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The press conference in the Oval Office with El Salvador's leader, Bukele, contained news, information, and misinformation. CNN does not hate the country, despite President Trump's claim.

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Let me also give a very special thanks to someone who truly loves Israel. In fact, loves it so much that my daughter converted. My daughter converted. Ivanka's here. And, Bibi, you do know this was not in the cards for me. They have a great marriage and they're they get along great. They're best friends. They have a very special relationship. Jared has been so helpful. He he really did something very special. He established the Abraham Accords with a group of very wonderful people. I like calling it the Avraham Accords because people that right? Avraham. It's so cool. It's so much sort of nicer. You know, the Abraham versus the Avraham. I just don't wanna sound too sanctimonious when I do it. So, you know, I sort of split it up. This will keep everybody happy.

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I was asked about the recent election in Mexico, but I didn't follow it closely. The new president, Claudio Shinebaum, is a climate scientist and a globalist. People are concerned about Mexico's future under a socialist president, but many in Mexico don't pay taxes or follow laws. If the government tries to enforce regulations, they may face resistance, even violence.

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The person nearest to Trump is his son-in-law, Jared Kushner. Netanyahu was sleeping in Kushner's bed in the family home. Netanyahu is very, very close friend of Kushner's father, Charles Kushner, a real estate mogul who was jailed for illegal campaign contributions, tax evasion, and witness tamper. Jared has funded illegal settlements in Israel. A funder of APAC, he's got big business connections to George Soros, Trump. From day one, he handed the American economy to Steven Mnuchin as his treasury secretary, also an ultra Zionist. He named his own lawyer, the extreme Zionist David Friedman. Jason Greenblatt, he became US special representative for international negotiations, which include negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians. The Israeli regime is planning to push ahead because they own the president of The United States. This is the reality that we're facing.

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US President Donald Trump is angry about the Nobel Peace Prize snub. In a letter addressed to the Norwegian prime minister, Trump said he no longer has an obligation to pursue peace as he was ignored for the Nobel Peace Prize. Bloomberg accessed the letter, in which he argued that the prize is awarded by a five-member committee elected by the Norwegian parliament, and reiterated his desire to seize Greenland, citing that Denmark cannot protect the land from Russia or China. He alleged that Denmark does not have written documents proving its ownership of Greenland, and added that the world is not secure unless The US has total control of Greenland. The backdrop to this is the Nobel Foundation clarifying that the Nobel Peace Prize cannot be revoked, shared, or transferred once awarded. Earlier, Venezuelan leader Maria Machado presented her Nobel Peace Prize medal to President Trump, crediting him for “his extraordinary leadership in promoting peace through strength.” Trump has publicly expressed a desire to win a Nobel Peace Prize on several occasions, including August 2025 when he called Norway’s foreign minister to discuss his chances and later complained after being passed over for Machado. Dr. Glenn Deissen, Professor of International Relations at the University of Southeastern Norway, joins the discussion. He notes that the Norwegian Nobel Committee, not the Norwegian government, awards the Nobel Peace Prize, making Trump’s letter to the prime minister unusual. He describes the premise as strange: “either you give me the Nobel Peace Prize or I won’t care about peace anymore.” He adds that the eight wars listed by Trump as ended include Gaza, where the US financed and armed the genocide, and an Iranian war ending after a surprise US attack, suggesting stopping that war does not align cleanly with the peace claim. Deissen says Trump’s peace vision centers on peace deriving from overwhelming strength plus ambiguity or unpredictability, the fear of consequences, which he believes motivates countries to compromise. At Davos, the geopolitical narrative is shaping up amid anti-Trump demonstrations and concerns over Venezuela and the Middle East. Deissen explains that the threats to seize Greenland are causing a rift between the United States and Europe, with Europeans unsure how to respond. They would like to push back, but fear that threatening military force could be problematic domestically and may not be permanent if power changes. He suggests Trump would prefer a pen-on-paper deal with Denmark for Greenland. The transatlantic alliance could be driven apart as tariffs and assertive U.S. policy unsettle Europe. The discussion frames Trump’s approach as resembling Nixon’s madman strategy—making adversaries believe he is extreme and unpredictable to force concessions—though it is unclear whether Trump is truly extreme or playing a role. The European stance remains uncertain and divided. Speaker 0 thanks Dr. Deissen for joining, and the segment ends with a note to download the WE ON app and subscribe to the YouTube channel.

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I was Donald Trump's personal campaign photographer and I am the current editor in chief of George. I want to share an interesting coincidence with you. Did you know that Donald Trump authorized the building of a new Air Force One? It will be completed sometime after 2024. Here's the crazy part: George magazine has exclusive permission to talk about it. Now, here's where it gets even weirder. The potential Air Force One looks similar to JFK Junior's first plane. It's quite a coincidence, don't you think?

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Donald Trump is allegedly accepting a $400 million aircraft from Qatar, described as a "palace in the sky." Trump stated he would be "stupid" to refuse such an offer, calling it a "great gesture." This acceptance allegedly violates the Constitution's emoluments clause, which prohibits officeholders from accepting gifts from foreign governments without congressional approval. Pam Bondi and the White House counsel see no problem with the gift, though Bondi previously lobbied for Qatar. The Air Force will purportedly accept it until Trump leaves office, then it will go to his library. The speaker claims this is designed to curry favor and influence Trump's foreign policy. Trump's children, including Jared Kushner, Don Jr., and Eric, are also allegedly receiving Qatari money through investments. The speaker contrasts this with issues faced by average Americans, such as rising air travel costs and airport safety concerns. A similar emoluments clause issue occurred during Trump's first term with Gulf nations buying floors in Trump hotels. The speaker expects a lawsuit, but anticipates the Supreme Court will delay ruling until Trump is out of office.

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President Donald J. Trump received an award from the Israel Heritage Foundation in July 2023 for his "extraordinary heroic efforts" to help the state of Israel and the Jewish people. The award expresses the wish that he and his family should be blessed eternally.

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"These people are directly being taught by USX military." "They got Pegasus from Israel." "She wants Mexico to stay Mexico. She doesn't wanna see American forces coming in." "A 100%." "Does she have narcoties? 100%. 100%." "I believe she definitely has narcoties." "She's with the Morena Party. So many political figures in this party have now, just recently, been sanctioned by The US, had their visas revoked by The US, have been tied to shell companies in The US that are cleaning money for the cartels." "This was the most violent Mexican election in the history of Mexican elections." "And then prior to her, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the previous president of Mexico, who basically took Sheehanbaum and put her up and said, everyone who voted for me, for her, and she won by a landslide." "He had been reported to have received a significant multimillion dollar payout from the Sinaloa cartel." "If she really cared about the Mexican people, the cartel crackdown would be to the next level." "I published that list. And then exactly a month later, Marina del Pilar, her US tourist visa and her husband's were revoked."

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Elon Musk, who wasn't born in the U.S. and grew up under apartheid in South Africa, gets his ego stroked while Trump naps. He became a naturalized citizen, not illegally, but through an H1B visa, allegedly overstaying it. It's great for Trump to let this foreigner, potentially an enemy of the U.S., do his work. I don't like Elon, but I'm not ready to call him an enemy of the United States just yet.

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The president explained his recent actions in the Honduras case and how they relate to broader regional politics. He said he "endorsed, as you know, the winning president, the man who won in Honduras. I endorsed the man who won in Chile. I endorsed the man who won in Argentina." He described the pardoned former Honduran president as someone who was "persecuted very unfairly" and said he viewed that treatment as analogous to how the Biden administration treated a man named Trump, stating, "This was a man who was persecuted very unfairly." He noted that the pardoned man is "a party member of the man who won," and that many people supported the decision. He stated that he "studied it very quickly, and then I studied it in great detail," and that he consulted "a lot of the people standing behind me" who felt the man was "persecuted and treated very badly," which influenced his decision to grant the pardon. He also reiterated that the pardon occurred because “the people liked what I did,” and emphasized that his conclusion came after careful consideration and consultation. The interviewer asked how this situation relates to Maduro and whether he would ever pardon Maduro, but the president’s comments primarily focus on the Honduras pardon, the Western hemisphere’s political alignments, and the reasoning behind the pardon rather than providing a direct stance on Maduro himself.

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Donald Trump is related to the Kennedy family through a complex family tree. General George Patton, who is the grandson of Abraham Lincoln, is the brother of Benito Mussolini. Joseph Kennedy, the older brother of John F. Kennedy, did not die in World War 2 as previously thought. He went into hiding and had a son, General Michael Flynn, who is first cousins with John F. Kennedy Jr. Donald Trump is the biological son of General Patton, making him the first cousin of JFK Jr. This connection explains why Trump accused Senator Ted Cruz's father of being friends with JFK's killer, as he sought to avenge the death of his uncle.

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Donald Trump is related to the Kennedy family through a complex family tree. General George Patton, who is the grandson of Abraham Lincoln, is the brother of Benito Mussolini. Joseph Kennedy, the older brother of John F. Kennedy, didn't die in World War 2 as believed, but went into hiding and had a son named General Michael Flynn. This makes Flynn the first cousin of John F. Kennedy Jr. Donald Trump is the biological son of General Patton, making him the first cousin of JFK Jr. This connection explains why Trump accused Senator Ted Cruz's father of being friends with JFK's killer, as he sought to avenge the death of his uncle.

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Breaking news: US president Donald Trump has pardoned former Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernandez. Hernandez was sentenced in The United States in 2024 to forty five years in prison for drug trafficking and weapons smuggling and has been serving his term at a federal facility in Hazleton, West Virginia. On 11/28/2025, Trump announced a full pardon arguing that Hernandez had been treated very harshly and unfairly. As the news broke, Hernandez's wife and children gathered on the steps of their home in Tegucha Galpa and knelt in prayer. The decision comes just days before the Honduran presidential election as Trump has also openly backed conservative candidate Nasri Asfura. The announcement triggered an international uproar. Supporters claim it corrects an injustice, while critics warn it could damage the credibility of America's war on drugs and amount to interference in a democratic election.

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Donald Trump is related to the Kennedy family. George Patton is the grandson of Abraham Lincoln. Benito Mussolini is George Patton's brother. Joseph Kennedy, thought to have died in World War II, went into hiding and fathered Michael Flynn, making Flynn first cousins with JFK Jr. Donald Trump is allegedly the biological son of General Patton, making Trump the first cousin of JFK Jr. This explains why Trump accused Senator Ted Cruz's father of being friends with JFK's killer, as he was avenging the death of his uncle.

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The president of Mexico is furious. She's calling Mexican senator Lily Tejas, a traitor, for coming on Fox Noticias with me a few days ago and saying this. Tejas says, "The help from The United States to fight the cartels in Mexico is absolutely welcome, and that is how the majority of Mexicans feel." She adds, "The only ones who don't like that president Trump is sending help and trying to support Mexicans against the cartels are the narco politicians. That includes president Scheinbaum." When asked, "Is Mexico a narco state?" she answers, "Yes, It is, And we all Mexicans know about it." She claims, "The party has financed, has given the cartels have given so much money to the to these politicians, narco politicians of Morena, to get into office, to get the power. So they protect the the Mexican government protects the cartels." She warns, "We are on the steps to be the next Venezuela. She's aligned with Venezuela's dictator with Cuba, and and we are losing our country." "We must work together to defeat the cartels and to get freedom for our country, for Mexico, to stop it to from being the next Venezuela." Officials respond, "we just turned over 26, cartel members. We're working. We're sharing intelligence." Tejas counters, "Because she really doesn't want the help of The United States." She adds, "Yes. I am afraid." She says, "The cartels are dominating everything here in Mexico. They are in all the offices of the government, in the states, in the cities, and in the national government." She concludes, "I will not step back." The host closes, "Senator Lily Deyes, a very brave woman indeed. Thank you so much for coming on our show and speaking the truth."

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Speaker 0 asks about how common it is for the CIA to use drugs as a weapon or to create cartels for various purposes, and whether it sometimes works as a strategy. Speaker 1 responds that it continues to this day, with key US allies implicated in the drug trade. The Organization for Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, funded by the State Department, is described as an investigative journalist outlet that has a new report about the Noboa family’s ties to the Balkan mafia. The Noboa family controls Ecuador; Daniel Noboa, born in Miami, is the president, and his family owns a Noboa shipping company. The shipping company is alleged to have been involved in sending bananas through the Noboa Bonita Fruit Company packed with cocaine to Europe via routes overseen by the Balkan Mafia. Ecuador is described as the largest drug export center to the United States, per the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, while Venezuela is claimed to be responsible for about 5% of drug transit. Kristi Noem, identified as the DHS secretary, is said to have visited Ecuador to meet with Daniel Noboa and campaign for a referendum to bring US military bases back to Ecuador, a referendum that was rejected by Ecuadorians. Noboa is portrayed as strategically valuable to the US, described as friendly with Marco Rubio, who has touted him as a partner in the war on drugs, yet the claim is made that the issue is about geostrategic interests. Noboa is said to have ended the legacy of social democrat Rafael Correa and is purportedly supporting US military bases on Ecuadorian soil, aligning with US interests even as Ecuador becomes a center of narco-trafficking and cartels destabilize parts of the country. In Mexico, the narrative references Vicente Fox and Felipe Calderón, noting Calderón as author of Plan Mérida, a US military-directed program to combat drugs in Mexico. Gennaro García Luna, head of Mexico’s equivalent of the FBI, is described as now in a US federal prison for life for involvement in a conspiracy with the Sinaloa cartel to ship drugs to the United States. The State Department is said to have acknowledged knowing about Luna’s activities while valuing him as a political partner. The Fast and Furious program is mentioned, alleging that the US armed Mexican cartels to track guns, and a 2011 federal court testimony by a Chapo Guzmán lieutenant claimed the US armed the Sinaloa cartel to defeat rivals like the Guadalajara cartel. A recent raid in Oakton, Northern Virginia, on Paul Campo, former director of the DEA’s financial division, is described. Campo was in charge of money laundering investigations and was associated with a CIA asset named Robert Sensi to launder $12,000,000 for the Jalisco New Generation Cartel. The speaker notes ongoing exploration of these connections. Historically, the CIA is said to have worked with narco cartels to fund black operations, funding proxy wars in Central America with off-the-books money. The Guadalajara cartel allegedly funded the Nicaraguan Contras through cartel profits. Enrique “Kiki” Camarena, a DEA agent, reportedly discovered the Guadalajara cartel’s involvement in black operations and was captured and tortured, with alleged monitoring by CIA operatives including Felix Rodríguez, who supervised the capture of Che Guevara. This is tied to a documentary on Amazon called The Last NARC.

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A Venezuelan American speaker describes the impact of the regime on their family and millions of others. Their family lost everything—work, savings, investments—wiped out by a narco dictatorship that has held Venezuela in a death grip for over twenty-five years. The Venezuelan exodus is described as the second largest displacement crisis on Earth after Syria, a humanitarian disaster and not just tragedy. The regime has jailed hundreds of political prisoners and thousands have been murdered for speaking out. More than a third of the population has fled, not for opportunity or the American dream, but to survive because staying often means death. The speaker contends Venezuela is not merely a collapsed state but an occupied one, with territory, natural resources, and institutions overrun by hostile foreign powers: Iranian militias, Chinese corporations, Russian intelligence, all exploiting the country with impunity. Venezuela, they argue, is no longer a local crisis but a geopolitical threat endangering the Western Hemisphere, a launchpad for authoritarian expansion in the Americas. Amid this, Maria Corina Machado is highlighted as a leader who dared to push for freedom. In 2024, she supposedly led a peaceful democratic uprising that won the election. Her team allegedly smuggled physical voting receipts out of the country—hard proof of victory the regime attempted to bury. The speaker says her courage has sparked belief among millions of Venezuelans that change is possible. Some people have questioned Machado’s decision to dedicate her Nobel Prize to Donald Trump. The speaker accepts the criticism but argues it was a brilliant strategic move on the global political stage. Machado is portrayed as understanding Trump’s character, his campaign for the prize, and the symbolic, personal value of the recognition to him. The claim is that this gesture might keep Trump’s attention focused on Venezuela at a time when U.S. presence and pressure in the Caribbean is rising. The dedication is described not as flattery or optics, but as a strategic act to protect and preserve a form of power that could shift history, grounded in the belief that the ultimate aim is freedom. The speaker emphasizes that Machado is not asking for a U.S. invasion or war; Venezuela is already invaded and held hostage by a narco state with foreign agents and enemies of democracy—Russians, Iranians, Chinese—operating freely to expand influence across Latin America. Machado is calling for the support of the only military capable of countering that threat, framed as liberation rather than imperialism. The argument is that the fight is for Venezuela’s life, not theory or politics, and that the world should recognize what’s at stake. The fight for Venezuela is a fight for freedom, democracy, and continental stability, and if liberty, human dignity, and peace in the Americas matter, Venezuela’s fight must matter to all.

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Jared Kushner is described as thoughtful and competent, contrary to the lies that were spread about him. Despite the nontraditional approach of sending a president's family member to the Middle East, he did good work. Trump's willingness to do business and negotiate without moral condemnations was seen as smart. He met with leaders like Kim Jong Un, Putin, and Xi Jinping, avoiding personal criticism. This approach was beneficial for both sides, and Jared Kushner's success can be attributed to his businessman mindset. Initially perceived as the end of the world, Trump's presidency was later seen as pretty good, with the potential to save America from fiscal ruin through initiatives like 100-year bonds. Overall, he did a commendable job as president.

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Speaker 0: Have you considered talking to the president of Colombia who you called a drop leader? Speaker 1: No. I haven't really thought too much about him. He's been fairly hostile to The United States, and I haven't given him a lot of thought. He's he's gonna have himself some big problems if he doesn't wise up. Speaker 2: Did you say Colombia is producing a lot of drugs. Have cocaine factories that they make cocaine, as you know, and they sell it right into The United States. So he better wise up or he'll be next. He'll be next too. I hope he's listening. Speaker 0: So was this operation a message that you're sending to Mexico, to Claudia Scheinbaum, president there? Speaker 2: Well, it wasn't meant to be. We're very friendly with her. She's a good woman, but the cartels are running Mexico. She's not running Mexico. The cartels are running Mexico. We could be politically correct and be nice and say, oh, yes. Is no. No. She's very, you know, she's very frightened of the cartels that are running Mexico. And I've asked her numerous times, would you like us to take out the cartels? No. No. No, mister president. No. No, no, please. So we have to do something because we lost the real number is 300,000 people, in my opinion. You know, they like to say a 100,000. A 100,000 is a lot of people, but the real number is 300,000 people. And we lost it to drugs, and they come in through the southern border, mostly the southern border. A lot plenty come in through Canada too, by the way, in case you don't know. But but they come in through the southern border, and something's gonna have to be done with Mexico. Cuban government, the Trump administration's next target, mister secretary, very quickly. Speaker 3: Well, the Cuban government is a is a huge problem. Yeah. The the the the Cuban government is a huge problem for Speaker 2: some So is that a yes? Speaker 3: Cuba. But I don't think people fully appreciate. I think they're in a lot of trouble. Yes. I'm not gonna talk talk to you about what our future steps are gonna be and our policies are gonna be right now in this regard, but I don't think it's any mystery that we are not big fans of the Cuban regime, who, by the way, are the ones that were propping up Maduro. His entire, like, internal security force, his internal security opera apparatus is entirely controlled by Cubans. One of the untold stories here is how, in essence, you talk about colonization because I think you said Dulce Rodriguez mentioned that, the ones who have sort of colonized, at least inside the regime, are Cubans. It was Cubans that guarded Maduro. He was not guarded by Venezuelan bodyguards. He had Cuban bodyguards. In terms of their internal intelligence, who spies on who inside to make sure there are no traitors, those are all Cubans. Speaker 0: He felt very strongly. We we needed for nationals. We need Greenland for national security, not for minerals. We had some we have so many sites for minerals and oil and everything. We have more oil than any other country in the world. We need Greenland for national security.

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The discussion centers on who is funding the film project and who is involved in backing the production. One speaker states that “Jim’s” name is funding the movie and that a great group of people have come together to invest in the production. They note that “the Carlos Slim family is involved from Mexico,” highlighting their participation in the financial backing. When asked to introduce Carlos Slim for those who may not know who he is, the speaker identifies him as “one of the wealthiest men in the world” and explains that his business interests are in telecommunications in Mexico and Latin America. The speaker adds that Carlos Slim’s son, Patrick, serves as the point of contact for the Slim family and is described as being very passionate about the work they are doing and about fighting trafficking. A second speaker adds context by stating that Carlos Slim is the largest shareholder in the Times. They reiterate Slim’s Mexican origin and claim that he has given “many millions of dollars to the Clintons and their initiatives.” They further assert that Carlos Slim is the largest owner of the newspaper from Mexico and offer a provocative claim about reporters at the New York Times, stating that they are not journalists but “corporate lobbyists for Carlos Slim and” for Hillary Clinton. The exchange emphasizes a narrative about financial influence and media relationships, linking Carlos Slim’s wealth and ownership to political connections and advocacy. The dialogue ends with an incomplete utterance, “Carlo,” which appears to be cut off and does not form a complete thought or claim within the transcription.

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Speaker 1 asks about the period after the speaker stayed in the country and hid within it until receiving the Nobel Peace Prize, and whether fear for life prevented a return. They note it’s unusual that the Nobel Peace Prize was dedicated to the leader of a different country, with the speaker publicly saying he deserved it more than the speaker. Speaker 0 responds clearly: as soon as they learned they had been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, they dedicated it to President Trump because they believed at that point that he deserved it. They state, “I dedicated to president Trump because I believed at that point that he deserved it,” and add that “a lot of people, most people said it was impossible to achieve what he has just done on Saturday, January 3.” They insist that if they believed he deserved it on October, they now think he has proven to the world what he means. They declare that “January 3 will go down in history as the day Justice defeated a tyranny,” calling it a milestone and saying it is “not only huge for the Venezuelan people and our future,” but “a huge step for humanity, for freedom, and human dignity.”

Breaking Points

Trump Pardons LITERAL DRUG TRAFFICKER To Swing Honduras Election
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Trump’s pardon of Honduras’s former president, Juan Orlando Hernández, and his public meddling in the country’s election expose a tangled web of U.S. politics, Latin American corruption, and crypto-fueled development schemes. The episode traces Hernández’s long ties to drug trafficking, including ledger evidence and DEA leads that connect him and his brother to shipments, and contrasts that with Trump’s willingness to intervene, framing his actions as supportive of allies while signaling a harsher stance on Maduro. The hosts analyze how Trump’s backing of a center-right candidate in Honduras appears to be a strategy informed by donor networks, notably those linked to speculative tech ventures and libertarian projects like the Prospera ZEDEs that sought to privatize almost every public function on a Caribbean island. They discuss how such projects, financed by prominent Silicon Valley figures, complicate regional politics and sovereignty, complicating the U.S. approach to Latin America. The conversation then broadens to Venezuela, considering how Trump’s threats and pardons fit into a larger pattern of mixed U.S. policy toward the region, provoking questions about credibility, leverage, and the balance between anti-drug campaigns and democratic norms.”,

PBD Podcast

Trump CONFIRMS Putin Alaska Meeting, Cuomo EXPOSES Mamdani & Vance's Epstein STUNNER | PBD Podcast
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Patrick Bet-David opens by announcing a new Monday, Wednesday, Friday schedule and delivering a father focused message. He quotes about fatherhood: One of the toughest things about being a father is when you realize you're raising the ones you can't live without to live without you. He adds that a father’s mission is to be respected, trusted, and loved by his children, and he urges listeners, especially fathers, to keep leading even when the world seems challenging. Turning to current events, the discussion covers Russia, Ukraine, and the Trump administration. Trump confirms Putin will fly to the United States for a meeting in Alaska next Friday, with talk of a possible trilateral summit including Zelensky. A White House back channel is described as productive. The panel debates whether Zelensky will attend; if he does, Ukraine’s territorial stance will be tested. Zelensky says that Ukraine’s territorial issue is already in the constitution and that no one will deviate from it. Putin is described as seeking withdrawal of troops from several Ukrainian regions and security guarantees, while the participants discuss how a deal could be reached and who should be in the room. The group contemplates Trump’s preference for a two‑leader encounter and the role of back channel diplomacy. The discussion moves to Armenia and Azerbaijan. Trump is credited with a peace breakthrough, and a joint declaration is signed at a summit described as a path to peace, stability, and prosperity. The hosts highlight that multiple countries have nominated Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize and debate whether the prize will be awarded to him while he is alive. Back in the United States, attention shifts to domestic politics. New York City reportedly spends 65 million dollars on a homeless shelter for transgender people, raising questions about budget priorities in a housing crisis. Princeton reportedly eliminates tuition for families earning about two hundred fifty thousand dollars a year, a measure seen by some as a response to elite pricing pressures. In the New York mayoral race, candidate Zoran Mandani, who supports a tough stance on policing, hires private security after calling to defund the police. Cuomo counters by highlighting rent stabilization and a call to move out, while Delasio defends past rent freezes and argues their benefits. Mandani proposes a law to reserve rent stabilized units for those who need affordable housing, labeling it Zoran’s Law. The show also covers surrogacy regulation. Florida Attorney General James announces legislation to stop sexual predators from pursuing surrogacy, adoption, and foster care, arguing for stronger safeguards after recent cases. A related story from California describes a case involving 21 children in a surrogacy arrangement, underscoring the lack of federal regulation and the patchwork state rules. Epstein continues to loom over national politics. JD Vance calls for full transparency and says the administration is compiling thousands of documents. Michael Cohen discusses Epstein and Trump, suggesting that Trump’s statements are made for a purpose, while others question credibility and timing around the released material. Capping the program, Jimmy Kimmel’s admission that liberal behavior can be off putting is discussed, along with criticisms that late night hosts have become political propagandists rather than entertainers. The death of Al Jazeera journalist Anas al Sharif in Gaza is reported, with debate about responsibility and propaganda. The show ends with a lighthearted prank clip and a poll about whether to keep a Monday, Wednesday, Friday schedule or switch to Tuesday, Thursday, and a plan to revisit the schedule in coming weeks. A final plug invites listeners to VT merch and invites them to tune in for the next episode.

The Rubin Report

JD Vance Shocks Host w/ the Real Lesson Learned from Trump’s Shocking Israel-Hamas Peace Deal
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Tonight’s episode weaves a momentous sequence of events in the Middle East with a reflection on how U.S. leadership is perceived abroad. The host notes the hostages have been released after 738 days and then pivots to Donald Trump’s appearance in the region, including his remarks in the Knesset, while a multinational conference is planned for Sharm El Sheikh with about twenty countries. The host argues this new approach departs from traditional diplomacy, favoring negotiated engagement with Gulf Arab states and Israel to press Hamas toward more cooperative behavior and to stabilize the regional balance of power. Two years into the war, a clip of JD Vance on Meet the Press frames the shift as a break from conventional diplomacy. He praises Trump for outside-the-box engagement with Gulf states and Israel, arguing the traditional pathway failed to yield results on hostages or peace. The program then covers the moment Hamas no longer holds living hostages, detailing the transfer process, hospital checks, and reunifications, and noting the media glare around the event. Trump then travels to Israel, declaring the war is over, and praising the peace framework as constructive, even as threats remain. The discussion then traces a broader media arc: clips from the Daily Show hint at a rare bipartisan acknowledgment of Trump’s diplomacy, while a Washington Post op-ed argues that Trump deserves the Nobel Peace Prize for his Gaza accords, signaling a shifting cultural mood. Former officials like Condoleezza Rice and Hillary Clinton are cited praising the peace effort, and Obama is quoted warning against rising authoritarianism, framed as a contrast to what is seen as heavy-handed investigations. The host also points to Letitia James’s indictment as part of political crosswinds. Toward the end, the conversation shifts to practical hopes: Jared Kushner’s remarks in Tel Aviv emphasize a collaborative path, recounting the back-channel efforts and President Trump’s unwavering commitment to hostages, Israel’s security, and regional stability. The host envisions Gaza’s reconstruction as a potential economic renaissance—the Riviera of the Middle East—if Palestinians embrace a peaceful civil society. The show closes with a call to choose a constructive future, contrasting with ongoing domestic strife and a drama surrounding political investigations, urging viewers to pursue unity and real-world progress.
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