- 30/05/2025
https://www.pupia.tv - USA - President Trump Participates in a Press Conference with Elon Musk (30.05.25)
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23:32There is a New York Times report today that accuses you of blurring the line between...
23:36Oh, wait, wait, wait.
23:37Is the New York Times, is that the same publication that got a Pulitzer Prize for false reporting on the Russiagate?
23:46Is it the same organization?
23:48I think it is.
23:50I think it is.
23:51It is.
23:52I think the judge just ruled against the New York Times for their lies about the Russiagate hoax and that they might have to give back that Pulitzer Prize.
24:01That New York Times, let's move on.
24:03Okay.
24:04Next question.
24:05I got one from President Trump.
24:07So, President Trump, Biden's aides who used to work here are in talks with Republicans in Congress to go and testify about what they did or didn't do to possibly conceal President Biden's decline.
24:22Do you think that Dr. Jill Biden should also have to come in and testify about what she did or didn't do?
24:29Well, I hate the concept of it.
24:32It's the wife of a man who was going through a lot of problems and everybody that dealt with him understood that.
24:41And I guess it came out during the debate loud and clear.
24:44That was a big...
24:45That was the biggest signal of all.
24:47They have to do what's right.
24:49The country was...
24:51There was a lot of dishonesty in the election, as you know, of 2020.
24:55That's been now caught.
24:56People understand it.
24:57It was a rigged election.
24:59And when you go further out, when you see the auto pen, I mean, I think the auto pen is going to become one of the great scandals of all time.
25:06Because you have somebody operating it or a number of people operating.
25:10Because I knew Joe Biden.
25:11Joe Biden wasn't in favor of opening up orders, letting 21 million people into this from prisons and mental institutions and gang members.
25:19He wasn't into that at all.
25:21And, you know, who signed these orders, proclamations, and all of the different things that he signed that set our country so far back, that was so bad for our country?
25:32With the auto pen, how would it work?
25:33Like, we're in the Oval Office right now.
25:35If there was a group of rogue staffers that worked for you who wanted to advance a bill or an executive order without your knowledge, how could they do it?
25:46Well, it's very hard because I'd read your newspapers or your media the next day and I'd say, well, I didn't approve that.
25:53And I would find it.
25:54I mean, they wouldn't get away with it for long because I'd say, I never signed that.
25:58Who the hell signed that?
25:59Auto pens, to me, are used to sign letters to people because we get, I think they said 20,000 letters a week.
26:07And you like to be able, when somebody takes the time to write a letter, it's nice to sort of write back.
26:13And auto pens are meant for that. Auto pens are not meant to sign major proclamations or tax cuts or borders, anything having to do with the border, which is so important.
26:23And if it happened on my watch, I would be able to see it because the next day or sooner I'd be reading about something that I knew nothing about and who the hell signed this.
26:33So I almost never used the auto pen. In fact, yesterday I was signing about 81, I think it was 81 proclamations and statements to people that I think should be signed by us.
26:47I think when you write letters to foreign dignitaries or presidents or prime ministers, you should be signing those letters, not done with auto pens.
26:56I understand he signed almost everything with an auto pen. It's a very dangerous thing. It really means you're not president.
27:02Whoever operated the auto pen, and we think we know who that is, and it was actually more than one person.
27:09But that's not what the presidency is all about. I hardly used to get it.
27:14Mr. President, on China, when you reinstate the tariffs on China, you said that they violated the agreement with the U.S.
27:21Well, they did. They violated a big part of the agreement we made. If you read that whole statement, I was very nice to them. I helped them because they were in trouble with the stoppage of a massive amount of business.
27:34But I'm sure that I'll speak to President Xi and hopefully we'll work that out.
27:38Is it on the table?
27:39Yeah, it's a violation of the agreement. Yeah, please.
27:41Mr. President, can you give us an update to the latest ceasefire agreement that Israel has agreed to, but Hamas still considering?
27:48Well, they're very close to an agreement on Gaza, and we'll let you know about it during the day or maybe tomorrow, and we have a chance of that.
27:56And I think we have a chance of making a deal with Iran also. They don't want to be blown up. They would rather make a deal.
28:02And I think that could happen in the not-too-distant future. That would be a great thing.
28:06If we could have a deal without bombs being dropped all over the Middle East, that would be a very good thing.
28:13They can't have a nuclear weapon. We want them to be safe. We want them to have a very, very successful nation.
28:20Let it be a great nation, but we can't have them. They cannot have a nuclear weapon. It's very simple.
28:24And I think we're fairly close to a deal with Iran.
28:28I have a question for Elon.
28:30Yeah, please.
28:31You said just now that you look forward to being a friend and advisor to the president.
28:35So do you expect to continue advising the president and Doge informally, or are you going to sort of shift your focus entirely to your companies?
28:46Well, I expect to continue to provide advice whenever the president would like advice.
28:50I hope so.
28:51I mean, yeah. I expect to remain a friend and an advisor. And certainly, if there's anything the president wants me to do, I'm at the president's service.
29:04You said that there was a trillion dollar promise for cuts.
29:09Yes, I think we do expect over time to achieve the trillion dollars.
29:12But what have you found in your time here was the biggest roadblock to getting those cuts?
29:17Was it the cabinet, or was it Congress, or something else? What was the biggest roadblock from your work?
29:23It's mostly just a lot of hard work. It's really not any one person or Congress. It's going through, really, millions of line items and saying,
29:35does each one of them make sense or does not make sense? Obviously, at times when you cut expenses, those who are receiving the money,
29:41whether they're receiving that money legitimately or not, they do complain. And you're not going to hear someone confessing that they received money inappropriately. Never.
29:52They're going to always say that they received money appropriately for an important cause, naturally. That's what you'd expect.
29:57But, so we just have to, it's just a lot of work going through the vast expenses of the federal government and just really asking questions.
30:08What's this money for? Are you sure it's actually being used well? Many times we can't even find anyone who defends it.
30:17So, for a lot of the expenses, there is actually no defender at all. And then we have to just work through the process of stopping the spending,
30:25where there's often literally no defender. Nobody even knows why the money is being spent. It's truly absurd.
30:30I mean, we find situations where there are millions of software licenses with zero people using them. Zero.
30:40Exactly. This is the quizzical expression. You're like, surely, if there's millions of software licenses, someone should be using them.
30:46No. And then we just, we've got to go through the process of saying, okay, look, if someone's using the software,
30:51where we need to terminate this software license agreement. That's, that's, that's, that's everywhere in the government, by the way.
30:57Mr. Moss, what do you think would be easier, colonizing Mars or making the government a big one?
31:04It's a tough call. But I think colonizing Mars and making life multi-planetary is harder.
31:10And as I said, I, we do, the, we do expect to achieve over time the, the trillion dollars of savings.
31:16We, we can't do it in like a few months. But if you say, by the, I think the official end of Doge, which the President may, may choose to extend, is the middle of next year.
31:25Say by the middle of next year, with the support of the President and Congress, could we achieve a trillion dollars of savings?
31:31I think so. We're, we're on track to do so.
31:33Do you have to be at Congress's business?
31:35You are.
31:36Go ahead.
31:37Just a question.
31:38Mr. President, you had mentioned earlier in the week that Doge had become a whipping boy.
31:43And as the President mentioned, you went through a lot to go through this process.
31:46Yes.
31:47Was it worth it for you? And what would you change?
31:51Uh, yes. So what we thought was happening was that if there were any cuts anywhere, um, uh, then people would assume that was done by Doge.
32:00Um, and so, uh, we became like the, essentially the Doge boogeyman, um, where if, if, you know, any cut anywhere would, would, would be ascribed to Doge.
32:11Um, you know, a friend of mine's, uh, daughter who's at law school at Georgetown thought that, uh, Doge had cut the Senate, uh, you know, the, uh, uh, internships for, but the legal internships for the Senate.
32:22And we have nothing to do with that. So if they have been cut, it's not to do with us, just as an example.
32:27So, uh, you know, it, it just became a bit ridiculous where, um, anything, any cut anywhere was, was Senha Doge.
32:35Um, and, and including things that made no sense, and we would agree, made no sense.
32:39Uh, so, um, there, there are many things that occur in the government because it's, it's the, it's the banal evil of bureaucracy.
32:47Um, it's, it's sort of the, the, the, the, frankly, largely, largely uncaring nature of, of bureaucracy.
32:55Um, it's, as the great Milton Friedman said, um, money is spent most poorly when it is, uh, someone else's money being spent on people you don't know.
33:04And that's, that's how federal spending is.
33:07Um, and, and, and then you can't really even blame the individuals because the, the way the government works is complaint minimization.
33:14So, uh, when you do try to, when someone within the government tries to stop that money being spent, there's usually someone that, that complains.
33:22Um, and then their manager will say, it's not worth the trouble. Just pay it anyway. That happens over and over again.
33:29That happens over and over again.
33:32I think it was, I think it was an important thing. I think it was a necessary thing. And I think it will have a good effect in the future.
33:37Thank you, President Trump. This week there was a video on board a plane that showed the first lady of France slapping her husband, Emmanuel Macron.
33:47Do you have any world leader to world leader marital in life?
33:54Make sure the door remains closed.
33:57That was not good.
33:59No, I spoke to him and, uh, he's, uh, he's fine. They're fine. They're two really good people. I know them very well.
34:06And, uh, I don't know what that was all about, but, uh, I know them very well and, uh, they're fine.
34:13I got a little signer here.
34:15What do you think about the Democratic Party plan to avoid being swept in every battleground state again by spending $20 million to study how you speak to American men?
34:27Well, you know, they spent, uh, they spent $2.8 million. We spent $1.5 million. We spent much less. We spent about half of what they spent. And at the end, they were $28 million short. They had to be, uh, they spent $2.8 billion. That's a lot. But they couldn't get $28 million at the end. And now they want to spend, I read that, they want to spend money to learn how to talk. That's fake. You don't want to be fake. You shouldn't have to hire consultants to say what America is.
34:56Say what America needs because, you know, then they should be, the consultants should be running the deal, not them. But I read that they want to spend a lot of money in each state. So we want all seven swing states, seven out of seven. We want a lot more than that. We want the popular vote. We want everything. And they want to spend money to find out what they did wrong. And I mean, I can tell you what they did wrong. I can tell you every one of their programs when they say men playing in women's sports, I would say that's not a winner.
35:23When they say transgender for everybody, I think that's not a winner. When they say, uh, open borders so the entire world's population of criminals can pour into our country. I don't think that's a winner. I mean, I can, I just gave them that for free.
35:37But, uh, I don't know if they'll change their ways. I see them all the time. I see people that I know in Congress, Democrats, they're trying to justify some of the things I just said. You can't justify them. They're, you know, they, I always hear the 80-20 issues. I say they're not 80-20, they're 97-3. They might be 99-1. They're not 80-20. They wish they were 80-20. And, uh, they're wasting a lot of money. Are they going to continue with that nonsense?
36:03And this one is a little more on the page 6 question. But, back to Nicholas of the Apprentice, you mentioned once in 2012 that Diddy was a good friend of yours. Back then, he has since found himself in some very serious legal trouble.
36:16Yeah, that's true.
36:16Would you ever consider pardoning him?
36:20I, well, nobody's asked. You had to be the one to ask, Peter. But nobody's asked. But I know people are thinking about it. I know they're thinking about it. I think people have been very close to asking.
36:31First of all, I'd look at what's happening. And I haven't been watching it too closely, although it's certainly getting a lot of coverage.
36:38I haven't seen him. I haven't spoken to him in years. He used to really like me a lot. But I think when I ran for politics, he sort of that relationship busted up from what I read.
36:51I don't know. He didn't tell me that. But I'd read some little bit nasty statements in the paper all of a sudden. You know, it's different.
36:57You become a much different person when you run for politics and you do what's right.
37:02I could do other things. And I'm sure he'd like me. And I'm sure other people would like me. But it wouldn't be as good for our country.
37:08As we said, our country is doing really well because of what we're doing. So I can't. It's not a popularity contest.
37:14So I don't know. I would certainly look at the facts. If I think somebody was mistreated, whether they like me or don't like me, it wouldn't have any impact on me.
37:23Mr. President, on the Big Beautiful Bill, would you like to see the Senate build in some support for your tariffs on the Big Beautiful Bill?
37:30Or should that be a standalone bill?
37:33I have great support on the tariffs. I mean, I was so honored that we got that ridiculous stay lifted because that would have taken away presidential power.
37:42It would have taken away everything that was granted by the founders. It would have been a terrible thing.
37:47And it would have, most importantly, would have left us vulnerable.
37:50We have a lot of countries that use tariffs on us and use them viciously, actually, viciously.
37:55And if we didn't have the power to use tariffs on them, and instantly, not when you go back to Congress and try and get hundreds of people to agree on something that would take months to get just one simple proclamation,
38:08if we didn't have the power to counteract their powers, you wouldn't have a country left.
38:14We have to act fast. We have to be fast and nimble, as they say.
38:18And that was a really great moment, I think, yesterday, when that stay was lifted.
38:24And hopefully now we'll go to court and just win that battle.
38:28Because if we don't have the power to do what they're doing to us, we are going to be a great nation no longer.
38:34And quickly, Mr. President, Elon Musk was once idolized by folks on the left in this country before joining your administration.
38:41Now he's considered a hero by conservatives.
38:43Why do you think this man, what he's done in American life, has been so politicized?
38:48Well, his life has been amazing.
38:50I mean, I look at so many different things.
38:52I look at that rocket being guided back into position.
38:56I've never seen that before.
38:57I thought it was a space movie.
38:59I thought it was a movie.
39:00You look at what he's done in terms of communication, it's been unbelievable.
39:05So many different, even tunnels going underground, not having to go through all the process of going, you know, he's got a company that does that.
39:13He's got so many different companies.
39:15Starlink, as an example.
39:16He saved a lot of lives, probably hundreds of lives in North Carolina.
39:21I don't even know if you remember, but I called you.
39:22They needed Starlink in North Carolina.
39:26And I didn't know what the hell Starlink was.
39:28I said, what is it?
39:29Who owns it?
39:30He said, do you know Elon Musk?
39:32I said, yeah, I happen to know the gentleman.
39:33This was before his government stay.
39:36And they said, we really need it because North Carolina was literally became an island.
39:41There was people had no communication.
39:44They had no access to anything.
39:45And they were dying.
39:47And I called up Elon.
39:49And you can't get it because it's so successful.
39:51It's very hard to get.
39:52And he had so much of it brought over there.
39:54And they told me it was unbelievable.
39:55It saved a lot of lives.
39:56So, you know, he's just done a lot of things.
39:58I don't think, frankly, I don't think he gets credit for what he's done.
40:02But he's a very good person, too.
40:05If he wasn't a good person, if he wasn't, but he did the same things, you know, I'd probably
40:11maybe speak differently.
40:12He happens to be a really good person who loves the country.
40:16You had indicated this week that there were some things you didn't like about what had
40:22passed in the House.
40:23What changes do you want to see the Senate make?
40:26And you had also indicated there were things you didn't like about the bill.
40:29What would you be suggesting he push senators to change in their version?
40:33Well, I'll tell you, I'll go first.
40:35It's an unbelievable bill.
40:37It cuts your deficits.
40:38It cuts, you know, it's a huge cutting.
40:40But there's things I'd like to see maybe cut a little bit more.
40:44I'd like to see a bigger cut in taxes.
40:46It's going to be the largest tax decrease or cut in the history of our country.
40:51I'd like to see it get down to an even lower number.
40:55I was shooting for a slightly lower number.
40:58I would have liked to have done that.
41:00But with all of that being said, when you look at the tax cut and the fact that the original
41:07tax cut, which made us so successful, we had the most successful four years in the history
41:11of our country, the economy.
41:13And this is going to be even better.
41:14And you see that by the reports that came out just yesterday or tonight.
41:18I guess they were released this morning at eight o'clock.
41:21You see the kind of numbers where somebody that's a pro is like, whoa, I haven't seen numbers
41:26like this since I've been doing this.
41:27You know, these are human emotions of professionals that have never seen numbers like and we've
41:33just we've just started.
41:35The bill is a great bill.
41:37It's going to be jiggled around a little bit.
41:40It's going to be negotiated with the Senate, with the House.
41:44But the end result is it extends the Trump tax cuts.
41:48If it doesn't get approved, you'll have a 68 percent tax increase.
41:54You're going to go up 68 percent.
41:56You that's a number that nobody's ever heard of before.
42:00You'll have a massive tax increase.
42:02If it does get approved, you'll have a large tax cut.
42:07The largest we've ever had.
42:09When you add the past tax cuts that we got you, the Trump tax, they call them the Trump
42:13tax cuts.
42:15It's an amazing bill.
42:17It does amazing things.
42:19With all of that, it's going to be adjusted a little bit over the next coming weeks.
42:22And I think it's going to be a pass.
42:24The Republicans want to pass it.
42:26With all of the great things it does, including an extension of debt.
42:30It's the extension.
42:31We have to extend the debt.
42:32If we don't extend debt, we're in default.
42:35Now, the Democrats might like our country to be in default.
42:37But in 250 years, we've never been in default.
42:41That was handed to them by a very well-meaning man that gave it to them because he thought
42:46it was the right thing to do.
42:48It could have been their problem before the election.
42:51But this man thought it was the right thing to do.
42:53And he was well-meaning.
42:53I don't hold anything against him for that.
42:57But that was put on our plate when it should have been on the Democrats.
43:01September 28th, a famous date.
43:03It should have been taken care of by the Democrats.
43:06But this person, a man of power, gave it to us so that in June that comes due.
43:13Well, we have to take care of that because if we don't take care of it, we have a country
43:17in default.
43:18And we don't ever want to have a country in default.
43:21You know, I'll tell you, a certain senator, Elizabeth Warren, said that she would never
43:31ever allow a default on our debt.
43:35She would never let it happen.
43:37And she would like to get rid of the debt ceiling, what's called the debt ceiling.
43:40I call it the debt extension because we really need an extension that she'd like to see that
43:45gotten rid of.
43:46And there are many people that agree.
43:47Many Democrats agree with that.
43:49But we gave that through.
43:53And, you know, I don't want to say an error.
43:55He did it well-meaning.
43:57They gave that to us.
43:58It was a Democrat problem just before the election.
44:01Would have had a huge impact on the election.
44:04And to our benefit.
44:05We won anyway, but to our benefit.
44:07But felt that really for the good of the country, we should extend that.
44:11But Elizabeth Warren and various other people would like to see that her whole career.
44:16She wanted to see it terminated, gotten rid of not being voted on every five years or
44:2410 years.
44:25And the reason was because it's so catastrophic for our country.
44:29And I always agreed with her.
44:31That was one thing I agreed with her on.
44:33Now, I haven't spoken to her, but I would say that if you asked her that question now, she'd
44:38say, no, no, it's their problem.
44:40But it's a very unfortunate situation.
44:43It's a very unfair situation.
44:44And she happened to be right on that.
44:46It should be gotten rid of.
44:47Or it should simply be extended.
44:49But that's one of the things that gets taken care of in this bill.
44:52That automatically gets extended for a four-year period.
44:56And it should be.
44:57But I agree with Elizabeth Warren on that.
44:59I think you should get rid of it.
45:00It's too catastrophic.
45:01Mr. Moss.
45:03Yeah, please.
45:03Go ahead.
45:03What do you want to say, Mr. Moss, to the bill?
45:05To international students, I guess you're welcome to study in the United States.
45:11And one question for Mr. Moss.
45:12To students?
45:13Well, we want to have great students here.
45:15We just don't want students that are causing trouble.
45:17We want to have students.
45:17I want to have foreign students.
45:19I think Harvard, you know, it's close to 31%.
45:22That's a lot.
45:24Our country's given $5 billion plus to Harvard over a short period of time.
45:31Nobody knew that.
45:31We found that out.
45:32I wouldn't say that was a doge thing, but we found that out over a period of time.
45:36That was sort of a Trump thing.
45:38We ended up in litigation for other reasons because they're very anti-Semitic.
45:42And in finding out and in going through the books, we found out that the country gave them
45:48$5 billion plus, much more than that, actually.
45:52And we're having it out with them, and let's see what happens.
45:55I think we have a very good – well, it's a very sad case.
46:00It's a case we win.
46:01We can't lose that case because we have the right to make grants.
46:04We're not going to make any grants like that.
46:05But I don't think Harvard's been acting very nicely.
46:10I think Columbia wants to get to the bottom of the problem.
46:13They've acted very well.
46:14And there are other institutions, too, that are acting.
46:16But Harvard's trying to be a big shot.
46:19And all that happens is every three days, we find another $100 million that was given.
46:25Last – two days ago, we found $200 million more.
46:28The money's given to them like gravy.
46:30I mean, I'd like to see the money go to trade schools where people learn how to fix motors
46:35and engines, where people learn how to build rocket ships because, you know, somebody has
46:39to build those rocket ships.
46:41And I'd like to see trade schools set up because you could take $5 billion plus hundreds of
46:46billions more, which is what's spent, and you could have the greatest trade school system
46:51anywhere in the world.
46:52And that's what we need, to build his rockets and robots and things that he's doing and to
46:57build lots of other things.
46:58And, you know, I went to school with people.
47:01In some cases, they weren't good students, but they could fix the engine of a car better
47:06than anybody I've ever seen.
47:07They could take it apart blindfolded.
47:09They had an ability to do that.
47:11And they did very well.
47:12They made a lot of money.
47:13You know, it's a very skilled job.
47:14It's great.
47:15But I'd like to see a lot of money going into trade schools.
47:18I've always felt that.
47:19And we probably found our pot of gold, and that's what's been wasted at places like Harvard.
47:26And the money's been wasted.
47:27Yeah, please.
47:27I wanted to ask quickly, Mr. Moss, is your eye okay?
47:30What happened to your drive?
47:32I noticed it was a huge thing.
47:33Well, it wasn't anywhere near France.
47:36So, but I was making a joke about the first lady of France.
47:44He's getting slapped, you know.
47:46I didn't notice.
47:47So, yeah, no, I was just forcing around with little X, and I said, go ahead, punch me in
47:52the face.
47:52And he did.
47:53It turns out even a five-year-old punching you in the face, actually.
47:56That was X that did?
47:57Yeah.
47:58X could do it.
47:59If you knew X.
48:00I see his mom right now.
48:01But I didn't really feel much at the time.
48:04and then I guess it bruises up.
48:06But I just forced him around with the kid.
48:07I didn't notice it, actually.
48:10I know that you tried to stay pretty neutral because not your war.
48:14But, and by the way, not my war.
48:18I just want to solve the problem for people.
48:20This was not a war that was going to happen if I were president.
48:22Right.
48:22And so, not your war.
48:24But as you try to fix it, and as you survey this hellscape of the Ukrainian front lines.
48:30It's horrible.
48:31And you guys, you and your team deal with a very stubborn Vladimir Putin.
48:35And Zelensky.
48:36Yeah.
48:37But do you look at this...
48:37Very stubborn Zelensky, too.
48:39...training differently now?
48:40Like, do you look at this and see Putin as the good guy or the bad guy?
48:45So, I've known him very well.
48:47And I went through a lot of things with him because Russia was, you know, the Russia, Russia, Russia hoax.
48:54Turned out to be a total hoax.
48:57New York Times, they got a Pulitzer Prize.
48:59They have to give back the Pulitzer Prize.
49:00That's my lawsuit.
49:02And they're doing very poorly in that lawsuit.
49:04But, you know, they wrote stories about how it was true and it was false.
49:07And, you know, a lot of Washington Post also.
49:12I have gotten to see things that I was very surprised at.
49:17with rockets being shot into cities like Kiev during a negotiation that I felt was maybe very close to ending.
49:27We were going to solve a problem and then all of a sudden rockets got shot into a couple of cities and people died.
49:35I saw things that I was surprised at.
49:38So, and I don't like being surprised.
49:40So, I'm very disappointed in that way.
49:43With that being said, I'd like to see it end.
49:45And 5,000 people, I think the number is even more than that, but 5,000 people a week are being killed.
49:52Mostly soldiers, but also people that live in little cities and towns throughout Ukraine.
49:58And I'd like to see that stop.
50:01And I asked Caroline this yesterday, but I want to ask you directly.
50:05So many of the things that you're trying to do are held up in court right now.
50:09If the courts are going to have so much influence over U.S. policy, do you wish you would have just become a judge?
50:15Yeah, well, look, it wasn't meant to be that way.
50:19If you look at the founders, the president had certain powers.
50:22And you have your three groups and they all had supposed to be equal, pretty equal powers.
50:28But you can't have a judge in Boston running foreign policy in places all over the country because he's got a liberal bent or he's a radical left person.
50:41That's what the executive branch is for.
50:44And you have checks and balances.
50:45But we had millions of people pour into our country, many, many criminals poured into our country, murderers, murderers, mental institutions from all over the world being emptied out into our country.
50:57And if we don't get them out and get them out quickly, we're going to lose your country very easily.
51:02This is a bad that anybody would allow this to happen to our country.
51:07You know, with all of the things we took over inflation, we took over some wars, we took over a lot of problems that didn't exist when I was president.
51:13None of it existed.
51:14We wiped out ISIS.
51:16Other than that, we had no wars.
51:18Putin was never going to hit Ukraine.
51:22Israel would have never been attacked.
51:24That attack, as you know, Iran had no money.
51:28They didn't have money for Hamas.
51:30They didn't have money for Hezbollah.
51:32They had no money whatsoever.
51:34That wasn't going to happen.
51:35All of these things that happened weren't going to happen.
51:37You wouldn't have had inflation.
51:39So it's very sad when I came back.
51:41But the thing that is the hardest is that they allowed 21 million people into our country.
51:48And many of those people are stone-cold criminals.
51:53They moved their criminal population into the United States.
51:58And of all the things that, you know, are bad, I solved inflation, I believe, already.
52:05I got the fuel prices down.
52:06The fuel prices came down.
52:07That's one of the reasons they screwed up the energy.
52:10They screwed up the cost of gasoline and oil and gas.
52:15And you had tremendous inflation.
52:17The greatest inflation probably in the history of our country under Biden.
52:21And when people said, oh, but the economy was there.
52:23No, the economy was terrible for the people because they couldn't afford the energy.
52:27And the energy brought everything else up.
52:29Energy is the big deal.
52:30But with all of that, we solved that already.
52:33In four months, we solved it.
52:35$1.99, $1.98 gasoline.
52:38First time people have seen that in a long time, since my term.
52:41But the hardest thing to solve is millions of people pouring into our country, many of whom are criminals.
52:49Because remember, these countries are smart.
52:51Their leaders are very street smart.
52:53They're sending the people that they don't want.
52:55They don't want the people that are there, that are law-abiding, that are productive, that are working hard.
53:02They want people that are in jails.
53:05We have them.
53:06They allow them to come in.
53:08And I always look to the other side, like, why would somebody do something?
53:12You know, in business, I try and study, why would they want to do this?
53:15Why would they want to sell it?
53:16Why would they want to buy it?
53:17One thing I can't figure out is, what would an administration, what were they thinking when they allowed millions of people from prisons all over the world,
53:29not just from South America, Venezuela, all over the world, from the Congo in Africa,
53:35hundreds of people, thousands of people from the Congo, rough, rough prisoners, from Asia, from Europe, rough parts of Europe.
53:47Why would they allow them to come into our country?
53:50Why would they do that?
53:52It's the one thing I can't figure out.
53:54And I don't believe it was Joe Biden.
53:57I really don't.
53:58I mean, he's been a sort of a moderate person over his lifetime.
54:02Not a smart person, but somewhat vicious person, I will say.
54:08If you feel sorry for him, don't feel so sorry because he's vicious.
54:11What he did with his political opponent and all of the people that he hurt, he hurt a lot of people, Biden.
54:17And so I really don't feel sorry for him.
54:19But he wasn't a person that would allow murderers to come into our country.
54:24He wasn't a person that was in favor of transgender for anybody that wanted it.
54:29Take kids out of families, et cetera, et cetera.
54:32So I just don't understand why a thing like this, how a thing like this could have been allowed to happen.
54:39Very sad.
54:41He's very sad for our country.
54:43If I could add something to that, which is I think the fundamental moral flaw of the left is empathy for the criminals and not empathy for the victims.
54:55Empathy for the criminals, but not empathy for the victims.
54:59And there's been way too much of that.
55:01That needs to stop.
55:02To the president's point, there's been immense judicial overreach that is unconstitutional.
55:08That was never intended.
55:09And it's undermining the people's faith in the legal system.
55:13It needs to stop.
55:15It's gone too far.
55:17And just today, we had just a couple of hours ago, we had a great decision from the Supreme Court, thank goodness, that was very important.
55:29We had two important decisions yesterday on the tariffs because, again, we have to be able to fight a fair fight with other countries.
55:36Howard, would you say we have to be able to use tariffs to fight people that use tariffs on us?
55:42I mean, if we didn't have that power of tariffs, we would economically be destroyed as a country because they will destroy us.
55:49Other countries will destroy us with unchecked tariffs.
55:53We can check them when we have the use.
55:55They tried to take that power away from us.
55:58And if you take that power away, we're not going to have a country.
56:00We won't have an economically viable country.
56:03But it's very important on immigration that we be able to get people out without having to go through a long court case.
56:12I mean, it was up to some of these judges.
56:14Every single one of these millions of people, millions of people, criminals, prisoners that were let go from jails because they save a fortune when they did.
56:24They brought them into the United States.
56:26You know what they're saving, the money they're saving?
56:29But some of the murderers, it's very important that we're able to get those people out of here fast, bring them back to their country where they belong.
56:36And those countries take them because if they don't take them, they have to go through the wrath of the United States and they take them.
56:42But we have judges that don't want that to happen.
56:45And it would be, it's a terrible thing.
56:48That's going through the court system right now, that whole situation.
56:53But when ICE and with Border Patrol, they've done an incredible job.
56:57When they do this incredible job and they capture 100 killers and drug dealers, we can't keep them for years here as we go through trials.
57:10We have to get them out rapidly.
57:12And we know who they are.
57:13We know who they are.
57:15And we're very careful about who they are.
57:17But we have to get them out rapidly.
57:19Or, again, we're not going to have a country.
57:21Okay?
57:23Maybe one or two more.
57:24Go ahead, please.
57:25I think there is that power from they also have companies like Tesla, which have cars manufactured a world.
57:32And this is also a two-year-old cost.
57:34Well, he's going to end up building his whole car here.
57:36I mean, I thought he built his whole car.
57:37Pretty much he does.
57:38He's got incredible factories.
57:40And, like, I looked at one in Texas.
57:42It's unbelievable.
57:44And no way all of the manufacturers will build their parts here, too.
57:49I mean, it used to bother me.
57:51They make a part in Canada, a part in Mexico, a part in Europe, and sent all over the place.
57:56And nobody knew what the hell was happening.
57:58I think it's ridiculous.
57:58You build a car, make it in America.
58:01And I gave them a little leeway on that.
58:04You know, I gave them some leeway.
58:06But over the next year, they've got to have the whole thing built in America.
58:09That's what we want.
58:10We want America to buy American-built cars.
58:14Thank you very much.
58:15Thank you, Chris.
58:15Thank you, Chris.
58:16Thank you, guys.
58:17Thank you, guys.
58:18Right out this way.
58:20Thanks, guys.
58:20Good news.
58:21Good news.
58:22It was a good news.
58:22Are you considering a car?
58:28Good news.
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