00:28But more specifically, it's the program, it's a very important point, because this context is often missing.
00:47It's the program that was launched by the Biden administration to fly illegal aliens into the country by aircraft.
00:54So when you hear about migrant flights, when you hear about illegal aliens being flown into the country, there were other programs, too.
01:00They had a fly-in program, or a free transportation program for hundreds of thousands of illegals at the border that was run out of DHS and funded by FEMA.
01:09They had a separate program for UAC, unaccompanied alien children.
01:12But when you think about the, most of the people talking about the migrant flights, they're talking about this program, the fly-ins for these illegal aliens.
01:21About half a million illegal aliens from those four countries, particularly in the last two years of the Biden administration, were flown directly into American cities and towns.
01:29So, of course, we revoked those, they called it parole, for those individuals, amnesty, basically.
01:37And now, of course, they're all subject to deportation from the United States.
01:41And, of course, self-evidently, of course, they have to be deported.
01:42You can't have a situation where the Biden administration can fly in half a million illegal aliens in the last 24 months, and we're having a conversation about, oh, maybe they should get to stay for life.
01:52They've been here for 24 months.
01:54They were flown into our country illegally.
01:56And the good news is the airplane is traveling in two directions.
01:58Next question.
01:59It's a great question and a very valid question.
02:12I'm going to let the USTR, the trade rep, Jameson Greer, as well as Secretary of Commerce and Secretary Lutnik provide more detail on that.
02:22I know that's not exactly the answer that you want, but I will speak at a high level to the fact that China has abrogated the agreement.
02:30The United States acted immediately and in good faith, as, of course, you all saw with the proclamation adjusting the tariff rate.
02:37China did not fulfill the obligations that it made and committed to with the United States.
02:41And so that opens up all manner of action for the United States to ensure future compliance.
02:49It remains the president's hope and desire that China will choose the path of cooperation, of common ground, and that we can open up China to American business, just in the same way that America, of course, as we all know, has been open to Chinese business for a very long time now.
03:07So hopefully China will choose the path, to use a very common bureaucratic phase, of rules-based conduct, not a phrase I often use, but it applies here, and follow the agreement that they reached.
03:21Next question.
03:21How quickly was China respond to the president's commands and some of the actions?
03:29Well, again, as I mentioned, China often says that it believes in the exact phrase of the rules-based international order, right?
03:34You've all heard that phrase from China over and over again.
03:37This is the chance to show what's serious about upholding that commitment to the rules-based international order.
03:42And as soon as possible is the best answer I can give you.
03:46We want to see them comply with their agreements with the United States and fulfill their obligations so that we can have, again, a relationship that is cooperative and that is constructive, which is what the president wants.
03:57Stephen, can you share more information about the person who was investigating that?
04:06I don't have any information, and I apologize.
04:09Yes.
04:10Well, there are actually examples, for example, in Brazil of fairly significant restrictions that have imposed on the free speech rights of Americans.
04:32But just as a general matter, this represents the United States' continued commitment to restoring free speech and fighting censorship.
04:41It was one of the big issues in the election, and we're going to fulfill and follow through on that commitment.
04:45Can you talk about what's possible?
04:59Well, the State Department is putting that in place right now, so I don't want to get ahead of Secretary Rubio in how exactly that's going to be developed.
05:07So details to come, but as a general matter, the policy is going to be that we're not going to be awarding visas to individuals who have a risk of being engaged in any form of malign conduct in the United States,
05:20which, of course, would include espionage, theft of trade secrets, theft of technology, or other actions that would degrade the security of our industrial base.
05:29At the same time, there's a deeper issue here, too.
05:32J.D. Vance has spoken about it as well, about we don't do enough in this country to reward and celebrate American genius.
05:41You know, we, in the 20th century, during a period of very low migration, led the modern world in everything, aviation, spaceflight, technology, national development, medicine, everything,
05:55using our own genius here in this country.
05:59And so, of course, we want to have an immigration policy that allows, just as we did during the World War II area, people have specialized knowledge to be able to contribute to our national economic security.
06:12What we can't do is have a system that deprives Americans of an opportunity to contribute to their own country.
06:18And we can't have a policy in America where every citizen of this country, whether looking for a job, whether looking for housing,
06:27whether looking for a government benefit in a time of need, has to compete with all of planet Earth.
06:33Because then you're not a nation anymore.
06:35At that point, you're just a world economy.
06:38Steve, are you considering what's taking actions against other universities in addition to Harvard?
06:43Or what does that process look like if they've been in touch with many of the other schools that you're talking about, what they need to do to avoid a separate process?
06:50Well, so obviously, Harvard has been engaged in the most pernicious conduct of any of the universities.
06:57They defied a lawful subpoena from DHS.
07:00They're engaged in a pattern and practice of invidious race-based discrimination, illegal gender and sex-based discrimination.
07:07They failed to comply with the Supreme Court ruling in Students for Fair Admissions.
07:12And that's just the beginning of the examples of Harvard's perfidy and unlawful conduct.
07:18But the administration is, as you know, looking back to our very first executive orders,
07:24is going through a compliance process with all of America's institutions of higher learning and K-12
07:28to ensure rigorous compliance with our nation's civil rights laws, in particular Title VI and VII and Title IX.
07:36So that's protections against racial discrimination and protections against sex-based discrimination.
07:41And so if a university, for example, is discriminating against white men or is discriminating against Asians
07:46or is discriminating against Indians or is discriminating against people for being straight
07:52or is discriminating against, say, a girl or a woman in the K-12 and a girl or a woman in the collegiate context
07:58in sports or in access to private facilities,
08:03all of that conduct is unlawful and all of it will have to be addressed with the appropriate remedy.
08:07Did this White House have concern about drug use in white men or less?
08:11The drugs that we're concerned about are the drugs pointed across the southern border.
08:14Next question.
08:15I know that this is a decision.
08:20Well, as you know, we received an almost immediate stay from the Federal Court of Appeals
08:26and the tariffs are fully in effect.
08:29Also, all nations know that the president has vast authority in the trade space given to him by Congress.
08:35I mean, these are laws that you all know well, Section 301, Section 232.
08:40There are numerous statutes that give the president authority to conduct trade
08:46because trade is a core element of national security and foreign policy.
08:49It's why the Congress has given the president those authorities.
08:51So nations all around the world understand that they are required to continue these negotiations
08:59with the United States in order to avoid tariffs.
09:03They all understand that.
09:04And could you talk about Elon Musk?
09:07Oh, sorry, behind you, yes.
09:09There's a question behind you.
09:10Yep, sorry.
09:13He went like a little bit for like five seconds.
09:15Yeah, sorry, go ahead.
09:16I don't believe that's true.
09:28But even regardless, the reality is, is that what has been fake for generations now
09:34is the medical and nutrition advice that so much of this government has been giving our families.
09:40And, you know, we saw, of course, you know, during COVID with like fake rules about from the so-called experts
09:47about masking and social distancing and everything else or pretending that there's the same risk profile
09:52for a healthy four-year-old kid as a elderly and obese person.
09:58The Maha report is the most significant and important breakthrough moment in terms of prioritizing prevention,
10:05underlying health, answering and asking the right questions.
10:07You know, why are there such persistently high rates of pediatric cancer in this country?
10:13And why have they increased so significantly since 1970?
10:16Why are pediatric cancer rates so much higher in the developed world than the developing world?
10:21Why do you even have a concept called diseases of civilization?
10:24I think you've all heard that concept before, right?
10:25Where in the most developed countries, you have such high instances of cancer, of immunological disorders, right?
10:34In other words, things like celiac disease, food allergies, eczema, psoriasis, gut disorders.
10:41You have so many quality of life disorders that can actually be crippling and debilitating, right?
10:46In other words, some of these disorders can completely degrade in the person's entire quality of life permanently with no known cures.
10:55They can treat these things with, you know, like Crohn's disease, for example.
10:59They can treat these things with steroids.
11:01They can try to mitigate the symptoms.
11:03But there's no path out for millions of Americans.
11:05What is causing young babies in this country to have these crippling allergic reactions or immune systems that don't fire properly?
11:12They underreact to certain illnesses.
11:14They overreact to other illnesses.
11:15And we don't see these same things in the natural world, in other primates.
11:19And so the report, which took just such extraordinary courage, and I'm so grateful to Bobby, in talking about the chemical load in our society,
11:28the chemical load that a child approves from the day they're born in terms of everything they touch and interact with in the world,
11:34the complete denuding of our food supply, in other words, the eradication of all living things, all natural things from our food supply in the form of these ultra-processed foods,
11:44so that children are living a life where they're not having access to anything natural, they're not having access to anything that's healthy.
11:50Everything they do have is loaded up with insane amounts of sugar.
11:53For years, I still think it's the case.
11:55If you went to, like, a store and looked at baby food, it's filled with sugar.
11:59Why are people putting sugar into baby food?
12:01And how many children's snacks, right, are filled with dyes, artificial ingredients, and massive amounts of sugar?
12:08What is this doing to a young body from the day they're born?
12:11So, combined, again, with all the chemical exposures, the incredibly accelerated growth and compression of the overall vaccine schedule from even when I was a kid,
12:22parents have questions.
12:23They want to know, again, why do their kids have these chronic health conditions?
12:28Why do they go to the hospital when they're sick?
12:31Instead of just, in other words, they have, like, a common cold, why is it sending them to the hospital?
12:34Why is their immune system firing wrong?
12:35Why is it that foods that people have eaten for thousands of years are suddenly causing these crippling allergies in children?
12:42Why is it these high and persistent rates of obesity that has no precedent in history amongst our young people?
12:52What are the effects and the costs to our health care system over time when you have these high rates of chronic illnesses?