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April 25, 2025 49 mins

Just the News No Noise on Real America's Voice

Segment A: WHAT IS GOING ON WITH JUDGES ACROSS AMERICA?
Segment B: INVESTIGATION INTO KLAUS SCHWAB
Segment C: THE TERRIFYING PROSPECT OF CALLING 911 AND NOT GETTING AN ANSWER
Segment D: JUST THE NEWS HEALTH UPDATE - RFK JR'S INVESTIGATION INTO AUTISM RATES
Segment E: SOME FINAL THOUGHTS TO WRAP UP THE WEEK

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:21):
Good eating America and Happy Friday. Yep, we made it
to the end of the week and welcome to the
latest edition of justin News. No noise. I'm your host,
John Solomon, reporting to you is always from the Nation's
capital and the Wiredofishcoffee dot Com studies Widerfish Coffee is
you know, my favorite coffee, the Fisher Coffee of justin News,
And you can go right now to Wiredofishcoffee dot Com
get a fantastic ten percent discount on all of their

(00:42):
great blends and their cool cups, their fishing gadgets, and
you can even get a copy autographed by me of
my book Fallock. Go check it out there one more
time Wired the number two Fish Coffee dot Com promo
code just News for that discount. All right. We are
finding much more about the Trump Russia collusion hoax, if
you can believe it. Yep, eight years we're still learning
about things that are coming out every day. Justin News

(01:03):
is continuing to dive into the newly declassified Crossfire hurricane
records that President Trump ordered release and cash Patil delivered.
And we've now found more evidence that former FBI officials
like Andrew McKay played a key role in sustaining the
investigation when there was no evidence of wrongdoing. We found
eight membos from McCabe in the classified Russia Gate documents,

(01:24):
and they spanned discussions and meetings that McCabe had between
January twenty four to twenty seventeen, right around the time
the FBI was deciding that Steele Dassier was no good
there was no evidence of Mike Flynn doing anything wrong
to make twenty first, twenty seventeen, when they opened up
an investigation on President Trump even though there was no
evidence that President Trump committed a crime. For instance, McCabe

(01:45):
and former FBI Director James Comy were heavily involved in
pushing the now widely discredited Steele DALs despite knowing that
it was probably baseless. That's because the FBI offered the
darsier's creator, Christopher Steele, one million dollars if you could
back up something that the FABAD ready decided was wrong uncorroborated.
McKay pushed it anyways. McCabe also has memos detailing a

(02:06):
discussion he had with Lieutenant General Mike Flynn, where he
told Flynn that media coverage around his contacts with Russian
representatives had led James Comy and the FBI to send
to send two agents to have a sit down interview
with him about it. Ready to know how that turned out,
but the FBI essentially forcing Flynn from his post in
the Trump administration. McKay's memos also mentioned that he met

(02:27):
with Vice President Mike Pence about the Flynn controversy in
February twenty seventeen. That was just three days before Flynn
was forced to resign as President Trump's National security advisor,
in more than a month after the lead agent in
the case had determined Flynn had done nothing wrong. Think
about that, they're still pursuing the guy after the FBI
has decided I thing was run. You can go over
to justinews dot com. Look at all those memos and

(02:49):
the fantastic piece my colleague Jerry Dunleavy wrote over tonight.
A lot of people talking about that today. All right,
it's time to bring in my amazing coast Amanda had
this week. She's in Los Angeles. Amanda. I know you've
got a lot of headlines you're watching. What's on your radar?

Speaker 2 (03:04):
Indeed, John, just some bizarre headlines. More news to get
to involving a judge and another illegal alien, this time.
The FBI announced earlier today that they have arrested a
Milwaukee judge accused of obstructing an immigration arrests. And this
follows the new Mexico judge who was recently arrested for
allegedly harboring an illegal trend a Aragua gang member in

(03:27):
his home. This is just absolutely baffling, I think to
so many Americans, John, But the judge's name is Hannah Dugan,
and FBI Director Cashpattel wrote this on X about the arrests.
He said, we believe Judge Dugan intentionally misdirected federal agents
away from the subject to be arrested in her courthouse
Eduardo Flores Ruiz, allowing the subject, an illegal alien, to

(03:50):
evade arrest. John, I don't know what is happening over
in the judicial branch branch of this country, but I
guess we're going to find out more as stories come
out like this.

Speaker 3 (04:00):
It's unbelievable.

Speaker 1 (04:02):
Yeah, it's crazy. Two judges, right, two judges, two illegal
aliens in one week. It's just it's extraordinary what's going on.
But I suspect that we're going to learn a lot
more that this may be a more common practice, that
there are democrats embedded in all forms of a government
that are probably harboring people that they don't want to
be removed from this country, even to the law says

(04:22):
they should be removed. We're very lucky to kick off
tonight's conversation, Amanda with a guy who's on the front
lines of this. He has been educating America for years
about what's going on at the border in his home
state of Arizona. He's a great friend of the show.
He's becoming one of the most impactful freshman members of Congress.
He is Congressman Abe Homedy, Congressman. Good to have you
back on SIRT.

Speaker 4 (04:43):
Going to be with you, John and Amanda.

Speaker 1 (04:44):
All right, there are two narratives about these judges. One is, hey,
these guys are harboring fugitives. That seems to be the
obvious and factual narrative. And then there's this sort of
heroism that these two judges should be regarded as heroes
because they're keeping illegal aliens from big bad Donald Trump.
I'm sure you have a favorite narrative in that one.

Speaker 5 (05:07):
A shocking John that this is a state of our
judiciary right now, the new Mexico judge harboring a illegal immigrant,
known terrorist cartel member in his own home. I mean,
think about how much damage that's doing to the confidence
of our legal system right now. That these judges that
wear black robes, they often act as if they're politicians

(05:27):
because they want to pass through an agenda, like they're
leftist ideology, and the same thing that's going on Wisconsin's
judge as well. I mean, if you remember, President Trump
had done this before back in twenty eighteen with the
Massachusetts judge, when that judge was found to be obstructing
law and federal law enforcement from deporting an illegal immigrants.
So this is nothing new, but the media's sensationalism about

(05:50):
the Wisconsin judge is particularly interesting because I don't hear
them mention much about the new Mexico judge. I was
just arrested earlier this week, and so there seems to
be a crisis brewing right now in our legal system.
And it's not just at the local level or state level.
It's also within our federal judiciary as well.

Speaker 4 (06:06):
I know. That's why the House.

Speaker 5 (06:07):
Of Representatives, before we went on our break and we
passed the No Rogue Rulings Act that Congressman Darryl isis sponsored.
So we're just waiting for it to go to the
Senate and for President Trump's signature. What that bill does
would limit the federal judges district court to only affect
what goes on in his own district, not have the
ability to issue injunctions nationally. So I think it's very

(06:31):
important that we get that across the finish line. But
I do believe that we are facing a ongoing crisis
within our legal system, and it has to do with
these judges who are acting above the law and not
following the law.

Speaker 2 (06:44):
Sterial isis That's a really good piece of legislation. I'll
be interesting's interested to see what happens in the Senate
on the hero narrative. If you look at the facts
of these cases, the alleged rap sheets of these two
individuals who were harbored, I think that any reasonable American
would look at this and say, how on earth can
you have someone who is an officer of the law,

(07:05):
a respected member of the community doing this.

Speaker 3 (07:09):
Are you finding that within the halls of Congress.

Speaker 2 (07:11):
I know you're not physically there this week, but as
you taught their Democrat colleagues. Do you find that even
some of them are saying, yeah, these folks aren't heroes.

Speaker 4 (07:20):
There's a few of them.

Speaker 5 (07:21):
But to be honest, I do believe that there's a
narrative within the Democrat Party that they're trying to protect
these illegal immigrants under the guise of due process. But
I don't remember due process being there for President Trump
when he was unfairly and we know that it was
a political witch hunt during the twenty twenty four election,
when so many county and state judges are going after

(07:43):
President Trump through those prosecutors. So I'm very worried right
now with the fact that Congress members are flying to, say,
for instance, El Salvador. One of them is an Arizona
colleague of mind, flying to El Salvador to try to
bring back an illegal immigrant whose country of gin, by
the way, is El Salvador. None of it makes sense,
and then you have to you know, the American people

(08:04):
are so much smarter now though, Amanda, I'm watching it
in real time. I had a town hall yesterday, and
there are some Democrats, they are Republicans as well, and
people are not buying the fake news anymore. That's why
President Trump's approval ratings regarding immigration as sky high, because
as the media right now wants to claim this illegal immigrant,
for instance, as a Maryland resident, we know that's you know,

(08:26):
they're trying to mask what he actually is. He's a criminal,
illegal immigrant with possible MS thirteen ties. It's very and
there's a lot of people who say that he has
MS thirteen ties, including the local shaff out there, and
now they're trying to bring them back in. So if
this is a Democrats message, I want them to continue
that for the Republican Party's sake. But it's really a
privacy to see how far left the Democrat Party has become.

Speaker 1 (08:49):
It is pretty remarkable. And the judges you mentioned that,
we talked about the local judges, the federal judges, and
you did such a great job the last time you're
on the show helping us understand how far astray Judge
Boseburg was. It didn't take long for the Supreme Court
to tell Judge Boseburg he was off far astray on that.
But you got judges. It's handing out injunctions still, even
as Congress has started to weigh in and the Supreme

(09:10):
Court started to weigh in they're handing out there. It's
like four or five more injunctions this week. It makes
me wonder if these judges are around in the eighteen
sixties when they have imposed an injunction on Lincoln for
the Emancipation Proclamation. It seems like they don't want to
let the president do presidential things.

Speaker 5 (09:29):
That's exactly right, and that's that's what I fear the
most right now, John, is that this judiciary feels as
if they're more powerful than the Congress, more powerful than
the president. So this is why Congress must back up
President Trump in the executive branch when we take on
the judiciary. The judiciary is the one who's egging this
fight on. Shockingly, now, I read through Justice Alito and

(09:50):
Thomas's descent and it was so powerful and it made
complete sense to not just me, but to ordinary Americans.
This is what the law is meant to be. It's
supposed to uphold the rule of law. We, of course,
we have the ability to deport illegal immigrants. And I'm
what I'm looking at right now is I think that
these judges, you know, they come from elite institutions, so

(10:12):
I do think that they have this belief that they're
here to protect the institutions.

Speaker 4 (10:16):
However, in their efforts to protect.

Speaker 5 (10:18):
The institutions, I believe it's going to be the downfall
of their institution because it's quickly losing its legitimacy in
the eyes of everyday Americans when none of these injunctions
make sense, when none of these orders make sense. So
you know, it's it's a very dangerous road that the
judiciary is going down. But I know President Trump in Congress,
I know we will take them on like we have

(10:38):
been through first of all the No Rogue Rulings Act,
but also I know there's been impeachments. And the reason
why these impeachments are coming through the House, John, I
know it's not going to pass the Senate, but it's
a signal to the judiciary that they have to get
their act together or else we are just representing the
people in our constituents. This is what they're demanding because
they understand that the rule of law is being hijacked.

Speaker 4 (11:00):
What Naya Bukeli, the.

Speaker 5 (11:01):
President of l Salvador, has mentioned how he had to
get rid of his corruptionist country was the judiciary.

Speaker 4 (11:07):
The corruption of the judiciary.

Speaker 5 (11:08):
So it's so important that we are aware that we
do not become ruled by judges here in the United States.
It's co equal branches of government, and we have to
constantly remind them.

Speaker 2 (11:19):
Congressman, I want to ask you about something that I
think should be felt on the ground, especially in border
states like Arizona. And you are home now, so you
are talking to constituents regardless of whether Democrats support or
don't support President Trump's deportation efforts, his efforts to shut
down the border, which have been wildly successful. Just looking
at the numbers, that is going to have an effect

(11:40):
on crime and issues within these border states. Are you
hearing that from constituents that they can see and feel
a difference in their state.

Speaker 5 (11:50):
And I've talked to local law enforcement as well, and
they already they sense that right now that criminals don't
feel embolden to commit crimes as they once were. And
that's pretty shocking to see how just a change of
administration can do that. But you know, it was also
remarkable was how few encounters.

Speaker 4 (12:06):
There are at the border.

Speaker 5 (12:07):
I've talked to the border patrol, I've talked to sheriffs
down there.

Speaker 4 (12:10):
I mean, you have a ninety five in.

Speaker 5 (12:12):
Some instances, ninety nine percent reduction of border encounters. Now
that that's hard to imagine unless you've been down to
the border. I have many times, and when I was
down there, I remember seeing hundreds and hundreds of illegal
immigrants lined up wanting to get processed, and border patrol
was effectively the travel agents. What President Trump has done,
he's militarized our southern border. He's given the border patrol

(12:33):
the assets they need, but also put the military down
at our southern border, which is very powerful. I've always
said we need to secure our border militarily because what
we are witnessing is an invasion. And the cartels we
know our terrorist organization. I'm glad President Trump designated them
as such. So it's feeling the effects rather quickly, especially
as you get closer to the border. But the fetanyl crisis,

(12:54):
it's going to be a much bigger issue to tackle.
I know the Chinese communists that they're the ones who
are trafficking thetanol with the drug cartels. But so far
it's a very good progress. But it's going to take
us time to eradicate all of the criminal illegal.

Speaker 4 (13:09):
Immigrants who have come into our country under Joe Biden.

Speaker 1 (13:11):
Yeah, really important. So I want to turn real quickly
to one other thing, which is when Congress gets back,
there is a narrow window for Congress to score the
sort of victories that back up President Trump. What do
you think is top of the list and what's the unanimity?
Is there enough that the House and Senate can get
things agreed to and done before the fourth of July?

Speaker 5 (13:32):
Yeah, well, I know, reconciliations on top of everybody's behind,
and that's exactly what leadership keeps focusing on.

Speaker 4 (13:39):
So I'm optimistic, though, John, I you.

Speaker 5 (13:41):
Know, when I entered Congress, people kind of told me
that it was going to be a challenge and that
with President Trump and there there's going to be some defectors.
But look at what the leadership, the Republican Party leadership
has done, Speaker Mike Johnson, Steve Scalies, Tom Emmer. What
they've done is they've coalesced so many different factions of
the republic Conference and have passed the America First Agenda

(14:03):
that President.

Speaker 4 (14:03):
Trump ran on and that he won.

Speaker 5 (14:05):
But the majority of the American people, the Senate is
the one that people were expecting to be driving the agenda,
but it's not happening right now. So I'm very happy
to see the House of Representative staying united, and I
think it's going to continue. I know there's going to
be some possible issues that arise from the final reconciliation package,
but I have full faith of our House leadership because
they've been very transparent and honest with the realistic expectations

(14:28):
of so many of these the bills and what the
spending savings are going to be as well in terms.

Speaker 4 (14:34):
Of what's going on next. You know, it's it's.

Speaker 5 (14:36):
Amazing how quickly the news cycle happens. But we understand
that President Trump right now he needs back up in Congress.
So I'm looking forward to election integrity. I know I
introduced legislation to codify President Trump's Executive Order on Election
Integrity because I understand that our margin in the House
of Representatives would be much bigger if we had free
and fair and honest elections, especially there in California, where

(14:59):
we witnessed seven weeks weeks of counting ballots where every
single Republican that was up somehow lost to the Democrats.
So we need to bring back confidence or elections, and
that requires action by Congress.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
Yeah, and people are looking forward that. I know. It
was a great start to the house. I had a
lot of activity in the first four months of the year.
Pretty historic. So great honor to have you on the
show today. Thanks for joining us. Have a good weekend.
Thank you. All right, folks, what a great conversation. All right?
Coming up next, Klaus Schwab is out at the World
Economic Forum. Well, what's the story behind the scenes. A
great investigative journalist. Seamus Bruner, my co author on the

(15:31):
book Fallout. He's going to join us in the second
to talk about that and a whole lot more. But
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Speaker 2 (16:56):
Welcome back, everybody to Just the News and No Noise. John,
I want to you in because President Trump and First
Lady Milania, of course are traveling to Italy for the
Pope's funeral. It is going to be a very busy weekend,
then heading back to the States tomorrow Sunday, head back
to Bedminster. They're going to be there. Your thoughts on
the Pope's funeral. A lot of folks traveling there. President

(17:18):
Joe Biden First Lady Joe Biden will be there as well.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
Yeah, and President Zelenski from Ukraine will be there. That
could be an interesting moment for President Trump to have
a sidebar conversation. Listen. I think from the Catholic Church's perspective,
it's the final chance to say goodbye to Pope Francis,
to celebrate what he did in his life, and then
the cardinals have to start the job of all these
issues that Pope Francis raised, LGBTQ and gay marriage and immigration,

(17:46):
how do we resolve them from Catholic talction, because there's
confusion and division over what he met excuse me, and
what he said, and that's going to work out, and
that's what that conclivet is about. The next Pope is
going to have to bring clarity to the issues that
Pope Francis surface and always clearly resolve. And so I
think that's where the church stands. It's next leader will
inherit this and probably bring some clarity and it'll determine

(18:07):
the direction of the church for a long time to come.
On the sidelines of this, I'd watch for President Trump
to have a sidebar with President Selenski.

Speaker 2 (18:16):
Yeah, I think that's possible, and I think that there
are great opportunities for those types of conversation, especially when
it's not something official and not something that's on the books,
because that pressure cauldron is just simply not there. So
I think that there could actually be some productive talks
in what might seem to be an unproductive atmosphere. John,

(18:37):
speaking of talks and negotiations, President Trump supposedly talking to
President She when it comes to all of these tariffs,
all of course at different levels, but when it comes
to China, very very firm. President Trump has been very
very firm on this, and it's been kind of an
arms race of teriff rates between the two countries. Do

(18:58):
you anticipate that this could finally be resolved soon because
there are a lot of American workers who are feeling
the pain of it.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
And listen, I really think this gets lost in some
of the translations. You have the Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov
on TV saying, surprise, we actually do want to make
a deal. Now we do. You guys aren't listening to us,
but we're trying to make a deal, and then President
Trump saying, hey, I'm hearing from President She wants to
clarify these trade issues and see if we can get
to a deal. You don't get that because all the
clutter in the media is designed to suggest the world's falling,

(19:30):
the sky is falling, that Donald Trump's lost control of
the whole ship. But actually there are really hopeful signs
now getting from hopeful signs to concrete agreements, big big step, right,
It's not going to be easy, but I don't think
things are as far asunder as the media, at least
the legacy media reporting in Amanda.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
Yeah, they seem to be cheering for it to not
go well, which is not great for the country.

Speaker 1 (19:53):
But anyways, they are cheering homus.

Speaker 3 (19:55):
It does absolutely all right. I want to get to
our next guest today.

Speaker 2 (19:59):
So if those of you you have been following, uh so,
if those.

Speaker 3 (20:03):
Of you who used to follow the WEF thought.

Speaker 2 (20:05):
That things were good now that Klaus Schwab has stepped down,
well an interesting shakeup reported over at the.

Speaker 3 (20:12):
Wall Street Journals.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
Since Klaus Schwab has stepped down, he is now under
investigation by that same organization that he used to head up.
So joining us now to dig into all of these
details is Investigative Journalists Associate Director of Research at the
Government Accountability Institute. He's also the co author with John
on Fallout and the author of Controller ConTroll of Arts.

Speaker 3 (20:33):
Seamus Brunner shame is. Great to see you, hey, Amanda.

Speaker 6 (20:38):
Great to see you John.

Speaker 1 (20:40):
Good to see you, hey, Seamous.

Speaker 2 (20:42):
All right, all right, So you know, I think for
a lot of Americans, it took COVID for people to
really pay attention to what the World Economic Forum was.
In Klaus Schwab's hand and everything, he stepped down.

Speaker 3 (20:53):
Now he's being investigated. What's happening.

Speaker 7 (20:58):
Yeah, Well, claud Schwab took a stepped back a year ago.
He moved to a non executive chairman role. And for
those who don't know who Klaus Schwab is, he is
the founder, chairman and head of the World Economic Forum,
or he was until a couple of days ago. He
founded it over fifty five years ago. It's in Davos, Switzerland.
It's where all the globalist elites fly to every year

(21:21):
to come up with new plans to lecture us on
climate change and come up with other schemes to control
our lives. Well, a whistleblower just last week reported sent
a letter that Klau Schwab was misusing World Economic Forum
moneies and he resigned quickly. I mean, no fanfare, no

(21:42):
going away ceremony, nothing like that. He resigned indicating that
there maybe are some financial irregularities that the whistleblower pointed out.
There's now a full blown investigation headed up by WEF,
and my thought on the whole thing is, well, Klaus
Schwab has been enriching himself at the World Economic Forum

(22:03):
for fifty five years. I mean he set up the
thing on fifty five hundred dollars six thousand dollars back
in the seventies. He turned it into a five hundred
million dollars per year juggernaut based on corporate sponsorships from
entities like Blackrock, Nessley, Microsoft, all the big multinational corporations.

(22:25):
Five hundred million a year the World Economic Forum brings in.
He's been paying himself, his wife, his children, his even
his nephew have been on the payroll of the World
Economic Forum. His palatial mansion is right up against the
Davos headquarters. By the way, the WEF spent eighty million
dollars to adjoin his house to the campus of the

(22:49):
World Economic Forum. So that's a pretty large financial benefit
and so you know, it's a little too little, too late.
I think the WEF just wants him out. He plans
to die in office, that's according to him. And it's
time for new leadership, is what this signals.

Speaker 1 (23:06):
That's amazing. What's a mickroball about it is that the
World Economic Forum is ground zero for the globalism movement,
the idea that if you create a large central government
in the world, things will get better for the everyday people.
But it's really perhaps another example of control of garks
in Ola Garks right, because this guy and others in
there live pretty high on the hog on this institution

(23:28):
that's trying to make the case this is going to
be better for every day you and me.

Speaker 6 (23:33):
Yeah, John, You're exactly right.

Speaker 7 (23:35):
I mean for decades, really, these people, these multinational corporations,
these globalists, these billionaire folks, have been flying to Davos
on their private jets, coming up with new ways to
hoodwink the masses into thinking that their interests are the
same as the Davos interests.

Speaker 6 (23:53):
They're not. So.

Speaker 7 (23:55):
Klaus Schwab came up with this thing called stakeholder capitalism,
and it sounds very nice everybody gets to be a stakeholder.
Sort of sounds akin to communism, but when you peel
back the layers and read all of his manifestos as
I have, stakeholder capitalism is basically fascism. It's the corporations
get into bed with the government and they form these

(24:16):
public private partnerships where the public has no say so.
It's ironically titled stakeholder capitalism.

Speaker 6 (24:23):
And you know.

Speaker 7 (24:25):
COVID you brought up at the beginning is a perfect
example of what the World Economic Forum and Claud Schwab
and these globalists have in mind, where they get to
issue dictats, control our lives, lock us down, shut down
our businesses, ruin our children's education.

Speaker 6 (24:43):
While they all get richer.

Speaker 7 (24:44):
I calculated in the book Control of Arcs that there
networks all skyrocketed as our businesses were shut down during
the pandemic.

Speaker 6 (24:52):
So good riddance to Claud Schwab.

Speaker 7 (24:54):
The next guy up is I mean, not entirely better,
but you know it's an end of an era for sure.

Speaker 2 (25:01):
Yeah, maybe it sends a little bit of a message
speaking of a corruption and public doubt over someone's activities
and involvement in something. Anthony Fauci in a very very
convenient timeframe, his network basically exploded. It doubled to fifteen
million dollars between twenty nineteen and twenty twenty three, right

(25:22):
when COVID was happening. Regardless of whether there is a
tangible financial association there, it's just it is a really
really bad look that he possibly benefited from this.

Speaker 7 (25:36):
Yeah, that's right. We talked about it in Control of ARCS.
I would recommend Bobby F. Kennedy's book The Real Anthony Fauci.
He talks about it, And actually I think the man
first on the case with the royalties and the patents
was one John Solomon back in I think two thousand
and five. John, you blew the lid off of how
these guys at nih and in the scientific establishment get rich.

(26:00):
But it's an outrage that Anthony Fauci was the highest
paid government employee.

Speaker 1 (26:06):
Secretary of the Vice President's pretty remarkable, just crazy shamus
real quickly. I think as people look out, there was
this huge expectation that the Trump administration will bring all
sorts of accountability and transparency. But it isn't coming fast
enough for the people who really thought it would be instantaneous.
But most times things like this, even when the good
guys are in charge, it still takes some time to

(26:27):
get through compliance with the laws. Do you think we
will see both a lot more transparency and a lot
more accountability or do you think people will be ultimately
disappointed by the final record of the Trump administration.

Speaker 6 (26:41):
Well that's a tough question, John.

Speaker 7 (26:44):
You know, people like Elon Musk and the tech bros.
Their motto is to move fast and break things, and
they have hit the brick wall of Washington, d C.
The bureaucracy does not move fast, and things don't easily break,
and you don't get a whole lot of innovation in DC.
So I'm not totally surprised that it wasn't as easy

(27:04):
as just exposing some of the grotesque contracts and trimming
the fat and all of a sudden Washington would roll over.

Speaker 6 (27:13):
You know, time will tell.

Speaker 7 (27:15):
I can't pass judgment on the end result, But like
many people, I am very disappointed at the speed at
which things are happening. We all want we want indictments,
we want to rest, we want people to go to jail.
There's so many crimes that have been committed over the
past ten years. I mean from Hunter Biden and all
of the things that you and I have reported, John,

(27:35):
you know, the Biden crime family, all of them, and
then the Clinton's and everybody else, and then Fauci. I mean,
people get sick of hearing about all of the awful
things happening. They want justice, they want accountability. So I'm
with them. If there aren't a rest, if there aren't
people facing jail time for all the things that have
been foisted upon us, I think everybody will be disappointed.

Speaker 3 (27:58):
Seamus, before we let you go.

Speaker 2 (27:59):
Over the last few months, we have heard a lot
a lot of actually undercover investigations from folks like James
O'Keefe and Project Veritas regarding government employees. People are getting
paid by the American people via American tax dollars at NASA,
at DoD, at the Department of Education, who are actively
fighting against President Trump his agenda that these people who

(28:19):
are paying them voted for. Are you surprised that this
is happening, that it seems to be as prevalent as
it is, the fact that they are able to capture
it on video, And do you think that on a
parallel track, maybe there will be more whistleblowers coming out
blowing the whistle about these exact people.

Speaker 7 (28:37):
Yeah, I mean to the previous point, we've seen the videotapes,
we've seen all the whistleblowers.

Speaker 6 (28:43):
We have all the.

Speaker 7 (28:44):
Information we need for accountability. I mean, I think there
will be more. I think I've heard a lot of
people turning from Democrat to Republican.

Speaker 6 (28:52):
Just in my local.

Speaker 7 (28:53):
Jurisdiction, the state Senate minority leader just changed party affiliation
from Democrats affiliated. Lots of people on the left are
changing side, and that means a lot of people in
the bureaucracy are seeing that they're on the wrong side
of history. So I expect more whistleblowers to come forward.
But again, we need the accountability absolutely.

Speaker 3 (29:14):
Seamus Rerenner, always a pleasure having you here with us.
Thanks for picking this apart.

Speaker 6 (29:18):
Thanks Ada, Thanks John, Thanks you all right.

Speaker 3 (29:21):
Everybody.

Speaker 2 (29:22):
Have you ever called nine to one one and no
one picked up? Are you scared that that could happen?
Or I think maybe it absolutely could never happen.

Speaker 3 (29:28):
Well it might. We're going to talk about that after
this break.

Speaker 1 (29:40):
Welcome back in America, joining us now to discuss a
lot of important stuff. Former police officer detective and lieutenant.
He's also the founder and chair of the board of
the Wounded Blue and he has a new book out
called Rescuing Nine one one. He's our good friend Randy
Suddon and Randy, welcome back, congratulations on the book.

Speaker 4 (29:58):
Thank you so much.

Speaker 1 (29:59):
I appreciate you having in me. Yeah, this is an
important issue. I think the more we see in the
last few years, the more we're certain that the things
we think could protect us in the past can't do.
We have a hard time protecting a governor in his
own mansion, a president on his own campaign trail. What
has gone on in the security world, and it looks
like we're in the middle of our own crisis.

Speaker 8 (30:20):
Well, we've been in a crisis regarding law enforcement for
a number of years now. The public safety crisis is
very real. The war on cops is very real, and
the American people have paid a very, very stiff price
for what has taken place basically since the Obama administration
began its war on cops. Now, it's a complicated situation.

(30:45):
That's why I wrote this book, Rescuing nine to one one,
the Fight for American Safety, because it is a complicated
issue and I needed to write this books because the
American people have a right to understand where this crisis
came from, and also a blueprint to bring back the
normalcy that the American public are are, you know, just

(31:08):
requiring now, you know, and thank goodness that that President
Trump has been elected that that that I believe will
will hasten the return to some common sense. But let's
look at the that the real issues. You know, the
fact is there are people now calling nine to one
one and there's no one to answer their calls. The

(31:29):
law enforcement community has shrunk.

Speaker 1 (31:32):
There are there are there.

Speaker 8 (31:34):
Is a crisis in many of the American cities who
simply don't have enough police officers to answer the calls
in an appropriate amount of time. When you're calling nine
to one one, you have a right to expect that
the police are going to be there when it is necessary.
And what is happening is that there has been such
a crisis the number of law enforcement officers that are

(31:55):
on the streets have diminished demonstrably. The number of police
officers who are being retained is continuing to drop. Those
that are recruiting, the departments that are heavily recruiting, they're
not getting the recruits that they need in order to
fill the role. So this is causing this crisis and

(32:17):
rescuing nine to one one. The fight for America's safety
really gives a history of how we got to this point.

Speaker 1 (32:25):
That's amazing.

Speaker 3 (32:27):
Randy true story.

Speaker 2 (32:28):
Tuesday, I was driving up to King's County, California, and
there was a small fire on the edge of someone's field,
and considering it's California and considering it was a dry field,
I thought, you know what, I'm going to call nine
one one called twice busy busy signal, so I know
exactly what you were talking about.

Speaker 3 (32:48):
I could not believe it. But there's a.

Speaker 2 (32:50):
Sunny side to this, and that is that National Police
Week is coming up. I think it is the second
week of May. That's going to be a week that
law enforcement agencies across this country can use to recruit.
Under President Trump, under this new culture, this new era
of boosting law enforcement, supporting law enforcement, do you anticipate
it's going to be a gangbuster week for recruitment.

Speaker 4 (33:10):
Well, I believe that.

Speaker 8 (33:11):
You know, you've got to understand what National Police Week
is really all about. It's about honoring the lives of
those officers who have given their lives in the line
of duty over this last year. It is it is
a very it's a very reflective time for law enforcement.

Speaker 1 (33:27):
Is a it's a very it is a.

Speaker 8 (33:30):
Motivational time, however, because about thirty to forty thousand police
officers will descend on Washington, DC to honor the lives
of those who have lost their lives in the line
of duty, and it's also a time of great unity
for law enforcement. My hope is that there will be
enough media coverage that it will lead to some recruitment,

(33:51):
because when you see twenty five thirty thousand police officers
dressed in their dress uniforms holding their candles aloft while
the names of their comrades who have died in the
line of duty are being read, if you can't get
the emotional response from that and show the pride in
law enforcement which is so essential to recruitment. And last year,

(34:17):
seventy nine thousand, more than seventy nine thousand police officers
were physically assaulted in the line of duty.

Speaker 4 (34:24):
Think of that.

Speaker 8 (34:25):
That's up dramatically from the last time that the FBI
reported those stats. And you know, as the founder of
the Wounded Blue, an organization that helps injured and disabled officers.
I see the pain literally every single day that these
officers are facing, not just physically, but emotionally and psychologically,
the scarring that has taken place as the dehumanization of

(34:48):
law enforcement has continued to march forward under the Biden
administration after the debacle of the Obama administration. So that's
why the reading my book Rescuing nine one will really
shed light to the American people about how we got
here and how you and I and the people that

(35:09):
care about this country need to join together to fight
side by side to rescue nine to one one.

Speaker 1 (35:17):
Randy, you give voice to this very important issue. You
give comfort to all those tens of thousands of officers
that are wounded that we never talk about in the media.
You're a hero on the front lines. It is a
great honor to having the show. Congratulations on the book.
You're bringing a really important issue to light.

Speaker 2 (35:33):
Thank you.

Speaker 8 (35:34):
And by the way, it hit number one bestseller on Amazon.

Speaker 1 (35:37):
How about that. Very excited thank you, well deserved and
great work has always served. All Right, we're gonna take
a quick commercial, bake going we come back. We're going
to start a new segment of the show. It's called
the justin News Health Update. We're going to talk about
RKG news efforts to find the cause of rising cases
of autism in America. Much more with that right after
these messages. All right, welcome to our just the News

(36:06):
Health Update, brought to you by Natapath. Joining us now
the co founder and chief culture officer at Natapath. Our
good friend, doctor Chad Walding, Doctor Walden, Good to have
you back on.

Speaker 4 (36:16):
Hey John, good to be back. Thank you for having.

Speaker 1 (36:18):
Me Since the last time we talked. A lot of
things have happened on the health front of In fact,
almost every day, there are historic things. I want to
turn to one that a lot of people are talking about.
It's very personal in my family. I have an autistic child.
RFK saying he's going to get to the forefront of
what's causing autism and start getting the right research and
support to families who are doing this. I think we're

(36:39):
down to one and thirty one kids that have some
form of an autism spectrum disorder. Tell us a little
bit how we got to this point and what rfk's
declaration of war and autism may mean for health going forward.

Speaker 9 (36:53):
Yeah, there's definitely a lot of conversation happening around this topic,
and it's very polarizing and very personal a lot of
people just like yourself, you know, and to me as
a physical therapist, it's something I've seen a lot. I've
treated a lot of people with autism, treated a lot
of children with autism, you know, gone into these people's
homes and really.

Speaker 4 (37:10):
Sense the challenges that people can have with it.

Speaker 9 (37:12):
So I appreciate the sensitivity of it and understand the
polarization around it.

Speaker 6 (37:17):
You know.

Speaker 9 (37:18):
I always step back and I look at trends, I
look at what's been happening in the past one hundred years,
and we're hearing about these stats that I think are
pretty concerning that we should pay attention to. You know,
we're hearing about things like in nineteen eighty three, one
in ten thousand shild children were being diagnosed with autism.
In twenty thirteen, it was one in eighty eight, twenty eighteen,
one in thirty six, you know, like you said, in

(37:39):
some areas it's even higher, I think in California one
in twenty two. And then we're seeing trends in vaccinations
of what the stats are saying right. The CDC schedule
of nineteen eighty three, ten vaccines were given to children
at birth, twenty thirteen, thirty two twenty eighteen seventy four vaccines.
So there's a trend in both of those directs, you know.

(38:00):
I think it's important to know that, like when we
see these things and where there's a correlation, it's it's
a correlation. It's not necessarily a causation, which is where
a lot of people are getting heated. But I do
appreciate that RFK is really researching into this to find
if there is causation. That's why he's doing all this
autism database collection. I think that data is needed, which

(38:22):
is also sensitive because people don't like giving up their
personal information.

Speaker 1 (38:25):
You know.

Speaker 9 (38:25):
My thing is the rise in autism is just in
line with the rise of many chronic diseases that we
experience in this country over the past one hundred years.
You know, just as we've had rises in autism, we've
had rises in chronic disease. In nineteen thirty, you know,
seven and a half percent of the people were having
chronic disease. In twenty twenty, it's sixty five percent. Heart disease.

(38:46):
The first recorded heart attack that we had in this
country was in nineteen twelve and now it's over thirty percent.
Obesity rates have climbed from ten percent in nineteen seventy
and now we're at a state we're over seventy four
percent of the population with obesity or being overweight.

Speaker 4 (39:01):
Right, And this is the same.

Speaker 9 (39:03):
Thing carries with autism, it carries with Alzheimer's, you know,
mental health disorders. Anything you're seeing in the past one
hundred years has changed, right. So you know, my thing is,
is what's behind all this what is causing it? Is
it one thing or is it a bunch of little
different things? And that that's the way I feel about it.
Has much more to do with how we're living in

(39:24):
our modern day, how we're eating in our modern day, moving,
living all of those things, and look at those changes, right,
And I think if if we look there, we'll find
a bigger, a bigger causation of what's happening with all
of this stuff.

Speaker 1 (39:36):
That's a really great point. It's a complex picture. And
our bodies are subjected to some more chemicals, so many
more environmental factors that didn't exist forty years ago. And
in the name of speed, we have fast food, but
it's a lot of processed food. When it's all done,
do you think that the most likely thing is it'll
be a multifaceted cause and effect scenario that we'll be

(39:57):
looking at.

Speaker 9 (39:58):
I think it is, you know when I look at it,
and the way I've always seen in the past, you know,
twenty years as a as a healthcare practitioner, is that
I lump it into a big box and say humans
have gotten off the path right when when we talk
about native path we see an off the pathway of eating,
moving and living and an on the path way of eating,
moving and living. And that on the pathway is getting

(40:20):
our biology aligned with what is designed for You know
that we're looking for principles that are eternal. The things
that work for humans in their health two hundred years
ago should be the exact same things that work for
their health, you know, two hundred years from now. Right,
these eternal principles of whole food, nutrition, movement, sunshine, good
proper hydration, good sleep, these things can't be ignored. They're

(40:41):
the foundational things. And if you look at how we've
changed in the past one hundred years, starting with food,
you know, the industrialization of food, the commercialization of food,
the introduction of toxic industrial seed oils that our great
grandparents would not recognize, the introduction of massive amounts of
sugar and artificial sweeteners in our food. You know, you
mentioned the dyes, the red dyes, the blue dyes, all

(41:02):
these things. The food scientist, their job has at this point,
food has become.

Speaker 4 (41:06):
A business right, and their job is.

Speaker 9 (41:08):
To get us addicted to food right, to get us
to where we can't just have one, and to improve
our need to keep eating more right.

Speaker 4 (41:16):
And that is a big issue.

Speaker 9 (41:17):
When we're eating a whole real food, it's satiated, right,
it's not toxic to our body, our blood sugar is balanced.

Speaker 4 (41:23):
But the bigger issue of what's.

Speaker 9 (41:25):
Going on behind all of this in our modern day
era is an off the path lifestyle that is leading
to things like insulin resistance, obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure,
possibly even autism and things like that. I think we'll
find more answers when we obey the laws of nature,
and an.

Speaker 1 (41:41):
Auto immune disease too, which is just so remarkable how
much that has exploded in the last decade or two
as well. So you talk about getting on the path,
and I think That's what makes Native Path so exciting.
I have a quick question. There's a personal question to
me because it's amused me since it happened. Since the
last time we talked, I Foull broke my album on
a couple spots. I've been on collagen for several months

(42:02):
now on the path, and I went just a few
days after the injury, and already the bone is refusing.
My doctor was legitimately like, well, I can't believe how
fast refusing. Does collagen have a role in healing factors?
Quicker than if I weren't taking it?

Speaker 9 (42:18):
Absolutely, And a lot of people when they think collagen,
they've been hearing it probably a lot about it in
the marketing lately and seeing ads. They normally think hair, skin, nails,
things that are exterior, right, and collagen does help with
all that.

Speaker 4 (42:30):
It's fantastic for that.

Speaker 9 (42:31):
In fact, like Type I, collagen is plentiful in all
of those things. But what people don't realize is that
collagen is also what makes up our bones.

Speaker 7 (42:40):
You know.

Speaker 9 (42:41):
So I first started learning about this as a physical therapist,
trying to help people from fractures, trying to help people
before they go into surgeries and help them heal after
they had a surgery, right, and started recognizing the collagen
with something that was missing in our modern diets.

Speaker 4 (42:55):
Right, It's what makes up those bones.

Speaker 9 (42:57):
Our ancestors got plenty of it because they would eats
to tail, they would make soups and brosts, and it
was a natural part of their diet. But in our
modern diet, we're not getting nearly enough. So this is
how I started learning about ancestral principles, and you know,
tweaking things with collagen and having my patients start to
supplement with collagen, and I would see the same thing
that you're seeing that your doctor's seeing, is that when

(43:18):
you start suppling with collagen after a fracture or you're
going through a healing process, the results start to speed
up dramatically, you know, because you're supplying that bone with
the raw materials that it needs in order to be strong.
You know, the bone health equation that a lot of
people think of when we think bones being strong.

Speaker 4 (43:36):
Most people just think calcium.

Speaker 9 (43:37):
Right, If I just supplement with calcium, that's going to
that's going to strengthen my bones.

Speaker 4 (43:40):
But we have to remember we're.

Speaker 9 (43:42):
We supplement with more calcium than any other country, but
we have some of the highest rates of osteoporosis, in osteopenia.

Speaker 4 (43:48):
So there's more of the equation.

Speaker 9 (43:49):
Collagen is one of them, Vitamin D, magnesium, weight bearing exercise,
those are all parts of the picture of making our
bones stronger. So I love that you're getting those results
and you're starting. Your doctor is happy and was surprised.

Speaker 1 (44:01):
It was stark. I mean it literally was stark, Like
I got to ask Doctor Chad next time we're together.
It's so amazing to get on the path because you
just start thinking a different way than you start living
a different way, and we're not just making America healthy,
then you're making yourself healthy. And I think that's what's
so exciting about our partnership with Native Path Doctor Shop.
We're gonna have you back again next week, folks. In
the meantime, here's a homework assignment. Go to get Nativepath

(44:24):
dot com slash just News. Get Nativepath dot com slash
just News, Go start your health transformation today. There's a
lot of great discounts there, specifically because of our partnership,
but doctor Chad, go check it out during the commercial break.
Start your journey to a healthier living in the future.
All Right, we're gonna take a quick commercial break. We'll
be right back after these messages.

Speaker 2 (44:52):
Welcome back everybody for more stories to hit before we
head into the weekend. Georgia Senator John as Off John
Solomon is backing the impeachment of President Trump. Of course,
he is driving efforts to get Democrat voters out to
the ballot box next November, emphasizing the importance of midterms
and people showing up to get Democrats back in the
majority in the House.

Speaker 3 (45:13):
Do you think that they've got a shot at that?

Speaker 2 (45:15):
And if they do, do you think they have a
shot at impeaching Trump.

Speaker 3 (45:18):
In the House?

Speaker 2 (45:19):
But then again, you got to you know, if you
want it to stick, you got to have two thirds
majority in the Senate, and Democrats won't have that.

Speaker 1 (45:25):
I think I'm a Pommeda. In the beginning of the show,
hit it on the head, which is Americans got why
says they just don't believe this stuff anymore. They've just
gotten realized that is a get Trump movement has nothing
to do with facts or evidence, has to do with politics,
and they tune it out. And that's usually the sort
of action that's not going to score a lot of points,
and I think, you know, he's got a tough way

(45:46):
if Governor Kemp goes into that race. John also is
likely not to be a senator in twenty twenty seven,
so he's got a lot more things to worry about than
just impeaching Donald Trump is going to be a really
tough if Governor Camp said. If not, it's more it
might be an easier race for us off We'll have
to wait and see what happens. Hey, just a little
bit ago, President Trump put out a truth on his

(46:09):
True Social saying that the both sides Ukraine and Russia
are very close to deal, and he's imploring him just
get it done. You're there, You're almost here, don't stop.
Keep going again. Very different from the narrative that the
meetia's been telling. But behind the scenes, I've been picking
this up for a couple of days now. They're selling
something together. Whether they'll get there, I don't know, but
it's a lot closer than what the current coverage suggests.

Speaker 4 (46:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (46:32):
Look, this is like an offense having a lot of
trouble in the red zone. You need a full set
of downs to finally punch it through. And I think
that for both Ukraine and Russia.

Speaker 3 (46:41):
They have needed a full set.

Speaker 2 (46:42):
Of downs to actually get it across the finish line.
But President Trump, this was something that he spoke about
frequently on the campaign trail. It's something that he and
his associates have obviously worked very, very hard.

Speaker 3 (46:53):
To make happen.

Speaker 2 (46:54):
And the exasperation was apparent a few days ago John
when Vice President Vance said, look, if you guys don't
get this workednet the we're going to be out of
the equation.

Speaker 1 (47:02):
Yeah, you know, And there's sometimes a little thing says
big volumes about what might be going on behind the scenes.
Overnight into this morning, the mayor of Kieva, famous Olympic
boxer you one of Ukrainians great athletes, Klitchko said, you know,
we're going to probably have to give up for me
in some land in order to get peace. And I
understand it. I don't like it, but I understand that
that is a very powerful voice rallying around one of

(47:24):
the notions of the Trump peace plan, and someone who's
generally been aligned with Zelenski during the war. So there
are little signs that maybe some of the stubbornness on
both sides is beginning to melt and common sense might prevail,
may not get there, but there's certainly signs of progress.

Speaker 2 (47:40):
Yeah, you know, I think that for that mayor and
many across Ukraine. The more death and destruction they see,
the more they see there, you know, thousand year old
structures being turned to rubble, the more they see men
of all ages in their country coming home in bags,
They're thinking to themselves, you know, if this is land
that we end up having to give back, then maybe
that's something we will revisit in the future. But for now,

(48:01):
let's just you know, as President Trump has repeatedly said,
let's stop the killing. Okay, I'm going to stay on
that football analogy for a moment, because Trump also truthed
out something a little while ago. After the first round
of the NFL Draft. He tweeted out in support of
Shadoor Sanders, who a lot of people know is the
son of the legendary Deon Sanders, President Trump saying, what is.

Speaker 3 (48:23):
Wrong with these football teams? This guy is the son
of Dion Sanders. He's an absolute legend.

Speaker 2 (48:28):
I think the second and third rounds are set to
start pretty.

Speaker 4 (48:31):
Much, yeah already.

Speaker 2 (48:33):
Yeah, what do you think should Sanders fate is going
to be And do you think that it helps that
the President of the United States is giving him a
little social media boost?

Speaker 1 (48:41):
Yeah, it should listen on Statistically, Shu Sanders should have
been drafted in the first round. My giants had a
chance to take him. They moved up, but they went
and took a kid from Utah who had been paying
for Mississippi State. I think the knock is not on
should Sanders' skill set. He's a tremendous, incredible athlete, but
I think a lot of teams are a little afraid

(49:01):
to have that much swagger. That's Sanders swagger. We all
remember Neon Dion and I think some teams soured on
him for fear that he's going to try to bring
a bad carm into the locker room. Listen, I think
the kid has got unbelievable talent, and someone's going to
get a discount on a very talented athlete in the
second round and they'll probably end up with a good quarterback.

(49:23):
But I do think beyond physical scies we see this
more and more now, attitude and approach and mentality are
also a big part of the equation. Might have been
the knock and it might not be fair, but it's
definitely the knock on him.

Speaker 2 (49:35):
Yeah and not a no sure, but Neon Dion is
actually a decent guy. I was on set for one
of the Heisman House commercials and I got to meet him,
and yeah, fun guy, exactly who you expect him to
be with a big personality, but also super down to earth.
So we'll see if that transpires down to his son
and what's going to happen tonight with the NFL Draft.

Speaker 3 (49:52):
I hope you all have a splendid weekend. We'll be
back here

Speaker 2 (49:54):
On Monday at six pm Eastern on Real America's Voice
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