.

That is where my administration comes in.


📋 MY PLAN TO FINISH THE JOB

🔍 End Government Abuse & Restore Trust

  • Clear enforcement standards across all federal agencies

  • No politically selective investigations or prosecutions


💰 Eliminate Waste, Fraud & Abuse

  • Modern audit systems across government

  • Real-time fraud detection and accountability measures


🛡️ Strengthen Oversight

  • Expand Inspector General authority and protections

  • Protect whistleblowers who expose wrongdoing


🏛️ Pentagon Accountability

  • Full financial transparency for the Department of Defense

  • Push for a clean audit standard and public reporting

📌 Latest audit: Department of Defense audit released November 2024
🔗 Learn more: https://www.defense.gov


🧾 Transparency & Public Access

  • Expand lawful declassification where possible

  • Strengthen public access to government records


⚖️ Protect the Constitution

  • Respect judicial independence

  • Uphold due process for every American


🇺🇸 PRESIDENTIAL RESPONSIBILITY

As President, I will:

  • Protect the American people

  • Enforce the law fairly

  • Ensure government works for citizens—not against them

  • Never allow power to be used as a political weapon


📣 STATEMENT FROM ROBERT R. MOTTA

“Americans deserve a government they can trust.

Leaders from both parties have tried to address waste, fraud, and abuse—but the system is still broken.

I will finish the job.

We will restore fairness, enforce accountability, and make government work for the people again.

America First means justice, transparency, and trust—here at home.”


🌐 GET INVOLVED

🇺🇸 www.VoteMotta2028.com
📧 info@votemotta2028.com (available anytime, 24/7)
💡 www.IdeasToInvent.com

🇺🇸 OFFICIAL CAMPAIGN STATEMENT

Robert R. Motta for President 2028

Prepared by the Motta 2028 Communications Team
Approved by Robert R. Motta


🇺🇸 A Message to the American People

Robert R. Motta is running for President with a clear commitment:

Restore fairness, protect families, and end the abuse of power in our legal and government systems.

Across this country, too many Americans feel that the system is no longer working for them. When legal processes, government authority, or taxpayer-funded institutions are used selectively, abusively, or without accountability, the public loses trust.

This campaign calls that what it is:

Lawfare — and it must end.


⚖️ ENDING LAWFARE & RESTORING EQUAL JUSTICE

Robert R. Motta believes in a simple principle:

Equal justice under the law—applied fairly, consistently, and transparently.

His administration will stand for:

  • ❌ No politically selective enforcement

  • ❌ No abusive or weaponized litigation

  • ❌ No bureaucratic cover-ups

  • ❌ No tolerance for waste, fraud, or abuse

At the same time:

  • 📜 Due process will be protected

  • ⚖️ Judicial independence will be respected

  • 🇺🇸 Constitutional limits on executive power will be upheld

A President cannot and should not control the courts—but a President can ensure the system operates fairly and lawfully.


🛡️ PROTECTING AMERICAN FAMILIES

This campaign recognizes that legal and financial system failures can have devastating real-world consequences.

Robert R. Motta’s policies will focus on protecting everyday Americans:

🏛️ Family Court Reform

  • Transparent rulings in divorce and child support cases

  • Independent review and audit mechanisms

  • Protections against wrongful financial penalties and abuse

The legal system must protect families—not break them.


💰 Inheritance & Elder Protection

  • Strong oversight of estate and inheritance processes

  • Protection for seniors from financial exploitation

  • Safeguards for caregivers and rightful heirs

Family wealth should not be lost through manipulation or lack of transparency.


🛡️ Government Accountability

  • Independent review boards for misconduct

  • Compensation standards for wrongful property damage or seizure

  • Real consequences for abuse of authority

If government fails the people, it must answer to the people.


🧠 BUILDING ON BIPARTISAN REFORMS

This campaign recognizes that past presidents from both parties have taken steps toward addressing these issues:

  • Efforts to reduce overcriminalization and improve fairness in enforcement

  • Criminal justice reforms focused on sentencing and reentry

  • Anti-fraud initiatives and stronger internal controls

  • Inspector General protections and oversight improvements

However, these efforts remain incomplete.

The next step is a full, unified reform agenda that restores trust across the entire system.


📋 POLICY PRIORITIES

A Motta Administration will implement:

  • 📜 Clear, published enforcement standards to prevent selective prosecution

  • 🔍 Stronger internal controls to prevent fraud and abuse

  • 🚨 Protections for whistleblowers and reporting of misconduct

  • ⚖️ Accountability for abusive litigation practices

  • 🏛️ Transparency in judicial conduct processes

  • 🇺🇸 Fair and balanced criminal justice reform


🧭 PRESIDENTIAL RESPONSIBILITY

Robert R. Motta believes the role of President is clear:

  • Protect the American people

  • Uphold the Constitution

  • Ensure government operates with integrity

  • Never allow power to be used as a political weapon


📣 STATEMENT FROM ROBERT R. MOTTA

“I have seen what happens when systems fail—when legal, financial, and institutional protections break down for everyday Americans.

That is why I am running for President.

We will restore fairness, accountability, and trust in our system.

America First means protecting our people—not just from threats abroad, but from failures here at home.

And under my leadership, the law will work for the people again.”


🌐 GET INVOLVED

🇺🇸 www.VoteMotta2028.com
📧 info@votemotta2028.com (available anytime, 24/7)
💡 www.IdeasToInvent.com

🇺🇸 OFFICIAL CAMPAIGN STATEMENT

Robert R. Motta for President 2028

Prepared by the Motta 2028 Communications Team
Approved by Robert R. Motta


🇺🇸 A Message to the American People

I am running for President of the United States with a clear mission:

🇺🇸 America First — With Truth, Strength, and Accountability.

The role of the President is not to create fear—but to protect the American people using facts, sound judgment, and the Constitution.


🛡️ NATIONAL SECURITY & WAR POLICY

No More Endless Wars. 🕊️

  • 🇺🇸 Military force will only be used when absolutely necessary

  • 📜 All actions will follow the Constitution and Congressional authority

  • 🔍 Decisions will be based on verified intelligence—not political pressure

Strength means knowing when NOT to go to war.


🤝 FOREIGN POLICY — AMERICA FIRST

  • 🇺🇸 Every alliance must serve American interests

  • 🌍 We support our allies—but without blind commitments

  • ⚖️ No foreign influence will override the will of the American people

Respect our allies. Protect our sovereignty.


🧠 TRUTH & INTELLIGENCE

  • 🔍 Honest, accountable intelligence agencies

  • 🗣️ Transparent communication with the public

  • ❌ No fear-based messaging to manipulate Americans

The American people deserve truth—not narratives.


🎖️ TROOPS & VETERANS

  • 🏠 Bring troops home responsibly

  • ❤️ Expand care for veterans and their families

  • 🇺🇸 Never risk American lives without clear purpose

If we send our troops, we stand by them—for life.


⚖️ ACCOUNTABILITY & RULE OF LAW

  • 📜 No one is above the law

  • 🔎 Investigations must be evidence-based and transparent

  • 🏛️ Justice will follow due process—not politics

Accountability is the foundation of democracy.


🧭 PRESIDENTIAL RESPONSIBILITY (PURVIEW)

As President, my responsibility will be to:

  • 🛡️ Protect the American people

  • 🎖️ Oversee the military responsibly

  • 🧠 Make decisions based on real intelligence

  • 📜 Uphold the Constitution at all times

Power must be used carefully, lawfully, and in service to the people.


🇺🇸 CAMPAIGN COMMITMENT

  • 🤝 Unite Americans—not divide them

  • 🧠 Lead with facts—not fear

  • 🇺🇸 Put American citizens first—always


📣 STATEMENT FROM ROBERT R. MOTTA

“I am running for President to restore trust, accountability, and common sense to our government.

🇺🇸 America First means protecting our people with truth—not fear.

We will end unnecessary wars, strengthen our nation at home, and ensure our leaders answer to the American people.

Together, we move forward—stronger, smarter, and united.”


🌐 GET INVOLVED

🇺🇸 www.VoteMotta2028.com
💡 www.IdeasToInvent.com
📧 info@votemotta2028.com (available anytime, 24/7)

“America First Means No Unnecessary Wars and Full Accountability.”

🇺🇸 Official Campaign Statement

Robert R. Motta for President 2028

Prepared by the Motta 2028 Communications Team
Approved by Robert R. Motta


A Message to the American People

Robert R. Motta is running for President with a clear and principled belief:

America First means truth, restraint, and accountability.

The role of the President is to protect the American people using facts, sound judgment, and lawful authority—not fear, speculation, or political pressure.


🇺🇸 Our Core Principles

1. No Unnecessary Wars

Robert Motta believes that no President should commit American forces to conflict without:

  • Clear, verified evidence

  • Proper authorization from Congress

  • A defined plan to protect American lives

This reflects the intent of the War Powers Resolution, which ensures that decisions about war are accountable to the American people.


2. America First Foreign Policy

All international relationships—including with allies such as Israel—must:

  • Serve the interests of the United States

  • Be transparent to the public

  • Remain free from undue influence

America’s policies will be guided by American security and sovereignty first.


3. Truth Over Fear

The Motta campaign stands for:

  • Honest communication with the public

  • Reliable and accountable intelligence

  • Decisions based on evidence—not fear-based narratives

Americans deserve clarity, not confusion.


4. Bring Troops Home Responsibly

Robert Motta supports:

  • Ending open-ended conflicts

  • Bringing troops home safely and strategically

  • Expanding care and support for veterans

  • Prioritizing diplomacy before military action


5. Accountability Under the Law

Robert Motta affirms a fundamental American principle:

No one is above the law.

Any leader—past or present—must be held accountable through:

  • Lawful investigations

  • Judicial process

  • Evidence-based prosecution when warranted

This is how the United States has historically addressed national security events, including investigations following the September 11 attacks.


⚖️ Commitment to Responsible Leadership

The Motta campaign is committed to:

  • Respectful, fact-based public discourse

  • Rejecting unverified claims and personal attacks

  • Offering solutions that unite rather than divide

We believe voters deserve serious leadership and credible plans, not noise or speculation.


📣 Campaign Statement from Robert R. Motta

“I am running for President to restore trust, accountability, and common sense to our government.

America First means protecting our people with truth—not fear—and ensuring every major decision is grounded in evidence, law, and responsibility.

We will end unnecessary wars, strengthen our country at home, and make sure our leaders answer to the American people. That is how we move forward—together.”


🌐 Learn More

www.VoteMotta2028.com
www.IdeasToInvent.com

🇺🇸 OFFICIAL STATEMENT — APRIL 15, 2026

Robert R. Motta for President of the United States (2028)


🇺🇸 Today, I Become a Candidate

April 15, 2026 marks a defining moment.

Today, I formally take the next step toward running for President of the United States.

Under federal law, once a candidate raises or spends more than $5,000 toward a campaign, they are required to register with the Federal Election Commission.

I have reached that threshold.

Not through donors.
Not through special interests.

But through my own effort and personal investment in:

  • 🇺🇸 Building the campaign platform

  • 🇺🇸 Creating educational content for the public

  • 🇺🇸 Developing communication tools and media

  • 🇺🇸 Establishing the foundation for a national movement

👉 Today, I begin the process of federal registration as a candidate for President of the United States.


🇺🇸 A Different Kind of Campaign

The American people deserve something better.

Too often, campaigns begin behind closed doors:

  • hidden funding

  • undisclosed strategy

  • decisions made before voters are informed

This campaign will be different.

You will see every step.

Because the way I campaign is the way I will govern:

  • 🇺🇸 transparent

  • 🇺🇸 accountable

  • 🇺🇸 direct to the people


🇺🇸 The Road to 2028 — Step by Step

From today forward, I will document this campaign in real time.

🇺🇸 Step 1 — April 15, 2026

I crossed the federal $5,000 threshold and begin formal candidate registration.


🇺🇸 Step 2 — Federal Filing

I will file all required documentation to officially register:

  • declaration of candidacy

  • formation of a campaign committee

  • entry into the federal reporting system


🇺🇸 Step 3 — Financial Accountability

I will:

  • separate campaign and personal finances

  • track and report spending

  • maintain full transparency

👉 No hidden money
👉 No backroom deals


🇺🇸 Step 4 — Direct Communication

This campaign will speak directly to the American people through:

  • this website

  • email updates

  • video and podcast platforms

Every action will be explained.
Every decision will be shared.


🇺🇸 Step 5 — Build a National Movement

From a single platform, we will grow into:

  • a nationwide campaign

  • a movement built by voters—not insiders


🇺🇸 Step 6 — Ballot Access

We will meet all legal requirements to appear on ballots across the country, and I will keep you informed at every milestone.


🇺🇸 Step 7 — Election 2028

From nomination to Election Day, this campaign will carry forward one mission:

Return government to the American people.


🇺🇸 Why I Am Running

This is not just about one election.

It is about restoring:

  • 🇺🇸 trust in leadership

  • 🇺🇸 accountability in government

  • 🇺🇸 transparency in how power operates

The American system does not fail because of the people.

It fails when:

  • information is hidden

  • decisions are not explained

  • and accountability disappears

That ends here.


🇺🇸 A Commitment to the American People

I am making this commitment today:

From April 15, 2026
to Election Day 2028

I will:

  • 🇺🇸 document this campaign openly

  • 🇺🇸 explain each step clearly

  • 🇺🇸 treat voters as partners—not spectators


🇺🇸 Join This Campaign

This campaign is not built on insiders.

It is built on people who believe:

  • 🇺🇸 transparency matters

  • 🇺🇸 leadership should be accountable

  • 🇺🇸 voters deserve to be informed

👉 To join:

📧 Email: info@votemotta2028.com

(Your device will open your email—send a message to receive updates)


🇺🇸 From Day One to the White House

This is Day One.

Not of power—
but of responsibility.

Not of promises—
but of action.

I am not asking for blind trust.

I am asking you to:

  • 🇺🇸 watch

  • 🇺🇸 learn

  • 🇺🇸 participate

Because together, we do more than run a campaign.

We restore how leadership works in the United States of America.

🇺🇸 Robert R. Motta — Border Security Plan

🇺🇸 Secure Borders. Smart Technology. Real Results.


🇺🇸 The Reality at Our Border

Border states like Texas are carrying the burden of a system that is not working.

Communities are dealing with:

  • 🇺🇸 strain on law enforcement and resources

  • 🇺🇸 increased pressure on infrastructure

  • 🇺🇸 risks tied to trafficking and smuggling networks

At the same time, outdated systems are failing to keep up with modern threats.

This is not just a policy failure.
It is a technology failure.


🇺🇸 What I Will Do — Day One

On Day One as President, I will take immediate action:

1. 🚁 Deploy Advanced Drone Surveillance

  • Expand use of border drones for real-time monitoring

  • Cover remote areas where agents cannot be everywhere

  • Track movement patterns, not just individual crossings

👉 Result:

  • faster response

  • better coordination

  • fewer blind spots


2. 🧠 Implement AI Border Intelligence Systems

  • Use AI to analyze movement, routes, and patterns

  • Identify:

    • trafficking networks

    • cartel routes

    • repeat crossing patterns

👉 This is how modern security works:
predict, not just react


3. 🛰️ Integrate Smart Sensor Networks

  • Ground sensors + aerial systems + satellite data

  • Unified into one system for agents

👉 Result:

  • real-time situational awareness

  • faster decisions on the ground


4. ⚖️ Coordinate with Border States

  • Direct partnership with states like Texas

  • Federal + state integration (not conflict)

👉 Border states should not be left alone:
They should be supported.


5. 🚨 Target Criminal Networks First

  • Focus enforcement on:

    • traffickers

    • smugglers

    • organized crime

👉 Priority:
protect people, stop exploitation


🇺🇸 Why Technology Matters

Cartels and smuggling networks already use:

  • drones

  • encrypted communication

  • advanced logistics

👉 Government must match and exceed that capability


🇺🇸 My Advantage — Builder, Not Just Politician

Through my work and platforms like:

👉 www.ideastoinvent.com

I understand:

  • innovation

  • prototyping

  • simulation

  • applying AI to real-world systems


🇺🇸 The Future of Border Security

This is not just about today.

It’s about building:

  • 🇺🇸 AI-assisted defense systems

  • 🇺🇸 predictive security models

  • 🇺🇸 integrated national protection networks

👉 A modern border for a modern world


🇺🇸 The Cost of Doing Nothing

When systems fail:

  • taxpayers pay more

  • communities face more pressure

  • criminals gain advantage

👉 Fixing the system is not just security—
it is fiscal responsibility


🇺🇸 Why Elect Robert R. Motta

Because this campaign offers:

  • 🇺🇸 forward-thinking leadership

  • 🇺🇸 real technology solutions

  • 🇺🇸 transparency and accountability

  • 🇺🇸 action starting Day One


🇺🇸 Core Message

“We will secure the border using the best tools available—
not just more promises, but better systems.”


🔥 Short Version (For Flyers / Social)

🇺🇸 Secure the Border. Use Smart Technology. Protect Americans.

  • AI-driven border monitoring

  • Drone surveillance in real time

  • Partnership with border states

  • Target trafficking and cartels

👉 Modern problems need modern solutions.

🇺🇸 OFFICIAL CAMPAIGN STATEMENT

Robert R. Motta for President of the United States (2028)


🇺🇸 Restoring Trust, Transparency, and Equal Justice

The American people deserve a government that treats every citizen fairly, equally, and without political bias.

Recent reporting and public debate have raised serious questions about how federal agencies—such as the Department of Justice and other institutions—have been used in recent years.

Americans across the country are asking:

  • 🇺🇸 Are laws being enforced equally?

  • 🇺🇸 Are citizens being treated fairly regardless of beliefs?

  • 🇺🇸 Is government operating transparently—or selectively?

These are not partisan questions.

These are American questions.


🇺🇸 My Commitment to the American People

As a candidate for President, I make this commitment clearly:

Government must never be used—
or appear to be used—
to target Americans based on their beliefs, values, or political views.


🇺🇸 What I Will Do as President (Day One)

On Day One in office, I will:

  1. ⚖️ Ensure Equal Enforcement of the Law
    Every American will be treated the same under the law—no exceptions.

  2. 🔍 Increase Transparency in Federal Agencies
    Clear reporting, oversight, and accountability in DOJ and all federal actions.

  3. 🧾 Strengthen Oversight and Review Processes
    Independent review where questions of fairness or bias arise.

  4. 🇺🇸 Protect Constitutional Rights for All Americans
    Freedom of speech, belief, and peaceful expression will be safeguarded.


📬 A Campaign Built on Daily Transparency

This campaign will not operate behind closed doors.

From today through Election Day 2028—and into the Oval Office—
I will keep the American people informed:

  • 🇺🇸 What actions are being taken

  • 🇺🇸 What decisions are being made

  • 🇺🇸 What comes next

👉 Every major step will be:

  • explained

  • documented

  • shared with voters


🇺🇸 Why This Matters

Trust in government is not automatic.

It must be earned—
through honesty, consistency, and accountability.

When Americans lose trust:

  • institutions weaken

  • division grows

  • confidence disappears

Restoring trust is not optional—it is essential.


🇺🇸 A New Standard of Leadership

This campaign is about setting a new standard:

  • 🇺🇸 transparent leadership

  • 🇺🇸 equal justice

  • 🇺🇸 accountability to the people

Not just promises—
but visible actions, every step of the way.


📧 Stay Informed — Join the Campaign

This campaign will communicate directly with the American people.

👉 To receive updates:

📧 info@votemotta2028.com

(Your device will open your email—send a message to join)


🇺🇸 Final Statement

I am not asking for blind trust.

I am asking you to:

  • 🇺🇸 watch

  • 🇺🇸 stay informed

  • 🇺🇸 hold leadership accountable

Because together, we will not just run a campaign—

We will restore how government works for the American people.


Robert R. Motta
Candidate for President of the United States
2028 🇺🇸

🇺🇸 OFFICIAL CAMPAIGN STATEMENT

Robert R. Motta for President of the United States (2028)


🇺🇸 The Truth About Border Security, Taxpayer Impact, and Accountability

The American people deserve clear facts, honest leadership, and a government that puts citizens first.

This statement outlines the reality facing our country—based on publicly reported data—and why this campaign is committed to restoring order, protecting taxpayers, and defending American communities.


🇺🇸 What the Data Shows

According to publicly reported government and research data:

  • 🇺🇸 6 million+ encounters at or between ports of entry from January 2021 through September 2023

  • 🇺🇸 3,095,577 individuals had no confirmed departure from the United States as of September 30, 2023

  • 🇺🇸 1,323,264 individuals with final orders of removal remained in the country as of December 10, 2023

👉 Reported by: House Judiciary Committee


💸 The Cost to Taxpayers

The financial impact on American taxpayers is significant:

  • 💸 $150.7 billion estimated annual cost in one major fiscal study

  • 💸 Up to $451 billion annually estimated when broader costs are included (housing, healthcare, education, law enforcement)

👉 Reported by: FAIR study and House Homeland Security analysis


🚨 The Human Impact

This is not just a policy issue—it is a human one.

  • 🚨 Smuggling and trafficking routes have resulted in documented deaths and injuries

  • 🚨 Migrants face dangerous conditions during illegal crossings

  • 🚨 Criminal networks exploit weak enforcement systems

👉 Reported by investigative journalism and anti-trafficking research organizations


🇺🇸 Why This Matters

These numbers represent more than statistics:

  • 🇺🇸 Pressure on communities

  • 🇺🇸 Strain on public services

  • 🇺🇸 Risks to public safety

  • 🇺🇸 Human lives placed in danger

The American people deserve leadership that recognizes these realities and acts responsibly.


🇺🇸 My Commitment

As a candidate for President of the United States, I am committed to:

  • 🇺🇸 Securing the border and restoring order

  • 🇺🇸 Protecting taxpayer resources

  • 🇺🇸 Combating trafficking and criminal networks

  • 🇺🇸 Supporting safe, lawful immigration

  • 🇺🇸 Providing transparency and accountability to the public


🇺🇸 A Campaign Built on Truth

This campaign will not rely on slogans alone.

It will:

  • 🇺🇸 present facts clearly

  • 🇺🇸 cite sources openly

  • 🇺🇸 explain policies directly to voters

Because trust is not demanded—it is earned.


🇺🇸 Join This Campaign

If you believe in:

  • 🇺🇸 secure borders

  • 🇺🇸 honest leadership

  • 🇺🇸 accountability in government

👉 Join the campaign and stay informed:

📧 info@votemotta2028.com

(Your device will open your email—send a message to receive updates)


🇺🇸 Final Statement

America is strongest when it is:

  • 🇺🇸 secure

  • 🇺🇸 accountable

  • 🇺🇸 truthful

This campaign is about restoring those principles.

Robert R. Motta
Candidate for President of the United States
2028 🇺🇸

Robert R. Motta for President 2028
Robert R. Motta for President 2028

Restore Truth. Restore Trust. Restore America.

America does not have a people problem. It has a system problem: hidden influence, unequal justice, and a government that too often protects insiders before it protects victims.

  • End hidden influence and dark-access politics
  • Restore equal justice and a victim-first system
  • Break the revolving door between public office and private reward
  • Demand transparency where past administrations failed survivors

The Core Message

For too long, Americans have been told to trust a system that does not feel accountable. Families see one set of rules for ordinary people and another for the wealthy, the connected, and the politically protected.

I am running to expose hidden influence, restore equal justice, and put voters ahead of insider networks.

Why I’m Running

The Epstein scandal exposed more than one criminal case. It exposed institutional failures, elite access, and a justice system that too often moved too slowly for survivors.

My administration will not protect a broken system. It will protect the people the system failed.

Campaign Priorities

1. End Hidden Influence

Bring sunlight to policy-shaping networks that operate between government, money, and private power.

  • Transparent disclosure of major influence networks and funding flows
  • Public visibility into policy-shaping organizations
  • No more back-channel government-by-proxy

2. Equal Justice for All

No special treatment for the wealthy, the well-connected, or politically protected insiders.

  • Victim-first justice
  • Review of major institutional failures
  • Independent accountability where trust was broken

3. Campaign Finance Reform

Voters deserve to know who funds campaigns and what access follows the money.

  • Full transparency for large donors and political money flows
  • Track donor access after elections
  • Ban undisclosed influence arrangements

4. Break the Revolving Door

Public office should not be a stepping stone to private reward negotiated behind closed doors.

  • No secret job negotiations while in office
  • Cooling-off periods before lobbying and influence roles
  • End favor trading between office and private gain

5. Survivor-First Accountability

Past administrations let survivors down through secrecy, delay, and avoidable failures.

  • Protect survivor privacy in records releases
  • Faster access to victim services and case updates
  • Transparent review of past prosecutorial failures

6. Restore Government Accountability

Open records, stronger whistleblower protections, and a government that answers to citizens.

  • Independent investigations where needed
  • Open-record reforms
  • Whistleblower protection

Policy Basis

These priorities are grounded in the documented failures surrounding the Epstein case and the legal rights of crime victims.

  1. The federal Crime Victims’ Rights Act and court rulings recognizing failures to notify victims during the 2007 non-prosecution agreement.
  2. DOJ review findings criticizing the handling of the earlier federal Epstein investigation.
  3. Recent controversy over DOJ file releases, redactions, and exposure of victim identities.
  4. Congressional scrutiny of former officials over delays and handling failures.

Add your final citation links here once you publish the site or move this copy into a full policy page.

Transcript

 
Video circulating online shows police votes with lights activated heading toward Little St. James Island, the private island where Jeffrey Epstein had
8 seconds
his estate. Joining us now, executive director for the Foundation for Freedom Online, Mike Benz. Mike, what should we make of these law enforcement boats around Epstein Island? Who knows?
19 seconds
There's obviously so many unsettled issues and seemingly unsolved crimes. I would prefer to see helicopters flying
27 seconds
over Zoro Ranch, frankly, than boats patrolling the island. The fact is,
31 seconds
between the financial crimes, the co-conspirators and whatever Epstein was evidently destroying with sulfuric acid
39 seconds
or whatever he was ordering by the gallons, could be almost anything at this point. We talked to the current owner of Zoro Ranch. He says all the
47 seconds
investigations have been done and he doesn't believe there are any bodies buried or any other evidence out there on the ranch. What what makes you think the the opposite may be true?
56 seconds
That's likely true. I'm sure at this point in time, 7 years after the 2019 arrest, the thing that was so strange about it was that the site was not I've
1 minute, 6 seconds
never heard of that in a criminal investigation where you're trying to sweep up all the evidence. You simply leave an entire not just residence, but
1 minute, 13 seconds
a vast estate unrated. I've just never heard of that except in the Epstein case that they knew Epstein owned that property. They didn't search it. I'm sure 7 years of international headlines,
1 minute, 25 seconds
whatever evidence was there, is is long gone. I I meant more in the sense that I think that it's shameful that there
1 minute, 33 seconds
appears to have had been a cover up of that property in its entirety. At this stage of the game, do you see any evidence that there are any open
1 minute, 41 seconds
investigations at this point as to kind of the underlying conduct or are the investigations we we're seeing globally
1 minute, 48 seconds
more about the information that Epstein received from some of these government and business leaders?
1 minute, 56 seconds
I'm heartened to see that it appears that James Comr in in House oversight appears to be leading some sort of investigation into Epstein's
2 minutes, 4 seconds
intelligence ties. That to me has been the longstanding big million-dollar question hanging over
2 minutes, 12 seconds
all of this, which is the appearance of protection because of ties to either domestic or foreign intelligence, likely
2 minutes, 20 seconds
in my opinion, both. This is something that I've been saying for a long time could be compelled by a bill. You could simply copy. You could do the same thing
2 minutes, 27 seconds
you did on the DOJ files, but do it for the intelligence community, for the CIA,
2 minutes, 32 seconds
for the defense intelligence uh agencies for the NSA. What would be the type of documents that you think would be housed in those repositories that would be illustrative?
2 minutes, 42 seconds
I think you would find Epstein as a logistics hub. I think that you would find Epstein having a relationship dating back likely to the early 1980s,
2 minutes, 52 seconds
possibly the late 1970s. But in my view,
2 minutes, 55 seconds
certainly by the 1990s, I think that it's frankly almost impossible for him to at least not there not to at least have been some dossier compiled, if
3 minutes, 4 seconds
nothing else than for counterintelligence purposes. I don't think it's an accident that Epstein was given the State Department property, the five-story mansion in New York City that
3 minutes, 13 seconds
was seized from Iran and given solely and exclusively to Jeffrey Epste. I don't think it's an accident that Jeffrey Epstein leased it out to the
3 minutes, 21 seconds
drug lawyer for the pizza connection and French Connection drug cases, which in my view appear to have had CIA involvement. I don't think it's an
3 minutes, 29 seconds
accident, frankly, that Jeffrey Epste was visiting the White House 17 times while he had that State Department lease. I don't think it's an accident
3 minutes, 37 seconds
that Jeffrey Epstein was handling Adnan Kosogi's money while Adnan Kosigible was the CIA middleman between the US and
3 minutes, 44 seconds
Israel during Iran Contra. I don't think it's an accident that Jeffrey Epstein was handling money for the CIA's bank
3 minutes, 51 seconds
BCCI at Bear Sterns. I don't think it's an accident that Jeffrey Epste in 1982 was living with Stanley Potinger, the
3 minutes, 58 seconds
mop-up lawyer for the CIA during everything from the Watergate scandals to everything after. I don't think it's an accident that Jeffrey Epstein was in
4 minutes, 7 seconds
1982 flying back and forth to London for the British arms dealer working with the CIA's bank. I don't think any of that's an accident. I don't think it's an accident. The stuff is so delicious.
4 minutes, 17 seconds
Yeah, I saw your commentary on this and wanted to ask you about it. I'm glad you explained it. The US government seized a big-time condo in New York from the
4 minutes, 25 seconds
Iranians, leases it out to Epstein, and then has to evict Epstein as the consequence of of him subleasasing it
4 minutes, 32 seconds
improperly. That is really odd when we see what's going on in in Iran today, don't you think?
4 minutes, 40 seconds
For 7 years, he had that from 1992 to 1999. And it was in 1999 as soon as the lease terminated, Jeffrey Epstein foyed
4 minutes, 47 seconds
the CIA for any open and acknowledged agency links between him and the CIA,
4 minutes, 52 seconds
which is totally normal. Like people regularly do that. I I'm sure you have foyed the CIA for all the records they have about your dealings with them,
4 minutes, 59 seconds
right, Mike?
5 minutes
Well, I actually understand why he would do that because even if he was not working at CIA, and I doubt that he was,
5 minutes, 8 seconds
I think that someone on the edge like that, you would not engage as some sort of handler or case officer or the like.
5 minutes, 15 seconds
I think this is a logistical hub. There are many, many there's more of them,
5 minutes, 20 seconds
frankly, than there are the 2011 human intelligence personality file types who are officially with it. And I think he probably was unsure whether he would be
5 minutes, 29 seconds
classified as being a open CIA contact or whether what he was doing was strictly confidential. I think he may
5 minutes, 36 seconds
have foyed the CIA because he knew that he was working with the CIA, but he didn't know if the CIA considered it to be some sort of classified thing. So he
5 minutes, 44 seconds
was probably as curious as everybody else was.
5 minutes, 47 seconds
It's kind of a status of the relationship check with the CIA via the FOYA process, I guess,
5 minutes, 53 seconds
right? Are we official or are we in a situation? Yeah, exact. It's complicated. Um,
5 minutes, 58 seconds
people say no accountability uh around a lot of this conduct, but we have seen royals stripped of titles, wealthy Arabs
6 minutes, 5 seconds
unmasked, ambassadors recalled. We've seen stocks tumble if their executives had mentions in in the Epstein files.
6 minutes, 13 seconds
What are you watching for next in in the accountability pipeline?
6 minutes, 16 seconds
I'm waiting to see what Congress does as its next salvo. I recall seeing that we were still set to receive I think something like 50,000 new documents.
6 minutes, 26 seconds
They said by end of weeks. So I doubt that's maybe the Iran war is has forestalled that. But the the fact is is there are many unexplained questions and
6 minutes, 34 seconds
there's a question of what enforcement action Congress is going to take on the back of it. I I find it very strange for example that Gla Maxwell was asked as
6 minutes, 43 seconds
asked to be on the 9/11 shadow commission. Ahoud Barack was the the president of Israel at at the the prime minister of Israel at the time of this
6 minutes, 51 seconds
and the entire 911 all the documents from 1999 to 2001 there's a gaping hole in the records that have been disclosed.
7 minutes
We know that about 3 million of these have not been disclosed. How many of those were between 1999 and 2001? When Speaker Johnson referred to there being
7 minutes, 8 seconds
national security reasons for not disclosing various Epstein files, could that relate to to 9/11? Frankly, I I
7 minutes, 16 seconds
think that's one of these details that has troubled me very deeply given the Middle East politics that were involved in in US foreign policy post 911 that
7 minutes, 25 seconds
were so intimately involved in Epstein's own network and that frankly lives on to some extent in the Epstein activity really dark and
7 minutes, 33 seconds
really troubling regarding the story it would tell. Mike Benz, executive director for the Foundation for Freedom Online. Thanks as always for stopping in.
Sync to video time

Transcript

That's really your new role in New York is you walk around and you get you get uh your picture taken by Gossip
6 seconds
magazines. So, here's Shaq uh getting her picture taken as she's walking around uh New York. Did we say this is
15 seconds
what it was? People say, "Oh, you're just you're just saying that now." No,
18 seconds
no. I'm sorry. We wrote about this a long time ago. Uh the truth about Jeff Epstein part one. There's a whole series I wrote about this again. Underage girls
28 seconds
again. and Stan Pottinger doing the extortion of the marks, right? We also talked about how they went into
36 seconds
so there's a whole series out there, 13 14 series with with all the receipts. We also talked about how Barack with his
44 seconds
companies and again these Israel pervasive surveillance investments like Paragon software then you had also uh
52 seconds
carbon uh carbonite uh uh carbine excuse me and graphite. all these investments
59 seconds
you take the what Yehud Barack did in the uh security for Israel and basically that became our DHS.
1 minute, 9 seconds
So what Hud Barack was doing before 9/11, this is the reason why 9/11 happens, right, is get Americans to say
1 minute, 17 seconds
we need Israeli type security. And indeed they brought in a lot of Israeli security people uh with Greg Carr and
1 minute, 23 seconds
the uh 80 different couples of Israeli art students uh compromising all the sheriff's offices and all the big city
1 minute, 31 seconds
police departments after 911. But we'll get to that later. But my point here is DHS was formed in a Hood Barack's image
1 minute, 40 seconds
and Jeff Epstein was the chief purveyor of those investment opportunities on Msad Island. This is so important to
1 minute, 48 seconds
understand about Jeff Epstein's involvement of 911 and why it makes so much sense he was involved in 911.
1 minute, 53 seconds
Because if you don't have 911 happen, if you don't have Saudi passports for the passengers and it doesn't hit everybody,
2 minutes, 2 seconds
doesn't hit buildings in New York in a big way, nobody wants the Israeli software. Nobody wants your software.
2 minutes, 8 seconds
Once you have terrorism now on the front burner of everybody, now your terrorism software everybody wants. And then you
2 minutes, 16 seconds
install Cherto here. Tom Ridge was the first frontman, but Cherto was the real uh person at And of course, Cher is at
2 minutes, 25 seconds
Carbine as well. We've been talking about this for I think I did an article on this in 2019. I did a whole I did a series a
2 minutes, 34 seconds
couple of days ago talking about all the carbine stuff in in 2019.
2 minutes, 40 seconds
So, and there's graphite. Graphite is going in at ice right now, right?
2 minutes, 44 seconds
Barack. So this is not something that's kind of off in the distance or on the tang central or on the periphery. This
2 minutes, 52 seconds
is right in the middle of the juice right now with the Trump administration.
2 minutes, 57 seconds
So let me go to comments here really quickly. Um um Georgia the Jungle as strong as he
3 minutes, 4 seconds
can be. Yeah, I'll go toe-to-toe with Brendan Frasier. We'll go toe-to-toe.
3 minutes, 9 seconds
I'll swing from one end of Groas Chinese Theater to the other and he can do the same. And uh yeah, let's do it. Um let's
3 minutes, 17 seconds
see. Uh okay, he's remember he's seven years younger. So um good morning from uh Birmingham, Alabama. That's where my
3 minutes, 25 seconds
mother was born. You can never get the southern out of a southern boy. Sorry.
3 minutes, 31 seconds
You just can't. And boy, if I ever talked to my mother on the phone, that draw would come back. You know that southern hospitality like grits.
3 minutes, 41 seconds
She loved grits. She used to make me grits.
3 minutes, 45 seconds
Griets. Yep. It was all good. Um and then and then we go to Birmingham and we cover the Kennedy and we look at all the
3 minutes, 54 seconds
Alabama Guard out there at the Birmingham airport and we said this was the first thing that started spraying in Cuba, right? This is Kennedy signed the
4 minutes, 1 second
1234 to stop Mississippi burning and stop for civil rights, but they took it
4 minutes, 8 seconds
and used it to spray Cuba, right? They took it and used it to spray Cuba. Uh guys like Lansdale used that to spray
4 minutes, 15 seconds
Cuba. But go back and check the the presidential directive 1234. Uh it's not 1234, but it's it's very sequential and very it pops pops off the page at you.
4 minutes, 27 seconds
Um and we also covered Tuskegee. Tuskegee. We covered the helila cells. We covered the helila cells at Tuskegee.
4 minutes, 36 seconds
And nobody wants to cover the helila cells at Tuskegee.
4 minutes, 40 seconds
All right. Nobody wants to say that all of the Russian bioweapons investment 20%,
4 minutes, 46 seconds
you know, bioweapons was 10 20% of their military budget for sure and that was a huge part of the Russian military
4 minutes, 53 seconds
budget. They all were infected with helila cells. A black woman with a rare
5 minutes
genetic marker uh G6 uh P uh PD right for the lactose or the glactose uh
5 minutes, 8 seconds
enzyme in all of Russia in every lab. No,
5 minutes, 12 seconds
that's helila cells infecting and they also used helilocs to do the polio vaccine. This is the big story that's missed with Dr. Mary's monkey. It's not
5 minutes, 21 seconds
SV40. It's not a virus trying to exist by itself. It's a cell with a infrastructure and it's a cell that knows how to grow and infect the whole lab.
5 minutes, 31 seconds
So, um, good day from Sacramento. Um,
5 minutes, 35 seconds
no relation to Gary Webb, no relation to Whitney Webb either. U, but I'm very familiar with Gary Webb. I've gone to the San Jose Mercury News. I've followed
5 minutes, 44 seconds
up with his people. I followed up with uh the guy who used to cut my hair in Washington DC. I made sure I went to get the haircut from the guy who was in Rick
5 minutes, 53 seconds
Ross's gang. Um, all the other guys in his gang dead. Um, he told me that when he was 18 years old, they had a million
6 minutes
dollars under his floorboards. They call him Cruz in Washington DC, the the second city after LA, after Rick Ross
6 minutes, 8 seconds
and George Bush hit LA. And then and um you know Gary Webb writes about that and
6 minutes, 16 seconds
and um Michael um I'm forgetting Michael's last name all of a sudden um who was the cop who also
6 minutes, 26 seconds
was a witness to all this in doing crackane in LA also they tried it in Washington DC and they found it was too
6 minutes, 34 seconds
there was too much. This is where I when I when the guy who was cutting my hair who worked with Rick Ross was in the same thing as Rick Ross. I I'll I'll
6 minutes, 42 seconds
break here from the Epstein thing for a second. Um this is where we got the idea for neighborhood news crews because they
6 minutes, 49 seconds
found Rick Ross and George Bush found that they could get two really big gangs, right? We have the Crips in the
6 minutes, 57 seconds
Bloods and we'll have gang counter gang and while everybody's fighting, no one will notice that there's a pipeline going from North Los Angeles to Long Beach.
7 minutes, 6 seconds
And when I showed the mayor of Compton,
7 minutes, 7 seconds
when I showed Omar Bradley why LA was connected and why they were fighting in Compton, he he was like, "Oh my god,
7 minutes, 15 seconds
you're right. This is to keep us fighting so nobody's looking at sucking out all the all the uh oil out of the
7 minutes, 23 seconds
Long Long Beach basin into Beverly Hills. We're we're we were ponds, you know." He he realized that. But my point
7 minutes, 32 seconds
being is that all of that LA stuff didn't work in in Washington DC. Again,
7 minutes, 39 seconds
the easiest way is not to try to put thing together in a mosaic with a thousand different emails 20 years later. The easiest way is to actually go
7 minutes, 47 seconds
there and interview the person who was there and then you get the whole picture right off the start. Right? That's sort
7 minutes, 55 seconds
of like me going to New York. I got the whole scene and you didn't even have to.
7 minutes, 58 seconds
you can just inhale it. I mean, just ride the subways and get in the cabs and you get the whole Epstein scene, right?
8 minutes, 5 seconds
The easiest way for any type of reporting is to talk to witnesses who are around the situation rather than trying to do it 20 years later with piecing together little puzzle pieces.
8 minutes, 16 seconds
The easiest way is to just go talk to a guy who ran with Rick Ross, right, in Washington DC, who was my barber. And I
8 minutes, 24 seconds
sought him out because I wanted to have him tell me about Rick Ross and I wanted him to have him tell me about Gary Webb.
8 minutes, 31 seconds
And that I know it sounds simple and I know it sounds easy and I know it sounds incredibly straightforward and I know it sounds like, hey, why didn't I think of
8 minutes, 38 seconds
that? But I did think of that and I did go to to the black neighborhoods and get my haircut because I wanted that information. So there's a certain amount
8 minutes, 46 seconds
of, you know, courage involved. He'd been in the he had been in prison. He had been in prison for 17 years. So to have a convict sitting there, you know,
8 minutes, 55 seconds
with a a a cut razor, you know, over you while you're interviewing him is a little bit exciting. But, you know, we
9 minutes, 3 seconds
were great friends and he told me all about Rick Ross and he told me all about the situation with Gary Webb. I think I got information about George Bush and Rick Ross that Gary Webb never got,
9 minutes, 14 seconds
right? Because Gary Webb didn't go the places I would go to get the story. I have nothing against Gary Webb. He's great reporter, Michael Rupert and all
9 minutes, 22 seconds
these other people. But you got to go where the action is in order to get the story, right? And that's this that's the
9 minutes, 29 seconds
takeaway from that. Hello from uh Space Force new headquarters. Uh did they move it out of Colorado Springs to Lampak yet? I predicted they would move it to
9 minutes, 38 seconds
Lampak, but they probably moved it for to Virginia near NGO. Where is the new Space Force headquarters? I know it was in Colorado Springs at NORAD, I think.
9 minutes, 48 seconds
Um, so we'll we'll see where they move it. Um,
9 minutes, 52 seconds
they're going to make Wahlberg the big star this year or try. Um, you're never going to be a big star unless unless
9 minutes, 59 seconds
Hood Barack and Epstein or or Les Wexner with Victoria's Angels, unless they pair you up with a supermodel. That's your
10 minutes, 8 seconds
metadata to know that you're going to be a big star. That's that's your metadata to know that you're going to get promoted. Um, and until that happens,
10 minutes, 16 seconds
I'm not I'm not seeing it with Marky Mark. We'll see what happens. Um, tell me who he's dating and then I'll and then I'll get back on with you on that.
10 minutes, 26 seconds
2013, Epstein flew with Gates to Norway for a video call with EU leaders and vaccines. How much did we cover the
10 minutes, 34 seconds
helicopter rides in Haiti with Epstein monthly to check on their vaccine programs in Haiti? How many How many times have we covered that? We covered that since 2016.
10 minutes, 44 seconds
We've been covering Epstein in Haiti with the vaccines with Bill Gates since 2016. Everybody said they didn't even know each other. Right now it's come out
10 minutes, 54 seconds
that Epstein was targeting Gates with the Russian bit bridge player. All the stuff that we said and reported all came
11 minutes, 1 second
in on the Bill Gates. I wrote a a whole series of substacks just on Bill Gates.
11 minutes, 6 seconds
the same uh chief science officer that Jeff Epstein had uh for the Epstein Foundation went to the Gates Foundation.
11 minutes, 15 seconds
Now she went from the Gates Foundation as the chief science officer to the chief science officer of WEF right now.
11 minutes, 21 seconds
I wrote that article. So um there you go. What area? Um again uh uh
11 minutes, 29 seconds
subjectverb predicate uh you can use them all. You can use proper nouns in the subject. You can use proper nouns in
11 minutes, 35 seconds
the predicate. You can use uh verbs. Uh you don't have to just use linking verbs. You can use action verbs. So, a
11 minutes, 43 seconds
subject verb predicate is a really good idea for comments. Um JFK riding around
11 minutes, 50 seconds
Redstone Arsenal in Open Top uh three weeks before uh Dallas is interesting
11 minutes, 56 seconds
metadata. Yeah, if uh Erin uh that's why we go to these places, right? We we How
12 minutes, 4 seconds
many times have we been to the Red Star and Arsenal in Huntsville? Talking about Birmingham, not far from my my mom's Birmingham. How many times have we gone
12 minutes, 12 seconds
out to Huntsville? How many How many shows did I do with Neighborhood News?
12 minutes, 15 seconds
Now, Cracker Barrel News, Cracker Barrel. I still like Neighborhood News because not everybody not everybody resonates with the Cracker
12 minutes, 24 seconds
Barrel News. People think, well, those are old people that are retired that are in rocking chairs. Well, first of all,
12 minutes, 32 seconds
watch out for how much a a grandfather or a grand do a mother can do in a rocking chair. Or I I think people I see a whole bunch of different people,
12 minutes, 42 seconds
mothers and dads, sitting in the rocking chairs and enjoying themselves. Fear the person in the rocking chair.
12 minutes, 48 seconds
They could do amazing things. The only thing a black cat is afraid of is a rocking chair. Think about it. The only thing Luigi Manion hacking for Nancy
12 minutes, 56 seconds
Pelosi is afraid of is somebody catching them and somebody putting together. What companies Ku Bono, what companies does
13 minutes, 4 seconds
Nancy Pelosi and and her godson Luigi Manion have in automated healthcare, AI,
13 minutes, 10 seconds
nursing? What? What? Oh, they have a whole bunch of companies. Oh, that's why they're killing off the competition. Got
13 minutes, 16 seconds
it. Fear Fear the grandfather. Fear the grandmother in the rocking chair. But we also have neighborhood news because we
13 minutes, 24 seconds
want this idea. But Mike, getting back to to to Washington DC, this goes back to what Aaron did with the with the kids in Ghana where they were all street
13 minutes, 33 seconds
urchins and they were all going to become uh you know um you know pickpockets and and and thieves and all this you know kind of like um what's
13 minutes, 42 seconds
that Oliver uh you know the Dickens kind of consider yourself at home. Consider yourself part
13 minutes, 50 seconds
of the family. Right. Finnegan's uh Little Thieves, right? No, you get in there and you get four or five of them
13 minutes, 58 seconds
together, these kids together, and you start getting them listening to the news and you get them involved in school and get them involved in academics and all
14 minutes, 5 seconds
of a sudden they're not on the street getting hit by cars or begging or going into prostitution or going into theft and the orphanage had 18 kids. He can't save the whole world. People say, "Oh,
14 minutes, 15 seconds
Aaron only had 18 kids in the orphanage.
14 minutes, 17 seconds
How much could he do?" Well, those 18 kids went on on to all get college degrees. A lot of them are surfer instructors now. Uh but that's just the
14 minutes, 27 seconds
way it is. And the the idea of crews of these four or five guys together like a basketball team where you don't let your
14 minutes, 35 seconds
you you don't let your uh your point guard all of a sudden sudden start doing drugs. You don't let your uh swing
14 minutes, 43 seconds
forward who who helps you every once in a while under the boards get a rebound when when they got some bigs that are tough, right? You don't let that guy get
14 minutes, 51 seconds
involved in drugs. You don't let him get involved in crime, right? And this is what John Thompson used to do at Georgetown. He'd go in there and he'd go, "Look," Len Bias used to come in,
15 minutes, 1 second
you know, with the drugs from Maryland.
15 minutes, 2 seconds
He go, "Look, Len, you're not coming in my locker room anymore. And hey you guys on the Georgetown team, you guys aren't going to talk to Len Bias anymore. Okay,
15 minutes, 12 seconds
that ain't going to happen, right? And that's how you make great men, right?
15 minutes, 16 seconds
That's how you make great men and great athletes, right? That you it's not it's not the situation. It's not the uh the
15 minutes, 24 seconds
ghetto or all these things. Aaron dealt with ghettos that would uh you know
15 minutes, 32 seconds
Jesse Jackson would be afraid to go into. Right. The way to do it is create crews of men who want to be great men.
15 minutes, 40 seconds
That's how you that's how you solve the problem of crime. You know, we're sending I I I know that Trump's sending
15 minutes, 47 seconds
everybody into Chicago and I know they're going to do the train stations and I know they're going to do uh make sure people don't shut down the freeways and stuff and I get that. I I understand
15 minutes, 56 seconds
where if it's so bad and the cancer's gotten so bad in Chicago that you got to do that. But the first step is the John
16 minutes, 3 seconds
Thompson. The first step is the Aaron Adler where you go in and you say, "Hey,
16 minutes, 8 seconds
you you bring the coach in and instead of being a Tim uh Waltz where you go, hey, why don't you become a shooter?"
16 minutes, 14 seconds
Right? Why don't you do late night wellness checks for Ptorian Guard? Why don't you kill a whole bunch of Democrats that don't want to get mean? Right? You do the opposite. You say,
16 minutes, 23 seconds
"Hey, wait a minute. You should be a doctor." Al McGee uh did my mom's back surgery. Probably the top uh black
16 minutes, 30 seconds
doctor in the country. You need to get spinal surgery. Top black doctor in the country or be a nurse or be a I'm on my
16 minutes, 39 seconds
soap box. Sorry. Uh or or or be a civil engineer or be an engineer or whatever,
16 minutes, 45 seconds
right? And it's the neighborhood news cruise, right? And that's why I like neighborhood because we can go to the interstate. It doesn't have to just be Cracker Barrel.
16 minutes, 54 seconds
I'm not trying to say that neighborhood news is going to the worst neighborhoods. You saw me in Home and Square with task force. Rahm Emanuel
17 minutes, 2 seconds
won't go to Home and Square. There's a lot of black people that won't go to Home and Square because they're afraid in Chicago, right? We went to the front gates of Home and Square, right?
17 minutes, 14 seconds
Leadership starts right there on the street, right? Starts right there on the street. And that's how you do it. And I've been in more ghettos than and than
17 minutes, 23 seconds
anybody, right? And I've played basketball with those guys. And I've been the only white guy when there's 300 guys around me. And everybody told me
17 minutes, 30 seconds
there were criminals, right? Everyone has said they're going to get killed.
17 minutes, 34 seconds
No, you go in there and you create greatness. You create great people. You create teams. You create crews. You do it five guys at a time, four guys at a
17 minutes, 43 seconds
time. You don't try to do the whole thing. You create crews. You create identity. You create pride. You don't want to create gangs. You don't want to
17 minutes, 50 seconds
create the drugs. I had all my guys on my basketball team died, right? Warl Simmons died 37. They threw him under,
18 minutes
you know, all these guys. Stan Pal, you know, all the guys I played ball with all died. All murdered, right? Before
18 minutes, 7 seconds
like before I'm trying to even think if they any of them made it to 30. Most of them died. A
18 minutes, 16 seconds
couple of them are still around that didn't start, but you know, they can tell the story, but most of them are dead, right? You got to you got to go to
18 minutes, 24 seconds
the ghetto and play hoops in the ghetto to learn what's going on. And I know Trump can't do that. I know that's too much to ask. But and Rahm Emanuel never
18 minutes, 33 seconds
did it, right? No, no mayor of Chicago ever did it. Even the mayors now never did it, right? We went down with Bernie Bridges. We were working underneath the
18 minutes, 41 seconds
Chicago bridges with Bernie Bridges with the homeless underneath the Waw Bash uh bridges and she was doing a hundred
18 minutes, 49 seconds
meals a day for the people that were uh trying to eat underneath the bridges.
18 minutes, 54 seconds
And that's a world that Rahm Emanuel never saw. Bernie Bridges was there though. Bernie Bridges was there every day making sure those guys didn't
19 minutes, 2 seconds
starve. And she was down there with them. Task Force also so gutsy would go right into all those neighborhoods. And I hate having to go in with, you know,
19 minutes, 12 seconds
armed and and national guard because it means there's a failure of leadership to get to this point. And this is all
19 minutes, 19 seconds
happening now as we speak. But it's a failure of leadership of the of Rahm Emanuel. I put it on Rahm Emanuel especially where he decided, oh, let's
19 minutes, 28 seconds
go with the two Chicago. Let's let's make it two Chicago. and uh let's make it uh anyway that's that's that's a uh
19 minutes, 36 seconds
I'll have to edit all this because I shouldn't have got on that subject. But when you got me to Gary Webb and and people say, "Well, how did you get
19 minutes, 43 seconds
better how did you get better stuff than Gary Webb?" I said, "I'll tell you how.
19 minutes, 46 seconds
I went right to the guy who ran with Rick Ross. That's how you get better information than Gary Webb. I went right there and had my haircut every week from the guy who ran with Rick freaking Ross.
19 minutes, 56 seconds
Bang. Right. So that's how you do it.
19 minutes, 59 seconds
All right. So, of Birmingham, you better believe it. Uh, subjectverb predicate. It really helps on these comments. Okay.
20 minutes, 7 seconds
Leo Zagami had the documents. Well, documents are okay.
20 minutes, 14 seconds
Documents are okay, but that's way after the fact, right? Documents are okay, but that's way after the fact, and they're all little tiny puzzle pieces, and half
20 minutes, 22 seconds
the pieces are missing. It's sort of like getting a puzzle out of storage 20 years later and trying to figure it out where half the pieces are missing. So
20 minutes, 30 seconds
much better to be there on the ground while it's happening and have somebody tell you the whole story while it's happening like it's a movie, right? Um
20 minutes, 40 seconds
uh how about Dragnet Jack Webb? No, I don't. You saw me down there at the city county building. Uh we've done a whole bunch of sharets down there. Uh we did
20 minutes, 49 seconds
uh the exfiltration of all the uh US genetic data through Donna Wang at Michigan State again, Aaron Adler with
20 minutes, 56 seconds
uh Lancing and all the great reporting of neighborhood news in Michigan. All the great uh reporting we've had there
21 minutes, 3 seconds
um with um uh out of Houston uh all of a sudden I'm forgetting the the name of the company,
21 minutes, 11 seconds
the voting company, but they were excfiltrating everything to China,
21 minutes, 16 seconds
right? Uh so um but we did they also were tried in LA. I'm cannot believe I'm
21 minutes, 23 seconds
forgetting this the company's name. Uh but uh they were also had an LA trial.
21 minutes, 28 seconds
So we were down there in front of that city county building every day. We were down there at where they had the Manson trial where you know in front of the police station where Jack Webb was. We
21 minutes, 36 seconds
were down there every every day. We were down there more than Jack Webb was down there. Right. They filmed all that. Uh,
21 minutes, 43 seconds
I think he was at was he Century City Studio City. They filmed all that off location. They didn't film it down there.
21 minutes, 52 seconds
We were down there. They weren't down there.
21 minutes, 56 seconds
So, uh, uh, I I hate when I don't catch the beginning. Well, there's a lot of juice in the beginning. You got to go back. I mean, I All the Epstein's juice,
22 minutes, 4 seconds
the Aude Barack thing, all the supermodels were in the beginning, all the Russian pipelining, all the Russian women on the buses. We talked about Renaissance technology. Uh we we we
22 minutes, 13 seconds
talked and those are in the emails as well, Renaissance Technology because you use all these Soviet women, right? And
22 minutes, 21 seconds
where do you put them into? You put them into these genetic uh research national laboratories or Brook Haven, right? Like
22 minutes, 28 seconds
we said, um the the human genome project is out there. You you saw where we went.
22 minutes, 33 seconds
We've gone out there and shown exactly how it happens. I just didn't have any Russian supermodel with me because they weren't, you know, running around with me at that time. But we talked about,
22 minutes, 42 seconds
you know, going to all these labs and then they pull the technology out and then they run right over to Renaissance Technology and and try to come up with a
22 minutes, 52 seconds
knockoff or if they had a bid, a defense bid, like a Rathon bid or a locked going headtohead. If Rathon won, then they
22 minutes, 59 seconds
would steal the Lockheed missile in a box, which is Club K was the number two,
23 minutes, 5 seconds
right? anytime they'd have a bid between Rathon and Lockheed, they'd take the one that didn't win, they'd run over to Renaissance Technology and they'd push
23 minutes, 10 seconds
that out. Um, so, um, I offer smiling kind eyes. I have smiling kind eyes.
23 minutes, 21 seconds
I have smiling kind eyes. Oh, that's that's nice. I That's where simultaneous sit. That's the nicest thing somebody said to me all day.
23 minutes, 35 seconds
When Irish eyes are smiling, we're going to save Ireland. We're going to save Ireland with music. What better way to
23 minutes, 42 seconds
save Ireland, right? Um, How Green Is My Valley with uh Saved Wales, right? With
23 minutes, 49 seconds
John Houston, one of John Houston's good movies. They saved Wales, right? They saved Wales with music. They saved Wales
23 minutes, 57 seconds
with just a choir. And they saved Wales with just a bunch of guys that wasn't even their day job.
24 minutes, 3 seconds
That was just their Elvis after work job which was the singing for the church, right? They were mostly coal miners.
24 minutes, 10 seconds
They saved Wales with with all those great Welsh songs. That's that's where the webs come from. We're real there's a lot of Welsh in here. Sorry. But anyway,
24 minutes, 21 seconds
nothing against my English brethren that we have the English side too with Henry II and stuff, but I'm just saying there's a lot of Welsh and there's some Irish. So, we're going to save Ireland
24 minutes, 30 seconds
with with music as well, right? We're going to save England with music as well. How did we stop the Vietnam War?
24 minutes, 39 seconds
Music, right? I wrote a whole series on it, Laurel Canyon. If we concentrate on the music, right, we won't get into this
24 minutes, 46 seconds
flame war thing where everybody's in a flame war and everybody's disagreeing about the most stupid little things and we get into the racism discussions and all these things. No,
24 minutes, 57 seconds
no, no, no, no, no. We're just going to talk about the days gone by. We're going to talk about the castles of Ireland,
25 minutes, 3 seconds
right? We're going to talk about Van Morrison who already has a hotel in Belfast, right? We're going to talk
25 minutes, 11 seconds
about James Joyce and we're going to talk about walking around Belfast,
25 minutes, 14 seconds
right, for Bloomsday. We're not going to go to all the sex joints and prostitution houses. And we're not going to talk about a man being a lower image of himself,
25 minutes, 25 seconds
a a reduced Adysius,
25 minutes, 28 seconds
right? We're not going to talk about how craven an insignificant man is. We're not going to do a Joyce version of the world. We're going to do a higher
25 minutes, 35 seconds
version of the world. We're going to skip all the parts. We're not going to do the pup grow. We're going to go to all the places that are enlightening,
25 minutes, 42 seconds
that are inspiring, that are human affirming in Belfast. We may do it on the day of Blooms Day on June 1st next
25 minutes, 51 seconds
year. We're going to offer a different path for Ireland. And we're going to start singing about it now. We're going to start writing about it now. We're
26 minutes
going to change Ireland. We're going to remind Ireland of who they are, right?
26 minutes, 5 seconds
Of the days gone by. We're going to remind the Irish people of who they are,
26 minutes, 9 seconds
right? We're gonna remind the people in America of their Irish, right? We're going to remind the people in America of their English. And we're not going to
26 minutes, 17 seconds
let these countries go, right? We're not going to let these countries fall. We have to save Ireland. We have to save
26 minutes, 26 seconds
England. Right? You have all these sicopantic uh agents for the British
26 minutes, 33 seconds
crown and the and the British East India Company running their drugs and they'll be here for in in a couple of minutes trying to organize my murder with uh
26 minutes, 40 seconds
organizing terrorist groups here in the United States Aryan NA nation Aryan Knights to kill me, right? Because they
26 minutes, 48 seconds
don't want old England. They don't want the best of the best of England, right?
26 minutes, 52 seconds
The best of England and the best of Ireland didn't come from the elites. It came from the people who do most of the working, living, and dying in Ireland,
27 minutes
in England. We cannot let England go. We cannot let Ireland go. Not on our watch. Not on our watch. Uh, good morning,
27 minutes, 9 seconds
Kevin. Those scratchy scratchy dogs that those every time Kevin Timber comes in, meian must go, "Oh my god, not again.
27 minutes, 18 seconds
Not again with the scratchy scratch dogs. Not again with the the white van and Butler. Scratchy scratch. Explosives
27 minutes, 24 seconds
are in the white van and and and crooks didn't drive the white van.
27 minutes, 31 seconds
Jurich was in the news supposedly. I don't know why Eur was in the news.
27 minutes, 34 seconds
Somebody tell me why Eur was in the news. Scratchy scratch. Scratchy scratch. Um,
27 minutes, 41 seconds
have you seen uh subjectverb subject verb predicate? Right.
27 minutes, 48 seconds
Subjectverb predicate. Have you seen Vicram chatw walls connections to something?
27 minutes, 56 seconds
Right?
27 minutes, 58 seconds
So if you say, have you seen Vic's connections to fill in the blank? That doesn't help.
28 minutes, 5 seconds
Right? Subjectverb predicate.
28 minutes, 8 seconds
Huntsville, Alabama. Oh my goodness gracious. How many times have we been to Huntsville?
28 minutes, 14 seconds
not only army material command there but space uh space uh and um
28 minutes, 21 seconds
the people who do the rail gun uh space wars star wars was based on Huntsville.
28 minutes, 26 seconds
Isn't it interesting those are the same people that did the military live exercise for that thing thing you know that thing thing that went in your arm thing.
28 minutes, 36 seconds
Yeah. Alabama.
28 minutes, 38 seconds
Uh, roll tai uh, Space Force to Redstone. Oh, Space Force is going to Redstone, of course.
28 minutes, 45 seconds
Yes. Um, Space and Missile Command is in in Redstone. So, well, I kind of
28 minutes, 55 seconds
it's all of the guys that were in Manhattan Project and got the Q-le clearance are the same people that did Star Wars, right? They're the same
29 minutes, 3 seconds
people that went. It's the same sort of MSAD combination with these old Nazi space guys, right? And they're kids now
29 minutes, 12 seconds
that are in all these places, right? And there's the Space Force, everything above the Carman line. We said it was going to happen and then it happened. We
29 minutes, 20 seconds
were talking about the Karman line way with the Blackberries, the encrypted Blackberries, way before Trump ever talked about Space Force. Way before.
29 minutes, 29 seconds
Um, there we go. Um,
29 minutes, 33 seconds
but talk talk to Michael, you know, talk to the people who know Michael Roupert. Talk to the people who know Rick Ross,
29 minutes, 42 seconds
right? If if if you doubt my reporting on this, talk, they're around, you know,
29 minutes, 48 seconds
uh, Huntsville, Alabama. Um, there you go. Uh, thank you. Um, Alabama,
29 minutes, 55 seconds
it's confirmed. Okay. Thank you very much. Uh, stars fell in Alabama.
30 minutes, 1 second
uh was European adoption and it hasn't been mentioned yet and and European adoption agency isn't what you think it
30 minutes, 9 seconds
is. Everybody thought, oh, it's a Russian pipeline. You saw me go there to Strongsville. This is the one that Lisa Paige was running with Peter Struck,
30 minutes, 17 seconds
right? And you saw me go there and I originally thought, oh, these are underage teen models, you know, from,
30 minutes, 23 seconds
you know, uh Perm or wherever in Russia.
30 minutes, 26 seconds
And I thought that's what it was. And it wasn't. It was all these young kids,
30 minutes, 30 seconds
these 12 year old, 13-year-old, 14y old boys, a lot of them, and they were all emotionally dis uh uh uh disturbed, very
30 minutes, 38 seconds
severely disturbed, like they've been um warehoused almost, and they were all violent, right? And that's when I thought, "Oh,
30 minutes, 49 seconds
this is something different. This is Boyce Haven. This is to have school shooter. This is to have a school shooter." And then we can say, well, uh,
30 minutes, 58 seconds
this Brown adopted them, so you know, white supremacist school shooter. Oh,
31 minutes, 5 seconds
this is a pipeline for white supremacist school shooters. You're going to get these kids adopted by the Browns and the Murphy's and the Kelly's. And then you're going to pawn them off as white school shooters. Ah, I got it. Right.
31 minutes, 17 seconds
And that's what that's what Strongsville all is all about. That's what the European Adoption Agency is all about.
31 minutes, 22 seconds
They were very they're also autistic kids.
31 minutes, 25 seconds
They're also autistic kids that were that were being brought in and and uh again I interviewed the mother of the we interviewed the mothers of the kids. I
31 minutes, 34 seconds
was actually I think I was with Harry when I was interviewing one of the mothers of the kids where we did a big thing in Ohio where I was interviewing and we had the speaker on and everybody
31 minutes, 42 seconds
could hear it me interviewing the mothers of the kids. Um Scott Adams uh being treated by Karma. No.
31 minutes, 51 seconds
No. But we have the uh the America's frontline doctor, Karma. She's um fantastic doctor and and you can consult
32 minutes
with her. Um we don't do medical advice here, but we certainly point you in her direction. She does everything both east and west. Run circles around Fouchy, run
32 minutes, 8 seconds
circles around Malone, run circles around any doctor on the internet. Uh her scores are off the chart. Her she
32 minutes, 15 seconds
also did it under fire, which is a lot harder. Just think about anything that you do in your job and then think about
32 minutes, 22 seconds
a whole bunch of snipers shooting at you during that that time and you're doing something meticulous like oh I don't know trying to keep somebody's brains
32 minutes, 31 seconds
inside their head or trying to keep their heart pumping or their you know keep them from bleeding out and you're getting shot at at the same time. That's
32 minutes, 40 seconds
and and you know what I so much stolen valor in the whole front America frontline doctors thing because they took that valor and they
32 minutes, 48 seconds
took that excellence and then they perverted it. They got all the money for the I and the V uh I and the um
32 minutes, 59 seconds
the H the H word and the I word. They got all the money and then they bought all these houses and planes and cars and SUVs and stole all the money from the
33 minutes, 7 seconds
rest of the doctors. It's just a terrible thing that that occurred. Uh good morning. Great pumpkin. Uh the pumpkin harvest harvest is coming up.
33 minutes, 16 seconds
We're going to have the harvest sharet in Michigan. We're going to have a beautiful farm.
33 minutes, 23 seconds
Um we won't say how, but it's a family connection. That's how we're getting it so cheap. Uh but we're going to have a
33 minutes, 30 seconds
beautiful farm the whole month of October. We're going to do it all again.
33 minutes, 34 seconds
Uh hopefully Karma will come down. We have a whole bunch of people from uh Ford American Innovation that'll come
33 minutes, 41 seconds
down hopefully. Um we have a lot of great farmers that'll come down. You can meet all the stars of Make Your Kid a
33 minutes, 48 seconds
Doctor, Make Your Kid a nurse, Make Your Kid an Engineer. You can meet all of Aaron's kids, all the stars of all those shows. Uh it'll be great. It'll be
33 minutes, 56 seconds
great. It'll be it'll be a wonderful experience. You'll meet Magnificent.
34 minutes
Meet Max Magnificent. Hopefully we'll have Kevin Timmer come up and bring one of the of his crime dogs uh or military
34 minutes, 8 seconds
dogs. So we it'll be awesome. And that's coming up the harvest. That'll be number 55. 55.
34 minutes, 16 seconds
Lamp. How many times have we gone to Lampak? How many times have we gone to Lampak? Uh, is there an armed diplomatic
34 minutes, 23 seconds
security services that works uh services officer that works for the head of NATO that just happened to be going back and
34 minutes, 31 seconds
forth to Wuhan? I don't know. Does her mother-in-law get all the DARPA adept
34 minutes, 37 seconds
bids for mRNA? Uh, I don't know. I don't know. Uh, let's see. Okay. Um, let's
34 minutes, 44 seconds
see. Let me read the rest of it. uh Gary Francis Post uh Zodiac Killer worked at as a radar operator.
34 minutes, 53 seconds
Well,
34 minutes, 55 seconds
uh his symbol was a radar scope. Don't believe everything you read, right?
35 minutes, 1 second
That's not how it works. How it works is Robert Allen Hail drives over and starts playing basketball with all the radar
35 minutes, 10 seconds
operators just like Oswalt, right? And then he says, "Who would be a good psy for the murders I'm going to commit to
35 minutes, 17 seconds
knock down all the MK Ultra stories from the 60s and 70s, right, from Hey Ashberry Perry and all the MK Ultra [ __ ]
35 minutes, 24 seconds
that we were doing." So we got to have to create a mass formation psychosis with a whole bunch of murders of young people, right? So that they'll put in the systems that we want in California.
35 minutes, 37 seconds
And you have to have a psychopath uh and a and a psychotic psychopath like Robert Allen Hale do the murders. Now I need a
35 minutes, 46 seconds
sidekick. I need a psy to blame it on. I need a psy to leave the DNA as we go all around. That's the story of the Zodiac
35 minutes, 54 seconds
Killer, right? Not not the Zodiac Killer thinking all this stuff out because the Zodiac Killer doesn't know who to kill for the MK Ultra, right? He doesn't know
36 minutes, 2 seconds
who to he doesn't know the parents. He doesn't know the parents were involved in the MK Ultra, right? He doesn't know who to pick, right? Robert Allen Hale knew who to pick, right? Um, let's see.
36 minutes, 16 seconds
New developments over 260 acres. New development over 260 acres.
36 minutes, 24 seconds
Well, there's a lot of acreage in America. So, again, I'm going to say it again. Subject verb predicate is a
36 minutes, 32 seconds
really good thing, right? write the whole sentence just so that it lives on its own so that later on when I read it
36 minutes, 40 seconds
then we go oh that's what the person meant because you may process this and just want to type oh I'll just type the
36 minutes, 49 seconds
the answer but I don't get to it in five minutes and then I I or 10 minutes and then now I I it's dissociated so subject
36 minutes, 57 seconds
have a sentence that stands on its own um is that the reason for the Huntsville location of space force Q level clearance
37 minutes, 5 seconds
Isn't it interesting that they developed the rail gun from Smart Pebbles? Okay,
37 minutes, 11 seconds
again we talked to somebody went to Sandia National Laboratories, somebody who and I won't try to identify him, but saw this being demonstrated in the 90s.
37 minutes, 22 seconds
In the 80s,
37 minutes, 24 seconds
Smart Pebbles goes all the way back to the 80s, which is bring uh nuclear reactor up to critical, then take it to subcritical, then bring it up to critical, then take it to subcritical.
37 minutes, 34 seconds
And what you're doing there is creating a lot of steam, right? And then you're char you're using a uh a generator,
37 minutes, 41 seconds
steam generator to then charge a big big battery,
37 minutes, 46 seconds
right? You charge the battery long enough, you put enough cells together and charge the battery, you can do things with a capacitor to release that
37 minutes, 54 seconds
energy from that battery all all at once. And guess what you can do? You can force a whole bunch of shrapnel
38 minutes, 3 seconds
at very high speeds if you have the if you have the juice, if you have the nuclear fuel to begin the whole cycle.
38 minutes, 10 seconds
That's what the rail gun is.
38 minutes, 13 seconds
That came out of Los Alamos. That came out of Sandia National Laboratories. That came out of the Manhattan Project.
38 minutes, 19 seconds
The idea of doing that in space is ridiculous, right? But they sold Reagan on it and that's all that matters. Edme
38 minutes, 27 seconds
sold Reagan on it. That's really all that matters. Missile and Space Defense in Huntsville sold Ronald Reagan on it
38 minutes, 34 seconds
and that's all that matters. Isn't it interesting that the guy who runs the Windbor lab, they were testing a rail
38 minutes, 42 seconds
gun to protect Washington in a top secret project in 1999. He's the guy who then takes that same missile and space
38 minutes, 50 seconds
defense software sort of like a space invaders or missile command. It's actually the precursor of the real missile command software,
39 minutes
right? You may remember missile command where the missiles are coming in and you have to put anti- ballistic missiles.
39 minutes, 6 seconds
That software that guy from missile and space command is in where flight 93 is just happens to be on the track to Washington DC from flight 93.
39 minutes, 17 seconds
Isn't it interesting?
39 minutes, 19 seconds
That's the guy who ends up repositioning that software for breast cancer.
39 minutes, 24 seconds
Right. We covered that. That guy was the person put in charge of the Windbor Center, the from Missile
39 minutes, 32 seconds
Space and Defense Command, the rail gun project. Now, isn't it interesting that the plane flies directly over
39 minutes, 42 seconds
that that rail gun in Shanksville? Isn't it interesting? Again, we go and interview the people who were there. I
39 minutes, 50 seconds
keep saying this, but I'm sorry about it. It's We interviewed the rescue workers that were the first people there
39 minutes, 56 seconds
on site. We filmed it. We gave the film away. I gave it to everybody else who anybody who wanted it to prove what we were saying. The plane was sharded.
40 minutes, 6 seconds
I'm not even sure it was a big plane, but the plane, let's say it was a 757. It was sharded into little tiny pieces.
40 minutes, 14 seconds
That's what happens when you have a rail gun shoot into the side of a mountain.
40 minutes, 21 seconds
You shoot in the side of the mountain and you end up with little tiny pieces.
40 minutes, 24 seconds
When you have a shotgun, just look at a shotgun. Just take a shotgun and shoot a bird, right? Versus shooting it with a 22,
40 minutes, 33 seconds
right? I don't mean shoot a Don't be mean to a bird, but like let's say it's a a a cowbird. They deserve to be shot.
40 minutes, 44 seconds
shoot a cowbird where it's legal with a shotgun and then I I used to go hunting.
40 minutes, 51 seconds
I saw this. It'll it'll be in thousands of little pieces if you shoot it point blank,
40 minutes, 58 seconds
right? If you shoot about 10 feet away, that cowbird will be splatted,
41 minutes, 3 seconds
right? It won't be like, "Oh, there's the cowbird and there's a hole, one hole through it, it'll have thousands of holes in it." We went and looked with
41 minutes, 12 seconds
our own eyes at the wreckage and saw how it was sharted down to little tiny pieces. It had to be shot with a shotgun
41 minutes, 20 seconds
that came from Huntsville. That that whole project rail gun I I'm across the
41 minutes, 26 seconds
river where from Dogrren surface warfare center and there's another one up in Indian Head and we could hear the damn rail gun go off. Don't tell me rail guns don't exist. They exist.
41 minutes, 39 seconds
watching from Perth. Oh, don't get me started on Perth. Oh my goodness, Perth is beautiful.
41 minutes, 45 seconds
Oh my my Oh, my week in Perth. It's like Los Angeles before the uh signs, before the billboards. Perth is so gorgeous.
41 minutes, 55 seconds
And uh the USS Enterprise, I think, was I can't remember who was in the Pacific 7th Fleet, but they were off the shore in Perth. And then they had all the uh
42 minutes, 4 seconds
World Cup there and and Dennis, what's his face? was Dennis Johnson, the American, and then the the Australian guy was going headto-head, and an Australian won that year. Good on you,
42 minutes, 15 seconds
Aussies. Right. And uh it just it was a great year. Two years ago when I was in Australia, I I remember that the
42 minutes, 22 seconds
Australian people were just so wonderful and and just so sporty and just so
42 minutes, 29 seconds
athletic and outgoing and always just everything you think about Australia as far as the people is concerned. uh you
42 minutes, 36 seconds
know, oh, you know, cut your arm, you go, "Oh, well, that'll get better."
42 minutes, 43 seconds
Just take, you know, your sock off and wrap it around, tie it off, and keep going. That's the Australian way, you know. Uh, I love the Australians. Okay.
42 minutes, 53 seconds
FB Google uh has built new facilities at Redstone Arsenal. Does that surprise you at all? Q level clearance. Q level
43 minutes, 1 second
clearance. You're never going to know about it. Space Force, it's above top secret. Carment line 327360 is the number on the back of the encrypted
43 minutes, 9 seconds
Blackberries. You're never going to know about it unless you get a witness.
43 minutes, 14 seconds
Unless you talk to somebody who is actually configuring them. Unless you get deep blackberry and you get him to tell you the answer to the test, then you know
43 minutes, 23 seconds
space force uh is beginning uh part of the Golden Gome. I couldn't agree with this more. It's going to be pervasive surveillance. are going to move the
43 minutes, 30 seconds
Gideon, all those uh David rocket systems, everything that we've got is going to be moved. Autonomous drones and so forth. You're going to have mass
43 minutes, 39 seconds
formation psychosis to set up the need for these things, right? And then they're going to be used against you.
43 minutes, 45 seconds
Absolutely. I couldn't agree more. our autonomous drones, James Jameson. We've been we went down uh and um our gal when
43 minutes, 53 seconds
I used to drink we um when I used to drink wine like Jesus when I used to
43 minutes, 59 seconds
drink wine like Jesus um uh we had a um we went to a wine tasting.
44 minutes, 6 seconds
Uh, we went to a wine tasting right by James Jameson's um drone factory uh for General Atomics.
44 minutes, 16 seconds
We've been covering the drones. Well, when was that? 2020, 2021.
44 minutes, 21 seconds
Long time. Uh, military-industrial complex. I love this. This is a fully formed sentence that's instructive.
44 minutes, 29 seconds
Um the military indexial conference uh uh complex is in full force in Madison County, Huntsville, Alabama, Lockheed,
44 minutes, 37 seconds
SI, SIC, Rathon, Dinecore, LH, uh L3,
44 minutes, 41 seconds
Harris, BAE, General Atomics, Deote Touch, CIA, and all the rest. I couldn't agree more.
44 minutes, 49 seconds
And we How many trips did we do? A lot. I've been to Huntsville a lot. Um yeah,
44 minutes, 56 seconds
absolutely. Oliver Twist, thank you. You know, I I was going with the uh Oliver as the story, but Oliver Twist
45 minutes, 3 seconds
is the original Dickens, but Oliver was the movie, and I saw the movie when I was a little kid. Con City of Self at
45 minutes, 10 seconds
home. Con City of Self, part of the family. Remember Finnegan or No, the Artful Dodger. The Artful Dodger was was
45 minutes, 18 seconds
coaching Oliver along to be a pickpocket. That's not what we want for our kids. We don't want the Artful Dodger. We don't want Finnegan and teaching all the kids how to do all the
45 minutes, 26 seconds
street crime. Let's let's do the John Thompson. John Thompson, great man.
45 minutes, 32 seconds
That's the way to do it right there. He went into the worst neighborhoods in Washington DC and he made this factory for great men, right? John Thompson is
45 minutes, 41 seconds
the model. Donald Trump, you should go visit John Thompson today and ask him how he he did what he did in Washington
45 minutes, 49 seconds
DC, right? To keep gangs from taking in Washington DC. And I'm telling you what,
45 minutes, 54 seconds
it's not my idea. It's Aaron Adler from Africa and and it's it's John Thompson that I saw do the cruise in Washington
46 minutes, 3 seconds
and it works if you just try it. Look at Washington actually doesn't have the kind of crime that you think it does. Um
46 minutes, 10 seconds
it, you know, I I saw a lot of crime up close and personal and had a lot of horrible things happen uh with task
46 minutes, 17 seconds
force and other things. Uh, but it doesn't have the kind of violent crime that Chicago has. Compare the murder statistics of what Washington DC used to
46 minutes, 26 seconds
be versus this crime statistics and murders in Chicago, right? And you'll see the difference. Uh, it's it's not the people,
46 minutes, 37 seconds
it's the leadership, it's the leadership, not the circumstances, it's none of that. seen the worst neighborhoods,
46 minutes, 45 seconds
best best factories for great men. Um,
46 minutes, 50 seconds
Alabama is much more cooperative than Colorado.
46 minutes, 54 seconds
I think Alabama I think the thing is uh with Alabama you you just have so much more act
47 minutes, 1 second
access to the Caribbean. You just have so much more access to you don't have the the uh oversight.
47 minutes, 10 seconds
Colorado gets snowed in. you gotta kind of make a special trip to go to Colorado if you're, you know, you gotta like stop in Dallas on your way down to the
47 minutes, 18 seconds
Caribbean. You could fly direct I know to Denver and so forth, but with if especially if you're trying to take
47 minutes, 25 seconds
Venezuela or something like that and or you try to do the bug thing with Landdale and you know drop the bugs on Cuba or doing something with bio uh Virginia Bonassi down there in Bonire,
47 minutes, 37 seconds
you you got to get in. You got to be close. You got to be close to the mosquito coast, right? You just got to
47 minutes, 44 seconds
be close to the mosquito coast if you're going to project and get other countries. Colorado, there's really nothing contiguous that you can take and
47 minutes, 51 seconds
mine and steal, right? There's no oil to steal. Uh, you know, it's owned by farmers there. So, only Black Rockck has to steal it.
48 minutes
when when once you get to Alabama now you can go get you know PB success you can go in the Caribbean basin and and
48 minutes, 7 seconds
take something from somebody else right so there's much more to gain in Alabama that I think than there is in Colorado
48 minutes, 16 seconds
might be just my my thinking there media portrays Epste as a pedo pervert rapist and again wrong it's not about
48 minutes, 26 seconds
$200 it's not about $200 high school uh massages from high school girls, right? It's not about $200. Let
48 minutes, 34 seconds
me let me just make this point very clear. All right, I'm going to make this point very clear, right?
48 minutes, 44 seconds
It's about DHS.
48 minutes, 46 seconds
It's about extortion, continual extortion.
48 minutes, 50 seconds
This uh Ireina Shack, just one of the Epstein girls. It's not about $200 massages.
48 minutes, 59 seconds
This is about the woman who's marrying Bradley Cooper. Okay?
49 minutes, 3 seconds
It's not about $200 massages. It's about the woman who's marrying Bradley Cooper.
49 minutes, 10 seconds
Okay? It's not about $200 massages.
49 minutes, 14 seconds
And James Patterson's the one who really pushes this on Netflix. It's about the woman who marries Mel Gibson. It's not
49 minutes, 22 seconds
about $200 massages. It's about the woman who marries Timothy Dalton. And these are just two of hundreds of
49 minutes, 30 seconds
examples with Jean Luke Brunell and Jeff Epstein. Hundreds of examples that we could go through. I just didn't have that kind of time this morning. I got up
49 minutes, 37 seconds
at two to do this story uh to get the substack out. I just didn't have the time. But that's the the it's not $200
49 minutes, 47 seconds
massages, James Patterson. you need I I respect you as a writer, but I don't really respect you as a fact gatherer
49 minutes, 56 seconds
because you're you're you're kind of coming in and to Yankee Stadium and you're looking at the the bleachers
50 minutes, 2 seconds
and going all the seats at Yankee Stadium are are or or going to the uh Wrigley Field,
50 minutes, 9 seconds
better off, and and you're looking at the bleachers and saying, "All the seats are $10 at Wrigleyfield. Look at it. I'm looking all around me. They're all $10.
50 minutes, 19 seconds
All these chairs are $10. I don't even think the bleachers are $10 anymore. I think they're 30 bucks or 40 bucks. They used to be $2 to go sit in the bleachers
50 minutes, 28 seconds
at Wrigley Field. $2. I remember the first time I used to go sit in the bleachers all the time.
50 minutes, 35 seconds
But if you just walk around the stadium a little bit and open your eyes, if you just open your eyes, you say, "Hey,
50 minutes, 41 seconds
there's Rickett." Rickettts was getting a hot dog. Sat behind home plate. I had some friends in Chicago. I was sitting behind home plate. I'm sitting next to the guy who owns a rig that owns owns the whole thing. Ricket's right there.
50 minutes, 51 seconds
Of course, he goes to the game, so he sits behind home plate. But anyway, the those seats behind home plate at Wrigley Field aren't aren't $20, aren't $30,
51 minutes, 2 seconds
aren't two, they're they're like $600 some of them, right? James Patterson,
51 minutes, 8 seconds
stop with the $200 massage from the girls. That's the whole filthy rich series is about $200 massages. It's not $200,
51 minutes, 18 seconds
right? It's not $200,
51 minutes, 22 seconds
right? These are hundreds of millions of dollars changing hands here. Hundreds of millions of dollars. When you start getting into the gene editing, you start getting into the pervasive software,
51 minutes, 32 seconds
we're talking billions of dollars.
51 minutes, 35 seconds
The girls are being used for billion-dollar contracts. The latest U Palunteer software was 10 billion
51 minutes, 43 seconds
dollars with the DoD. billion with a B.
51 minutes, 48 seconds
Um, I suspect that something's uh something that's something's got to do with it. Len bias, overdosed cocaine.
51 minutes, 55 seconds
Yeah. Uh, Len bias. I'm sorry. I these basketball references. Yeah. But he was in the he was in the locker room at
52 minutes, 3 seconds
Georgetown and John Thompson said, "Come here." John Thompson's a big guy. Six. He's taller than me. And he's like,
52 minutes, 10 seconds
"Hey, Len, never come back here again. I don't want you messing with my basketball players. And then he went into the locker room. He goes, I don't
52 minutes, 18 seconds
want any of you, if any of you associate with him anymore, you're off the team.
52 minutes, 23 seconds
Okay, that's leadership. That's leadership. That's knowing right from wrong and going in there and telling those kids, "Nope, you're done if you
52 minutes, 32 seconds
talk to him anymore." Right? That's how he stopped that from Georgetown getting infected with the Lenbias thing.
52 minutes, 40 seconds
Uh, ICE National Guard, uh, DEA, so many large busts throughout the country already.
52 minutes, 47 seconds
Yeah. Yeah. Uh, I'm not saying that they, um, aren't doing a good job. I'm not saying they aren't doing a good job.
52 minutes, 54 seconds
I'm just saying that they're inculcated.
52 minutes, 57 seconds
Graphite and carbine and Barack and Epstein and stuff, they're inculcated into our national security fra fabric.
53 minutes, 6 seconds
That's what I'm saying, right? And guys like Cher, right, and the guy who uh they just had running DHS, they're they're horrible criminals, right?
53 minutes, 16 seconds
They're horrible criminals. Nothing wrong with the ICE agents that go out and do a brave job every day. I I know I talked to cops.
53 minutes, 24 seconds
Number one cop uh lived in Cobb Island for had the most arrests. You know, he made all of his arrests. You see these big ICE raids? He went into the most
53 minutes, 33 seconds
vicious killers, right? And he brought all these guys in. You know how he made all this arrest? You go knock on the door by himself.
53 minutes, 42 seconds
By himself. The mom would answer the door. Hey, is Ricky around? Oh, Ricky's
53 minutes, 48 seconds
over here. Okay. Right. Go over knock on Ricky's door. Hey, what's up? Hey, I got a warrant for your arrest. You know,
53 minutes, 57 seconds
I'll wait out here in the car. Come on out. Right.
54 minutes, 2 seconds
Most of his guys came out. They didn't want to have the big shootout and stuff.
54 minutes, 6 seconds
He did a lot of arrests just by knocking on the door, talking to the mother.
54 minutes, 10 seconds
Mother, tell them where the kid is. Just knock and say, "Hey, I got a warrant. I don't want to I don't want it to be a bad thing. It's going to look better for
54 minutes, 17 seconds
you if you just kind of come along. I'll I'll I'll vouch for you.
54 minutes, 23 seconds
He got most of his arrest just by himself, right? Don't need the big ICE thing." Um are we headed um No, they did some M4, you know, bust down the door.
54 minutes, 33 seconds
They did that, too. He He He used to do that, too. All kinds of cops from Washington police, DC police department
54 minutes, 41 seconds
live on Cabala Island. It's because they work these 24-hour shifts. You can you can work an hour away from Washington.
54 minutes, 48 seconds
Uh amount heading to Mass and they they like that. They like that being able to close off the bridge. Now, we're on our island. You can't come over the bridge,
54 minutes, 57 seconds
right? Uh AMT heading to master surveillance.
55 minutes, 2 seconds
AMT. I don't know what AMT is. Uh, this is not going to end well. Um, tell me what AMT is. Um,
55 minutes, 11 seconds
again, we do exposure and you can have something that's that's going to be horrible that's about to happen, like an
55 minutes, 18 seconds
invasion or whatever, and then if you get early word and you expose it, it it it stops the invasion, right? And you do
55 minutes, 25 seconds
that with very little work. It's much easier to stop an invasion by doing citizen journalism than it is to wait
55 minutes, 33 seconds
for it, right? Don't This is one of those deals where you say, "Wait for it.
55 minutes, 36 seconds
Wait for it." No, don't wait for it. Get there early with citizen journalism and expose it. Uh 36. Show some love. 36 uh
55 minutes, 45 seconds
thumbs up. Yeah. Um I just decided I'm going to keep doing it. What? No matter if we if we don't ever get any if we
55 minutes, 53 seconds
don't ever break out and get the exposure, I don't really care. I'm doing I'm working for the big guy, so I really don't care. I I know the numbers are
56 minutes, 1 second
low. Um I I I don't have an explanation for it.
56 minutes, 6 seconds
I don't know if it's signal reduction. I don't know what it is. Doesn't matter. 100% to the big guy.
56 minutes, 14 seconds
If you want to support me, it's eight bucks a month. I never ask for more. So,
56 minutes, 18 seconds
if you get somebody asking for more from me, it's a it's an imposttor. It's a liar, right?
56 minutes, 27 seconds
Um, Chicago just had really bad numbers this morning. We went and did a whole bunch of stuff on the shooting when Rob
56 minutes, 34 seconds
Emanuel was uh um task force and I we we interviewed a gal. We went on the one of the bridges and after task force and I
56 minutes, 42 seconds
interviewed her, but it her son was shot. They ran through her house and her shot son was shot and killed on her
56 minutes, 49 seconds
porch as a bystander. They thought he was a um in the gang. Uh we interviewed a mother who had just had her just had her kid shot on her porch.
57 minutes, 2 seconds
Mass surveillance. Um again,
57 minutes, 7 seconds
the smallest amount of citizen journalism beats the largest amount of mass surveillance. That's the beautiful part about citizen journalism. It's only a couple of people, right? And they make
57 minutes, 16 seconds
fun of us because we like Cracker Barrel and have a rocking chair or they make fun of us because we get together uh with Mark Buckley and and Aaron Adler and, you know, feed the chickens.
57 minutes, 28 seconds
Those chickens are going to look awfully good when the [ __ ] hits the fan. Aaron Adler, beautiful story about changing young men's life. This has really
57 minutes, 36 seconds
happened and it happened over 14 years and it happened over and over again. So, you know, it wasn't just one person,
57 minutes, 42 seconds
right? Uh, the orphanage worked as a machine to create great men. It did. Um,
57 minutes, 49 seconds
uh, if you if you have any doubt, come to us, Sharet, and meet Karen's kids,
57 minutes, 54 seconds
right? If you have any doubt. Now, I know Aaron's going to say, "No, don't meet my kids because they're always running around." But they're they're the most beautiful, wonderful kids in the
58 minutes, 2 seconds
world. And he's he puts the same thing into being a dad. And I I think that's really great.
58 minutes, 8 seconds
I recall um news several years ago in Huntsville had been noted for all the Chinese moving there. Yeah. Well, you have to somebody has to take the rocket secrets back. Helping kids in Africa,
58 minutes, 19 seconds
ironically, is much easier than helping kids in the United States.
58 minutes, 27 seconds
Interesting. Yeah. Interesting. Very interesting. I remember you told me a story about a girl who was uh um I think she was under six or seven years old,
58 minutes, 39 seconds
but her brother came and her brother said they had re couldn't get into the orphanage. And and and the brother said,
58 minutes, 47 seconds
"You've got to get my sister into the orphanage because she's going to get hit by these cars begging as the traffic's
58 minutes, 55 seconds
going by. You've got to get her." And here's a brother not begging for his own bed at the orphanage, but begging for
59 minutes, 2 seconds
his sister to get in. That was that those stories stick with you. Those stories stick with you, you know. and
59 minutes, 9 seconds
and Aaron did bring her in and uh she became super successful and they had people coming in from all over Europe because it's in the same time zone and
59 minutes, 18 seconds
easier to get to from Europe and it was but eventually you know people pull the plug you know financially uh and you lose your sponsor and and you and you
59 minutes, 26 seconds
move on and Eric what that's what we're doing right now we kind of have a boy club now only it's it's more of a boys
59 minutes, 33 seconds
club and Cracker Barrel um for uh for folks who are kind of at more toward the end of their working career.
59 minutes, 42 seconds
Uh mass surveillance is weeding out all corruption. Uh really the guys doing the mass
59 minutes, 50 seconds
surveillance are not weeding anything out. They're weeding themselves in. Uh so uh I I'm not sure if you have
59 minutes, 59 seconds
followed Peter Teal lately uh and Palanteer, but they're not weeding out corruption.
1 hour, 5 seconds
They are the corruption. So I think that's a Polyiana statement. Um let's see. Uh during Labor Day weekend 2025,
1 hour, 15 seconds
at least eight people were killed, 58 were injured in Chicago according to various news reports. I I just see this as a mass formation psychosis to get the
1 hour, 23 seconds
Rand Corporation into uh how to solve the problems of the inner cities. Again,
1 hour, 30 seconds
we've seen them do this before.
1 hour, 33 seconds
Mass formation psychosis, go shoot five or six people. Now that we've then moved the,
1 hour, 39 seconds
you know, get the president to move the National Guard in. Now we have riots.
1 hour, 43 seconds
Now we have all those visuals that we had from the 60s. Now we bring in Rand Corporation as a mass formation psychosis. Right? Isn't Rand Corporation
1 hour, 52 seconds
dealing with the inner city problem right now? Did did Rand Corporation say,
1 hour, 57 seconds
"Hey, I've seen it work with my own eyes. I've seen John Thompson or I've seen Aaron Adler do it with my own eyes.
1 hour, 1 minute, 4 seconds
You don't need a whole bunch of big fancy plans and a bunch of slidewear and a bunch of bloat wear. What you need is somebody who will spend time with the kids. That's what you need. You need a
1 hour, 1 minute, 13 seconds
coach that will spend time with the kids and tell them right from wrong. And that's all you need. That's all you need. Sorry, I'm on my soap box again.
1 hour, 1 minute, 20 seconds
So, uh, exactly, Erin Edler. Okay. Um,
1 hour, 1 minute, 24 seconds
Barack hacked emails 820 carbine surveillance. Is this the repackaged into Palanteer? So, it could be Homeland Security as Gotham. Yes.
1 hour, 1 minute, 34 seconds
Yes. That's it's in my substack today.
1 hour, 1 minute, 37 seconds
Um, you know, I've written series on all these things. I just didn't write one thing. Matter of fact, I'm going to jump over to it real quick. I've written a series on all these things.
1 hour, 1 minute, 48 seconds
Uh, Gregorya there and the sha.
1 hour, 1 minute, 53 seconds
Um, let's see here. Um there's their implant there with uh
1 hour, 2 minutes, 2 seconds
cherat they are at ICE. Um so did EP did
1 hour, 2 minutes, 9 seconds
Epstein present fine fix and finish software on the island. You can see the island here, right, for his directed
1 hour, 2 minutes, 16 seconds
evolution conference where he invited the people, the same people in Inqutell and CIA that did directed evolution in Elatchua are the same people that got
1 hour, 2 minutes, 25 seconds
invited to the island and Francis Arnold who won the Nobel Prize was there, right? She was there at the
1 hour, 2 minutes, 33 seconds
island. Uh, we played Chopan while the world played Chopsticks is another series I wrote. These are all like five,
1 hour, 2 minutes, 39 seconds
six, seven articles with receipts. And then I'm not going to cover up Epstein's trafficking on Long Island, right? Where
1 hour, 2 minutes, 46 seconds
a lot of the girls went directly. Uh if you're a supermodel,
1 hour, 2 minutes, 52 seconds
uh you went they for the elites, but if you were, you know, not quite a supermodel, right, you ended up with the
1 hour, 2 minutes, 58 seconds
Saudis. There was a whole system uh on Long Island for how um they operated. So those are all these are all series.
1 hour, 3 minutes, 7 seconds
You click on these, they go to articles and receipts. So anyway, go back here for a second.
1 hour, 3 minutes, 17 seconds
Is there trolls trying to organize my death? Lower Wacker Drive in Chicago is a city failure. Um, we broadcast from
1 hour, 3 minutes, 25 seconds
Wacker how many times? 50, 100, I don't know. I gank out. Uh, we cannot forget the kids. Good day from Perth.
1 hour, 3 minutes, 33 seconds
Possibility of JFK clone. Well, we talk about clones and it's not really clones in the biological
1 hour, 3 minutes, 40 seconds
sense, but it is clones in the virtual sense. It is clones in the AI sense. And again, it is clones in the cyber hacking
1 hour, 3 minutes, 48 seconds
sense. And again, where people are cloning people's identities to to get into our health systems. We talk about how the godchild of Nancy Pelosi,
1 hour, 3 minutes, 57 seconds
literally, Luigi Manion, is doing this and how they're eliminating the competition and how they're bringing Al Capone and organized crime and the
1 hour, 4 minutes, 5 seconds
Chicago mob into healthcare. So, we do this on a daily basis and I wrote an articles about this. Look at my Manion
1 hour, 4 minutes, 12 seconds
articles about how we take down um how we take down the cyber crime. And then the mark of Zora. I talk about the bringing the Ukrainian criminals which Epstein also was involved in doing.
1 hour, 4 minutes, 23 seconds
Bringing the Ukrainian hackers in. Al Perovich. We've talked about Alperovich.
1 hour, 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Uh how do they uh well the easy way is just is just give when you run your
1 hour, 4 minutes, 35 seconds
foundation just make just give everything you own and lose $75,000 a year and then you don't have to worry about it.
1 hour, 4 minutes, 42 seconds
um give all your life savings into what you're doing and then you don't really have to worry about anything. What are they going to take away from you when
1 hour, 4 minutes, 50 seconds
you're losing $75,000 a year for the big guy?
1 hour, 4 minutes, 54 seconds
That's a good deal for me. I I'll do that all day. I'll do that year after year. Here's 100% to the big guy.
1 hour, 5 minutes, 4 seconds
Um Chinese bought up the whole town. Uh uh in I'm assuming you're talking about
1 hour, 5 minutes, 13 seconds
Huntsville, but I don't know. Oh, in Michigan. What What town in Michigan?
1 hour, 5 minutes, 22 seconds
I don't know. A Sandia. Uh I disagree.
1 hour, 5 minutes, 24 seconds
There's a lot of failure of it's not a failure leadership. It's a purposeful climatic.
1 hour, 5 minutes, 29 seconds
Well, I agree. I mean, yeah, I would agree with that, too. I think the WF and their policies to make drug addicts, I
1 hour, 5 minutes, 38 seconds
mean, if you're a British East India Company, you want drug addicts. Uh, you want prostitution, you want crime. Uh,
1 hour, 5 minutes, 45 seconds
if it's sort of like, you know, if you want to sell popcorn,
1 hour, 5 minutes, 51 seconds
if you want to sell soft drinks at at the movie theater, you got to sell popcorn. Very salty popcorn. The
1 hour, 5 minutes, 59 seconds
customers not might not need very salty popcorn, but you sure do. if you want to sell drinks at the drink fountain.
1 hour, 6 minutes, 5 seconds
Right? So that's the whole sort of thing is you have to have ghettos if you want to sell drugs.
1 hour, 6 minutes, 11 seconds
Right? So so I'm not saying that the the British East India Company and and and their partners don't want to sell drugs. They do.
1 hour, 6 minutes, 20 seconds
They've created 80 we covered Greg Carr and the Israeli students going to the 80 different centers and creating the fusion centers. The same place they created the fusion centers, the state,
1 hour, 6 minutes, 29 seconds
the 80 largest in America, Los Angeles being the first one, right? The same place that they
1 hour, 6 minutes, 36 seconds
created those fusion centers is the same place that the drug trafficking is is is highest, right? Is it because they're trying to stop drug trafficking? They're
1 hour, 6 minutes, 44 seconds
not trying to drug stop drug trafficking. They're promoting it.
1 hour, 6 minutes, 48 seconds
They're making sure that their guys don't get arrested. They're making sure that they get a Coberger, pick a Coberger out of a library somewhere and
1 hour, 6 minutes, 55 seconds
say he did it right to protect their drug trafficking the area night drug trafficking.
1 hour, 7 minutes, 1 second
Um I don't know where Sandia Waves is.
1 hour, 7 minutes, 7 seconds
I don't know where Sandia Waves is. Tell me what city of Sandia Waves is close to. um FCC,
1 hour, 7 minutes, 15 seconds
uh Obama, Harvard, uh Chum, uh who helped to get him elected to Congress.
1 hour, 7 minutes, 20 seconds
Go ahead and throw a name in there if you'd be so kind. Um go ahead and throw a name in there. That's how we all learn the names of things we might not know
1 hour, 7 minutes, 29 seconds
off the top of our head. Uh did you ever dig into Extensoral Ranch?
1 hour, 7 minutes, 38 seconds
Thank you for saying this. But uh that's in not only did I talk about it, let me
1 hour, 7 minutes, 46 seconds
take you to the river. Let me take you to the river of news. Okay, let me take you to the river of news.
1 hour, 7 minutes, 54 seconds
And uh the next article that I didn't get to is can we talk about Jeff Epstein's tail numbers? Now see the Dinecore ranch there going out to Zoro.
1 hour, 8 minutes, 3 seconds
See all the helicopters. see the helicopters at the pool at the Zoro Ranch. So that we sure did talk about it. As a matter of fact, I whole wrote a whole series about it.
1 hour, 8 minutes, 14 seconds
So you better believe it. Thank you for asking. Um Birmingham, too, with Chinese immigration. I don't mind Chinese immigration,
1 hour, 8 minutes, 24 seconds
right? Again, leadership, right? Again,
1 hour, 8 minutes, 27 seconds
citizen journalism. If you have citizen journalism, it doesn't matter if you have every race, every creed, every sex,
1 hour, 8 minutes, 34 seconds
every everything. If you have citizen journalism to keep people doing the right things rather than doing the wrong
1 hour, 8 minutes, 42 seconds
things and you can expose the wrong things early before they become cancers and you can take care of it in a pre preventative predictive way and you can
1 hour, 8 minutes, 50 seconds
encourage people to be the best at the same time, you don't care who's coming in.
1 hour, 8 minutes, 56 seconds
It'll immediately be rooted out by citizen journalism. You don't care if there's thousands and thousands and thousands coming in, right? We'll take
1 hour, 9 minutes, 4 seconds
every one of these supermodels that wants to become uh you know that that Jeff Epste wants to prostitute out and we'll turn them around,
1 hour, 9 minutes, 13 seconds
right? We'll make them into actresses and actors and you know, musicians and
1 hour, 9 minutes, 20 seconds
scientists and all that. Uh that was the whole uh part of uh the romance I wrote a romance mobile
1 hour, 9 minutes, 29 seconds
uh where the Russian uh PhD scientist is is trying to compromise the American in in Mobile
1 hour, 9 minutes, 38 seconds
Alabama. Uh it was actually takes place a lot of it takes place at University of Alabama Birmingham at the automated lab at University of Alabama Birmingham.
1 hour, 9 minutes, 49 seconds
And he through his uh just shining a light really just showing
1 hour, 9 minutes, 57 seconds
the light on the hill. Showing the shining light on the hill. The person becomes a better person and then decides not to live a life of espionage and and
1 hour, 10 minutes, 5 seconds
kill a whole bunch of people with bioweapons which is a really beautiful story but it didn't sell. So, I went back to
1 hour, 10 minutes, 13 seconds
I went back to the um non-fiction which is much easier actually. It's it's harder but then it's
1 hour, 10 minutes, 22 seconds
easier. You just go and talk to the people.
1 hour, 10 minutes, 26 seconds
You just go and talk to the people and they tell you the story. What what it's it's so simple. Journalism is so simple.
1 hour, 10 minutes, 33 seconds
Uh if you you just have to have a courage to go to places where nobody else is willing to go. That's the only thing you have to do. uh two major banks
1 hour, 10 minutes, 40 seconds
are being indicted uh for funding the Chinese military. Go ahead and throw those in there in your comments which one those are. Everyone swims in a sea
1 hour, 10 minutes, 47 seconds
of lies and it's been that way for decades and unless unless you have the the phone and show people different,
1 hour, 10 minutes, 57 seconds
right? And then the lies evaporate in the sun, right? You can have a swarm of lies,
1 hour, 11 minutes, 5 seconds
right? in a dark room with a swarm of rats.
1 hour, 11 minutes, 10 seconds
We do this all the time when we do our our when our citizen journalists come in, right? You should have seen the studio before we got there.
1 hour, 11 minutes, 20 seconds
We open the doors, we let the sun come in, we put in the fans, we air it out,
1 hour, 11 minutes, 25 seconds
we get rid of all the contagion and so forth. scrub the walls, paint the walls,
1 hour, 11 minutes, 30 seconds
put up memorabilia to remind us of of the things that we want to save and cherish, right?
1 hour, 11 minutes, 38 seconds
Because there's a lot of good in the days gone by and it changes everything.
1 hour, 11 minutes, 43 seconds
Changes the whole street corner which changes the city, right? Now it's a now everyone wants to go there. Before it
1 hour, 11 minutes, 49 seconds
was box office poison. So again, citizen journalism is is simply
1 hour, 11 minutes, 58 seconds
putting what your mother told you about right and wrong into practice.
1 hour, 12 minutes, 3 seconds
That's all it is. It's what my mother told me about right and wrong. Just putting it in practice. Uh another Burning Man death this year. Well, I
1 hour, 12 minutes, 12 seconds
guess Ray Dio, I guess she put up a fight, huh? Um uh hey George, glad I caught you. Glad
1 hour, 12 minutes, 21 seconds
to have you here. Morning dose of George. Right. Jeez, that got me thinking about coffee. You got me thinking about coffee.
1 hour, 12 minutes, 32 seconds
RP Veronica Wolski, Bernie Bridges,
1 hour, 12 minutes, 39 seconds
bought many Truth Leaks and free Julian Assange t-shirts.
1 hour, 12 minutes, 43 seconds
I to we took Veronica we took uh Birdie Bridges with task force and I we went up to where she served Al Capone.
1 hour, 12 minutes, 51 seconds
Not not him but all of his guys up in um real close to the border where they ran the hooch over the border from
1 hour, 12 minutes, 59 seconds
Wisconsin. They bring it in Lake Michigan through Rene and then they would bring it over the border at this one place. It was like a little little
1 hour, 13 minutes, 6 seconds
Sicily. They made it into a Sicily. A little Sicily.
1 hour, 13 minutes, 10 seconds
and he and she used to serve when she was a young girl used to serve them up there.
1 hour, 13 minutes, 19 seconds
Um,
1 hour, 13 minutes, 20 seconds
I probably shouldn't tell this story about her, but I'm going to tell it anyway because she told me this in confidence.
1 hour, 13 minutes, 30 seconds
Uh, but she's dead now and I really think it tells you who she is and why she made all those sandwiches.
1 hour, 13 minutes, 38 seconds
No, I can't. Okay. Um, okay. Here's here's why she made all those sandwiches.
Sync to video time
 

 

Transcript

Chapter 1: Epstein's Disregard For His Victims

So I've asked you about about Ghislaine.
2 seconds
Well, what struck you when you talked to Jeffrey Epstein and about the way he talked about young women?
11 seconds
That they were really disposable service providers,
16 seconds
sort of like landscapers and disease annoyances that just wanted to be paid again and didn't really deserve to be.
28 seconds
I'm trying to call this is the Daily Beast podcast.
31 seconds
Today's guest comes armed with a tape of his conversation with Jeffrey Epstein.
38 seconds
And we're going to be playing you clips from that tape, literally, a voice from the grave. And this was when our guest, George Rush,
47 seconds
was running the most important gossip column in New York. He and his wife, Joanna molloy, ran a column called Rush and Malloy,
56 seconds
which was the first thing you had to read every morning to understand what the city's power brokers were up to.
1 minute, 3 seconds
Well, of course, Jeffrey Epstein was up to no good as George Rush had learned from a tip from someone living on Al Brillo Way,
1 minute, 14 seconds
which is where Jeffrey Epstein had his Florida mansion in Palm Beach.
1 minute, 19 seconds
And what George Rush heard from Epstein's neighbor was that, yes, he was out of jail, but he was up to his old tricks.
1 minute, 27 seconds
So we're going to play you some of the clips from that interview and talk to George about what it was like when Epstein called him.
1 minute, 35 seconds
But before we do that, before we get to those clips, just, a plea. We are almost at 600,000 subscribers.
1 minute, 45 seconds
Please, if you haven't. Do subscribe to the Daily Beast. Join our beast tier of membership where you get extra content, exclusive content.
1 minute, 54 seconds
And don't forget to leave us a comment telling us what you made of this conversation. But now let's get into it.
2 minutes, 5 seconds
George, welcome to the Daily Beast podcast. Let's start at the beginning. You were a fabulously well known gossip columnist in New York City,
2 minutes, 15 seconds
presiding over a hugely influential column at the Daily News. And you started hearing things about Jeffrey Epstein.
2 minutes, 24 seconds
I, was familiar with his name, but I really didn't know very much about him, and I was vaguely aware that he'd had some legal problems where he was alleged to have, abused young women.
2 minutes, 40 seconds
And I had a couple of friends in Palm Beach who were much more avid about following his movements,
2 minutes, 49 seconds
and he had just been released from the Palm Beach sheriff's, stockade, as they called the jail down there.
2 minutes, 58 seconds
And stockade House came very west. Sound like cattle. And he had reached this what was it called?
3 minutes, 8 seconds
A sweetheart deal to plead to the much reduced charge of soliciting prostitution,
3 minutes, 16 seconds
and he had completed a work release sentence where he would only spend nights at this stockade jail, sleeping there.
3 minutes, 26 seconds
And during the day he was free to go to his office, where he supposedly was pursuing his philanthropy.
3 minutes, 34 seconds
And we should just point out, soliciting prostitution from a minor. Yes, from a minor. And it's abiding friends in Palm Beach.
3 minutes, 44 seconds
This one lady in, particular name, Morrison,

Chapter 2: How Rush First Investigated Epstein

3 minutes, 48 seconds
who was a kind of socialite who had turned herself into a private detective, believed that he was up to his old tricks
3 minutes, 55 seconds
and was still trying to recruit poor, underage girls, some of whom were on the edges
4 minutes, 3 seconds
of the adult entertainment sex massage area and lure them to his mansion.
4 minutes, 12 seconds
So I dug into the litigation. In particular, this suit filed by Jane Doe 102,
4 minutes, 21 seconds
as she was known then later to be revealed as, Virginia Giuffre, the best known, of his accusers and victims.
4 minutes, 30 seconds
I was astonished by her testimony of how Gillian Maxwell, his former girlfriend and,
4 minutes, 38 seconds
hench woman, had made her acquaintance,
4 minutes, 42 seconds
introduced herself at the Mar-A-Lago club where Virginia and worked in the locker room.
4 minutes, 50 seconds
And Geylang, she said, had asked her if she would be interested in becoming a masseuse.
4 minutes, 58 seconds
And Virginia said, I don't know anything about it. Oh, it's easy to learn and you can make a lot of money.
5 minutes, 2 seconds
And so in this testimony, said Guillén eventually brought her over the Epstein Mandarin, showed her to the massage room where she saw this naked man,
5 minutes, 15 seconds
and assumed that that was par for the course and that Guillen had been removed her own shirt,
5 minutes, 24 seconds
and stripped down to her underwear, but remained topless and demonstrated by rubbing her breasts across,
5 minutes, 33 seconds
Epstein, that this was what a Virginia should do.
5 minutes, 38 seconds
And again, in this testimony, she said that the over the course of this encounter, Guillen and Epstein had,
5 minutes, 50 seconds
abused her, violated her, and at the end of it said,
5 minutes, 55 seconds
she has a promising future that the words that effect so I, talked to other people around that story.
6 minutes, 3 seconds
Her lawyer, Brett Edwards, and eventually put together a list of questions that,
6 minutes, 12 seconds
I wanted to give Epstein and Maxwell the opportunity to respond to. And I had once had dinner with Elaine and some other folks.
6 minutes, 22 seconds
And so I kind of knew her and had her email.
6 minutes, 25 seconds
I emailed her the questions, and I then I sort of braced myself for what the fallout, which came in the form of,
6 minutes, 37 seconds
our editor in chief, Martin Dunne, saying that, the owner of the newspaper, real estate mogul Mort Zuckerman,
6 minutes, 46 seconds
had gotten a call from Epstein. Whom he was a, a better friend to than I realized.
6 minutes, 54 seconds
And Mort, which is the point where every journalist's heart sinks because you never want to get the owner involved, right?
7 minutes, 2 seconds
That's always going to be a nightmare.
7 minutes, 4 seconds
Exactly. Yeah. And but, Mort,
7 minutes, 10 seconds
I knew I was aware that Mort and Epstein had had a couple of business ventures where,
7 minutes, 17 seconds
they had launched, a magazine radar, which was, which was quite smart, sort of in the spy magazine.
7 minutes, 26 seconds
But I remember it was kind of gossipy, pocket gossip about the powerful in New York. Yeah.
7 minutes, 31 seconds
And, they'd also made an attempt to buy New York magazine with a partner named Harvey Weinstein. Great, great, great guys,

Chapter 3: Epstein Calls Owner To Kill Story

7 minutes, 40 seconds
great guys, Jeffrey Epstein, Harvey Weinstein, and then Mort Zuckerman, who did at least know how to publish a newspaper was, at least in the business.
7 minutes, 48 seconds
Exactly. And but,
7 minutes, 51 seconds
not until these latest DOJ Department of Justice emails came out
7 minutes, 57 seconds
did I discover that, Epstein was already pursuing his years long quest to, take control
8 minutes, 6 seconds
and become the architect, as he put it, of Mort Zuckerman's billions in, in, in, and do his estate planning.
8 minutes, 16 seconds
And so just to set the stage, Jeffrey Epstein and Mort Zuckerman are friends.
8 minutes, 21 seconds
But Jeffrey Epstein's ambition is to get his hands on Mort Zuckerman's. Billions of dollars created through real estate.
8 minutes, 31 seconds
Yeah, and to be his to be in charge of his estate planning. Exactly.
8 minutes, 37 seconds
Even though which he was, went to college, much less law school or, you know. Right. But but for which he was planning to charge $20 million a year.
8 minutes, 46 seconds
The initial, proposal in that document was for 30 million, which every trust in estate lawyer just says, no, no, no one has ever gotten that much money.
8 minutes, 58 seconds
And then when Mort started hemming and hawing, he Epstein dropped it down to 21 million, you know? So what happens?
9 minutes, 6 seconds
Does Mort call you and say, George, what are you doing? He's a friend of mine. Or how does it sort of move from there?
9 minutes, 13 seconds
Well, I had I had drafted a story at that point and Martin Dunne, the editor, again, came over and said, you know, we've got trouble here.
9 minutes, 21 seconds
Mort has heard from Epstein. I was waiting for him to just say, it's dad.
9 minutes, 26 seconds
It's, you know, the story should be sent to the morgue, but kind of to my, excitement.
9 minutes, 34 seconds
He's. Martin said that Epstein wants to talk to you. At that point, I don't know whether Epstein had ever given an interview.
9 minutes, 41 seconds
Maybe maybe one. And so I welcomed that, that chance to to talk to him.
9 minutes, 48 seconds
And the following week,
9 minutes, 51 seconds
I went into Martin's office and, and Epstein called at the appointed time and he, began to spin me, about how I,
10 minutes, 5 seconds
we respected what, the Daily News did. And because he was a kid from Brooklyn, he came from a poor family.
10 minutes, 15 seconds
And by the way, he, you know, there aren't many,
10 minutes, 22 seconds
recordings of Epstein's voice.
10 minutes, 24 seconds
Certainly not at that point, but in the recordings of depositions he'd given, he comes off as a,
10 minutes, 33 seconds
very educated, sophisticated man with a sort of admitted landing accent.
10 minutes, 39 seconds
But on this phone call, he was leaning into his his Brooklyn roots, you know? Okay, so we actually have a clip from the interview.
10 minutes, 47 seconds
Let's hear it. And I have to say, I mean, as someone who'd only ever heard him,
10 minutes, 54 seconds
really say he was going to plead the fifth, the sixth and the 14th instead of just the fifth. Why, he couldn't have pled just the fifth. I do not know.
11 minutes, 1 second
Before we get into it, just a brief housekeeping aside, the first clip isn't very clear.
11 minutes, 7 seconds
So if you're listening to this on audio, we've actually got the captions up on YouTube. But the next three clips are perfectly clear.
11 minutes, 16 seconds
And you hear that deeply manipulative voice. I was very intrigued to hear this voice,

Chapter 4: First Audio: Epstein Tries To Charm Press

11 minutes, 24 seconds
and it is like a voice from the grave. I can judge. Yeah, yeah.
11 minutes, 31 seconds
So I went back and.
11 minutes, 38 seconds
I understood the challenge of bringing in new technological. Your transition papers.
11 minutes, 47 seconds
Commercial service industries prefer people that are doing mandatory. Certainly before the international.
11 minutes, 59 seconds
Institutional interest.
12 minutes, 1 second
You know, they make stringent rules and it's fascinating to hear even given it's a tape recording from 20 years ago.
12 minutes, 10 seconds
I understand he says to you, I understand the charge of bringing in, attacking the rich guy, and I respect it. Your job is trying to sell papers.
12 minutes, 19 seconds
Such a classic line. People always say that when you you've got them back to rights.
12 minutes, 23 seconds
I think that's I think what's potentially more exciting here is that people not only did it do they dislike the wealthy, but they dislike lawyers.
12 minutes, 33 seconds
And so he then tries to sell you a story about Virginia for a lawyer. Exactly.
12 minutes, 41 seconds
He he starts to say that a much better story would involve the truly evil person of a lawyer who is,
12 minutes, 53 seconds
using you, George. And the Daily News by by email,
12 minutes, 59 seconds
asking you to carry water for his outrageous claim that against me.
13 minutes, 5 seconds
And I mean, as as we have come to see part of Epstein's,
13 minutes, 14 seconds
leverage and approach is playbook is controlling the media narrative.
13 minutes, 19 seconds
And in this case, using a combination of flattery and, you know,
13 minutes, 29 seconds
it's vague that a threat of of litigation to steer you in the direction of telling the story
13 minutes, 37 seconds
he wants told and briefly, his his claim was that, Brad Edwards,
13 minutes, 47 seconds
the crusading attorney for many of, Epstein's victims, ultimately successful,
13 minutes, 56 seconds
was a part of a Ponzi scheme that a that Brad Edwards, his former law firm, had had taken part in.
14 minutes, 8 seconds
And that firm was, the the chief partner was a man named, Seth Rothstein,
14 minutes, 16 seconds
who indeed was convicted of a, I think, $1.5 billion,
14 minutes, 24 seconds
scam where he would sell investors shares in future,
14 minutes, 31 seconds
settlements with, people that the firm was suing, including Epstein and,
14 minutes, 40 seconds
Rothstein eventually went to prison for, sentenced for 50 years. So can we just dwell on that a moment?
14 minutes, 46 seconds
Because what's fascinating about this story is that Epstein is actually selling you or selling you on, obviously, is no money exchanging
14 minutes, 55 seconds
hands, a story which in fact turns out to be true in it is a riveting story, and it doesn't mean that the two stories can't coexist.
15 minutes, 5 seconds
In fact, it turns out that both things are kind of true, that that, Brad Edwards, as you say, the lawyer for Virginia Giuffre's partner,

Chapter 5: Epstein Pushes Lawyer Conspiracy Theory

15 minutes, 14 seconds
is selling investments to people on future legal settlements. And what I find fascinating about this is he gets 15 years.
15 minutes, 24 seconds
He is sentenced to five zero years in jail,
15 minutes, 28 seconds
which is basically 35 times longer than the sentence Jeffrey Epstein gets. Yeah.
15 minutes, 36 seconds
It's and and let me hasten to add, Brad Edwards maintained that he himself was a victim of Rothstein and he had been ripped off.
15 minutes, 50 seconds
And so it was it was, he viewed it as a speech, as,
15 minutes, 57 seconds
malevolent vendetta, litigation to scare him away from representing these accusers.
16 minutes, 7 seconds
And yet the court found his, partner guilty. Rothstein guilty and sentenced him to 50 years.
16 minutes, 14 seconds
It's just an astonishing sideshow to the main Epstein Epstein story. Okay, let me, if I may, quickly,
16 minutes, 22 seconds
before we forget Brad Edwards. It took him, I think, about six years, but he ultimately. Well, let me back up.
16 minutes, 30 seconds
Epstein sued Brad Edwards, saying that you took part in this Ponzi scheme, and I was a victim of it.
16 minutes, 37 seconds
Ultimately, Brad Edwards got Epstein to make a settlement with him where Epstein paid Edwards an undisclosed amount and
16 minutes, 46 seconds
issued a public rare public apology, acknowledging that he did it as a vendetta.
16 minutes, 52 seconds
And because Brad Edwards was so good at his job. Wow. Okay.
16 minutes, 57 seconds
Well, he turned out to be very good at his job in terms of representing the number of victims that he did and getting them settlement.
17 minutes, 4 seconds
So should we play another clip? Because here we have you confronting Epstein on his own agreement.
17 minutes, 11 seconds
I'm looking here at the Non-prosecution agreement. Where where they referred him to you,
17 minutes, 18 seconds
that you willfully conspired to knowingly, persuade and to entice minor females to engage in prostitution.
17 minutes, 27 seconds
I mean, you actually abandoned. Okay, that's not that's the thing you did.
17 minutes, 34 seconds
You successfully. Yeah.
17 minutes, 41 seconds
It's this is signed by Gerald Lefcourt 927 that does not serve a single charge is very much accurate.
17 minutes, 52 seconds
Okay. So just in in everyday conversation, what do you have to say about, you know, if doing that, do you.
18 minutes
Why did you do that? Oh my God, I can't have that confessions. I can't get it.
18 minutes, 7 seconds
Why don't you tell me I get somebody like that? So what was it like? Sort of talking to him?
18 minutes, 15 seconds
Did you feel you were being played? I mean, where he says that. Oh, my God, I can't have that conversation. I pled guilty to solicit what I pled guilty to. I can't talk about that anymore.
18 minutes, 23 seconds
It was a difficult conversation.
18 minutes, 25 seconds
I could tell right away that he wasn't going to break down and say, I'm sorry I did that.
18 minutes, 33 seconds
And I also was conscious that, you can't I know, given that he's the publisher's friend, you have to.
18 minutes, 43 seconds
I can't go too hard.
18 minutes, 46 seconds
And, you know, I just generally think it's good to be respectful to people you're interviewing, but, he he was.

Chapter 6: Confronting Epstein On Guilty Plea

18 minutes, 55 seconds
He wouldn't go into self-reflection, in any way. His main argument was that, in a way, he was the victim of these girls,
19 minutes, 5 seconds
that they had deceived him into thinking that they were older than they were, that,
19 minutes, 10 seconds
they were already working, as miss, misuses and strippers,
19 minutes, 16 seconds
and they were part of this demimonde that, you know, existed before he came on. And they'd come willfully to his house, to get paid.
19 minutes, 25 seconds
And as he's played it now, they want to get paid again.
19 minutes, 28 seconds
And that sentence he got was, in his words, much harsher than he would have gotten in New York, which which he said what he did
19 minutes, 38 seconds
was essentially like a John on a street corner who, you know, saw a prostitute.
19 minutes, 44 seconds
And then, you know, when asked her if she was free for an hour or something and that it was like would have been the equivalent of jaywalking, he said. So,
19 minutes, 56 seconds
you know, I wanted to see if he would acknowledge anything.
20 minutes
And, the closest he came was to admit it in his own way that his, his main mistake was, was kind of getting caught,
20 minutes, 9 seconds
that he came too close to the line, that he should have been more careful about, you know, exposing himself.
20 minutes, 17 seconds
So he also he blames the victims and says that they were all prostitutes anyway, and they were trying to charge him twice, first, for the time he paid them,
20 minutes, 25 seconds
and then they were coming back to get legal, to get that Brad Edwards had basically pointed out to them that they could make more money out of this.
20 minutes, 35 seconds
But you have a spy also on you have Miss Marple of El Brillo Way,
20 minutes, 41 seconds
who's basically saying, listen, this guy has not gotten any better. He's been inside in the stockade, he's come out and there's still girls,
20 minutes, 49 seconds
a flock of girls going in and out of his his house every day.
20 minutes, 54 seconds
When you look back on the interview, you did now with hindsight, obviously were the red flags. You you see, now that you didn't see then.
21 minutes, 6 seconds
I guess it, yes. In the sense that, I,
21 minutes, 13 seconds
I didn't realize the scope of how he had continued to, resume his trafficking operations.
21 minutes, 22 seconds
I also didn't realize I thought it was sort of just for his own pleasure. Perhaps.
21 minutes, 28 seconds
But I didn't realize how wide the network was. And he was providing a service for his male friends. Yeah.
21 minutes, 35 seconds
So I'm flying these girls around the world, and that who who else was involved?
21 minutes, 43 seconds
So one of the things he's very specific about, is that he wants to leave Guillen out of this.
21 minutes, 51 seconds
You ask about Guillen, who you know, socially because she's a figure on the New York social scene, which you're covering in your Russian Malloy column.
22 minutes, 1 second
Why can you just remind us what he said? And why do you think he was so vociferous about leaving her out of this?
22 minutes, 11 seconds
I, one I think he probably, to the extent that he felt
22 minutes, 19 seconds
any personal responsibility, it was to Guillen, that he had, you know, viewed himself as having gotten into this trouble.
22 minutes, 29 seconds
And although I guess we later found out it was with her help, she was, his second banana, and,
22 minutes, 38 seconds
didn't want to drag her into the to the shame. He didn't want to be in the shame.

Chapter 7: Epstein Blames Victims In Interview

22 minutes, 42 seconds
I mean, now, one thing that has also emerged is how the worlds of Palm Beach and New York
22 minutes, 50 seconds
City were apart, and that what he was doing there hadn't really come to light in his New York social circle.
22 minutes, 59 seconds
He just sort of he disappeared for 13 months while he was under water during his sentence.
23 minutes, 6 seconds
But, you know, many the New York crowd would go down to Palm Beach, but to a great extent, they weren't aware of what was going down.
23 minutes, 13 seconds
And he didn't want the hometown newspaper splashing it out and letting everyone making it clear what Guillén had did and that, you know, that description from that,
23 minutes, 27 seconds
affidavit that Virginia Giuffre gave, I think terrified him and that,
23 minutes, 32 seconds
you know, Ghislaine, who was sort of his ticket to the high society European, British, milieu.
23 minutes, 41 seconds
It he didn't if she was also shamed, she that would be bad for the whole operation. Interesting.
23 minutes, 49 seconds
And so it I mean, Mort Zuckerman didn't stop you from publishing the story. The story appeared. Yes.
23 minutes, 56 seconds
So to to Mort's credit, a, I won't say it was sanitized. There were some, some,
24 minutes, 5 seconds
the basic facts of it were undeniable. They were in, public records. And,
24 minutes, 12 seconds
the lead kind of became that that Epstein had reached a settlement with one of his accusers.
24 minutes, 18 seconds
I whether because of my inquiry or not, he had made an it,
24 minutes, 24 seconds
I guess, an initial settlement with, with, Virginia Giuffre. But, nowhere was Gillon mentioned.
24 minutes, 33 seconds
That was the deal where, Mort had asked us to, honor his request.
24 minutes, 41 seconds
And I've since request to leave her out.
24 minutes, 44 seconds
And in return, we could get at other things. Right?
24 minutes, 50 seconds
So he didn't want her in any way tainted with his behavior. Because that would stop her from being able to keep his funnel coming home.
24 minutes, 59 seconds
Right. Fascinating. And then when the story came out, what was the impact? There wasn't the sort of eruption that we have today.
25 minutes, 7 seconds
It ran on a Sunday, and they didn't. It didn't, make the splash. I hoped it would.
25 minutes, 14 seconds
But the people who were aware of the difficulty of getting it in the paper at all were happy.
25 minutes, 23 seconds
The the accusers, Brad Edwards, my palm Beach friends, they they were pleased. Okay.
25 minutes, 30 seconds
So we have another clip here where you say that he plays the victim and he says, these girls are all ganging up against him.
25 minutes, 39 seconds
They've been whipped up by the lawyer, Brad Edwards. Let let's just hear this. And his description that it's all about money.
25 minutes, 47 seconds
I think we're just about done here. But the, again, getting back to Jane Doe went out to, You have anything to say about her motives?
25 minutes, 57 seconds
Just this. This is this is already in effect.
26 minutes, 1 second
You know, the general think I can't begin to bash some of the personal content for that particular house,
26 minutes, 11 seconds
and we want to get paid, get a I don't know the technicalities of educational medical supplies to the point,
26 minutes, 20 seconds
but the disclosure that the gentleman has made sure that we have a lot going on in that clip, we have him saying he doesn't want to attack the characters of the girls, but in fact, he's all right.

Chapter 8: “They Want To Get Paid Again” Clip

26 minutes, 34 seconds
She's back to you. Right? He's saying they just want to get paid again. He's saying it wasn't smart of him to go so close to the line.
26 minutes, 41 seconds
So sort of acknowledging there was a line and he went too close to it, but he got a slap on the wrist.
26 minutes, 47 seconds
And then, fascinatingly, he says, no, some of these claims are as legitimate as my Zorro winning ticket in the Oklahoma Lottery.
26 minutes, 56 seconds
What is he talking about? Okay, I'll in in the
27 minutes, 3 seconds
in the, documents that I had discovered was a report that,
27 minutes, 11 seconds
Jeffrey Epstein, a Jeffrey Epstein had won, a the Oklahoma lottery,
27 minutes, 20 seconds
and that it was,
27 minutes, 23 seconds
actually, I don't know whether they used him in his name, but as you know, with his, he has his ranch in New Mexico, Lazaro ranch.
27 minutes, 32 seconds
And the winner was, associated with the Zorro ranch in New Mexico.
27 minutes, 39 seconds
And I believe a that the a the name Wexner was also included in the in the story and of course,
27 minutes, 51 seconds
that would be Les Wexner. Yeah. Was, you know, Epstein's initial benefactor and, a victim himself and the founder, we should say, of the limited, which included Victoria's Secret.
28 minutes, 4 seconds
Yes. Correct.
28 minutes, 4 seconds
And so this story, I, I brought this story to Epstein's attention and asked him, what the hell is this?
28 minutes, 12 seconds
You you won the Oklahoma Lottery.
28 minutes, 15 seconds
And he professed that this was news to him, that he had no idea what the hell this this was about.
28 minutes, 23 seconds
If some if one of my staff won the lottery and didn't tell me I'm entitled to some money.
28 minutes, 28 seconds
So he kind of made light of of this this report and used it as a comparison for how absurd these charges were against him.
28 minutes, 39 seconds
Because it was it was it's,
28 minutes, 42 seconds
specious and and preposterous as as his lotto winner winning. But he did appear to have or someone from this or old ranch had won the lottery.
28 minutes, 52 seconds
Well, I never got to the bottom of that. I don't I that's something to follow up on.
28 minutes, 57 seconds
I mean, if people are paying more attention to the then the bizarre a ranch now and by the way, not to go off on track,
29 minutes, 7 seconds
but I recently I, spoke to someone who had been a guest at the Zorro Ranch and,
29 minutes, 15 seconds
she was she was not one of his, victims. She was sort of a social friend, but,
29 minutes, 25 seconds
she told the story of how she got up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom and was trying to find her way down the hallways
29 minutes, 33 seconds
and open this one door and discovered that it was a,
29 minutes, 40 seconds
some sort of medical examination room that featured, gynecologist stirrups. Oh, God. How creepy. Yeah.
29 minutes, 48 seconds
And why do you need that there?
29 minutes, 52 seconds
And as as reporting by the New York Times has revealed, he had this old,
30 minutes, 1 second
coterie of doctors and specialists that included in, in the words of Jeffrey Epstein and in one of his emails, a pussy doctor,
30 minutes, 11 seconds
who would examine, these, his victims checked out for any STDs or whatever.

Chapter 9: Protecting Ghislaine Maxwell From Story

30 minutes, 20 seconds
So I've always thought it odd that people described him as a germaphobe,
30 minutes, 24 seconds
which, of course, Donald Trump has professed to be a germaphobe, and he wouldn't shake hands with people. He would do the fist bump or he would do the weird elbow thing.
30 minutes, 31 seconds
And this was before Covid and then you read his medical documents and you read about the network of doctors he had.
30 minutes, 38 seconds
And this fresh, constant fresh intakes of young girls from, Eastern Europe. And he was constantly getting gonorrhea.
30 minutes, 46 seconds
I mean, constantly getting some kind of STI, herpes or all of these things. And yet he was supposed to be a germaphobe.
30 minutes, 54 seconds
So bizarre. So I've asked you about about Galen.
30 minutes, 58 seconds
What struck you when you talk to him about the way he talked about young women?
31 minutes, 5 seconds
I think that they were really disposable.
31 minutes, 10 seconds
Service providers, you know, sort of like landscapers or. I don't know, I mean.
31 minutes, 19 seconds
Just just how little regard he had for them.
31 minutes, 23 seconds
And that they were treated as his annoyances that just wanted to be paid again.
31 minutes, 32 seconds
And didn't really deserve to be. And that, you know, because of their,
31 minutes, 40 seconds
plot against him, you know, he's had to, to suffer.
31 minutes, 46 seconds
But, you know, he's he vaguely knowledge that it was a, it was a chapter of his life
31 minutes, 54 seconds
that was now behind him and that now he wanted to, work on his philanthropy. Okay, we have a clip about that.
32 minutes, 3 seconds
You say to him, well, we can hear what you say, but you set it up by saying, you know, basically,
32 minutes, 11 seconds
do you have any regrets in hindsight? Do you feel like you shouldn't have been,
32 minutes, 18 seconds
even if they came in, came to get paid attention to me?
32 minutes, 23 seconds
I think that was, you know, an investment that could happen with additional medications for me to get my life back,
32 minutes, 34 seconds
which will ever be, So you're not,
32 minutes, 41 seconds
you're not in engaging in any sort of massage or. Necessarily.
32 minutes, 51 seconds
Want to wake up to the track? So he's trying to make a joke there when you say,
32 minutes, 59 seconds
you're not engaging in anything, and he goes, physical massage,
33 minutes, 2 seconds
or you say physical massage, and he goes, no, most of the scientists who come here in their 70s and 80s, they're not that attractive. Are you making a joke?
33 minutes, 10 seconds
He's not going to get, massage from an 80 year old scientist. And yet he's very deftly changing the subject there.
33 minutes, 18 seconds
Yeah, yeah. And he also goes on and in that part of the conversation,
33 minutes, 24 seconds
to brag about how what a great philanthropist he is and how he's,
33 minutes, 31 seconds
doing cutting edge and just uses this phrase bleeding edge science, where he is
33 minutes, 39 seconds
giving funding to, researchers that would couldn't get it from anywhere else, and that he's, you know, like a lot of these
33 minutes, 49 seconds
not to tar, too many people with the same brush, but but,
33 minutes, 54 seconds
this, this futuristic roller, our billionaire visionary galaxy brain,

Chapter 10: Publisher Pressure And What Got Cut

34 minutes, 3 seconds
a self-aggrandizement that, you know, has become common in out of out of tech.
34 minutes, 9 seconds
You know, he just feels like he's the world's savior and only he can do it. And that somehow, I mean,
34 minutes, 17 seconds
as we have come to see,
34 minutes, 20 seconds
he saw science and philanthropy as a way to, win absolution and, you know, overcome the stain of of his behavior.
34 minutes, 33 seconds
And I, I,
34 minutes, 36 seconds
believe that, you know, he hoped to recruit more Zuckerman in this, the scheme. And I think you're a friend of the beast.
34 minutes, 46 seconds
Michael Wolff, wrote a piece, I mean, during the time that he had gotten to know Epstein in which he described,
34 minutes, 55 seconds
how Mort Zuckerman was,
34 minutes, 57 seconds
present at a gathering where Epstein was exploring the idea of a philanthropy that,
35 minutes, 6 seconds
would, would help them all and that, you know, using their money, but using their money and their reputations, too, because it was a sort of smokescreen.
35 minutes, 14 seconds
I mean, what's fascinating is that academia in America is set up for people to sponsor it.
35 minutes, 22 seconds
You know, so many academics and so many research scientists are desperate for funding. And along comes Jeffrey Epstein and along, you know, they meet in the middle. And that's the thing.
35 minutes, 30 seconds
I mean, because he undoubtedly did sponsor people and he was able to hide behind their reputations and use them as a sort of social battering ram for for repairing his reputation.
35 minutes, 43 seconds
Right? Yeah. He, he just, you kind of, kind of, figured he would,
35 minutes, 54 seconds
use the respectability of these Nobel Prize winners, these institutions like MIT and Harvard.
36 minutes, 2 seconds
You know, he, bought himself a Harvard sweatshirt that he never rarely took off. And it's in all the pictures.
36 minutes, 9 seconds
It tells you more about him than anything else. Almost. You know, I don't know whether somebody there gave him,
36 minutes, 18 seconds
a sweatshirt.
36 minutes, 19 seconds
I think probably Larry Summers, the former president of him, sent him probably a new sweatshirt every day, a new sweatshirt every day.
36 minutes, 27 seconds
So why do you think Mort Zuckerman was so interested in staying friends with Jeffrey Epstein
36 minutes, 37 seconds
when he had read what you had written, and also would know that there was a lot of stuff that you had researched and written that didn't get into the paper.
36 minutes, 46 seconds
Yeah, I mean, that's one of the things that still puzzles me. Because, you know, Moore was a brilliant man,
36 minutes, 56 seconds
who created this fortune, and, he, you know, also had a true intellectual side.
37 minutes, 5 seconds
He would appear on political talk shows and, you know, his name was floated as a potential candidate from time to time.
37 minutes, 13 seconds
And it really had an amazing art collection. Really, really was someone who hosted Leon Black.
37 minutes, 22 seconds
It should be. Yeah. Added.
37 minutes, 26 seconds
And so we it's you'd think he would hope that that the what my story brought to his attention might have concerned him.
37 minutes, 35 seconds
But as these emails have shown, they, they,
37 minutes, 43 seconds
he continued to be friends with him. I mean, they were constantly talking about how fond they were of each other.

Chapter 11: Why The Story Barely Made Waves

37 minutes, 50 seconds
By the way, I don't think we touched on how these emails also revealed to me the,
37 minutes, 58 seconds
what was going on behind the scenes when I was waiting for a response from Epstein and Guillen.
38 minutes, 5 seconds
In the emails, Epstein says, here's a possible response. You know, that they were all hookers,
38 minutes, 14 seconds
or or and what's this?
38 minutes, 15 seconds
Whether he was waiting for more to tell him the story had died or whatever, and Mort said, well, you know, we're working on it against much resistance. And,
38 minutes, 26 seconds
there was this, this back and forth and, you know, eventually, I think Epstein thought that
38 minutes, 34 seconds
the story was, that he was I was waiting for his exclusive about the Ponzi scheme.
38 minutes, 41 seconds
And then when I started making more phone calls to other people, an email, Epstein emailed me, and,
38 minutes, 49 seconds
I hear George Rush is working on the story again.
38 minutes, 52 seconds
Like you just suddenly sort of frustrated that it was still, coming back to life. So,
39 minutes
you know, a lot of these emails that have come out also, show how Mort was a being preyed upon by Epstein in that he,
39 minutes, 11 seconds
you know, Epstein had scored big first from Leslie Wexner managing his millions, and then Leon Black,
39 minutes, 20 seconds
the hedge fund billionaire, of Apollo. And I think he, he saw Ma, Zuckerman as his next mark.
39 minutes, 30 seconds
And, in later emails, you also see how it became apparent that,
39 minutes, 37 seconds
Moore was experiencing memory loss. And, you know, Epstein played on this vulnerability.
39 minutes, 44 seconds
Like, you know, you've told me how you you're, you're doing enveloping these symptoms and, yeah,
39 minutes, 52 seconds
I really have to I'm concerned about your, you know, your money should be guarded. And there were.
39 minutes, 59 seconds
Mort has two nephews who were like sons to him, and they were kind of his principal errors.
40 minutes, 6 seconds
And they were helping him manage his money. And Epstein wanted to just push them out. And the board had some of the best trust in the state.
40 minutes, 15 seconds
Lawyers absolutely wanted them out of the picture. And so he would couch all these,
40 minutes, 23 seconds
aggressive maneuvers in concern for, his friend and,
40 minutes, 31 seconds
you know, other reporting has shown how Mort, continued to, I mean,
40 minutes, 37 seconds
he had once signed the same birthday book that Donald Trump signed for Epstein's 50th birthday with the nude cartoon.
40 minutes, 46 seconds
Mort had done some joking dedication where he, suggested that Epstein had a hidden family in Luxembourg, which,
40 minutes, 56 seconds
was not true.
40 minutes, 58 seconds
And in a later birthday book, he he said something about how Epstein,
41 minutes, 5 seconds
should have a menu at his next dinner where the it was would include a simple salad and whatever would enhance, Jeffrey's sexual performance.
41 minutes, 15 seconds
So, you know, even years after,
41 minutes, 21 seconds
my story and when other things were coming to light, Moore was still joking about his sexual performance.
41 minutes, 27 seconds
I mean, it's also interesting to me that I saw some emails in there about Jeffrey trying to offer more help getting his then younger daughter into Trinity.

Chapter 12: Epstein Plays Victim Again On Tape

41 minutes, 38 seconds
And you think, why on earth would would Mort Zuckerman, who's well known, you know, billionaire businessman, right.
41 minutes, 46 seconds
Super connected in New York, an absolute steeple on the kind of landscape of New York,
41 minutes, 53 seconds
you know, of of well-connected New York power brokers need Jeffrey Epstein,
42 minutes
who wasn't even a parent at Trinity, to get him into the school. I think Epstein used any tactic he could.
42 minutes, 11 seconds
I mean, it had worked for him in other occasions. These emails are full of,
42 minutes, 16 seconds
the, you know, offers and requests for help in gaining admission to school, to private schools, colleges, dental schools,
42 minutes, 27 seconds
Harvard, Harvard, you know, he and he and,
42 minutes, 31 seconds
you know, Epstein delivered or tried to and that was part of how he kept this network in play, how the the people owed him something.
42 minutes, 41 seconds
And if he could, if he could bring it off, then he really had his hooks in them. So, yeah, it is, it is surprising.
42 minutes, 52 seconds
But then again, not I mean, it also, my story aside, over the next six years,
43 minutes, 2 seconds
these the, the litigation,
43 minutes, 6 seconds
from the other accusers started making it into the media more and more.
43 minutes, 12 seconds
And there was it was would be hard for Moore to ignore that or not see it.
43 minutes, 18 seconds
And, you know, I think initially he probably took it on faith that Epstein was,
43 minutes, 27 seconds
that it was a kind of he said, she said or something.
43 minutes, 29 seconds
And but more and more particularly after, you know, the Miami Herald series, Julie, Kate Brown,
43 minutes, 37 seconds
it would be hard to to its, you know, take Epstein at his word.
43 minutes, 42 seconds
Did you get glimpses of the supposed charm that Jeffrey Epstein had?
43 minutes, 49 seconds
I mean, it is incredible. The network he had and the people he had around his dinner table. And he was supposed to be,
43 minutes, 57 seconds
you know, as well as using all his connections to help people. He was supposed to be very charming. And when he focused on you, you know, like people say about Bill Clinton,
44 minutes, 7 seconds
you know, you felt like you were the center of his universe. Did you feel that when he was talking to you a little bit?
44 minutes, 14 seconds
You know, I can even if you hear the whole recording, you get a sense of how,
44 minutes, 22 seconds
he could be, could be charming. I mean, he said at one point, I want you to be as skeptical as you want to be.
44 minutes, 31 seconds
And, but over time, I think you'll see that what I'm saying is correct. And he he was a master.
44 minutes, 41 seconds
You could tell immediately you were in the hands of a master, of of schmooze and and persuasion,
44 minutes, 48 seconds
and that he had an assortment of tools to try and get his way right to real you in you know.
44 minutes, 57 seconds
Well, and in another sort of weird aside, I just noticed that that you're in the tape.
45 minutes, 5 seconds
You say this is signed by Gerald Lefcourt. I played tennis with Jerry. We get paired occasionally in, in our tennis club, which is which is funny.
45 minutes, 15 seconds
He's very he's a very good strategic tennis player. So there you go. Degrees of Epstein, six degrees of Epstein.
45 minutes, 22 seconds
What a horrible idea. Horrible idea. I don't want to be anyway connected with Jeffrey Epstein. He had an amazing legal team.

Chapter 13: Red Flags Rush Missed At The Time

45 minutes, 31 seconds
I mean, it was. It put OJ's dream team to shame. I mean, he had, their show wits.
45 minutes, 39 seconds
He had, Roy Black, who had been the, attorney for General Manuel Noriega on the topic.
45 minutes, 49 seconds
Right. Of course. And, Kenneth Starr, that,
45 minutes, 55 seconds
moral arbiter of Bill Clinton's, how could the how Ken Starr went from Clinton to Epstein tells you a lot?
46 minutes, 5 seconds
Yeah, yeah. I don't know. Court.
46 minutes, 8 seconds
I think there may have been someone else in there, but yeah, I think he at one point was responsible for keeping the whole Florida bar going, wasn't he?
46 minutes, 15 seconds
I think it's 75. I think Michael Wolff told me he had 75 lawyers at one point. I could believe it.
46 minutes, 22 seconds
Yeah. You didn't know who to call? No wonder he wanted a large fee for monitoring Mort Zuckerman's estate. Yeah, I need this to keep it going.
46 minutes, 30 seconds
It just sometimes it feels like you'll never get to the bottom of it there. I mean, people are using. I and wired had this story.
46 minutes, 40 seconds
The other day about this, wonky guy who had developed a, way of connecting
46 minutes, 47 seconds
different emails and, and really doing a matrix of the, of the network. So maybe someday.
46 minutes, 55 seconds
So, George, your story, you had an intense slice of the Epstein story caught between Jeffrey Epstein and your proprietor and his friend.
47 minutes, 5 seconds
And actually, it says a lot about Saul Zuckerman that he let you run the story. It does. And it's to his credit.
47 minutes, 11 seconds
And I, you know, not to get to too deep into the aftermath, but,
47 minutes, 17 seconds
this damn recording became a huge headache because the lawyer for the the accusers, Brad Edwards,
47 minutes, 29 seconds
I, I told him about it, and he naturally wanted to hear it. I didn't I said, I can't give it to you.
47 minutes, 37 seconds
I, you know, was an off the record, conversation the first thing out of Epstein's mouth was, you know, this is off the record.
47 minutes, 44 seconds
He didn't, you know, even hello was off the record. And and so,
47 minutes, 51 seconds
we the, the Daily News took the position that the, shield law,
47 minutes, 58 seconds
protected our this this, confidential source. And we, you know, we're not going to surrender it.
48 minutes, 6 seconds
And, you know, I think Mort go bankrupt. I believe bankroll that. Sometimes I wonder if Epstein bankrolled that defense, but, he.
48 minutes, 16 seconds
Epstein did not want Brad Edwards to get that recording either. And so, I ended up,
48 minutes, 25 seconds
having to go to court, where,
48 minutes, 29 seconds
to our surprise, the judge said, you know, I having listen to this recording, I do think there is information that, Mr.
48 minutes, 41 seconds
Edwards,
48 minutes, 43 seconds
could could help his case and and show that Epstein has no remorse and that he had of this, malice toward this attorney.
48 minutes, 53 seconds
And so, but you better turn it over in the next hearing. Or bring your pajamas. Bring your pajamas. Meaning you two will go to jail.
49 minutes, 2 seconds
I would go to jail. I was bracing for that. And in the meantime, fortunately, Epstein reached a settlement with Ju Frey.
49 minutes, 10 seconds
And so I didn't, with that, that case died. But, Brad Edwards still wanted to tape,

Chapter 14: Looking Back At The Epstein Interview

49 minutes, 19 seconds
and he he said, I need it for my case. I get it involving Epstein. Unfortunately, again, the judge said, no, you don't.
49 minutes, 27 seconds
And so he we never had to, return the tape. They turn over the tape.
49 minutes, 35 seconds
At one point, there's an email where Epstein asked Zuckerman to please appeal this decision to try and prevent the tape from falling into Edwards his hands. And,
49 minutes, 48 seconds
so that that was a whole side story. And so I have kept that tape. Unheard for for a number of years.
49 minutes, 57 seconds
And then after Epstein's death, it,
50 minutes, 4 seconds
and it emerged that he had given interviews to Michael Wolff and, James B Stewart of The New York Times.
50 minutes, 11 seconds
And so, they were telling what was in those interviews. I figure I was, within my rights to, you know,
50 minutes, 21 seconds
share it with you and the statute of limitations was over.
50 minutes, 24 seconds
So do you think he was murdered or do you think he actually died by his own hand? I have go back and forth. I,
50 minutes, 32 seconds
I, I do think that, you can't underestimate the incompetence of a, prison system that,
50 minutes, 41 seconds
where, you know that the mic where he was staying is just like, bad was badly need of overhaul.
50 minutes, 49 seconds
So there's incompetence that could have allowed him to do it. But, then again, the analysis of Michael Baden,
50 minutes, 57 seconds
the medical examiner for, Epstein's brother is also persuasive that,
51 minutes, 2 seconds
you know, there was sort of the, the nature of the, of the wounds is unlike anything he had said, saying, you know,
51 minutes, 12 seconds
I don't want to get too in the weeds, and I'm not an expert on that. So my, I mean, kind of,
51 minutes, 20 seconds
person who thinks the most obvious conclusion is, is true. I do think he's such a narcissist.
51 minutes, 27 seconds
I've seen that the thought of remaining in jail and enduring this trial was just beyond what he could endure.
51 minutes, 35 seconds
And so, quite possibly, he he just thought this was the classic way out. Fascinating.
51 minutes, 43 seconds
Well, thank you for playing the tape with us.
51 minutes, 47 seconds
And as we said, says a lot about Mort Zuckerman that he allowed the the piece to be published less about him,
51 minutes, 54 seconds
that he continued to be friendly with him, given all he knew. You know, I mean, I will say one more thing about more.
52 minutes, 4 seconds
He generally was not the sort of publisher who was always protecting his friends.
52 minutes, 12 seconds
And when I when I first started this job as a gossip columnists, they someone said to me, you have two things to remember right about.
52 minutes, 20 seconds
It's friends. And don't write about more friends. Yeah. No. What a what a complicate. Because you were writing about all the power brokers in the city.
52 minutes, 28 seconds
And of course they were all people that were having dinner with them every night and probably saying, I can't believe you let George write that about me. Yeah.
52 minutes, 36 seconds
But generally, I mean, you hear many stories about Rupert Murdoch, enforcing his will on his employees, but,
52 minutes, 45 seconds
rarely did more Bigfoot reporters. In my experience in him, he he let things fly.
52 minutes, 52 seconds
That, I know he would have, borne the brunt of. But in this case, he he intervened and to an extent and,
53 minutes, 2 seconds
you know, again, this story did still run, you know, and inform. Well, George, many thanks for coming in.
53 minutes, 9 seconds
And fascinating story, fascinating glimpse of the master manipulator. I'm glad I could share it.
53 minutes, 17 seconds
Thank you Joe.
53 minutes, 23 seconds
Not an enviable place to be squashed between Jeffrey Epstein and the owner of your newspaper, Mort Zuckerman.
53 minutes, 32 seconds
And I do think it's it's very telling that Mort Zuckerman was a good enough owner to let George Rush run the story about his friend.
53 minutes, 41 seconds
I do still think it's weird that he stayed friendly with him. But such are the mysteries of powerful men.
53 minutes, 50 seconds
If you have been. Thank you for watching. Don't forget to subscribe. Leave us a comment with your favorite part of the conversation.
53 minutes, 56 seconds
So the good news is we have so many beast tier members now. There are too many names to read out and we really appreciate your support.
54 minutes, 5 seconds
Thanks to our production team Devin, Roger Reno, Ryan Murray, Rachel Parsa, Heather Pizarro, Neil Rosen. The house.
Sync to video time

1,089 Comments

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@TheDailyBeast
2 weeks ago
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55


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3 replies

@carrow1057
2 weeks ago
NO such thing as prostitution from a minor they cannot consent. It is child rape.

549


Reply


33 replies

@OliveD-Martini
2 weeks ago
Minors aren't prostitutes

452


Reply


15 replies

@8877robert
2 weeks ago
Cindy McCain said it early. "They all knew."

104


Reply


3 replies

@nancyodell1185

2 weeks ago
It's not charm it's Grooming. They're always grooming people to like them and Trust them.

110


Reply


1 reply

@Fohntuuli
2 weeks ago
Les wexler lied, he was no victim either. He used the victims too. I believe Virginia Giuffre s book, what she said

84


Reply


1 reply

@hayestoph
2 weeks ago
Tapes?
If only Joanna knew someone else with tapes of conversations with Epstein...

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@GeorgeHamilton-pt2fh
2 weeks ago
Tragically and on short acquaintance Virginia married a violence prone male who eventually con'd the police, took her children and property and bashed her. IF she suicided is one issue but the degenerate, disgusting smirk on the face of that 'martial arts instructor' creep who claimed SHE assaulted HIM' lives in my memory as spawn of satan.

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@maribelrodriguez5690
2 weeks ago
There is No Child Prost1tut1on. A Minor can not Give Permission to be ProstitUted.

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@michaelkenny1940

2 weeks ago
I love the line..."that he should have been more careful about, you know, exposing himself". EXPOSING himself? Double entendre? Epstein was believed because he was a man talking to other men, it's that simple. Just like Trump's "locker room talk" BS.

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@raincadeify
2 weeks ago
Having 75 lawyers from the same state also corners the market as far as who can be hired for opposing counsel.

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@kimmccormick5922
2 weeks ago
After reading time after time of the short sentences given to pedophiles I have wondered why they were so lightly punished.
Now that I see the men who use children sexually are at the top on down in our leadership it is now clear why sentences don't reflect the damage done by the crime.

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@Lifetarian555
2 weeks ago
Wolfe needs to come clean with his relationship with Epstein

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@kathya1321
2 weeks ago (edited)
Just a reminder Michael Wolff STILL holds on to his supposed 100 hrs of ‘Epstein tapes’ it’s just unconscionable. Joanna we still have no credible reason he does not release them to authorities. It’s disgusting to me and I refuse to listen to Wolff for that reason. He’s waiting for a big payday. It’s obscene.

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@weesa-y5j
2 weeks ago
A few mentions of the nationwide March 28 NO KINGS III protest would be much appreciated by those of us on the ground working to increase participation in the critical resistance to this corrupt White House and complicit GOP

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@theresa2245
2 weeks ago
We, as women, should organize to have candlelit marches throughout the country for these little girls and young women who were abused and enslaved by Epstein, and by callous people of power who had no integrity, so we can to honor their lives and pledge solidarity with these girls, heal our souls, protest against this egregious crime, and insist that all of these people who were involved are held accountable for epstein's vicious slavery business. What can YOU do to support and make this very important national march happen.

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@brianquigley1940
2 weeks ago
Malignant narcissism...making the worst possible decision that harms the most people.

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@virtualselfie6899
2 weeks ago
A huge scandal rocked Great Britain in 1964: Prime Minister John Profumo was linked to prostitute, Christine Keeler, and it threatened to bring down the government. That case was nothing compared to this international Epstein crime syndicate that trafficked underage girls for sale to powerful men.

It is beyond hard to process the widening scope of the pay-to-play arrangements rolling out from the 3 million E. Files.

Thank you, Daily Beast, for in-depth interviews with investigative reporters and columnists who expose the nitty-gritty details of sexual predators engaging in the worst kind of depravity and perversion for which there must be full accountability, in accordance with a rules-based society.

Jaw-dropping expose!

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@EdwardYervant
2 weeks ago
Bernie Madoff also gave a lot of money to philanthropic causes. Not his money, but a tactic people use to clothe themselves in respectability. In the UK Jimmy Savile raised a lot of money for the burns unit in Stoke Mandeville Hospital, and so on. It is sad that good causes can be hijacked by people who actually have no moral compass, just ruthless selfishness.

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@shellyskye527
2 weeks ago (edited)
All of this is so foreign to me. I live in the mountains above Santa Cruz. I’m 75, retired from education. While I’m sure there are men in our community who abuse women and children, the whole world that these folks inhabited is so foreign to me. I’m so, so very glad I never lived in this kind of world.

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@SuzzieMarie0130
2 weeks ago (edited)
Hearing Epstine explains how much he and djt had in common, why they were friends and had “special secrets.” Disgusting!

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@brianquigley1940
2 weeks ago
Iran War = Operation Epstein Distraction... no matter how many people die.

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@MrDirtclodfight
2 weeks ago
MARCH 28 NO KINGS️‍

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@AngusThomas-i5c
2 weeks ago
Even today we cannot talk about the similarities of all the abusers on YouTube because it's censored by YouTube.

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@6dragondaddy913
2 weeks ago
But Joanna, you're 2 degrees from Epstein: you to Michael, Michael to Epstein

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@flash_flood_area
2 weeks ago
The wealthy and well connected aren't any smarter or better than most folks who live in squalor. Often, they're worse.