inciting violence in broad daylight reporter: it s not necessarily news that donald trump doesn t change, but donald trump doesn t change. the statement is almost identical to what he said right before the riot at the capitol. that, you know, it walks up to the line of calling for violence. the implication is to call for violence. but he doesn t exactly say he s calling for violence. however, his supporters understand exactly what he s saying. and he s calling for violence. so, you know, we ve all been warned, and we ll see what happens as he likes to say. what do you think, s.e.? reporter: well, we know he s very good at turning americans against each other. he did that in his campaign of president in 2015, throughout his presidency, and he is still doing it. we talk a lot about his ego and the need to be adored and see his power in evidence.
looking at a winter of severe illness and death for yourselves, your families, and the hospitals you may soon overwhelm. if someone is in your family isn t vaccinated, should you ask them not to show up? because yes, i would do that. jason: the covid fearmongering has got to stop. it s turning americans into paranoid maniacs who prorate each other for even slightly deviating from the new normal. take a look at what happened on a delta flight last week when an elderly man says he took off his mask. [bleep]. [indiscernible]. [bleep]. [bleep] jason: that s not the first time someone has been lambasted for daring to chew well unmasked
done that yet though. judging by her poll numbers, i say americans want to see a lot less of kamala harris, not more. hearing her say all that kind of made me cringe. i mean, that cackle is still there. have no fear, there are more moments like that from her interview, and here to help us break them down, stephen miller, former senior advisor for policy under president trump, and keira davis, writer and editor at large for red state. thank you both for joining us. stephen, i want to start with you because, i mean, her biggest failure is not traveling more? are you buying that? well, i will say this. she should have visited the border that she was in charge of months and months ago and i don t mean the show trip that she did where she never actually made it down to the front lines. she needs to go out there in the field where the agents are patrolling, meet with them, hear their concerns about the border catastrophe that she and joe biden are responsible for.
not even been to one of the major press conferences at the white house, which you would think that the secretary of health and human services would be a part of. when it came to the border issue, which hhs has a major role to play in the border because border patrol turns over all of the unaccompanied children over to hhs. a whole other story. he hasn t been down there. nor has he been out front and center dealing with the opioid epidemic. if so on the major issues, the major crises that we have been facing as americans, the health and human the hhs secretary has been m.i.a. and when asked about this, i believe in a radio interview that a reporter was able to actually track him down, they asked, well, why aren t you at any of these major briefings and why are you more front and center talking about this issue the same way that secretary azar was, he said it s not the
way too slow, but you know, biden is catching onto what americans have caught on to a year ago, they are voting with their feet, they re moving to florida, tennessee, texas, a thousand a day coming into florida for their individual freedom, for their liberty, because we believe that they can choose best for what s good for their families and their livelihood, not washington, d.c. and that underscores everything. that s why california, new york, illinois, massachusetts, or losing people left and right. jason: congressman, thank you, and thank you for your service and have a wonderful and a great new year. this may shock you, but the criminals have stolen nearly $100 billion in pandemic relief funds. that s your money, it s our money. out of that $100 billion stolen, the government has only been able to recover about $2 billion. would you trust them to responsibly spend more of your money? of course not.