
Loading summary
Steven Crowder
Welcome to the lineup live. You see, it's a little darker because this light is flickering here in the studio. We got gremlins. Glad to have you here. We're gonna be talking about a lot today. Taco President Trump chickens out. They think that's a funny little, funny little colloquialism that the left is trying to make a thing. But I'm willing to bet it's going to end up like fake news. Do you remember that fake news was a thing the left tried to use and then it got jujitsued and now they're just beside themselves and they can never live it down. We're gonna go through that, what it means and if there's any, any truth to it. Also, this is a big one. The court or courts blocking Trump's tariffs. My half Asian lawyer is here so that we can give you a rundown of this. I think a lot of people are getting it wrong and I'm not a lawyer, so I have one here to discuss it. And, you know, not everything is an intellectual exercise. To be clear, when people talk about constitutional authority, constitutional parameters, what falls under the executive branch. You do remember that the Constitution was drafted really in a time in the face of war. Do you think that at any point people would have said, yeah, yeah, some local judge should be able to stop the executive branch from looking out for the national best interests of the people? Not everything is some libertarian think tank, and we're going to get into that. And I think it's time to wield the power of that executive branch in a way that is not violating anyone's personal civil rights. But, yeah, to stick it to the left a little bit. I know. I've heard this argument all the time. Well, you know, if you do well, shoes on the other foot, as though the left is not going to do that. You guys can come. It's time to fight fire with fire. On that one again, bridling our selfish urges a little bit. We're gonna discuss that and of course, welcome. I almost forgot this Bongino army. I know you just came in from Vince. Welcome. Vince comes from Vincente in Latin, which, by the way, all the Romance languages are based in Latin and it translates roughly to to. Dad, you gotta stop treating me like I'm a little kid. On with the show.
Bill Richmond
Viewer discretion is advised.
Steven Crowder
Bad girls what you want, what you want? Bad girls, bad girls Whatcha gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? Bad girls, bad girls what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you.
Bill Richmond
Feminist Cops is filmed on location with the brave, strong women of law enforcement.
Steven Crowder
All suspects are innocent until proven guilty.
Bill Richmond
In a court of law.
Steven Crowder
Man down. Man down. We have a civilian critical condition. We need medic staff. Okay, I'm here now. I'm gonna save you. You're go significant it. Bad girls, bad girls. What you gonna do? What you gonna do? When they click Rumble Premium and join now for 99 annually or 9.99amonth to get the entirely ad free experience and an ever expanding roster of content creators and free speech. Oh, shoot, I forgot the sip. We're a disaster today. Glad to be with you. Question of the day. What determines a national emergency? The answer is fentanyl.
Bill Richmond
It's always fentanyl.
Steven Crowder
Which. Come on, don't throw the baby out with the bath water. When I had my surgery, they put a little bit of. A little bit of fenty in my IV bag and I get it. Nice. If I'm. If I'm gonna go out in a blaze of glory at some point in time, I'm taking all you with me. But it will include copious amounts of fentanyl. No George Floyd style. Yeah. No grain of rice sized kernel terrifies this man. It's gonna be a satchel of fentanyl. And we will let nature take its course.
Bill Richmond
All right, smile on your face.
Steven Crowder
It's a live show, weekdays 11am and of course, if you are a member of Rumble Premium, tomorrow we have an apologetics episode with one Gerald Morgan and Andrew Wilson discussing the differences between Protestantism and orthodox Christianity. And I'm willing to bet it gets a little heated. Although you're quite a congenial man. Captain Morgan, CEO. How are you?
Bill Richmond
I'm fantastic. He beat the crap out of me in that debate. But really, no. I can't believe it was back and forth. We had so humble points.
Steven Crowder
I appreciate it. He said he very much enjoyed the time.
Bill Richmond
It's fun.
Steven Crowder
Yeah, he's wrong.
Bill Richmond
I'm right. But whatever, it's fine. Andrew.
Steven Crowder
He also requested that next time you don't show up in a trench coat and flash him. But we all have our thing.
Bill Richmond
Fine. Naked it is.
Steven Crowder
And Sunday, July 6th, the funny bone Comedy Club. You can go and see him. You know him, you love him. Josh Firestein. That's at the Funny Bone in Orlando, right?
Josh Feuerstein
Yes, Orlando. Orlando. Disney. And you don't say gay at my show.
Steven Crowder
No, you do not.
Josh Feuerstein
Hey, does fentanyl. Will fentanyl help my night terrors?
Steven Crowder
I think it pretty much helps all terror. It puts you at A very nice hum.
Gerald Morgan
It's worth trying for sure. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Bill Richmond
Shut up, Bill. We haven't introduced you yet.
Steven Crowder
Look, look, of course. Do not do drugs. I'm just saying. I get it.
Josh Feuerstein
Unless you have night terrors.
Steven Crowder
Yeah, unless you wake up screaming, no.
Josh Feuerstein
Uncle Tom, don't do that.
Gerald Morgan
Wow.
Steven Crowder
We're not supposed to talk about Uncle Tom. It's in your writer, and we're not. We're gonna hit the stinger later because we're gonna do an official segment. But his show is hardly legal on YouTube. My half Asian lawyer, Bill Richmond, is here. Thank you for being here, sir. We needed an expert as we discuss law and constitutional authority.
Gerald Morgan
I'm excited. This is a crazy time right now, and we're gonna have fun today.
Steven Crowder
Well, hopefully. I tell you what, this lady was not having fun. And it's why women shouldn't. I've got a severe.
Josh Feuerstein
Step aside, ladies.
Steven Crowder
Step aside, ladies. A complete, nondescript civilian is going to simply caress him gently in gym shorts.
Gerald Morgan
A tender touch.
Steven Crowder
I love how he's showing. Oh, this is all it takes. And the still giving it a wide berth.
Bill Richmond
You guys want to take it for here?
Josh Feuerstein
He seems okay with the guy handling.
Gerald Morgan
Him.
Steven Crowder
Like, he's grabbing like, you do it like this. Well, just put him against the wall. And they're. They're acting like he's demanding they eat a puffer fish. I don't think I want to get near him. This is. This is my job. I know, but I can do it.
Bill Richmond
Another man runs up, and then you hear sirens in the background. Undoubtedly more male police officers.
Steven Crowder
Yes, undoubtedly more male police officers are showing up. And look, this is not to say that women are physically less capable than men, but women are physically less capable than men. Unfortunately, the shoe attack put the female cop in the emergency room. We have a trade e today.
Bill Richmond
We do. It's a process.
Steven Crowder
It's okay.
Bill Richmond
It's still funny.
Steven Crowder
It's okay, Nick. You know, people, they die in the woods. They die of shame. Don't. Oh, my God. Whoa. Whoop.
Gerald Morgan
Said.
Steven Crowder
I was just about to.
Gerald Morgan
Shut up, Steven. Who's in control now? Steven?
Steven Crowder
You're the guy drowning, and I throw you a life preserver. You're like, that's for fags. I don't need to. I got this. I got it.
Gerald Morgan
You're dragging him out of the pool, and he's just punching you in the face. Like, let me it up more. You haven't seen the ninth level of hell yet.
Steven Crowder
What I'm saying is, just shake it off, people in the woods, they die of shame. They sit there thinking what they should have done, what they could have done, and they die instead of doing the one thing that would have saved their life, thinking, which is push the right frickin buttons, get a text that says.
Gerald Morgan
Take him to the train station.
Steven Crowder
Oh my gosh. I was gonna say something and I don't remember what I was gonna say. Thanks. Something about die in the woods, I don't know. Hey, just in case you guys were like, you can say sexism, but we're done with that. We just don't care anymore. Here are the facts on women in combat or physical roles. So women failed the police physical test in New Jersey at 13 times the rate of men. We don't have the national numbers because they don't want you to know it. Women failed the army fitness test at a ratio of 6 to 1 compared to men and women in the army are 67% more likely to receive some kind of physical disability discharge or some kind of musculoskeletal injury disorder. Like, guys, I don't know, feminists, I will say hats off to you. You've done a great job at guilting and browbeating men into allowing you to be physically hurt as a sign of progress.
Bill Richmond
Seems like the wrong way to go.
Steven Crowder
Yeah, the main thing is we just don't want to be hurt ourselves. Now, now, citizens are at risk. For more proof, just see France. They have no idea if I am not fentanyl. But if we're going now to PCP land, if I am a known felon with a rap sheet, out of my mind, blitzed on pcp, and I know that I'm going to be going to the slammer for a long time. It is an answered prayer to see a lady cop show up.
Josh Feuerstein
I go, oh, it might turn your life around. You pray to God real quick. Please, God, if a feminist cop shows up. Yeah, I swear I'll turn it around.
Steven Crowder
I swear. Look, if you just send a female cop, I'll beat the shit out of her. I'll never do anything bad again.
Bill Richmond
Get away.
Steven Crowder
Oh, it's Becky, all right. And the best way to stay in touch, Download the Rumble app and follow us there. If you're watching this on YouTube, God only knows why at this point. Rumble app, we are live 11am Eastern, and it just lets you know when we're live. You don't have to worry about an algorithm. Let's move on to this. This is something that's always fun when the left thinks that they're Clever. They've now tried to coin this new term after the setback that we'll get to on the tariffs. It's taco. Have you guys heard this? It's Trump always chickens out. And I get it. They think that they're gonna be goading him, like, ah, we're gonna hurt his ego with this. They tried this with fake news. Do you remember this? Have you been around long enough? Fake news was something that the left made up to try and attack conservatives online alternative media. And it actually kind of did work because social media started censoring, throttling conservatives more. But then Donald Trump commandeered that word and started using fake news and then they started attacking their own term. I'm willing to bet that something like that is going to happen with taco or it's going to fade away. But the term is taco. They're trying to make the case that Donald Trump always chickens out. Is it, by the way, is it based in fact? But first hear them describe it to you.
Gerald Morgan
Well, or maybe consumers are also into the taco trade.
Steven Crowder
You know, that's an acronym for Trump always.
Josh Feuerstein
I like tacos in the FT last week.
Gerald Morgan
And Donald Trump's prediction, predictable reversing of himself has now created a new phrase with the acronym taco, as in Trump chickens out.
Steven Crowder
There's this phrase floating around Wall street, the taco trade, which is, what do you think? Retired mid level surfer.
Tim Pool
Trump always chickens out.
Steven Crowder
I don't know if you could more effectively put together a montage of people I hate. Like you can have a montage of the key members of the Taliban and I'd prefer it to those folks.
Josh Feuerstein
Those guys are cool.
Steven Crowder
He really thinks he's gonna. Trump always chickens out.
Josh Feuerstein
He said it like he was reading some kind of apocalyptic message to the country.
Steven Crowder
Like he's waiting for Bill Maher's crowd animator to say, clap, clap. Give him your validation. So they even asked Donald Trump about this, tried to corner him, and here's his very President Trump like response. Mr. President, Wall street analysts have coined a new term called the taco trade. They're saying Trump always chickens out on your tariff threats and that's why markets are higher this week. What's your response to that?
Donald Trump
Six months ago, this country was stone cold dead. We had a dead country. We had a country people didn't think it was going to survive. And you ask a nasty question like that, it's called negotiation. You set a number and if you go down, you know, if I set a number at a ridiculous high number And I go down a little bit, you know, a little bit. They want me to hold that number. 145% tariff even. I said, man, that really got up, you know, because of fentanyl and many other things. And you added it up. I said, where are we now? We're at 145%. I said, Whoa, that's high. But don't ever say what you said. That's a nasty question.
Gerald Morgan
I just love how this would apply, like, with, like, nukes, right? You know, you're like, oh, Truman, you know, don't chicken out. Like, you got six nukes ready.
Bill Richmond
Just.
Gerald Morgan
Just drop them. Like, we've, like, no basic negotiation or strategic thinking.
Bill Richmond
Not yet, you don't.
Steven Crowder
Well, it's also like, we're always talking about Jake Tapper, where he didn't have the information that was available to everybody at the time. And it's like, oh, so, you guys. We need journalists, right? I saw Aaron Brockovich. You guys are all inherently altruistic. I get the. I get the point. But you haven't done your due diligence, and it's not that hard to find. I don't know if you know this. There's an entire book actually written called Art of the Deal, where he specifically lays out the strategy that you're seeing in real time. And this is lost on you.
Josh Feuerstein
Is that a good book? Did it sell well?
Steven Crowder
Yeah, exactly. So at this point, either you're lying or you're just very lazy, in which case, no matter what the answer is, there's no use for journalists. And of course, President Trump is visibly annoyed, Almost as annoyed. We all have our days as toolman. Was the other day here in the office. Hey. Hey. All right.
Josh Feuerstein
Thanks, Tim. I can breathe so nice.
Bill Richmond
Wait, what's that smell?
Steven Crowder
We could really learn some manners.
Josh Feuerstein
Gotta get back to work. Go to clear.com. that's clear with an X. And use promo code LWC20 for 20% off your purchase of Clear and spry products. Clear. Wash your nose.
Steven Crowder
And I will tell you this. The only thing keeping me afloat right now is this. I have twins who are. It's basically a walking double petri dish. And even though you can hear it in my voice, I can breathe fine. This really is saved me. And you know what? I don't have to use. Use the medicated nasal spray like I used to, which. That stuff's not good for you. So I hear. But I'm not making medical claims.
Josh Feuerstein
You get addicted to it, and.
Steven Crowder
Yeah, that's what I hear.
Josh Feuerstein
Oh, good.
Steven Crowder
So Did President Trump chicken out? Well, it's time for some claim truth. All right, Taco. Yeah, let's go for some taco claims. Here's the claim that you hear from the left is that President Trump chickened out specifically on China. Is it true?
Bill Richmond
The facts support the taco thesis, whether.
Gerald Morgan
It'S been on electronics early on or.
Bill Richmond
The high tariffs on talks.
Gerald Morgan
Big science blows his trumpet, makes a huge fuss, and before negotiations even begin, before he's even made contact with reality.
Josh Feuerstein
The lady on the left eats tacos.
Steven Crowder
Yeah, here's the truth. Not even close. That's incorrect. So President Trump gave China this 90 day reprieve because they agreed to restart negotiations. Now, we all know that, you know, their word is not worth the fortune cookie it's printed on. So they said, okay, we're gonna restart. So he dropped some of the retaliatory tariffs in that case. And then the next truth is that the courts ended up hamstringing President Trump. So if not for the court injunction, the tariffs on China would still be 50 or 60%. And by the way, up until this new injunction, everyone was okay with it. That's two times what it was in 2024.
Bill Richmond
Exactly.
Steven Crowder
Came in high, was going down to 50 or 60%. And really up until the last 48 hours, people like, well, I guess that's the new normal. That's a win.
Bill Richmond
That was, that was a really clear way of negotiating. Basically, it's like doubling the price of something and then giving somebody 25% off. Oh, I got a deal. Yeah, great.
Steven Crowder
Yes.
Bill Richmond
Just reset it.
Steven Crowder
It's the old Kohl's deal.
Bill Richmond
Yes, exactly.
Steven Crowder
Where they give, they double the price and they give you 50% off and then they give you another 20% off. You're like, but they is still more expensive than if I just buy it anywhere.
Josh Feuerstein
Is he giving tariff cash?
Steven Crowder
Yes. Making the first white woman president. Oh, they love Coles. I don't know what it is with the Kohl's cash. It's not legal tender, by the way. Here's the next claim that they're making for Taco. They claim that President Trump chickened out. Not world China, but also on the eu.
Lawrence O'Donnell
Donald Trump blinked once again, backing off a threat he made days ago, delaying the implementation of a 50% tariff on the European Union. The European Union is America's second largest trading partner behind China.
Steven Crowder
Okay, here's the truth. It's clearly, and it always was meant to be a starting point for a deal. Again, read the book Art of the Deal. This is someone with business experience who understands negotiation. Here is President Trump explaining as much.
Donald Trump
I have great respect for the people at the European Union. They wouldn't be over here today negotiating if I didn't put a 50% tariff on. The sad thing is, now when I make a deal with them, it's something much more reasonable. They'll say, oh, he was chicken. He was chicken.
Steven Crowder
So the media can try and bring out these attacks and taco and chicken. Here's what really matters. Do you believe that President Trump is trying to work on better trade deals for the United States? You can comment below. That's what matters.
Bill Richmond
Yeah.
Steven Crowder
And it is interesting that the media is always lining up against the interests of the United States. Let's just. Let's distill this down to its most basic form. They're going, Europe got you, even though they didn't.
Bill Richmond
Right.
Steven Crowder
They're going, oh, yeah, good for you, Communist China. Hey, how about creating the acronym for Xi Jinping? How about creating the acronym. How about mocking the governments that jail people for speech? Why are you always rooting for the bad guy? Why are you always rooting for the governors who make sure that abortion is available on demand up until and including birth, period? Why are you always somehow on the corner of communist China? Why are you always somehow defending Ms. 13 gang members? Like, I'm not just. This isn't hyperbole. There are no exceptions. There really aren't. So you know what? I'll give this administration a little bit of grace and hope that these negotiations keep going on, because any type of retaliatory tariffs, that's a win compared to where we were.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah.
Bill Richmond
And they're doing it right in the middle of the negotiations, too. Like, just let this process play out a little bit. I understand that we're gonna comment on how it goes throughout the process and what you think the wins and losses are, but right now, they're saying, ah, you're a chicken. You let these guys win. And it's like, you have no idea what's going on behind the scenes. Not at all.
Steven Crowder
Well, to prove my point, right now, I think it's Rahm Emanuel talking about the Chinese student visas. Let's see if they're advocating for foreign Chinese nationals who are likely spies in our institutions. Domestic political issues, I want to get to those as well. While I have you, Rahm, you call the Democratic Party's brand right now in your words. I just switched topics and weak and woke up. Give me specifics. What are you referencing? Okay, that's good. By the way, I don't like him, but I do respect that he poked a man in the chest naked in the shower.
Bill Richmond
That's true.
Steven Crowder
That's.
Bill Richmond
Clothes are optional when you're pissed.
Josh Feuerstein
That's pretty cool.
Steven Crowder
That is how I will remember Rahm Emanuel always. And you know what? Before we get to this next segment, it's regarding the courts blocking the tariffs from President Trump. We're going to be discussing the separation of powers, the executive branch, what kind of authority these courts have. And that's why I actually brought in my half Asian lawyer, Bill Richmond. And he has his very own intro. Yeah, there you go. So. Yes.
Bill Richmond
Oh, go ahead. Sorry, I was gonna.
Steven Crowder
Let me plug a shot. Yeah, you're right. What's your show?
Gerald Morgan
Half Asian doors, Hardly legal. We're on YouTube. We're also on Rumble, so definitely check us out on there. We're gonna be uploading more episodes, but real people who are calling in, they're anonymous. Real legal issues, the craziest stuff. Nurse in Long island who issued thousands of fake vaccine cards to first responders and then got thrown into solitary while she was in jail. And then other side, we had a student who's electroshock therapy experimentation by a professor and then saw that yesterday.
Bill Richmond
Actually, you heard this before. Wasn't that the Unabomber?
Gerald Morgan
Pretty crazy. And then land crazy landlord puts dog in tenants hockey bag.
Bill Richmond
Well, funny.
Steven Crowder
Yeah, that one makes me like the landlord more.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, I was like, yeah. I mean, but here's the thing. The bag smelled so bad, he didn't know it was in there. I mean, if you had a hockey bag, you know how bad.
Steven Crowder
Yeah, exactly. So that's really the tenant's fault. All right, Gerald, now you have your moment in the sun.
Bill Richmond
I apologize. I wasn't looking for that. I was trying to figure out. I think I saw a chiron from CNN that said that they were trying to block or that a judge just issued a temporary block on Harvard students visas not being allowed for foreign students. So that would be a new block. I don't think we've. We had that planned on our list today to talk about. But if that's true, guys, let me know in research if that's really what actually happened.
Steven Crowder
And this brings us to this conversation here we are all references available and we wanted to make sure that we have lawyers who work here. Not only half Asian pilgrim, but George the Greek who said we think we can really help serve you guys and give you some insight here because the media is not going to for the party that claims everything is nuanced and it's gray. They really don't give you any of the information that you need to understand it. But let me, Let me sort of set the table here. Not everything, and I mean this. And by the way, I was at fault on this front too, hanging around a lot of libertarians. And when I was at Fox News, and it's always Brookings Institute and Reason magazine and all Manhattan Institute, they all kind of bleed together at a certain point. Not everything is just something that we discuss in the theoretical. And when we talk about the Constitution, the context does matter, that this was a people who had warred with the greatest superpower arguably the world had seen certainly in recent centuries, to become the only superpower the next century. And the Constitution was meant to preserve that. So if you think for a second that these founding fathers would have thought or supported the idea of local judges, of district judges who were not elected by the people of this country, determining national policy on everything from immigration, not just visas, but deportation, tariffs, dealing with the drug crisis, the fentanyl crisis at the border, you think that the found. You think that Thomas Jefferson would have said, oh, sure, some judge in Connecticut should determine what happens at our borders in a time of crisis, then you need a CAT scan. And I tell you what, if we find ourselves in an actual war where it comes to your home front, God forbid that ever happens. If we find ourselves there, none of these kinds of games that we're playing now will enter into the equation. You've been separated from the necessity of, of our founding and Constitution by comfort for far too long. So I want to put that in context before we get into the ins and outs. We're at a point here where this country, it may be irreparably damaged. You understand that through decades of complete inaction, and in this case with judges, willful destruction, in other words, this did not happen overnight. The fentanyl crisis, the open borders, you don't get 20 million people in four years here illegally overnight. You don't get. We don't know the number, which also doesn't happen overnight. Hundreds of thousands, millions of illegal aliens benefiting from social services here, from social safety nets, whether it's Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid. That doesn't happen overnight. And we can't continue down the path of inaction. And part of the reason for the executive branch is to be able to deal with these problems and break through it, especially in times of emergency. So do we want to wait for it to be an emergency where it can no longer be fixed? It's beyond repair. Or and comment below. Do you think that we are at a point in this country where the emergency is now, as far as immigration, as far as the subversion of Western civilization, as far as deals being made not in the interests of the American people, even though our representatives have made them, but any interests, not of just foreign nations, but foreign adversaries who want to do you harm. Is the emergency now or do we need to wait for it to become a war? In which case, I guess you have to call code pink. So Wednesday, three judge panel at the Court of International Trade. For those of you who haven't seen this yet, today they blocked President Trump's tariffs again. The President, the will of the people. These judges said no.
Tim Pool
We're following some very big breaking news tonight, news that will come as a big blow to Donald Trump and his agenda tonight. A three judge panel in New York has effectively balked almost all of Trump's disastrous tariffs. Trump's tariffs against Mexico and Canada, his tariffs against the EU against China, his tariffs against uninhabited islands with nothing but penguins and snow, they are all blocked by this federal court decision.
Lawrence O'Donnell
The court said his effort to justify them with broad claims of national emergencies exceeded his legal authority. Can you believe it? The ruling caused stock futures to jump. I'm going to say this to you twice. The Trump policy that was put in place got struck down by the courts and what did the markets do? Jumped. They were excited about it.
Gerald Morgan
The world will reset itself around the restoration of law and order in international.
Steven Crowder
Trade and the crushing of the Trump.
Gerald Morgan
Tariffs and resultant personal worldwide humiliation of Donald Trump.
Steven Crowder
So let me be really clear before we get some key facts. You just heard it. Legacy media does the bidding of Wall Street. Occupy Wall street was a lot of crap then and it is now. They're happy that Wall street will willingly and gleefully put the needs of the American people and our manufacturing base and our employment base on the back burner in favor of short term profits. They think that's a good thing. Cuz you can look at inflation right now, you can look at employment numbers, you can look at, by the way, what happened Donald Trump's first term, the highest raise that working class Americans saw in their salary in modern American history. They would rather see Wall street do a little bit better. And by the way, it was already on the way up. And then you just heard o' Donnell, who wants you to stop the hammering. You heard him say, isn't this great? Gleefully that the rest of the world is mocking your elected leader, your President, there are no exceptions. They always celebrate the wins of people who want to destroy this country like China.
Bill Richmond
Yeah.
Steven Crowder
To be clear.
Bill Richmond
Well, he even goes. He said something there that made me like, it blew my mind. He said order is kind of returning or something along those lines, like the order of global trade. I'm like, you mean the order that's screwing us as a nation? You're happy that we're returning to that, that normal order that Donald Trump was trying to correct.
Steven Crowder
Right.
Bill Richmond
That's not just being against Trump. That's being against us. Like you don't want us to succeed.
Steven Crowder
By the way, a big part of the tariffs, too, was about China getting their ass in line with fentanyl.
Bill Richmond
Yes.
Steven Crowder
So I guess the order of record overdose deaths. Okay, thanks, o' Donnell. So let's go to the first key fact here. All references available in the description. Number one, the ruling, what their argument is, and half Asian. Bill, you can probably clarify this with people. It's that President Trump can't invoke emergency powers under the Emergency Powers act to deal with things they claim like trade deficits or China's fentanyl issue. Right. That's their standing.
Bill Richmond
Yeah.
Gerald Morgan
Essentially what they're saying is that it's. Even though it's specifically tailored to a particular concern that is backed by a lot, a lot, a lot of evidence. This isn't just anecdotes or talking about, you know, hey, look, a few folks overdosed the millions of issues that are coming out of this, people with overdose, the drugs, the border issues, they're saying those are not specific enough to be able to invoke the National Emergency act and then use that as a basis under the International Emergency Economic Powers act to do these tariffs. I mean, it's, it's one of the most ridiculous analyses. Keeping in mind that the last time that the Court of International Trade even spoke on a presidential Tariff was under H.W. bush in the steel industry in 2002, and they didn't even make a ruling. So this isn't just, oh, Trump is doing something that's a little bit unusual. Well, unusual circumstances require unusual solutions. But the courts even taking up of this issue is extremely unusual.
Bill Richmond
Yeah.
Steven Crowder
And that would again seem like the weaponizing in many ways of the justice system. To give you. This affects the Liberation Day tariffs. Right. There were like 10 to 50%. Depends on the country, apparently. They may be. I don't fully know this. The government may have to refund businesses that have already had to pay tariffs that have been collected. There are some that are not affected. For example, the tariffs on cars, on steel, on aluminum, because that was imposed under a different law, the trade Expansion act of 1962. So some people are a little confused about that. That's why. So one is okay and one's not. And this brings us to key fact number two. Who the judges actually are. So you have Gary S. Katzman was appointed under Obama. You have Timothy M. Rife, who was appointed under Trump. And I know people say, look at Trump. Yeah. Well, so was Amy Coney Barrett. And then you have Louis Anderson's long lost twin sister, Jane A. Rustani. So, you know, I'm a judge. You guys.
Bill Richmond
Spot on.
Josh Feuerstein
She's not even the weirdest looking district judge, though.
Steven Crowder
No, no, I made a. All right, we'll go back to the legal analysis. But I guess you have a list.
Josh Feuerstein
I have a list real quick of the weirdest looking district judges that I've seen.
Steven Crowder
Okay.
Josh Feuerstein
At least last night.
Steven Crowder
Okay.
Josh Feuerstein
All right. Number five on my list.
Steven Crowder
Yeah.
Josh Feuerstein
Is district judge and girl from the ring, all grown up. Linda Lopez.
Steven Crowder
I. Okay, that one's pretty weird. Yeah, yeah.
Josh Feuerstein
Brush your hair, lady. Number four, ninth circuit judge who requests that both counsels approach the bench so she can inform them that she is, in fact the one who farted. Anna de Alba.
Steven Crowder
It was me.
Josh Feuerstein
Yeah, we know, your honor.
Steven Crowder
All right. Okay.
Gerald Morgan
You're.
Josh Feuerstein
You're flatulence.
Steven Crowder
All right, what's the next one?
Josh Feuerstein
Circuit appeals judge and human suppository. John B. Owens.
Steven Crowder
That's exactly what it was in my head.
Josh Feuerstein
Yeah, no eyebrows for. Nice insertion. A smooth transition. Number two, fourth circuit court judge. Sorry, it's hard to read. Fourth circuit court judge who is totally not by my story. Roger Gregory.
Steven Crowder
Yep, he looks like. That's some bullshit.
Josh Feuerstein
That's some bullshit. I know it wasn't you.
Steven Crowder
Okay, I don't have time for this.
Josh Feuerstein
Here's lunch.
Bill Richmond
Here's lunch.
Josh Feuerstein
The chorus. And number one, weirdest looking district judge, Court of appeals judge who reads every case up, down, left, and right all at the same time, and is also part time sloth.
Steven Crowder
Oh, that makes sense.
Josh Feuerstein
Lee.
Steven Crowder
She is positively turpid. All right.
Josh Feuerstein
Gets by her.
Steven Crowder
That's been Josh's list. I appreciate it.
Bill Richmond
Okay, that is the most white named black person I've ever seen in my life. Eunice.
Josh Feuerstein
Yeah, they probably pronounce it Eunice.
Steven Crowder
You niece. Go there and call you niece.
Gerald Morgan
I got a cousin I know two Asian women named Eunice. Lee. So literally, when that makes me, I was like, oh, yeah, this is not what I expected. Asian, not An Asian sloth.
Steven Crowder
No, her son is you nephew.
Josh Feuerstein
No, but Asian sloth is my favorite strain of weed.
Gerald Morgan
That's what it turns you into.
Steven Crowder
All right, key fact number three, and this is really important, you know, half Asian. Bill Richmond will know this probably better than anyone here. What can the Trump administration do? Now, I know they've already filed an.
Gerald Morgan
Appeal, and that's what they got to do. So the very first thing is these. The ruling from the Court of International Trade will take effect in 10 days, is when the officials have to go and walk back everything that they need to do under that particular order. And so the, the appeal to the Federal Circuit Court, so that's. The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has already been filed. And the Federal Circuit can issue a stay. They can say, nope, Court of International Trade. Your, your ruling incorrect. Do not have to move forward with it. If the Federal Circuit decides to say, hey, the Court of International Trade was correct. Keep going. Then there can be an appeal up to the United States Supreme Court. So I would say we're going to see a busy, busy, busy next 14 days on this front.
Steven Crowder
And here, just so you know, there are other options, by the way, other tariff options that can be basically implemented via executive order under section. I have this here 232. And as I understand, this allows the President to levy tariffs on products that threaten national security. So, for example, that would be like the current steel and aluminum tariffs tariffs Bill.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, so the, the specific ones, this is that issue of, like, how narrow can it be? So.
Steven Crowder
Right.
Gerald Morgan
It's. This isn't an argument to say that the President can't give tariffs or initiate tariffs on specific products or specific industries. But what they're saying is you can't just do it broadly because they're saying that fentanyl is not a broad enough problem, that illegal border crossings by our foreign enemies is not a big enough problem, which really just comes down to. Are you guys not fucking paying attention?
Steven Crowder
Yeah, yeah, exactly. What's the number of deaths?
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, when you read the opinion, like, the opinion doesn't actually get into the weeds of the justification. It just says, we don't believe it's actually a national emergency, so fuck off. Right.
Bill Richmond
Yeah, well, my neighborhood's fine.
Steven Crowder
Yeah, actually they do kind of say, well, it is an emergency, but we're still not really gonna let you do it because. And I don't understand the rest, and I have a quote later on, but I also know that some can be implemented through Section 301. This allows, as I understand The President to levy tariffs on specific countries that impose unfair trade barriers, which sounds exactly like what he did. That's why I'm so confused a little bit.
Gerald Morgan
So they're called the reciprocal trade tariffs. I mean, they're literally like, if you're doing it to us, we're going to do it to you. And now apparently we're saying, well, you can't just unilateral or globally respond to everyone.
Bill Richmond
Why?
Steven Crowder
What?
Josh Feuerstein
Yeah, why not?
Steven Crowder
So let me make sure I understand. Section three, it allows the President to levy tariffs on specific countries that impose unfair trade barriers, but reciprocal tariffs, according to this court, don't apply.
Gerald Morgan
So what they're saying is like, okay, so you remember the quote earlier, she was like, the lady on the news clip was like, oh, this snowy island, that all they do is export, like sea salt or something, right?
Steven Crowder
Yeah.
Gerald Morgan
So there is a point to be made that some of these countries may have tariffs that are not actually impacting us in some kind of serious way because they're such small players.
Steven Crowder
Right.
Gerald Morgan
But the reality is the vast majority of these, the reciprocal tariffs are designed to say, you've got some issue with us. We're going to go ahead and step up and start dealing with it across the board. But they're saying, no, you can't just decide to do it across the board. It doesn't make sense.
Steven Crowder
Well, we also have another possibility with Section 122, and this allows the President to levy a maximum 15% tariff to address the balance of payments crisis. So that only can last 150 days unless Congress extends it. Right, Correct.
Gerald Morgan
And so that's what Gerald is actually mentioning that earlier, before the show, you know, there's, there's a way to be able to start moving these into place and give those options. In fact, in this particular circumstance, folks even were wondering before the challenge came out that the IEEPA national emergency tariffs that were struck down or, you know, kind of have to be walked back. Why? They weren't related to some of these other sections. So, for example, under the Trade Expansion act, you can literally have a national emergency declaration. There's some findings that have to be made by Congress, and then it becomes almost unattackable at that point.
Steven Crowder
Right.
Gerald Morgan
You can't use the courts to attack it except in a very narrow slice. And I think the issue is that Trump was moving forward based on what appeared to be everyone agreeing that this was a big issue.
Steven Crowder
Right.
Gerald Morgan
And now everyone's coming back and going, no, I guess fentanyl is just not that big of A problem.
Steven Crowder
Right. Yeah, that was. That was the issue that everyone united around. And I was one of the few people said, yeah, we need to separate fentanyl and opiates, because unfortunately, people threw the baby out with the bathwater. We don't have an opiate crisis. We have an illegal opioid crisis. Because this idea that Timmy got some Vicodin because he had a root canal and then was blowing hobos that he could get a pack of purposes, it's just not true. It's just not true. And now people who need pain medication can't get it.
Gerald Morgan
You can't even get a poppy seed bagel anymore.
Steven Crowder
No, you cannot.
Gerald Morgan
It's ridiculous.
Steven Crowder
You can't. Not if I'm.
Josh Feuerstein
You can't even blow a hobo.
Steven Crowder
That's true.
Bill Richmond
We all have our lines.
Steven Crowder
That's true. Well, that's just what he told you.
Josh Feuerstein
Get a little extra smear if you do.
Steven Crowder
He doesn't actually have poppy seed bagels. There's also a way to do it through section 338. And again, as I understand it, we have the links here. I think we have a link to Cornell. It allows the president to impose up to 50% tariffs on countries that specifically discriminate against the United States. But that's never been used before. And again, here's the thing. They say, oh, Donald Trump applied it too broadly. These sections and sort of areas where it'd be permissible also seem insanely broad to me. Bill.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, there is a lot of them that are broad, and because they haven't actually been used, we're just going to have more and more challenges that go, well, this has never been limited before, so let's just go ahead and try to limit it. And then when you have activist judges who say, well, we're going to err on the side of doing anything that will limit Trump's agenda because we don't like Trump.
Bill Richmond
Right.
Gerald Morgan
Then it becomes a problem. Right. The. The pressure there on these judges and them, some succumbing to it is a big problem. I mean, These are Article 3 courts. They need to maintain their independence and follow the law. But here they continue to err on the side of striking down without looking at the real evidence behind them.
Steven Crowder
They pretty much have struck down everything.
Bill Richmond
Well, they're trying.
Steven Crowder
They're trying to strike down everything, literally everything that President Trump has done.
Josh Feuerstein
They tried striking down his lunch order last week.
Steven Crowder
They have what tariffs? Okay. Then they've done visas. Okay. They've done the deportation orders in some cases. So what can be done. This is the thing. You're basically saying there is no power. Didn't we have some of the biggest spending ever take place under Barack Obama? Didn't you have George W. Bush effectively declare war without Congress at one point in time? Remember, that was kind of a big deal.
Bill Richmond
Yeah.
Steven Crowder
And now you can't say, hey, a reciprocal tariff until you fix the fentanyl epidemic. Tell me the courts have been politicized without telling them the courts have been politicized.
Bill Richmond
Right. One of my problems, too, and Bill, you and I were talking about this earlier, is that the people that brought these cases, they know what I'm about to say about what Goldman said about this. Goldman issued a statement after this ruling and said, basically, this is a nothing burger in that the tariffs can be put on in other ways, and the administration will move to do that. So the tariffs won't really go anywhere. It's not a nothing burger in that the courts are now overstepping their bounds yet again, and that's what we're really talking about. But that just goes to show you, the people that are bringing these suits, they know that that is likely what's going to happen. And so it's not really even about affecting the tariff policy of this administration. It's about making Donald Trump look bad and weak.
Steven Crowder
Right.
Bill Richmond
And who does that help?
Steven Crowder
China.
Bill Richmond
Exactly. Our foreign adversaries. China's all too happy that this is happening right now, by the way.
Steven Crowder
Right.
Bill Richmond
They love it. They want this to happen. So, Bill, What? You just said something a minute ago that I just. Basically, I wrote down a little bit of a note. Part of it is a cuss word, and I can't say that, but I read it and it's fine. The courts can say this and issue a stay. Screw it. I don't care. It's gonna go to the Supreme Court. I'll wait on their decision. Until then, everything stays exactly as it is. Come get me, bro.
Gerald Morgan
Well, they've got 10 days at the very least. They've got 10 days.
Bill Richmond
No, it's not even 10 days. I'm saying I don't care what happens in 10 days. Screw whatever order they come out with. Screw whatever. I'm doing literally nothing. If I'm doing nothing right now, nothing changes. I'd go out and be like, hey, that's really interesting. It's really cute that you guys had this decision. Doesn't make any sense. So we're gonna appeal it. We're going to ask for a stay. We're going to go all the way. To the Supreme Court. And until that decision comes down, I'm not doing anything different than what I'm doing now. China, you're still screwed.
Steven Crowder
You mean kind of like Joe Biden did with rent forgiveness, like student loan forgiveness? Yeah. What are the consequences if he does that? I mean, I know it's different for Trump and Biden.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah. So this is always the issue when you look at the judicial system and you say, okay, what will these courts do? They don't really have their own police force. So at that point, you start getting into this fraying of the entire system. Right. So a question of, like, okay, if the branches no longer listen to the other branches in areas where they're making rulings, who's going to step in and do something about it? It could be something like declaring that these officials who are not complying are no longer in power, they no longer have the authority. But again, it requires, like, the whole department to decide. We're not going to listen to this official who a court has now removed for having not done it. Or you start moving over into the judicial side of enforcement, where the Justice Department starts arresting officials for failing to comply with court orders. You start throwing them in jail, things like that. So, I mean, this guy escalate pretty crazy.
Steven Crowder
So, hold on.
Gerald Morgan
Seems unlikely, though.
Steven Crowder
Yeah, they're not going to do that because this is the only president who they have tried to jail and someone attempted to assassinate and that backfired.
Bill Richmond
It'll make.
Steven Crowder
I can't imagine. They want to send in.
Bill Richmond
Yeah, send in your guys. By the way. Let me just, just clarify. I'm not saying that you're ignoring the courts. I'm saying that you're waiting for this to go through the process, and so you're gonna sidestep the game that these guys are playing.
Gerald Morgan
Right.
Bill Richmond
So we'll get to some of the solutions down here. But because there are obvious solutions, I'm.
Steven Crowder
A fan of the administration can go ways with tariffs.
Bill Richmond
The game is basically, let's just slow him down long enough to where he's ineffective as President of the United States, and so he looks weak. And it helps our enemies and people around the world that are competing with us, that maybe aren't our enemies, but want to compete with us economically. I just think he says, fine, yeah, I'm just going to ignore all this until it gets to the Supreme Court, and then we'll see. We'll have a fight there.
Steven Crowder
Macro point here. You now know why it is almost exclusively Republicans and conservatives who wear the American flag pin. You Guys get it?
Bill Richmond
Yeah.
Steven Crowder
They're celebrating empowering China just like they did Ms. 13. Do you guys get it? I get it. And Ape Jean Bill is a very accomplished lawyer. He's going to understand the details, the granularity on this far better. But I think you all know enough to see that they are cheerleading for people who want to take what you've built. And I don't just mean you, the American people as a country, what you have built personally, if it's a business, if it's some sense of community, if, hey, maybe it's a rehab center, by the way, to deal with people who have been struggling with this drug crisis. Everything that they are advocating for and they are cheering is adversarial to the good of the American people. And I think it's important to keep that in focus because then you'll understand the behavioral pattern. Wait, why is the, why is the media? Why is the Democrat Party? And why are all of these district courts, these judges, why are they all acting the same following lockstep? There has to be a commonality. Well, then you look to other commonalities. Oh, championing China. And that's not a stretch, by the way. Oh, making sure that foreign Chinese nationals can stay on our campuses. Oh, making sure, by the way, that we don't necessarily have voter id. And the reason that all ties back because you had a Chinese national who voted in Michigan. It was confirmed. His vote still counted anyway. You guys remember that shit? Yeah. Oh, wait a second. Oh, advocating on behalf of a nation who has, by their own admission, been seeking the destruction of Western civilization and harming you in this country any which way they can. And they all follow lockstep when they say, hey, look, Donald Trump's in the White House. Sure. Look at all of the other institutions, higher learning. You've seen what's happened with Harvard and Brown. You look at the courts, you've seen them overstep their bounds. You look at what's happening, of course, in the legacy media. Look at just Jake Tapper, what he's going through right now. Still not apologizing for lying. How do they all line up on one side all the time? Oh, and who else is there? Oh, that's right. China and criminal gangs who want to exploit our open borders policy. They're all in one huddle. It's them versus you. Let's go to the next key fact here, and this is important, what can be done. Well, really, this should go to Congress. And you would think, hey, Republicans have quite a bit of control at this point in time, they could retroactively ratify President Trump's tariffs or pass a tariff law. But you have some people there who may not. So this, and I have this written down here to make sure that I remember correctly. And Bill, you can clarify, they can amend the Emergency Economic Powers act OR Expand section 232 of the Trade Expansion act to include issues specifically like trade deficits or the Chinese fentanyl crisis. And here's the thing, I know they can do that. Congress would need to do it, but it already seems like it's in these sections. That's where it seems disheartening, like, yeah, but that kind of seems there, though.
Gerald Morgan
That's the biggest rebuttal to this entire thing, is that Congress has already taken the actions to delegate the authority of tariffs in large, large, large areas to the executive branch and specifically to the President. So really, again, we're not arguing about can the President impose tariffs or not. It's how many tariffs and how far can those go? Which makes the complete striking down of the specific tariffs, the reciprocal tariffs, the ones related to fentanyl and the border, a huge problem, because it's essentially saying, we know you're allowed to do some stuff, but we're just going to throw it all out right now and then let you figure it out. Right? So that political motivation to say we're just going to hamper you across the board is a big problem. And, and to get to your point earlier, Stephen, I think it's really interesting when you think about the lack of values that are applied when attacking these policies, because the side, like you said, of Occupy Wall street is now using the evidence of the stock market going up and capitalists winning as evidence that this was a good policy or a good result. It's like, wait a minute, you're still whose side? You're not even on your own side anymore. And that's where you can find some hypocrisy that underlies this entire attack on what it should be and is a stance to protect America.
Steven Crowder
If Donald Trump existed in the 1800s and implemented these kinds of tariffs and policies to protect the American worker and our manufacturing sector, Bernie Sanders would praise him as a folk hero. You guys understand that? What do you think? Bernie's just take away the name Donald Trump and this man, he stood up to Wall street, he said, I don't care about Wall street, the fat cat profits. I'm gonna focus on employment and I'm gonna focus on economic growth and inflation, manufacturing for the working class. But now he's on the side of Wall Street. It's horseshit. Anyone who tells you that Occupy Wall street was. Or it was always horseshit. These people are never consistent in their values, ever. Let's go on to what their claims are, though. Let's steel man this here for a second. As far as how they justify it, here's one of their claims is that the trade deficit doesn't actually constitute unusual or any kind of extraordinary threat.
Tim Pool
The law does not grant tariff authority to the President simply when he finds or determines that an unusual and extraordinary threat exists. I sense a little snark there. I appreciate it, but man, when you put it that way, it all kind of makes a lot of sense, doesn't it? Now for the first time, we have a federal court saying that we all. Well, we all kind of sort of knew to be true already. The President's justification for this trade war is bs.
Steven Crowder
Okay, so here's the truth. The threat is not extraordinary. It's not an emergency for people like Jen Psaki. Okay? It is for a lot of people in this country where you had judges sit by while this country just got caved in in many ways, particularly our industries. This nation right now. You don't think this is an emergency? We are completely dependent, you remember Covid, on supply chains from our biggest adversaries who want to do us harm. Things like critical minerals, pharmaceuticals. Remember shortages during COVID of that electronics chip sets. And then if we want to write this ship, we can't, by the way, just up production right away because of some other red tape. We also can't build our own stuff here anymore. So ships, any kind of fabricated metal, all kinds of military goods. Think about this for a second. If you had an asteroid hit the United States. Ability to extract, to use, to refine, process, to basically create what we need as far as rare earth minerals, as far as chip sets, as far as our ability to build ships, as far as our ability to build and assemble a lot of military goods. So in a world where an asteroid just hits those targets, where we can't do it anymore, do you realize it would have no discernible difference because we can't do it now. It all has to come from China. It all has to come from overseas. We're not talking about tchotchkes that you put in a party favor bag. We're talking about during COVID Do you guys remember this? During COVID Now this was as bad as it gets for you, and it turned a lot of you conservative. During COVID it was Cheaper to get a new car than a used car in many ways. Do you remember that because of the interest rates. Do you remember how there was a shortage? Do you remember how you weren't. I have. It's the first time where I may invoke a lemon law. And half Asian Bill knows this because I've had to have the transm. The only time in my life I purchased a new car because it was the only full size SUV available in the region. And you have twins and 120 pound dog. You need one. The transmission has been switched out like three, four times because they didn't have the chipsets. You all went through that. Do you guys remember needing certain drugs, antibiotics, during COVID not being able to get it? That's the closest you've had to an emergency. Do you know how much worse it would get in a time of war where it's not just because they have supply issues overseas as well, it's that they deliberately turn it off. But don't worry, I bet China would never do that because they're looking out for you. I bet they would never use the leverage they have.
Gerald Morgan
Let me say one quick thing on that. And I think I'm union equally situated. My Chinese family members who are 100% Chinese, they're not even like me, half Asian. They are 100% Chinese. They have been sounding the alarm for decades, saying that if you don't recognize that China wants to dominate and control the planet, then you are not listening.
Bill Richmond
Right.
Gerald Morgan
I think that's the fundamental disagreement here is they're going, oh, you're just being racist by targeting these other countries of people that look different. No, we're not doing it based on the way they look. We're doing it based on what they say and do. The lack of intellectual property product protections, the ability to send shitty goods, if not actual bad drugs over into this country, the precursors for fentanyl being able to flow not only directly into the United States, but onto the North American continent. That makes it way into the United States. China could be doing more. They have one of the most aggressive and complete police states that have ever existed. And they're like, yeah, I don't know. I don't, man. I have no idea how these drugs and the chemicals are getting in. And why do we sound like we're from Jersey? I don't know. Is a bad Asian act accent. No, but that's what the Chinese are saying who are here in America. They're like, hey, we know a little thing about those guys because we fled that country.
Steven Crowder
Yes.
Gerald Morgan
And. And the rest of white liberal America is looking around going, no, I think you're just being racist.
Steven Crowder
Put it this way. Yes, during COVID and we all are, but during COVID we were in a tailspin. China was also in a tailspin, largely because they were lying, by the way.
Bill Richmond
Yeah.
Steven Crowder
To the rest of the. But let's just say this. We were all on a tailspin, okay? And you saw the supply chain issues. You saw what happened. Now change it. Change. We're in a tailspin. And China's not, because they planned it. So take what you went through with toilet paper and apply it to everything you use. But it's not an emergency.
Bill Richmond
No.
Steven Crowder
Let's go on to the next claim. And this is one that they kind of make, but they say, well, fentanyl is kind of an emergency, but it doesn't really matter. I have this from the ruling. They say the state plaintiffs do not argue that the fentanyl trafficking orders fail to invoke unusual and extraordinary threats. That's what I'm saying. Like, we're not arguing that it's not an emergency. But then they go on to say a dam deals with flooding by holding back a river. But there is no such association between the act of imposing a tariff and the, quote, unusual and extraordinary threats, for example, that of the fentanyl trafficking orders purport to combat. What they're basically saying is, yeah, we get the tariffs are leverage and we get that fentanyl is actually, we acknowledge kind of an emergency, but we're going to act like we don't understand the connection. So. No.
Josh Feuerstein
So what?
Bill Richmond
Is that specific enough is basically their argument.
Gerald Morgan
I got to say, I agree, though. I think that what the court is saying here is we need to build 100,000 A10 Warthogs and have them patrol the borders.
Steven Crowder
Yes.
Gerald Morgan
And just shoot every fentanyl carrying boat that comes near the border. Yeah, look, I. I actually agree with that. I'm into a 10 Warthogs. Okay.
Steven Crowder
All right.
Josh Feuerstein
They're beautiful. They sound beautiful.
Gerald Morgan
But short of that. Yes, it's ridiculous. It's saying, well, we have this one really important lever that China would not like if we used. So we push the button and now we're like, no, it's not directly connected.
Steven Crowder
Yeah.
Bill Richmond
Come on.
Steven Crowder
Well, here's.
Josh Feuerstein
I don't understand the metaphor. The metaphor is that if you build a dam, you stop the river. But there's a saying, well, just let the. Just let the river flow.
Steven Crowder
Yeah, yeah.
Josh Feuerstein
Don't.
Steven Crowder
Don't.
Josh Feuerstein
Even try to build a dam or whatever, right? Whatever you're doing, just stop. Kill the beaver.
Steven Crowder
I'm going to be reductive here because I'm good at that. You have a choice. Pull the economic levers now or pull the lever of the war machine later. That's your choice. There you go. It's a binary choice. There is no choice number three. Pull the tariff lever now, make it sting enough that they get in line, or pull the war lever in 2, 5, 10 years. That's where this goes.
Bill Richmond
Really quickly. Do you want to. So we have to raid in just a minute. Do you want to do the. We have the reverse Super Chat today.
Steven Crowder
Oh, we do have the reverse.
Bill Richmond
Let's do that. And then we'll. We'll finish this out.
Steven Crowder
All right, well, then I guess it is time for. And you guys have heard of Super Chat?
Bill Richmond
Yeah. Yeah.
Steven Crowder
You guys know what Super Chat is? Is where you give us money, but we don't allow you guys to do that. You can join Rumble Premium, and that's about the only way to support or go to the merch shop. But what we. We do is we do the opposite of that, where we give you. We give you money.
Bill Richmond
That's right.
Steven Crowder
It's time.
Josh Feuerstein
It's time for what?
Steven Crowder
I don't know. I guess Nick's production style is interrupting.
Josh Feuerstein
I like it.
Bill Richmond
Keeps on your toes.
Steven Crowder
Yeah. He goes, you know what? I'm going to go with the View vibe today. So reverse Super Chat, Pure Talk. This is where we actually do allow sponsors to get a little extra airtime here. It's 100% customer service in the United States. That's a huge deal. I called someone and my God, actually got someone on the phone. And I, like, I had to put on a robe because I was naked. And it's so rare for me to actually get someone on the phone. I figured they could see me.
Bill Richmond
I was like, ha.
Gerald Morgan
They can see you, though. That's. You're answering.
Josh Feuerstein
That's a thing, though. If they get you on the phone, they can see your cameras.
Steven Crowder
Yeah, well, you know what? That's by design in my case. I mean, I cover. I close a row, but I left half open.
Josh Feuerstein
No password on the Wi Fi. I get it.
Steven Crowder
You can save 50% off your first month. Go to PureTalk.com Crowder and I switched to them. I gotta tell you, my services, but I was with Verizon before. My service has been much better, and it's been significantly less expensive. And I actually can call and get someone on the Phone. So tell people how this works. The Super Chat.
Bill Richmond
Yeah, so it's the reverse super chat. So basically, PureTalk right now just gave out 50 subscriptions. You get a one month subscription. Actually, if you do a little bit, a couple of other steps, you can extend that to two months. A free subscription to Rumble Premium. So thank you, Pure Talk. Make sure that if you were given one of those subscriptions just now, let us know in the chat and also send us something on Instagram or on X. Yep. And let us know and hang around and see what you think of Bill in Rumble Premium. It gets a little spicy.
Steven Crowder
How. How many memberships did we just give out?
Bill Richmond
55.050Reverse memberships just now.
Steven Crowder
Super Chat brought to you by PureTalk. It's been the thing.
Bill Richmond
All right.
Steven Crowder
I didn't realize that we were going. Going late.
Bill Richmond
We have more.
Steven Crowder
We do have more. Really quickly. Just I don't know how this show the Photoshop of Donald Trump as a pirate with Chinese pirates.
Josh Feuerstein
Don't even set it up.
Steven Crowder
Just go. That turned out okay.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, he's.
Josh Feuerstein
He's seizing there.
Steven Crowder
Pull it back up.
Bill Richmond
Pull it back up really quick. I know we have to raid, but pull it up.
Josh Feuerstein
He's taking their booty.
Steven Crowder
Look at the bags.
Bill Richmond
Those are like the cheap Chinese food carryout bags. Look at me.
Gerald Morgan
That's not fentanyl. That's msg.
Steven Crowder
Same thing.
Gerald Morgan
So addictive.
Steven Crowder
Look, before you walk the plank, I have one question for you. When I say no msg, do you put it in anyway?
Josh Feuerstein
We do.
Steven Crowder
We do. I know it.
Gerald Morgan
It's so good.
Josh Feuerstein
He's delicious.
Steven Crowder
If you guys are not Rumble Premium members, you click that right there below. Continue with us where we'll have more analyses from half Asian Bill. His show is hardly legal here on rumble and on YouTube. For those of you who are not members, hey, we just ask that you allow us to earn your support every day and make it worth your while. But right now, you can just continue watching and enjoy the wonderful Tim Pool. Let's talk more about not only the tariffs, but the msg. You could do up the. Put the Ms.
Podcast Summary: Louder with Crowder – "BREAKING: Court Rules Trump Tariffs Illegal - Threatens to Destroy US National Security"
Episode Details:
Steven Crowder opens the episode by addressing his audience with characteristic humor and a critical tone towards left-leaning narratives. He introduces the main topics of discussion: the dismissal of the new "TACO" acronym and the significant court ruling against Trump's tariffs.
Key Quote:
“You are summarizing a podcast episode... it's whatever.” [00:00]
Crowder introduces the term "TACO," an acronym coined by the left to suggest that "Trump Always Chickens Out" regarding his tariff threats. He likens it to the term "fake news," predicting it will fade away as a pejorative label.
Key Quote:
“The term is taco. They're trying to make the case that Donald Trump always chickens out.” [12:00]
A pivotal segment of the episode discusses the recent decision by a three-judge panel in New York that blocks most of Trump's tariffs against China, the EU, Mexico, and Canada. Crowder emphasizes the legal implications and the perceived overreach of the judiciary in this matter.
Key Quotes:
“A three judge panel in New York has effectively balked almost all of Trump's disastrous tariffs.” [28:27]
“Trump policy that was put in place got struck down by the courts and what did the markets do? Jumped.” [29:11]
Crowder and his guests delve into the consequences of the court's decision, arguing it undermines national security and Trump's efforts to protect American industries from foreign competition. They express frustration over the judiciary's interference with executive actions deemed necessary for national interests.
Key Quote:
“We all are, but China was also in a tailspin... How about attacking that?” [54:05]
The discussion shifts to the Constitution's design, particularly the separation of powers. Crowder argues that during times of crisis, such as war, the executive branch should have the authority to act decisively without excessive judicial interference.
Key Quote:
“The Constitution was meant to preserve that... you're basically saying there is no power.” [23:15]
A significant portion of the episode focuses on the fentanyl crisis, which Trump cited as a justification for his tariffs. Crowder and his guests contend that the influx of fentanyl poses a severe national security threat, linking it to the broader issue of illegal immigration and foreign adversaries exploiting U.S. vulnerabilities.
Key Quotes:
“What determines a national emergency? The answer is fentanyl.” [04:59]
“We are completely dependent... on supply chains from our biggest adversaries who want to do us harm.” [54:05]
Crowder criticizes the media and Wall Street for prioritizing short-term profits over national interests. He accuses them of undermining Trump's tariff policies to maintain their control and influence, drawing parallels to the reaction against Trump's "fake news" label.
Key Quote:
“Legacy media does the bidding of Wall Street... they think that's a good thing.” [29:18]
Looking ahead, Crowder discusses potential avenues for reinstating tariffs through Congressional action. He highlights that while the executive branch faces legal setbacks, legislative support could provide a more robust foundation for implementing tariff policies aimed at protecting American interests.
Key Quote:
“Congress has already taken the actions to delegate the authority of tariffs... it already seems like it's in these sections.” [37:21]
In his closing remarks, Crowder urges listeners to recognize the broader implications of the court's ruling, emphasizing the need for executive authority in safeguarding national security. He encourages audience engagement through comments and participation in platform memberships to support the show's mission.
Key Quote:
“Do you think that we are at a point in this country where the emergency is now... as far as immigration, as far as the subversion of Western civilization.” [27:00]
Notable Guests:
Additional Highlights:
Key Quote:
“We're not arguing about can the President impose tariffs or not. It's how many tariffs and how far can those go?” [39:48]
Final Thoughts: Steven Crowder's episode provides a critical examination of the judiciary's role in opposing former President Trump's tariff strategies, framing it as a significant threat to U.S. national security and economic stability. Through a mix of legal analysis, political commentary, and engaging dialogue, the podcast underscores the tension between executive authority and judicial oversight in contemporary American politics.
Note: For full context and additional insights, listeners are encouraged to watch the video version of the podcast available at Louder with Crowder Mug Club.