The Donald Goes to Davos + Trump 2.0 at One Year
The Charlie Kirk ShowJanuary 21, 202600:29:5413.74 MB

The Donald Goes to Davos + Trump 2.0 at One Year

All eyes were on Davos, Switzerland on Wednesday, where President Trump delivered his remarks on Greenland, mass migration, and more to the captive audience of elites at the World Economic Forum. The team reacts to Trump's negotiation style and the strategic merits of his Greenland bid. Sean Davis reacts to the sweeping Democrat plans to transform Virginia, and assesses the accomplishments of the second Trump Admin at the one-year mark.

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00:00:03 Speaker 1: My name is Charlie Kirk. I run the largest pro American student organization in the country, fighting for the future of our republic. My call is to fight evil and to proclaim truth. If the most important thing for you is just feeling good, you're gonna end up miserable. But if the most important thing is doing good, you'll end up purposeful. College is a scam, everybody. You got to stop sending your kids to college. You should get married as young as possible and have as many kids as possible. 00:00:31 Speaker 2: Go start at turning point. You would say college chapter. 00:00:33 Speaker 1: Go start aturning point, yould say high school chapter. Go find out how your church can get involved. 00:00:37 Speaker 2: Sign up and become an activist. 00:00:39 Speaker 1: I gave my life to the Lord in fifth grade, most important decision I ever made in my life, and I encourage you to do the same. 00:00:45 Speaker 2: Here I am Lord, Use me. 00:00:48 Speaker 1: Buckle up, everybody, Here we go. The Charlie Kirk Show is proudly sponsored by Preserved Gold, leading gold and silver experts and the only precious metals company I recommend to my family, friends and viewers. 00:01:09 Speaker 3: All right, welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show. It is January twenty first, twenty twenty six. We're here in the studio in Phoenix. 00:01:16 Speaker 2: Welcome Blake. One year, one year, one year anniversary. 00:01:19 Speaker 3: We're actually gonna have Sean Davis, co founder and CEO of The Federalist, on in the second hour to look back at one year of President Trump's second term in office forty seven. These things raced by, don't they, Oh Man, And everything that happened with Charlie just felt like it like part of it fell into a bit of a black hole for us in here. But there's a lot to talk about. A year in review with Sean. We're actually gonna have him review what's going on in Virginia. And his take is that it's worse than anybody has any idea about it. 00:01:49 Speaker 4: It portends ill. Oh, Virginia's Virginia's doom. That's what I'm telling all of my friends who are there. 00:01:54 Speaker 2: Oh, it's terrible. 00:01:55 Speaker 4: It's what I warned about. Like at least with a lot of other Blue states, they can break it hard enough that you can leave, But in Virginia they can. 00:02:03 Speaker 2: Just keep it stracted. 00:02:05 Speaker 4: All of the money through the federal governm. 00:02:07 Speaker 3: Worse than Somali pirates there in Northnest and I mean by magnitudes and so. But the big news of the morning, of course, is President Trump gave his big speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland and made huge news. So let's just start with the clip and then we're gonna unpack this. So President Trump made it very clear, there's been this back and forth. We want Greenland, we'll buy it. Actually, we're gonna use force if you don't play play ball, and Blake it was squirming the whole time, very uncomfortable with this. Then at Davos he made it clear we will not use force, but we still really want it. Three twenty seven. 00:02:49 Speaker 5: We never asked her anything, and we never got anything. We probably won't get anything unless I decide to use excessive strength and force, where we would be frankly unstoppable. But I won't do that. Okay. Now everyone's saying, oh good, that's probably the biggest statement I made, because people thought I would use force. 00:03:14 Speaker 6: I don't have to use force. I don't want to use force. 00:03:15 Speaker 7: I won't use force. 00:03:18 Speaker 5: All the United States is asking for is a place called Greenland. 00:03:23 Speaker 2: All we're asking for is a place go greet there. Oh we're asking Okay. 00:03:26 Speaker 4: Just five hundred and sixty thousand square miles. 00:03:29 Speaker 3: No, I listen, there is there's a guy named Josh wolf on X. He's the partner at Lux Capital, founding chair cy Prep. Anyways, smart guy got a lot of followers. This is this article is getting a lot of traction. And what he's doing is he's breaking down a classic Trump negotiation tactic. That's why it's getting a lot of traction. So I want to give attribution where it's due to this to this gentleman again, his name is Josh Wolfe, and he says, you know, he's kind of observing that the press thinks it's a spectacle. Europeans say it's a breaking with international norms and a rule based order. He calls that all a mirage, by the way, which I tend to agree. There is a part of this where Trump is actually doing the math correctly. That NATO doesn't work without America. That doesn't mean we want to mistreat our allies. Trump is a saber rattler, he's a negotiator, and I think he sees through a bunch of the rule based order, which is really they get their way, America pays for it, and I think people are sick of it. And so what he says is this quote what is actually underway. It's not all the noise listen to. This is supply chain annexation dressed in cost the costume of territorial ambition. The target is not an island. It is two geological formations in southern Greenland. And I'm going to pronounce these terribly, but cave scheffeld and tan breeze that contain the heavy, rare earth elements without which no advantant's weapons system can be built. Dysprosium, ter ribium, names that mean nothing to the public but everything to the Pentagon. These elements are irreplaceable in the actuators of F thirty five fighters, the guidance fins of precision munitions, the sonar arrays of Virginia class submarines, and the permanent magnets of every electric vehicle motor. China controls over ninety percent of global processing. The United States controls almost none. The quote unquote purchase of Greenland is not a land deal. Its attempt to break a chokehold. That's one of the very key elements. There's also the fact that Trump is now signaling to Canada that this is about building the Golden Dome, and he's warning Carney up in Canada, the great White North neighbor, saying, you know, why don't you watch your mouth when you're talking about these things and flirting with the CCP, mister Carney three twelve. 00:05:56 Speaker 6: Kennedy gets so out of freebias from US, by the way, they should be for a little so. But then I watched your Prime Minister yesterday. He wasn't so grateful. They should be grateful to US. Canada lives because of the United States. Remember that, mark the next time you make your statements. 00:06:15 Speaker 2: A direct shot across the bow too. 00:06:17 Speaker 4: He's mad, He's very mad, but well it does. It shows why this is a double sided thing, I believe, because he's being very forceful. He's being very assertive about America, and I know that guy you were just reading in others like yeah, Josh Wall they're very skeptical of that International Order. They say it's fake and all of that, But a lot of it was if it is fake, it was fakeness that did benefit the United States in a lot of ways. I think it was the presumption that nations would look to the United States, that they would orbit around US, and we had to subsidize them a lot, a lot. But I think President Trump had a lot of success and basically saying, you guys are free riding too much. You need to pony up more. In fact, Denmark is a good example of that. 00:07:03 Speaker 2: Denmark. 00:07:03 Speaker 4: I was checking this in twenty fifteen. Denmark was paying I think one percent of their GDP towards defense. They where they were totally not not spending money to defend things. And during President Trump's first term he says to Europe, this is NATO's an alliance. It's not just us. You guys have to point out, and they tripled the amount they were spending on defense. We have had some success getting these guys. 00:07:23 Speaker 2: Yes, certainly more. I think the there's two points. 00:07:28 Speaker 3: I think Josh Wolf makes some good points with the rar earth, the heavy rare earth minerals that China largely controls around the world, and that Greenland has apparently a lot of There's that point. There's also the point that Trump wants to build a Golden Dome which will protect Canada as well. And if you look at a map that is you know, I think we yeah, this map three thirty one. If you see this map if the US acquires Greenland, if you you know, because oftentimes we see those maps that are laid out sort of long ways as opposed to the globe where it's properly positioned. You see out far north of the Lower forty eight, and how well positioned it is to defend against attacks that might come over the Arctic from Russia, from China, where there are ICBM stations that could reach the US, that could reach Canada. That position is very strategic in building a global dome. And it was interesting in the speech President Trump made this point. He said, it's not just you know, you got to understand, it's a psychological difference. Nobody wants to invest hundreds of billions of dollars in something that they're leasing that could go back to an original owner, you know. So that part actually makes a lot of sense. But if the US controls those two fronts, Alaska and Greenland, the ability to defend the Lower forty eight becomes extraordinarily robust, especially from ICBM attacks coming over the Arctics. So listen, there's a lot of stuff that makes sense here. And it was interesting to me because you have been raising the alarm. 00:09:02 Speaker 2: Blake. 00:09:02 Speaker 3: I think in a lot of ways. You're worried that we're alienating our most tried and true partners in Europe, which you acknowledge you have a lot of problems. 00:09:09 Speaker 2: I get that. 00:09:10 Speaker 3: I'm not saying you're giving them a free ride here, but it was interesting that your take was that you actually appreciated the tone this morning. Explain why you thought it was more measure. 00:09:21 Speaker 4: So, as I said, I think the biggest risk here, as I've explained, is that they look at what the President Trump's doing, and it's not just oh, he's being assertive like he is before. It's the sense is he being unreliable? Because, for example, with NATO, you can say, NATO, you need to spend more on your defense. But if you're straight up saying we are going to take territory from you abruptly, make this new demand, and if not, any number of things can happen. At that point, you're basically saying this isn't a military alliance anymore. This is a thing we can extort you. We can extort territory from you. So I like him saying, Okay, we're not going to attack you, We're going to operate through the normal means. 00:10:00 Speaker 2: We don't want. 00:10:02 Speaker 4: There's always that risk that President Trump will kind of you drive your partners away so much they say, we're gonna make partnerships with other people, if only because we just don't like you anymore. 00:10:13 Speaker 3: Candles were lit on Bondai Beach by families, by children, by people of faith to celebrate a festival of Light, a festival from Bible times, one that Jesus himself celebrated. People gathered with hope, seeking unity and comfort and tradition, but instead of light, there was darkness, violence, fear, hatred, showing itself at a time meant for prayer and rejoicing. Times like this remind us that even with the ceasefire in Israel, Jewish people are being targeted simply because of their faith, and times like this remind us why the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews exists to stand in the gap, providing safety and security to God's people. The Fellowship brings together Christians and Jews to be a light to suffering Jews in Israel, the former Soviet Union, or wherever the needs are greatest. Together we can make a real difference in the lives of those who need hope the most. Your gift today will help provide the security that God's people so desperately need. Visit urgent IFCJ dot org. That's one word, urgent if CJ dot org. Or call now at eight six six three three eight I f CJ. That's eight six six three three eight four three two five. 00:11:22 Speaker 4: We have very interesting video from. 00:11:24 Speaker 2: Yes, where are you going to play the actor? One? Or no? 00:11:27 Speaker 4: No, Well, if we feel like it money, but we should probably shouldn't send a whole minute on a fake video. But so we have Mark Roots or Ruta or however you say is Ruta and he is a senior official with NATO, YEP, and he's at Davos, and he's kind of I sympathize with him because you know, he's clearly must be having a hard time. 00:11:47 Speaker 2: He's a NATO realist. 00:11:48 Speaker 4: He's a NATO realist. But he did say something which a lot of people are not happy about, and he basically said Donald Trump is right that Greenland is strategically important. And I think he's got to make the case if you're not going to give it to them, you have to really up the defenses for it in a way that makes the security argument that's credible. Let's play a clip three thirty two. 00:12:09 Speaker 7: We need to defend the Arctic. We know that these sea lanes are opening up. We know that China and Russia are increasingly active in the Arctic. There are eight countries bordering only Arctic. Seven are a member of NATO. That's Finland and Sweden and Norway and Denmark, Iceland, Canada, and the US. And there's only one country bordering on the Arctic outside NATO, and there's Russia. And I would argue that there's a ninth country, which is China, which is increasingly active in the Arctic region. So President Trump and other leaders are right, we have to do more there. We have to protect the Arctic against Russian and Chinese influences. 00:12:44 Speaker 4: I've had this thought. I feel like it's so frustrating the Europeans. They have to act a certain way because they just don't like Trump a lot. And so, for example, this drama we had where they sent their troops up, did you follow this, Yes, it was so silly that the Germans, like they sent five the best one. The best one was Germany, which sent thirteen soldiers. But they didn't want to aggravate us by getting making it too military. So what they did is they took a big military plane and they landed it in Denmark, and then they put the troops onto a commercial flight and they flew them to Denmark on the commercial plane and they stayed there for two days. They canceled a planned sight seeing trip because it was too cold, and then they got on a commercial flight and they flew home. And they did all this as an obvious gesture. Oh, we're standing with Denmark against America. I feel like they would create it. President Trump loves wins. If they really don't want to give away Denmark, what they should have just or Greenland, they should have just said. President Trump is right here. We're calling a meeting. Here's the five billion, ten billion, some big amount of money, and like deployment of troops were ready to do in the Arctic, and we're going to pay for it. Well, we'll pay for America to expand their bases in the Arctic. We'll pay for this Golden domebase he wants to build. There you go, and then in Trump, he loves to tout wins, he comes back, he's like, I made this great deal. We're expanding our bases in the Arctic, and they're paying for all that we've seen how he does this. President Trump loves making deals on things, and it's so frustrating that they're not reacting that way. And instead we'll get both sides digging in their heels and we might get a renewed trade war out of this. Potentially. 00:14:20 Speaker 3: Yeah, I think today was a step back from that. But you know what, I what probably would make sense on your line of reasoning is you do it in sort of like a Guantanamo Bay, Cuba scenario where you you know, if Charlie or if this is what Charlie would say, at least I'm suspecting because Charlie went to Greenland. You know this is going in the back of my head. Charlie experienced firsthand all the love that the folks of Nuke had for President Trump. I think Greenlanders want their independence, they want to be able to vote on a referendum. But the point is you could you could give or sell portions of Greenland to the United States, almost in a Guantanamo Bay fashion, where you where we actually do own the land, it can't be taken back, and you know, Denmark could retain ownership of the rest. I don't think Trump would be happy with that, because we do want to mine it. We do want to you know, take these rarer minerals out of it. But in defense of a strong US imperial economic military force. I just have to say I love it because Trump is calling bs on a lot of this stuff where you know, Europe is weak, they haven't grown the the You know, you've got Germany that's de in industrialized itself over the last few years. Energy prices are soaring. They produce less energy than they did. I think energy prices up like seventy five percent in Germany and they produced twenty percent less than they did in twenty seventeen. 00:15:42 Speaker 2: Huge, huge strategic mistake. 00:15:44 Speaker 3: Meanwhile, President Trump's bringing in seventeen eighteen trillion dollars of direct investment, foreign direct investment businesses investing in the country. We've got nuclear plants, the brand new ones that are a lot safer, a lot more efficient, smaller, building those all over the country, building new plants, building new factories. GDPs could very well be over five percent. We have a lot going for US, and we're investing a lot in our military. All right, Listen, I'd love to cut the debt. I'd love to I'd love to decree spending. Those are let's put those to the side. Those are problems. But there's a lot going for America that is not going for Europe, and Europe knows it. America is strong, it's aggressive, it's robust, it's muscular, especially under President Trump. Europe is in malays, Europe is stagnant growth. Europe has a migration problem that is not going away anytime soon. They lack political will, They're fighting a rise of right wing populism and nationalism in their own countries, and they're distracted, and they have a fertility problem. So you've got all of these things. And candidly, Europe knows that they can't fight America on this. They can't even out negotiate America on this. Trump is right to call their bluff and say you would be nothing without us. As a matter of fact, I think we have a clip that says just that that NATO would be nothing and we asked for nothing. He kind of mentioned that before, But this is this is the truth of the situation. I love that President Trump is calling it. You know, here's here's another clip that I think is really important here. Actually it sort of plays into it three twenty nine. 00:17:12 Speaker 5: Recent decades, it became conventional wisdom in Washington and European capital is that the only way to grow a modern Western economy was through ever increasing government spending, unchecked mass migration, and endless foreign imports. 00:17:29 Speaker 3: So why that always in is that Trump has reversed the trend on those pieces. We have re reverse migration. Europe has not been ad. 00:17:38 Speaker 4: But you have to be careful. For example, he says, we've never asked for anything but the Danes certainly remember they did send troops to Afghanistan. Forty three of them died there. That's a lot for a country of five million people. Well, and I mean in the most humiliate your friends. You won't have as many friends in the future. 00:17:58 Speaker 3: I want to remind you about a pharmacy we trust and recommend, especially right now when it feels like everyone's getting sick. Flu cases are viruses are going around. If you're a family, you know your kids are sick. But All Family Pharmacy is here to help you access medications you need without the run around. When you don't want to wait in line and want instead your meds to be delivered to your door, you need All Family pharmacy. When everyone around you is sick and you want to be prepared, you need All Family Pharmacy. 00:18:26 Speaker 2: When your doctor says. 00:18:27 Speaker 3: They won't prescribe ivermectin, you need All Family Pharmacy. They've got everything, antibiotics, antivirals, tama flu ivermectin, hydroxychloroquin, blood pressure meds, and more. 00:18:38 Speaker 1: You do not need insurance, you don't need to beg a doctor, just simple, fast, honest care. This is what healthcare should look like in America with you in control. 00:18:46 Speaker 3: The process is simple. Order online and license, doctor reviews it, and your medication ships straight to your door. So start the year prepared and take care of your family the right way. Visit All Familypharmacy dot com slash kirk and use promo code Kirk ten to save ten percent. Again, that's Allfamilypharmacy dot Com. Slash kirk and use the code Kirk ten. So I believe we are still working on getting Jack Pasovic here, but I wanted to kind of I think I'm going to set this up here with for Jack here. There's these two clips that just need to be juxtaposed side by side. So you've got this Finland President Alexander Stubb says Europe can defend itself unequivocally without the Americans three sixteen. 00:19:32 Speaker 8: First, it is a direct answer to the question of this panel. Can Europe defend itself? My answer is unequivocally. 00:19:37 Speaker 7: Yes, without the Americans. 00:19:39 Speaker 8: Without the Americans, I mean, how we look but. 00:19:43 Speaker 1: You're relying on them for these key elements. 00:19:45 Speaker 7: How would you do it at scale and at duration with an. 00:19:48 Speaker 8: Assumption that the United States would cut off completely any kind of work. Well, if we look at the defense composure of Europe buying large in a country like Finland, you know, the bottom line is that if you ask me the question that can the Finnish military defend itself against a Russian attack, the whole defense composture of the way in which you're doing, yes, we can. 00:20:10 Speaker 3: I think it's asked about it later and he says, oh, I love journalists, that's not what I said. 00:20:14 Speaker 2: Three thirty five. 00:20:16 Speaker 3: You've said earlier that Europe can defend itself without the Americans. 00:20:22 Speaker 9: If it comes. 00:20:22 Speaker 8: Down not exactly, that's not a quote. 00:20:28 Speaker 7: More or less we'll go back to the transfer, yeah, more or less. 00:20:34 Speaker 3: More or less journalists, see, I love this juxtaposition because it's a total tell. They they saber rattle, they play big, they peacock, they puff up their chests, and they say, oh, we don't need Trump, we don't need the Americans. They don't really mean that. They don't really mean it, because it's not true at all. 00:20:52 Speaker 2: It's not true. Though. 00:20:54 Speaker 4: I would say it's better for us if we're interacting with them. We much more want them to start paying but still be basically reliant on us, versus if they decide America is getting a little wacky, they're taking land off of us, we need to toughen up and also make a new alliance that's not with them or worse yet, with someone else. 00:21:14 Speaker 3: Well, and that's the whole China threat that they're putting out there. Email us your thoughts freedom at Charliekirk dot com. I want to hear what you think are we is Trump playing too rough with the Europeans? 00:21:23 Speaker 2: Not rough enough? 00:21:25 Speaker 3: Do you think that they are bluffing in these entreaties, this flirtation with China. Want to hear your thoughts Freedom at Charliekirk dot com. Blake will be reading those in the next segment. Oh so, Freedom at Charliekirk dot com want to hear what your thoughts are on Trump's tone his presentation at Davos this morning. 00:21:41 Speaker 2: But why those two clips I think are really interesting. 00:21:43 Speaker 3: Blake is listen to now, Okay, I'm gonna grain assault this one. This come from RT, which is state run media with Putin, So you got to trust the translation here, but we'll play it. 00:21:55 Speaker 2: We'll give you the translation. 00:21:57 Speaker 3: And but I think that Putin, when you think about it in terms of this finished president, makes a lot of sense here three thirty. 00:22:03 Speaker 9: Eight Trumps herectrum so nco. 00:22:22 Speaker 2: What he says there is you'll see. It will happen quickly. 00:22:24 Speaker 3: Soon they being the Europeans, the leaders will all stand at the feet of the Master America and will gently wag their tails. Everything will fall into place, you'll see. So he's he's basically observing that they're playing tough now, they're signaling strength and all of this because they don't like Trump, they don't like they feel like they're getting bullied. But Putin says, they'll all fall in line. Joining us now is Jack Posobac. He's live from Davos, Switzerland. He's been providing some behind the scenes clips that have been really fascinating to watch. Jack, we're talking about this dynamic between European elites, the leadership and President Trump. Obviously there's tension. There's tension about Greenland, there's tension about NATO, NATO funding, there's flirtations with China. Tell us what you're feeling and seeing in the room, this dynamic between Atlantic allies. 00:23:15 Speaker 10: Yeah, Andrew, guys, that's exactly right. And you know we're here, we're in the room. I remember four years ago, my very first DAVO was calling into the Charlie Kirk Show right after getting detained by the World Economic Foreign Police. So you know, here we are four years later, we're inside the building where they're in the room with President Trump and he and the US team. They're still kind of going around here. So he's holding those sideline meetings as we speak. There's going to be a reception a little bit later. But you're right, there really is this sort of tension. There's this sort of you know, I would say even kind of a cynicism of some of the European leaders saying that, oh, Trump is so ridiculous, this will never work, this will never happen. We can you know, we can be rude to him, but at the same time you've come to understand that. In certainly in the room we saw this, there were a lot of people laughing at his jokes. They were sort of rolling with the punches, rolling with the laughter. And I think that at this time around, given that he's been on the world stage for so many years, they've started to take that old Scott Adams phrase where they they take him seriously, but they don't take him literally. And what that means is that they're serious about his intentions, but they understand that a lot of what he's doing, he's going into a salesman pitch, he's going into his art, he's saying things for effect over and over again. And it seemed that at least in the room, a lot of people got that. 00:24:32 Speaker 4: Yeah, it's very nicely mentioned that Jack no joke. I was reading the other day the members of the Norwegian Nobel Prize committee and one of them is this foreign policy blogger, and he actually had a thing he wrote on the Greenland drama and he basically said Trump is always in negotiation mode, and that means he's always trying to keep people off balance. He'll like shock them by being really aggressive with what he says he'll consider any offer. He's always ready to make a deal. And it's just so disorienting compared to how my normal person shots them. And it kind of relies a bit on, you know, the old Nixon idea, the madman theory. Like part of his negotiation position is to basically be like, I'm super serious, I'm ready to invade. I've I've thrown out the brakes on my car, I've thrown out the steering wheel, nothing can stop me. And then he actually can just stop and make the deal very abruptly. 00:25:25 Speaker 2: I completely agree. 00:25:26 Speaker 3: This is what again this we talked about this guy Josh wolf Jack, who kind of you know, he said, this is classic Trump negotiation sequence. It goes like this signal acquisition Denmark Scoffs mentioned force, Denmark recoils, insist on force loudly, repeatedly. Denmark reaches peak indignation, others come to their side, than pivot a purchase offer that eliminates Denmark's entire national debt one hundred and forty two billion and nearly doubles Greenland's GDP four und and fifty billion, And suddenly the question is no longer. How dare you? But wait, how much? How do you think Jack? 00:26:01 Speaker 6: No? 00:26:01 Speaker 10: I think that's exactly the path that I'm trying to see this. And if anyone wants to know what this is called, it's literally called the Art of the Deal. President Trump wrote a book about this about forty years ago where he outlines that specific policy in great detail. He says, it's what he does every single time he's in a high stakes negotiation. I think it's really interesting that so many people either haven't actually read that book, haven't seen him do it a million times already, and that they still seem to fall for the same exact trick. Now, one of the things that I did think was interesting, you know, coming at it from a military perspective as well, that he did talk about the need for greenland, not just we've heard for you know, the Arctic shipping routes. We've also heard it from the national security in terms of those sea lanes, but he also talked about ballistic missile defense and really talked about the Golden Dome, those intercontinental ballistic missiles, whether they're fired off from China, Russia, North Korea, even if ron if they were able to develop those long range ballistic missiles. They would be flying them over the top, targeting the Washington d C, and they would fall within the territory of Greenland, making Greenland a key position, key point for the United States in any type of missile defense. And I haven't really seen him use that phrasing and use that phraseology put it all together on the world stage. He kind of presaged it in an interview yesterday, but today. 00:27:18 Speaker 2: Was the really big one. 00:27:19 Speaker 10: And I think that for anyone who's looking at it seriously, he makes some very solid military points there. 00:27:25 Speaker 3: Yeah, no, I agree. I think the ICBM argument is pretty strong. And I loved him name checking Carney, telling him to know his role, no his place. 00:27:34 Speaker 2: I think that's important. 00:27:35 Speaker 3: Actually, there's another dynamic that's a little bit more on the domestic home front here, Jack, there's you got Gavin Newsom wanting around. He's calling Scott Besson smug. Scott Besson had the line of the day, I think, hitting him back three fourteen. 00:27:49 Speaker 11: You think it's very very ironic that you Governor Newsom, who strikes me as Patrick Bateman, the sparkle beach Ken, maybe the only Californian who knows less about economics than Kamala Harris. He's here this week with his billionaire sugar daddy, Alex Soros. 00:28:12 Speaker 3: I've seen you behind the scenes. You've gotten iPhone video of Gavin Newsom. What the heck is going on with this? What does he think he's an accomplished Is this is just all about twenty twenty eight for him? 00:28:22 Speaker 2: I think it is. 00:28:22 Speaker 10: He's bird dogging. He's trying to get his name out there. He wants people to put him in the same conversation as Trump, trying to put himself on the same level as Mark Karney. Trudeohis here as well. Actually, Alex Soros just walked by a couple of minutes ago. I saw him just kind of darting out the out the way before he could see me. And funny enough, I actually went up to that interview where I you know, he was coming out here doing a gaggle. I walked up, you know, his his press guy was trying to say, oh, no, Jack, you know, not him, not Pasobic. I said, out, you know, guys, it'll be fine, let me in, and I asked him a question, do you have any comment regarding Don Lemon and the agitators at the Minneapolis chure up there in uh when they were barging in. He said he hadn't heard about it. Explained the situation once again, he said he hadn't heard about it, so well, we'll see what kind of what kind of situation that is. 00:29:10 Speaker 2: But I did very quickly. 00:29:12 Speaker 10: You know, he caught my name and I saw this press guy sort of saying, oh, that's Jack Pisobic, and I mentioned to him, I said, hey, hey, governor knew some I was friends with Charlie and and and Gavin. You know, he kind of kind of touched his heart for a second there and said he said wow, wow. And you know I think that was a really, you know, really humanizing moment. I remember Charlie and he had had that that incredible interview that they had done together. So I thought it maybe a little little way to break the ice a little bit. 00:29:35 Speaker 3: Jack Pasobic, God bless you, man, Stay safe, keep getting those questions in with the with the world leaders. 00:29:42 Speaker 2: We appreciate man. Talk to you soon. We'll do it. 00:29:44 Speaker 7: Thanks guys. 00:29:49 Speaker 4: For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to Charliekirk dot com