ELON MUSK DRUG ADDICTION, TRUMP CUTS 37B, JOB CORPS & MORE #live #livestreaming #livestream
Jun 3, 2025
#livestreaming #viralvideo #livestream
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0:03
Y trade saw. This is the chainsaw for
0:09
bureaucracy. [Music]
0:17
Tra. This is the chainsaw for bureaucracy. Chainsaw.
0:27
[Applause]
0:32
Yep. That's Elon Musk. That's Elon Musk. Whoops. Sorry.
0:40
All right. This is This is him tweaking
0:47
out. All right. The creator of Doge, everybody.
0:53
from the person that thinks the term Nazis isn't what you think it means. That a Nazi
1:01
salute. Here's more of him tweaking.
1:28
Want to know where he got that black eye from? The Oval Office after reports that he got into a physical fight with
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Trump's Treasury Secretary Scott Bessant. The Daily Mail had reported that Elon Musk's swift departure from
1:40
Doge in the White House was escalated by an outburst that turned violent. According to none other than Steve
1:46
Bannon, who said that Elon Musk physically shoved the 62-year-old Treasury Secretary Scott Bessant after
1:52
he was confronted over his wild promises to save the administration a trillion
1:57
dollars. Besset apparently called Musk out and said, "You promised us a trillion dollars in cuts and now you're
2:02
at like a hundred billion dollars and nobody can find anything. What are you doing?" And that's when Elon got
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physical. It's a sore subject with him. It wasn't an argument. It was a physical confrontation. Elon basically shoved
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him. Bannon said that Trump 100% sided with Bessant after the clash, saying, "I
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don't think Bessant has any bad blood, but he's got a job to do, and he's going to do it." And news of the confrontation
2:25
was confirmed by White House press secretary Caroline Levitt, who said, "It's no secret Trump has put together a
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team of people who are incredibly passionate about the issues impacting our country. Disagreements are a normal
2:37
part of any healthy policy process, and ultimately, everyone knows they serve at the pleasure of Trump." Elon, meanwhile,
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was asked about the black eye during this Oval Office press conference, and he blamed it on his kid. He said that little X, the name of his kid, did this
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because he asked him to punch him in the face and the kid obliged. Okay. Anyway, I think this the LA Mail reporting is
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giving us Well, people are caught catching on because they know Elon was full of crap
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and he wasn't about giving uh he wasn't about saving people trillions of dollars. He was about fattening his
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pockets. Those people at Doge are not um those people at Doge are not auditors.
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They're hackers. One of the people who work for Doge, okay, work for a cyber
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crime ring and they harassed a retired cop. Elon Mus allegedly took large
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amounts of drugs including ketamine while advising Trump report. Doge heads had at times took disassociative daily
3:35
along with ecstasy and psychedelic mushroom. According to the
3:42
New York Times, Elon Musk engaged in extensive drug consumption while serving as one of Donald Trump's closest
3:48
advisers, taking ketamine so frequently it caused bladder problems and traveling with a daily supply of approximately 20
3:54
pills. According to the claims made to the New York Times, the world's richest person
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regularly consumed ketamine, ecstasy, and psychedelic mushrooms during his rise to political prominence. Anonymous sources familiar with his activities
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told the Times his drug use reportedly intensified as he donated 275 million to
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Trump's presidential campaign and later wielded significant power through his role spearheading the so-called Department of Government Efficiency or
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Doge. Musk announced his departure from government service on Wednesday evening, months after exhibiting erratic
4:25
behavior, including insulting cabinet members and making Nazi salutes at a public at a political rally. Okay.
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Ecstasy is classified by the Drug Enforcement Administration, DEA, as a scheduled one controlled substance with
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no acceptable medical use, making it entirely prohibited for federal employees. Though Musk has been
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classified as a special government employee and not subject to the same stringent rules as a regular
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employee, while ketamine can be legally prescribed as a schedule 3 substance,
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recreational use or mixing it with other drugs would be would probably violate federal work policies. The Doge leader
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developed what those sources described to the Times as a serious ketamine habit, consuming the powerful anesthetic
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sometimes daily rather than a small amount taken about every once every two weeks. He rather than the small amount
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taken about once every two weeks. He claimed in interviews, "If you use too much ketamine, you can't really get work
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done and I have a lot of work." Mus previously told journalist Don Lemon in March 2024, downplaying his consumption.
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However, by spring last year, the Times reported Musk was telling associates his
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ketamine use was affecting his bladder, a known consequence of chronic abuse of the drug, which has psychedelic
5:46
properties and can cause disassociation from reality. According to the DEA, his
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regular medication bodies contain pills bearing aderall markings along other alongside other substances. According to
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sources with the Times who saw photographs of the container, it remains unclear whether Musk was under the
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influence during his time at the White House or where or where he had attended sensitive meetings with foreign leaders
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and held power over federal spending cuts. When asked for comment on the reporting and whether Mus did any drugs
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test, White House spokesman Harrison Fields skirted the question, saying, "I must accomplish more for American
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taxpayers than many career politicians." Okay, he's lying. The UCL's in America would leave
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the comfort of the seauite to serve in federal serve in the federal government. Field said in a statement, "Yeah, they
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wouldn't serve in the federal government because they know they have to be in the politics and they would be under um scrutiny." Okay. The the nominee they
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would have would be taken away and now the government could look into their
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findings, look into their um business practices, sorry. Yet, Elon Mus did just that, joining the Trump administration's
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efforts to cut waste, fraud, and abuse. Doge and its core mission is now embedded in the fabric of federal
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government and continues to drive efficiency and save taxpayers taxpayers dollars, which is a lie. SpaceX
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maintains strict drug-free workforce policies for employees due to his government contracts. However, those insiders tell the Times that Mus
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received advanced warning of random drug tests undermining their effectiveness. popular podcast and public intellectual
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Sam Harris, who publicly ended his friendship with Mus wrote in in a January newsletter, "There is something
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seriously wrong with his moral compass, if not his perception of reality." Well, I mean, he did say he would he was
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working with AI to usher in the demons. So, I don't think he has much of moral a moral code. Just keeping it
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real. All right. I don't think he has much of a moral code. Just that's just being honest. and
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you know doing Nazi salutes and his grandfather was a Nazi a Nazi supporter.
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His father uh made a lot of money taking away those emerald mines from Africans in South Africa. That's how he became
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rich. So and you know he's has multiple baby mamas. Okay.
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Uh I where's the morality here? I'm sorry. I don't see it. I just
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don't see it. Let's talk about Trump cutting 37B
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now. Okay. And they're calling it racially
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biased, but let's be real. So, let me break down what's really going on here. The Trump administration is trying to
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amend a $ 37 billion program created specifically to help minority owned businesses get access to federal
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contracts. And they're calling it racially biased. But let's be real, they're trying to take away the little
8:46
support that exists for black and brown entrepreneurs. Slowly but surely, they're stripping away the funding, the
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grants, the contracts, and then when all that's gone, what happens to our businesses? That's why now more than
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ever, we have to start moving different with urgency. Stop waiting to go after funding. Stop waiting to apply for that
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grant. Stop waiting until things get harder or it eventually doesn't exist. We have to stop waiting for permission
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and start learning how to get what's already out there, what's already
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available. I thought Trump was making America great
9:23
again. Apparently, he's making it great for racist whites to have no
9:31
competition. It's really what it's all about. And they're the ones saying,
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"Pull yourself up by your bootstraps." But when you do and you make something great in this country, you know, look up
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Ros look up uh Tulsa, Oklahoma, look up Black Wall Street, they will try to burn
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it down, okay? Or they'll, you know, they'll put a highway through it, you
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know, stuff like that. Trump team looks to end 37B program designed to help minority
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businesses, saying it violates the Constitution. Wow. The Trump administration has joined with
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two white-owned construction companies looking to end 37 billion program designed to help minority owned
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businesses saying it's unconstitutional. These are the names of the companies. The Indiana based company's Mid America
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Milling Company and Bagshaw Trucking. Boycott both of them. Okay. Boycott both
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of these companies. All right. sued the Department of Transportation 2023 over
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the disadvantages disadvantage of business enterprise program, the
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DBE, arguing that it should be permanently dismantled. On Wednesday, the Department of Justice filed a
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proposal for a settlement with the Department of Transportation to dismantle the program, which was first
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authorized by Congress in 1983 and served roughly 49,000 businesses that
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have been deemed disadvantaged. The program is funded by the federal
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government but administered by states and allocates at least 10% of the government funding for transportation
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infrastructure to such contracting firms. The original complaint described the DBE as the largest perhaps oldest
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affirmative action program in US history and claimed that the program's goals were in fact discriminary barriers targeting non designated racial groups
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including white Americans. White Americans don't have to face racism. White Americans don't have to face the
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fact of, you know, being told they're not hiring. You know, they
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don't have to fact u face uh discriminatory job practices
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like you are qualified to do a job, but instead of hiring you for that um
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position in the higher position within the company, I mean promote you, right?
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They will have you train a white guy or a white woman who is not qualified for that job and then hire them, promote
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them to that position that you were qualified for.
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Okay? White people don't have to go through that crap. Blacks,
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Indians, especially Indians in the tech industry, okay, they were catching hell with DEI was was taken away from them.
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Taken away, I'm sorry. DI was taken away. A lot of issues came up. The fact that they're fetishized by their white
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employers, okay? They have to be training, like I just said, they have to be training people like white people who
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are not qualified for the promotion. And those people get the promotion when they
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were qualified. They should have gotten that promotion in the first place.
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Okay? A whole lot of things happened. A lot of Asians can't get into these Ivy League schools. But guess who could get
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into these Ivy League Ivy League schools schools and their grades suck? Rich
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kids, which rich parents whose daddies and mommies graduate from those um Ivy
12:56
League universities through legacy admissions. Don't want to talk about that
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though. Okay. The word disadvantage is simply code for women and certain minorities. The complaint stated, adding
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that disfavored racial groups must compete with the preferred racial groups on an unequal
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footing because the DBE program violates the Constitution promise of equal treatment. It must be permanently
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dismantled. No, you want the right to, you know, just practice
13:30
nepotism on a large scale. That's what you want. You hate
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competition. These racist whites hate competition because it shows when there's when there's real competition, they
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suck. Last January under the Biden administration, the DOT hit back at the suits, saying that the planers had
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notably not identified any current transport construction contracts that
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had race or gender based subcontracting goals due to DOT DBE programs. However,
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in a new filing on Wednesday, the administration said it had re-evalued its position in light of a 2023 Supreme
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Court ruling which blocked raceconscious college admissions. Defendants upon review of the DBE program and their
14:15
position in this litigation have determined that the program's use of race and sexbased presumptions is
14:22
unconstitutional. the filing
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stated. That's what they want. But uh let me show you what's going on with
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this project 2025 since you all want to root for this. It's happening before our
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eyes. President Trump also overturned a
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decades old executive order banning workplace discrimination. And the new rule will will require the government
14:53
contractors to conform. They do not have diversity, equity, and inclusion
14:58
programs. Trump says he wants to focus on merit. Those against the issue say it will companies less likely to hire women
15:05
and minorities. President Trump also
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overturned a decades old executive order banning workplace discrimination. The new rule will require the government
15:18
contractors to conform. They do not have diversity, equity, and inclusion
15:23
programs. Trump says he wants to focus on merit. Those against the issue say it will make companies less likely to hire
15:30
women and minorities. All of you voting for Trump,
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you've basically shot yourselves in the foot. Shot yourselves in the
15:41
foot. Okay? You black magas, black Trumpers porters, I just
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hope it was worth it. I hope it was worth it. Just remember, you're going to have a hard time getting a job and your
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kids are going to have a hard time getting a job after college. Now Trump is cutting job
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corpse into that right
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now. Job core center which is being forced to shut down earlier than
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initially announced. The news coming on the heels of a department of labor review last month suggesting such sites
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cost more than their work. Staff and students tell TV5's Trey Harris that the accelerated closure date is not only
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disruptive but damaging their futures. At Flint Jennese Job Course Center, 147
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students were focused on building careers. Now they're just trying to figure out what's next. But this kept
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people safe. But I don't know what's going to happen after. I ain't going to lie. The US Department of Labor
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announced this week that Flint is one of five job core centers that will pause operations by August 31st, citing fiscal
16:53
year 2025 budget cuts that dropped the program's funding by nearlyion dollars. Governments are not
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made to be efficient. They're made to help the people and assist the people. And if that costs money, that cost money. If it's better ways to do it,
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better ways to do it. But this there are better ways to do this. They don't have to cut job corpse. Okay? This is a
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successful program that helps kids at risk who don't feel college is for them. They can do trades. They don't have to
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cut this. Okay. And Caroline Levit wanted money to be put into the trades instead
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of, you know, uh LGBT uh um college courses or school courses.
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Now, what is this? This is hypocrisy. But as we know um with project 2025,
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it's supposed to make uh life very hard for minorities and other marginalized groups
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in America. This is the this is what Trump
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this is Trump's America. He's going to have these kids either in jail making uh private prison owners a
18:02
lot of money or they're going to be working those fields getting crappy pay in the blazing
18:07
hot sun or they're going to be joining the military to fight whatever
18:13
war that Trump wants them to fight.
18:19
This is what's working right now. But here in Flint, staff say the shutdown is already underway. A stop work order
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takes effect June 30th, two months earlier than expected. And now internal systems are down. An email sent Friday
18:30
confirmed staff have lost access to critical platforms like Citricx, making it nearly impossible to operate. We had
18:36
a meeting at 2:00 and they told us that basically we got to pack our stuff.
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That's left students and instructors in the dark, scrambling for answers while trying to stay focused on what brought
18:47
them here in the first place. It's kind of sad they shut everything down cuz I ain't got my education. I ain't got my
18:53
license. I came back here to get my life together and it's just confusing me how they shut it down. I needed my high school diploma, all type of stuff. So,
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but I was working towards that so I can do my CDL cuz that was my number one goal. Many of these students live on
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campus. Others rely on this program for high school diplomas, vocational certifications, and job placement. A lot
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of people in here don't got nowhere to go. A lot of people in here trying to change their life around. Trying to get a house, trying to get a trade, trying to go to the union, trying to trying to
19:18
build money up so they can have a better life. conference. Staff are now calling for a community response, asking local
19:23
leaders, schools, and employers to step up and help transition these. They don't want the they don't want these kids to
19:29
get help. I bet you these racist whites were in Trump's ear. We do not like these
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these nwords, these other minorities getting work, and we have to hire them.
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We don't like that. Make America great
19:46
again. Okay. And Russell, who is the creator of Project
19:54
2025, is going to be heading Doge. And he's going to give Trump the power to fire federal
20:00
workers with no problems, which is pretty much fascism. Fascism. And he's
20:05
going to have people alongside Trump that will do whatever Trump acts. This is fascism. This is not a new
20:13
way for America. He does not want, okay, Trump does not
20:20
want to be a beacon for humanity. Trump does not want to fix the America's
20:27
problems. Trump has his orders and he's going to fulfill them for white supremacy.
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One of the notable cuts in President Trump's budget that passed the House last week is to an organization called
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JobCore. This program is 61 years old and what it does is it offers educational and vocational training to
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Americans between the ages of 16 and 24. Now, our Corin Hogard talked to more
20:55
than a dozen graduates today. He joins us live from the St. Paul site. So, Corin, what's the biggest fear about
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these potential cuts? Tim and Kelsey, all of these folks
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walked away from JobCore with something valuable. whether it was a job skill that they still use or maybe just
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learning to be a responsible adult. And so they're worried that the government is kind of pulling up this life
21:24
ladder. Job core meant everything for a lot of the 3 million people who've used it as a stepping stone since 1964.
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I was homeless and I had nowhere to go and I was 16 turning 17 years old and it
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completely changed my life. Dante and Renee Rudolph met at JobCore and built their own American dream out of the
21:47
ashes of their former lives. The program puts a roof over the heads of about 50,000 youngsters every year. It helps
21:54
them get a high school diploma or a GED. It teaches them trades and even how to drive. One of my dreams was to become a
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truck driver and now I'm living it and I've been I've been been driving truck for 13 years and if it wasn't for
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JobCore, uh I wouldn't have been able to get my driver's license even. More than a dozen graduates told me JobCore is
22:12
where they learn structure and responsibility and even some basic life skills. I learned that you were supposed
22:19
to dust baseboards. I didn't learn that at home. I didn't know that was a thing you were supposed to do. JobCore taught
22:25
me that. But the program costs more than $1.5 billion dollar a year. Now the Trump administration says it's
22:31
financially unsustainable and called it a failed experiment. Its success stories
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are hoping for a reversal. JobCore means everything. It means promise of a bright
22:42
future, promise of hope and the ability to pursue a brighter path.
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The future of JobCore about 300 folks here at this site is now
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that's what it is. No, I don't have uh TDS. Uh, Greg, I have common sense
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syndrome. I'm sorry that's not something you you you have. Um, common sense
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syndrome means when you see nonsense, you call it out. That's the thing, Greg. Don't be
23:13
like Greg. Job poor. Um it's a program that helps
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poor kids and young uh men and women to get job training and a lot of times it
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puts them in it's like an apprenticeship basically and uh and my uncle was actually in JobCore and he swears by he
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said he wouldn't be the man he was today if it wasn't uh for JobCore and he was a young um white rule poor kid. I mean my
23:38
grandparents had nothing and uh it was a huge help for him. But I'm going to show you a news clip of what's actually
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happening and then I'm going to show you some articles uh of what the Trump administration said would happen. Where
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are you going to go? I don't know. I tried making a few calls, you know, trying to figure out something, but as
23:55
of so far, there's nothing that's solid ground. 18year-old Cameron is dazed. His son
24:01
reality, he has no place to live. Is in jail. The other is dead. He lived at
24:07
Detroit JobCore on Detroit's west side. Career training facility for young people. A sad scene Friday afternoon.
24:13
Dozens lugged garbage bags full of their belongings. Some into their parents' trunks and others, well, they didn't
24:19
have anywhere to go. The staff, they had us go to the wreck at about 1:30 and
24:25
they broke the news to us and they had us go to the dorms, pack our stuff. So, let's look at who's in job core. A the
24:32
ages are 16 to 24, men and women. The average age is 19. They're from disadvantaged backgrounds, um,
24:38
debilitating environments, and they are in need of education and training. And as you can see here, 59% male, 77%
24:46
lacked a high school diploma or equivalent, 75% are minority groups, 50%
24:51
are African-American. Now, let's look at what um they said was going to happen to these PE. They said they were planning a
24:58
pause and an orderly transition for student, staff, and local communities. And the pause would occur by June 30th.
25:04
They are actually closing these facilities down right now and kicking people out as you could see. And then
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Lorie Chavez comes out and says they are ensuring participants are supported through this transition and connected
25:17
with resources they need to succeed as we evaluate the program's possibilities. No, they didn't. They booted these
25:23
people out with nowhere to go. I mean, there's homeless 17, 18, 19 year olds who are now um out on the streets
25:29
instead of getting job training. This is why you know MAGA is full of [ __ ] because this should be MAGA. These are
25:36
people that are Americans that need it should be cuz MAGA majority of MAGA are like poor and below middle class. You
25:45
got people in Appalachia's poor as hell vote Republican for Trump. Poor as dirt.
25:52
No better than poor poor blacks in the hood in the ghetto.
26:00
Okay, we get you voting for Trump. He's cutting your section 8. Okay, many of
26:06
you white women who are single moms are on and have multiple baby daddies and I
26:13
hope it was worth it. You basically voted against your your own interest and you thought it wasn't going to affect
26:19
you. You're on public assistance. You're not white and you're not rich. You are a
26:25
target. for corporations and billionaires. I'll
26:31
say again, if you are Republican and you are not white and rich, you are lunch
26:38
for these people that need help. And they are
26:45
trying, they're not out selling drugs. They're trying to get job training and be bare people. And of course, Trump and
26:52
his admin had to shut it down because it's a made up of minorities and poor people who they do not give a [ __ ]
26:58
about. All 20 years of pull your uh pull yourselves up by the bootstraps finally coming true. And I from the videos I've
27:05
seen, it can hit a [ __ ] Trump voter straight in the face and they'll still give this [ __ ] an A or a B.
27:12
Pretty much. Pretty much that's how they feel. They feel that way. They think
27:18
Trump's white, they're white, it will work out. No, it won't. No the hell it
27:27
won't. You know, Trump's level, you work for the billionaires. You don't you don't care
27:32
about people who are poor. Let's talk about the truth about this Qatar plane. Now, the deal has not
27:38
been finalized to the United States to accept that luxury Boeing 747A jumbo jet
27:43
from Qatar. And that's despite previous claims from the Department of Defense that the US had Oh yeah, your famous
27:49
your beloved orange god took, you know, wanted this plane
27:54
from a country that funds terrorists like Hamas
27:59
officially accepted the plane to be used as the new Air Force One. And sources tell ABC News that Qatar wants to
28:06
clarify the details surrounding this transfer, specifically emphasizing that the Trump administration was responsible
28:13
for initiating the discussions. Plans raise significant security concerns. The
28:18
deal has not been That's the thing. He may like, oh, you know, they gave it to me. No, they didn't. Man, you're the one
28:24
who wanted it. That's the thing. You're the one who wanted that plane,
28:29
Donald. Ah, man. Say how he is,
28:37
man. Donald Trump, man. Greedy, greedy, greedy, greedy, greedy.
28:44
Donald tells Donald Trump not so fast on that free plane as the deal is not done
28:49
yet. Now, this comes directly from the White House where officials say that they're working out the details of the
28:54
gift and trying to create a memorandum of repairs, let alone the near billion
29:00
dollars necessary to get the security up to date. But this isue here is how Donald Trump is making deals. How he is
29:07
lying to the American people about what actually is being done. First, he said Qatar just offered him the plane, which
29:13
wasn't true. Now you look at Pennsylvania with the steel acquisition suggesting that Japan's not buying the
29:19
the steel mill. Instead, they're just investing, which isn't the case at all.
29:25
It's adid that he was the one who initiated conversation or that he tacoed
29:31
out allowed the steel deal to
29:38
happen. Oh man. tacoed
29:45
out. Oh, Trump, man. Trump. Oh, man. He He kills me, man. He
29:51
He kills me. When it comes to money and greed,
29:57
Trump turns into a prostitute. Just like when it came to Putin. All right, it came to Putin. He
30:05
didn't care that Putin put his wife's nudes up on display. He didn't care. He
30:11
wanted to do what Putin wanted. What you got for me, Putin? That's it. That's it. Ladies, in the United
30:17
States of America going on in the United States,
30:23
America right now, please be careful, especially women of color, young women
30:28
of color. Educate yourself. Know that people are impersonating ICE agents
30:34
because of this Trump administration. cruelty being the point type of mentality. People are impersonating ICE
30:42
agents for the sole purpose of kidnapping, detaining, saing, doing
30:48
whatever the hell they want with these people. It's scary out there
30:55
now. 120 days of this operation of this administration stuff happening. This
31:01
happened once under the Biden administration that I can
31:11
being the point with the Trump administration and with these ICE agents. The public doesn't even know
31:17
what Let's not for the B administration, you did have immigrants killing Americans as well. Let's not forget that
31:25
both sides are scum. Both sides are dirty. Intervene or not? some of this is
31:30
happening in broad daylight in front of the general public and the public is too
31:36
afraid to intervene because they think that they're being detained lawfully and
31:42
they're not. So when you see an ICE agent or when you see a situation that appears to
31:49
be an ICE agent, make them identify themselves or piss off. And if they want
31:56
to know why, this is why. if they're not identifying themselves later.
32:03
Pretty much because there are a lot of sick people out here who love white supremacy
32:11
and they feel that Trump is going to give them the right to act as their ancestors. Not no not in this
32:18
century. Okay. Which US states have the most human trafficking victims over the past 5 years? Most human human
32:25
trafficking victims over the past five years. And this is, you know, this is uh going in line with uh the topic of
32:32
people impersonating ICE officers trafficking numbers came out. So the statistics on it and I'm here to tell
32:38
you if your state is safer, those numbers will have to be skewed a little bit more because we have now copycat ICE
32:44
people. Since the fact of the matter that Christy Gnome head of Homeland Security doesn't believe that the people
32:51
that are basically people the streets don't show
32:56
any form of uh they have a license to carry a pew pew with mask now oh you know how it
33:05
works once you have something going copycaters show up. Yep. That's called
33:11
predators. So, they're like, "Hey, maybe we should do the same thing. Instead of trying to just show up in a car with a
33:17
little toy, we'll just wear a mask and pretend we're ice agents." Here's a report on that as
33:23
well. People um I honestly don't know how I mean, first of all, I would ask
33:29
anybody that comes up to me would say, "Where's you? Can you show me that you you know that you're able to carry a firearm?" If you really want to get them
33:36
and they want to get around, you know, their so-called W A R A N T, you know,
33:41
judicial war, where's where's your where's your license to carry? Where's your license to
33:49
carry? What's your badge number? Where's your uh
33:55
headquarters? Stuff like
34:02
that. ICE impersonators and other scammers on the rise. How to protect
34:08
yourself. It was Monday and lunch and the lunch rush was in full swing in El
34:14
Sancho Local Taka in Newbury Park when an customer was spotted wearing a jacket
34:19
with a label on the back of it that said ICE immigration. This wasn't a real immigration official. This was says
34:27
immigrant advocate uh Primativa Hernandez a blatant attempt to intimidate our community. This is not
34:33
just cruel. She said it's illegal. There have been a growing number of reports of people impersonating immigration and
34:39
customs enforcement agents as well as other scams targeting the immigrant community [Music]
34:45
since Attorney General Rob Bont. Bad actors are capitalizing on a fear
34:51
created by the Trump administration mass deportation plans. He says on Monday, concerned community members alerted 805
34:58
undocu 805 undocument a joint effort of immigrant serving organizations in
35:03
Ventura and Santa Barbara counties expressing deep concern over this act of
35:08
intimidation said Hernandez the group's executive directoring a federal officer's crime that is punishable by a
35:15
fine or imprisonment. Let's be clear, Bon Bont said in a statement, "If you
35:20
seek to scam or otherwise take advantage of California's immigrant communities, you will be held accountable. Experts
35:25
including Bont have shared immigrantly related scams, how to protect yourself from them. Fake ICE agents, if you are
35:32
approached by a person who claims they're immigration official, the best way to confirm that they're a legitimate
35:39
federal officer is ask for identification." According to Bont's office, immigration authorities carrying identifying badges and credentials. How
35:45
to protect yourself from someone impressing an ICE official. Don't sign anything even with legitimate ICE
35:51
officials. You should always understand what you're signing. Do not agree to anything that is not put in writing and in a language you don't
35:58
understand. You have a constitutional right to remain silent. If you ask about your immigration status, where you're
36:04
born, or how you enter the United States, you are remain silent or to refuse to answer. This applies e even
36:11
when the ICE agent is legitimate. Scammers pretending to be ICE or US citizenship and immigration services
36:17
officials also try to contact you by phone, text, email or on social media. Immigration officials, however, will
36:23
only contact you through offic USCIS accounts according to the USCIS website.
36:30
If you signed up for a case alerts by email or phone, always corroborate the information by logging into your
36:35
account. A fake ICE agent can a fake a fake ICE agent on the phone might ask
36:41
for personal or financial information under the guise that there's an issue with your im immigration case telling
36:47
you the information is necessary to avoid deportation. Immigration officers will not call asking for personal
36:53
information or money. ICE agents won't call you to warn you that you're being detained or arrested according to the
36:59
attorney general's office. Do not give money or personal information to anyone who calls, texts, or emails you claiming that there is a problem with your
37:05
immigration status or documentation. Do not sign an immigration form that includes incorrect information or blanks. Before you sign any information
37:13
form, be sure that the forms are fully and accurately filled out. If it has incorrect information, such as the wrong
37:19
name, then it's fake. Do not let anyone persuade you to lie on a form or sign a blank
37:25
form. All right.
37:31
All right. Scammers try to confuse immigrants into thinking that they're an
37:36
immigration attorney by calling themselves an anario notary public account or consultant. According to the
37:44
Federal Trade Commission, in Latin American countries,
37:50
a natario or not republic is an attorney or has legal training, but that's not true in the United States. Now, you can
37:56
read more for yourself. You could uh it's in the LA Times. You could look up that information for yourself more on
38:06
uh how to protect yourself from uh fake immigration ICE
38:16
officers. Let's talk about [Music] uh more about Trump when it comes to
38:23
this wealth transfer. Trump's shocking move will trigger the largest cash transfer in history. I'm Steve Mer as
38:29
you're about to see. This could be the end of banks as we know it. The great monetary reset is here. Now, as ever to
38:35
Bloomberg, we picked today's start with the headline. A stable coin regulation could shake up the US financial system
38:42
and many people have been waiting for this because they believe that cryptocurrencies and stable coins will
38:48
change the face of the financial system. But even on a bigger level, as you're about to see, this could be the end of
38:55
banks as we know it as what's coming could be the biggest cash transfer in history. And for the banks, this is an
39:02
absolute nightmare scenario. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bass has even a grander
39:07
vision. The stable coins will strengthen the dollar status as a dominant reserve currency in the world, a concept that's
39:13
been called into question in recent months. And for those of you who don't know what stable coins are currently,
39:18
they're right now tied to the US dollar, meaning they barely fluctuate at all. Yes, there are minor fluctuations, but
39:25
the idea behind them, they are stable. And what this presents is an alternative to what the existing banking system
39:31
offers as a place to deposit money. Instead, we could see Americans using stable coins, and that could spread all
39:38
over the world, making the United States a powerhouse behind crypto. Bessent and
39:44
his team said they're also looking into how they can help the government finances gaping deficits. Not all
39:49
economists though are quite bullish. And there's the really big issue has nothing to do with economists as everything to
39:55
do with financing massive deficits and stable coins. Now the answer as Scott
40:01
Bet is telling us this is absolutely shocking. You're going to see why this is going to transfer a massive amount of
40:08
money out of the banking system. Right now, we look to banks to hold our money. In the future, that may not be the case.
40:15
Instead, what you're going to find out is stable coins are really going to be a way for many people, not just here in
40:21
the United States, but all over the world, to finance our enacting the bill
40:27
now winding its way through Congress could further accelerate stable coin adoption, moving this asset class more
40:32
mainstream. This according to a JP Morgan Chase strategist, it would lend legitimacy to the asset class at a time
40:38
when use cases for stable coins are growing and evolving. And what we also are finding out when we go back and look
40:44
at prior banking crisis is that consumers, they want alternatives to the banking system because they don't trust
40:51
it. And right now, stable coins are an alternative, but for a lot of depositors, this isn't an option. But if
40:58
all of a sudden we see the US government get behind it, what you could see is a mass exodus, a bank run of large
41:05
proportions, perhaps one bigger than we've ever seen in history, as people look to move their money out of the
41:10
banks into something they believe is far more stable.
41:18
Like I said, this is something that is I don't know, man. This this is really
41:24
scary times. Plus, we have Ronda Santz doing this. Now, check this
41:37
out. We are going to utilize our authority under the Constitution in the
41:42
state of Florida uh to make sure that gold and silver are recognized as proper
41:47
legal tender. Have you ever said to yourself, "H, there's no cash in my wallet. I wish I had a way to pay for
41:53
something." Well, in the state of Florida, in another year or so, you might be able to use gold and silver.
41:59
Today, the governor signed a bill that's going to begin the process of the state considering gold and
42:07
silver. There's a long way to go. This would govern how it's used, what
42:14
regulation. This is our ability to give you the financial freedom to be able to
42:20
protect yourself against the declining value of the dollar. Now, the governor says people should be able to use gold
42:27
and silver to buy things like houses, cars, and whatever else the state decides you would be able to use gold
42:34
and silver for. The CFO has to come up with a new batch of rules. Then the legislature would go back and approve
42:41
those rules by uh the end of next session. All the new rules are going to
42:46
be on paper by November 1st of this year. So we can start getting a really good picture of how it's all going to
42:52
work coming up over the next several months. For more ahead
43:00
to I don't know I would say people have been talking about getting invested into
43:06
uh into gold for a long time and silver because money was
43:12
becoming cash was becoming obsolete. So, let's talk about uh the Diddy situation now. Let's get
43:20
into that. Let's talk about Diddy. One second
43:28
[Music] here. Seems worth exploring at least
43:34
that broader network. And you know, a lot of the people, you know, oligarch figures that pop up in my book, the
43:40
Brownman family, for example, I had an outsized influence on the record industry and on hiphop um in the 1990s
43:47
and beyond. We're going to be talking about the Diddy uh um the corrupt powers that be
43:56
um dealing with the Diddy trial. Not going to be talking about Cassie. talk about the Diddy trial and the human
44:01
trafficking and the hip hop
44:06
uh to be had includes Ron Burkel being another one.
44:13
So it seems worth exploring at least that broader network and you know a lot of the people you know oligarch figures
44:20
in my book the Brownman family for example I had an outsized influence on the record industry and on hiphop um in
44:28
the 19 beyond and some of that intersects with other aspects of my
44:33
Epstein research that I sort of explore uh with my co-author C at the end um you
44:39
know this first article hopefully it'll be a three-part series But you know, sometimes these things run a a little
44:45
long. You know, we tend to do long form. Sorry. Uh just to be clear, I didn't want to misrepresent. I mean, basically
44:53
talking about the Jeffrey Epstein and the Diddy Connection. Okay. Journalism
44:58
at Unlimited Hangout. Anyway, so it might be more than three, but some of my uh past stuff sort of on uh things that
45:04
were going on in the 1990s in in the world of covert ops, sort of uh linking
45:10
some of this um unusual activity in the hiphop industry with allegations made by
45:17
Gary Webb and his Dark Alliance and some of this um you know what I wrote about
45:22
in my book uh One Nation Under Blackmail about Epstein's apparent involvement in arms trafficking. uh during the first
45:29
Clinton administration, what his 17 visits to the Clinton White House were about. Um and you know why he had
45:36
assisted on behalf of his you know main patron Leslie Wexner relocating the southern air transport airline which had
45:44
previously been CIA owned and had been the main Iran Contra airline
45:51
that in China's weapons which is not really something about a lot but I've
45:56
always thought uh is a pretty important piece of the puzzle and talking about you know this alleged effort that's
46:03
touched on here of sort of um engineering a cultural shift for the
46:08
purpose of benefit of the private prison industry. And so there's an exploration
46:13
of that as it relates to Diddy in this piece. It's so funny because it's like just I don't know minute response that
46:20
you gave. It's like you can make five books out of the various things that you
46:26
mentioned. Yeah. Well, trying not to do that, but there are obviously references to my book. So, you know, if you want to
46:33
know more about some of the things I mentioned, you know, there's references in the piece to keep it from being a
46:38
book, um, you know, to the book I've already written that touches on some of these things. But, you know, I have it.
46:45
I'm looking off to the side because I have it, but I don't know which room it's in. I have two like bookshelves.
46:50
So, but it's a great It's actually, you know, how long is it? Uh, well, it's almost a thousand pages because there's
46:56
two of them, right? But it's surprisingly or not surprisingly given the subject matter. like it's pretty,
47:01
you know, it's not like uh it's a page turner. You know, lots of times like I get a lot of books sent to people which
47:07
is great and it's like oh god I have to catch up with this reading and you know if you're out there listening to this and I've asked you for a book of course
47:13
I'm very grateful and I do read uh it's nice that when you get a really long one uh that it's actually very engaging any
47:20
relevant information you think it's important to know or understand. Sure. So, I'm not the series probably isn't
47:26
going to include stuff that would, you know, sort of be more like court reporting, but as I understand it, you
47:31
know, he's already had aspects of the legal trafficking. You know, a lot of
47:42
similarities cases. But what's interesting though is that you know where whereas with Maxwell it was sort
47:48
of the FBI and SDNY leading the Diddy cases had a lot of involvement from the Department of Homeland Security which is
47:56
kind of unusual it seems. Yeah. Um it was interesting also to as as a native
48:03
New Yorker was interesting to hear about different places he had uh like gone to school and lived and moved. And then
48:09
we'll get it when we Epstein. I don't know if you know what high school I went to, but guess what I went to?
48:16
Uh, or where you taught. Uh, yeah, exactly. Delton. And that's where bar was and everything. I just realized, by
48:22
the way, I was relistening because because your book is also great as an audio book, but I was relisting to it.
48:27
It's just there. What is there's even a virus, right? Epstein bar or bar Epstein virus. Yeah, it's Epstein bar, but
48:32
unrelated to the I know. I know. It's funny. the Donald Bill uh email and
48:38
Epstein thing. Yeah. And so uh what are the uh uh what is he being accused of?
48:46
Your article not only kind of um details his violent and abuse rise, but his his
48:52
mentors who helped him uh who kind of molded him such as Clyde Davis and Russell Simmons. Can you tell us more
48:58
about uh these figures and and kind of I guess the network behind them? Yeah. Uh
49:03
so Clive Davis in particular is the person that is really credited with allowing Bad Boy Records to be a success
49:10
because you know uh they really wouldn't have uh been successful if they didn't enter into that very early distribution
49:16
and promo deal with Clive Davis's Arista Records um around you know when they were created. And this is also true of
49:22
you know his mentor Andre Herrell at Uptown Records. You know Uptown Records
49:28
wouldn't have been successful if it wasn't for their distribution deal with MCA for example. which is now Universal
49:34
Studios. I think the same is true for Russell Simmons's label, Def Jam, but I think in their case it was CBS Records,
49:41
which is also related to sort of the Clive Davis story. Um Clive Davis was,
49:47
you know, at at sort of the C, you know, at a major post within the CBS recording
49:53
subsidiaries. uh he got involved in this major poliola scandal which is basically generally poliola is when there's
49:59
bribery to get you know singles of a particular artist or a particular label played more on certain stations uh which
50:07
is illegal but in the case of Clive Davis it was pola basically tied to a
50:12
heroin ring and his uh top assistant his like main aid uh was known for sort of
50:18
being a fixer at the label and supplying you know these these stations they were you know allegedly bribing and also So,
50:24
just other people, artists, uh, under the label and whatever with with drugs, with prostitutes, with all sorts of
50:31
things. Uh, Clive Davis, uh, arguably evaded charges for that. He got let go of CBS, uh, why the, you know, why it
50:38
was kind of hot. The investigation arguably because they didn't want any of the scandal beyond the poli aspect to
50:45
come back and and bite the company in the in the butt, basically. Um and it was uh that heroin ring by the way was
50:52
tied to organized crime interests mainly I believe the Genevese crime family which had you know kind of a long and
50:59
storied history in the music industry through like roulette records and figures like Morris Levy who for example
51:06
uh funded the first hip-hop label uh Sugar Hill and so you know that there's
51:11
basically been the sort of this unorganized crime effort to dominate uh those particular labels for some time um
51:18
and Davis stands accused of people that were once close to, you know, Combmes and later became
51:24
rivals like Sh Knight and also his uh bodyguard, former bodyguard Gene Deal of sort of training uh Diddy and this this
51:32
uh using drugs and and sex uh to control people. And also allegedly Russell
51:38
Simmons of Def Jam engaged in that same type of behavior and sort of mentored Diddy in that because Russell Simmons
51:44
was obviously important not just for Diddy but also for uh Andre Harold at
51:50
Uptown Records and that's how uh you know that Diddy Chan comps first entered the music industry. Um and Russell
51:57
Simmons is interesting for a few reasons. Uh, one of the reasons I point out that doesn't really that hasn't really gotten a lot of coverage is his
52:04
uh, very early connection in the 1990s. Obviously, Def Jam was successful by then. He became very involved with this
52:11
guy who later became a famous Hollywood director named Brett Ratner who along with Simmons has been accused of
52:17
committing uh, sex crimes. And so now Simmons is like in Indonesia evading
52:23
charges and Ratner immigrated to Israel to avoid uh lawsuits related to sex
52:29
assault. They're both accused separately and accused of engaging in that type of activity uh together. If you don't know
52:36
Brett Ratner, he he uh created a movie The Hangover. And uh Ratner's kind of an interesting
52:43
figure at least in recent years because he teamed up with Steve Minutuchin's Hollywood studio
52:50
uh to create you through his uh company he created with the Australian billionaire James Packer Ratpack
52:56
Entertainment. James Packer is a major focus of the Netanyahu corruption trial.
53:01
Uh currently a lot of that is, you know, kind of mentioned in the piece, but there's a lot there to pick on. And
53:09
um uh and Ratner was basically offered real apparently a week before he did. So he
53:15
was
53:22
that of special guests to have at your UN speech. Uh and Ratner is and uh
53:27
Packer were actually recently at Mara Largo dining with Musk and Trump. And apparently Ratner is trying to make his
53:33
Hollywood comeback after being banished basically because of all the uh the litany of you know sex assault claims
53:40
against him. You know he's directing the new Melania Trump documentary that's supposed to air on Amazon at the end of
53:46
the year on which Melania is an executive producer. So that would be really objective. Yeah. And then oddly
53:52
it's around the same time James Packer buys this property neighboring Mara Largo uh in Florida that had previously
53:59
been reserved for like the Secret Service and close friends of the of the Trump family. So interesting that a
54:04
major figure in the Netanyahu corruption trial who became Netanyahu's neighbor and that's part of what the charge is
54:10
about is now kind of repeating the same thing. And one of the reasons I think Brett Ratner is really interesting and
54:16
his team up with Russell Simmons is interesting is because Brett Ratner is very much involved with uh sort of the
54:22
heir to Mayor Lansky uh Al Malnik who's this uh Miami
54:28
businessman businessman uh who's basically credited you know by mainstream media too as inventing this
54:35
this way for Lansky and sort of other uh mobster bank figures uh like Tore
54:42
Rosenbomb uh developing these ways to sort of launder money for organized crime from
54:48
illicit into legitimate ventures and created these banks in the Bahamas and all of that to do so. And Ratner is a
54:56
they're they adopted son and adopted father. They're like very very very close. They have a lot of weird ties
55:03
also the two of them to doesn't really make a lot of sense
55:08
but that's his uh that's his claim and his ties to Al Melnik are kind of significant. So, you know, in in looking
55:15
at a lot of these figures, there seem to be a lot of uh organized crime ties. Uh
55:20
and you know, honestly, and I I try and make this pretty clear in my book as well, uh organized crime, despite the
55:28
public perception that's been developed, did not magically disappear in the 60s
55:33
and the 70s and 80s. arguably, you know, it went and they organized crime figures
55:38
rebranded as philanthropists and as multinational corporations and as and as
55:44
oligarchs and because of this system that was developed by allegedly by Malnik but also others um you know
55:50
they're able to sort of launder money from elicit into these legitimate ventures and so that elicit money pumps
55:56
up these legitimate ventures and allows them to become uh hugely successful and dominate their
56:02
respective things or buyout competitors. and consolidate and because of you know a lot of the legislation that was pl
56:08
passed in the Reagan, Bush and and Clinton eras you know and and you know and so on uh you know industry
56:15
consolidation was allowed to progress to points that were previously unthinkable
56:21
in the United States creating you know basically quasi semline monopolies in a lot of our industries to the benefit of
56:27
a relatively small click of oligarchs who dominate uh the country now.
56:32
All right. So, I'm going to end it right there. Like, share, comment, and subscribe. Love to hear what you got to
56:39
say.
#Politics
#Recreational Drugs


