Bill Clinton’s Testimony Under Fire: Unpacking the Epstein Connection and Political Fallout
35 min
•Feb 28, 2026about 2 months agoSummary
Episode covers Bill Clinton's Capitol Hill testimony regarding Jeffrey Epstein connections, President Trump's State of the Union address priorities including economic relief and aviation safety reforms, alleged FBI abuses and weaponization of the Justice Department, and emerging cancer trends potentially linked to pandemic-related factors.
Insights
- Economic relief measures (no taxes on overtime, tips, Social Security) are beginning to impact household finances measurably, shifting voter perception from statistics to real dinner-table affordability
- Aviation safety failures reveal systemic technology integration gaps between military and civilian aircraft requiring protocol changes at Department of Defense level
- Alleged coordination between state and federal prosecutors (Fannie Willis, Jack Smith) represents potential civil rights violations requiring criminal prosecution, not just professional consequences
- Cancer rate increases across multiple demographics may correlate with spike protein exposure from both COVID-19 infection and vaccination, warranting 5-15 year heightened surveillance
- Current bar associations lack enforcement mechanisms to deter prosecutorial misconduct, creating systemic vulnerability to weaponization of law enforcement
Trends
Shift from statistical economic metrics to household-level affordability perception driving voter sentimentIncreased focus on aviation safety technology integration between military and civilian airspaceEmerging pattern of coordinated state-federal prosecution strategies targeting political figuresRising cancer incidence in younger demographics correlating with pandemic timelineGrowing concern about FBI surveillance and phone record seizures of government officialsAddiction and recovery investment as policy priority alongside drug interdictionTelemedicine and at-home medical emergency kits as preventive healthcare modelForeign policy focus on Iran regime change through technology enablement rather than military interventionHousing affordability crisis driven by institutional investor consolidation of single-family homesGlyphosate herbicide exposure risk mitigation strategies for agricultural workers
Topics
Bill Clinton Epstein TestimonyPresidential State of the Union Address StrategyAviation Safety Technology IntegrationFBI Weaponization and Civil Rights ViolationsProsecutorial Misconduct and AccountabilityCancer Rate Increases and Spike ProteinEconomic Relief Measures and Tax PolicyHousing Affordability and Institutional InvestorsFentanyl Interdiction and Addiction RecoveryIran Regime Change StrategyGlyphosate Herbicide Health RisksTelemedicine and Emergency Medical KitsMilitary Aviation Protocol ReformPotomac River Sewage ContaminationBar Association Enforcement Mechanisms
Companies
The Wellness Company
Partner providing telemedicine services, emergency medical kits, and preventive health products featured throughout e...
Bayer Monsanto
Manufacturer of Roundup/glyphosate herbicide with multi-billion dollar settlement for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma claims
People
Bill Clinton
Testified on Capitol Hill regarding relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, denying knowledge of alleged crimes
Hillary Clinton
Gave deposition stating no knowledge of Jeffrey Epstein, claimed desire for truth while accusing committee of partisa...
Tom Barrett
U.S. Congressman (Michigan 7th District) discussing State of the Union priorities, aviation safety reforms, and addic...
Donald Trump
President delivering State of the Union address; subject of alleged coordinated state-federal prosecution strategy
Fannie Willis
Georgia prosecutor allegedly coordinating with Biden DOJ and White House to create parallel state case mirroring fede...
Jack Smith
Federal prosecutor allegedly coordinating with state prosecutors in double-drain strategy against Trump
Joe DiGenova
Former U.S. Attorney analyzing FBI abuses, prosecutorial misconduct, and recommending indictments of Willis and Smith
Peter McCullough
Chief Scientific Officer of Wellness Company discussing cancer trends, spike protein risks, and ivermectin cancer res...
Barack Obama
Named as potential unindicted co-conspirator in alleged January 2017 conspiracy against incoming President Trump
Susan Rice
Authored January 20, 2017 memo documenting Oval Office meeting discussing investigation into incoming Trump administr...
Kash Patel
White House official whose phone records allegedly seized by FBI without proper legal consent
Suzy Wiles
White House official whose phone records allegedly seized by FBI; lawyer denied consenting to monitoring
Jeffrey Epstein
Convicted sex offender whose connections to Clinton administration officials under congressional investigation
Ted Cruz
Senator who introduced Rotaract aviation safety bill being voted on in House
RFK
Advocate for eliminating glyphosate herbicide use; working on risk mitigation strategies with administration
Larry Krasner
Philadelphia prosecutor publicly stating intention to prosecute Trump after leaving office
Alvin Bragg
New York prosecutor involved in Trump cases cited as example of prosecutorial misconduct without consequences
John Brennan
Former CIA Director named in alleged conspiracy; subject of investigation in Fort Pierce
Quotes
"I didn't know that he was engaged in the things that he later was convicted to be engaged in and charge with. If I did, I would have turned them in myself."
Bill Clinton•Opening statement during Capitol Hill testimony
"You cannot worry about the political fallout from this. You must do what is right. And doing what is right is indicting a group of CIA, FBI, national security people for crimes against Donald Trump."
Joe DiGenova•Discussion of prosecutorial accountability
"This was a conspiracy. In my view, this isn't a complicated case. This is first year prosecution instruction. There was a conspiracy against Donald Trump."
Joe DiGenova•Analysis of state-federal coordination
"I think we're all at increased risk for cancer. I got to tell you, I'm very worried about this. I think we've got about a 5 to 15 year window of cancer concern."
Peter McCullough•Discussion of pandemic-related cancer trends
"The spike protein reduces our ability to detect and wipe out these cancer cells early, our natural tumor detection systems."
Peter McCullough•Explanation of cancer mechanism hypothesis
Full Transcript
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Welcome to the latest edition of John Solomon Reports, the podcast from Just the News, where right now we are tracking Bill Clinton's ongoing testimony on Capitol Hill. Yep, he's being asked to answer questions about his relationship with his good buddy, the convicted sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein. Yesterday, Hillary Clinton said, I don't know anything to know about the guy. Can I ask Bill about him? Yep, threw her husband under the bus on that one. Well, today, Bill Clinton did. And his opening statement said, very quickly, I didn't know that he was engaged in the things that he later was convicted to be engaged in and charge with. If I did, I would have turned them in myself. I don't know if people are going to buy that story, but we'll see. But there will be lots of revelations over the next 10 to 12 days on this very issue. And that will keep us all working real hard here at Just the News. Every moment will get you the very latest on that. And we've got a great lineup for you today to lean in and weigh in on this very, very important story. Kicking things off, Congressman Tom Barrett from Michigan. We talked to him earlier this week, and he's got a really great set of ideas about where we are in the state of our country, where we are in the development of our capabilities in the military. He's working very hard, Congressman Barrett, is to make our airlines a lot safer. By the way, they're very scary. Some of the safety issues we now have, the lack of technology synchronization, the potential for another midair collision like we just saw over the Potomac River in the nation's capital a year ago this past January. So we're going to start right there. And I think you're going to enjoy it a lot. In the second block of the show, we're going to turn to Joe DiGenova, one of the most accomplished federal prosecutors in American history, former U.S. attorney, former independent counsel. He's held many prestigious jobs. He is going to weigh in on two things, the Bill Clinton testimony today, and more importantly, are we going to get prosecutions for the weaponization of the gun? He's going to weigh in on what we just told you about earlier this week with Fannie Willis, what we told you about in other places. Joe DiGenova, former U.S. attorney in Washington, D.C., truly one of the great legal minds in our country. He's going to be our second block of the show. And then we'll finish up with a little bit of health on our minds. We've all got a little bit of health. Joining us, Dr. Peter McCullough, one of the greatest minds in the medical and public health space and also a disruptor to the medicine industry with his telehealth medicine and the work he does with The Wellness Company, one of our partners here at justthenews.com. By the way, you can take advantage of our partnership with The Wellness Company by going to twc.health slash justnews, twc.health slash justnews. Use the promo code justnews to check out. you get all sorts of discounts. That is our show today. I'm very proud of it. Congressman Tom Barrett, the great prosecutor, Joe DeGenova, and of course, the one and only Dr. Peter McCullough, here on the Friday, the final Friday of February, 2026 edition of John Solomon Reports. We're going to take a commercial break in a second, but before we do, a little shout out from my good friends at the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, which brings people of different faiths who We're at the core of the Judeo-Christian Western civilization, the Judeo-Christian founding of America, and we're all finding ourselves a little bit of a consternation. We're seeing anti-Israel, anti-Jewish, anti-American, anti-Western civilization sentiment creep up on all sides of the political eye. Yeah, it was on the left, but it's on the right too. You know this because I've said this before, and it comes out of my Catholic faith. 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Be the blessing. Live the word. Answer the call. Make a difference. All right, back in a second after the commercial break. Hey, folks, let me flag something important as we move into the winter. Doctors have warned that this year's flu season is going to be a rough one. Now, even mainstream media outlets like Fox News are reporting that a new, more virulent and severe flu strain is spreading faster in the U.S. like it did in Europe. The kicker, the already ineffective flu vaccine is even less effective against this new strain. That's not good. What the media won't tell you is that Dr. Peter McCullough, my good friend, warned about this weeks ago. In fact, right on this show, you know that because you were listening. He's been clear that this strain is more severe and is unlikely to respond to the flu vaccine, which means more personal preparations matter. That's why I trust the wellness company's two-step approach. Here's what it is. 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A lot happening up on Capitol Hill today. I was up there at 9 a.m. this morning, and it was already a hop in because the president, of course, is going to be delivering the first official State of the Union address of his second term later tonight. And with Democrats aiming to gain control of the House, what can we anticipate from President Trump's address? How is he going to engage with voters as we approach the midterm elections? Joining us now to discuss this and so much more is Congressman representing the great state of Michigan, their 7th district, Tom Barrett. Congressman, thanks so much for being with us. Amanda, thank you for having me. I really appreciate it. We're looking forward to the president's remarks tonight. Absolutely We appreciate you being here and I anticipate with so much of an emphasis on the economy and a lot of things happening last year that will start to bear fruit hopefully for Republicans coming up in the spring What do you anticipate President Trump's going to hit on? And do you think that will be the priority? Yes, absolutely. I mean, we're already seeing better and higher tax returns for many Americans, especially the hardest working Americans in the economy. those that are working overtime, like the road paving crew that I visited in my district last summer, you know, they were super excited about the no taxes on overtime wages that they earn. You know, the hardest working Americans that do that, the auto assembly line workers that put in extra hours after their 40 hour week is done as they're retooling a new assembly line or any of the other countless Americans that work overtime in extra hours paying no taxes on those overtime wages or the people in the service economy, no taxes on tips and gratuities for those that are providing services that have really transformed our economy in the last decade or so, or whether it's, you know, seniors like my mom and dad. My mom is my guest for the State of the Union tonight. And, you know, my parents and about 90 percent of other seniors are going to pay no taxes on their Social Security wages or Social Security benefits that they've earned. These are meaningful things. And then for the families in my district, like the ones in Carline, when I dropped my kids off at school and expanded child tax credit that'll make life just a little bit easier for people raising kids throughout our country. These are really great reforms. They're meaningful reforms, and they really go at the heart of, like I said, the hardest working Americans to give them the most relief that we can. There's a dynamic that is just starting to hit the dinner table now, Congressman, and that is that affordability isn't just in the statistics anymore. It's starting to hit. I went to the gas station this morning. I paid up to 70 last year at State of the Union. I paid about 320. I went to the pharmacy. My most expensive prescription was down about 30 percent. Food store eggs are down. It seems to me that sometimes it takes a few months for those statistics at the dinner table. But is this a night where the president reminds people that he made America affordable again? Yeah, absolutely. I mean, to your point about eggs alone, I mean, it was not long ago that we were paying six or more dollars for a dozen eggs. And now, you know, they're back down to two bucks or less for a dozen eggs. And, you know, that's a meaningful and measurable, you know, benefit that we've seen. But also, as we look at the trajectory line of where these things are heading, you know, we've got more work to do. I tell people all the time that in Congress, we're never going to work ourselves out of a job. There's always going to be a lot of problems to fix that we've got to do the hard work of doing. And now, you know, we got to put a lot of energy and attention around housing. The president has put forth some plans to really prevent these monopolistic, large hedge funds, sometimes foreign-owned entities from buying up and competing against single-family new entry-level homes that families would look to buy to start building their own family around. The average age of a first-time homebuyer in America is over 40 years old now. These are things that we've got to tackle. The president's put forward some ideas in which to do that. We've brought some ideas up in Congress. I've introduced some bills in that effort as well. There are real things that we need to do to tackle these problems that we're facing. I'm sure we're going to hear a lot about tariffs and foreign trade. We're going to hear about foreign policies, some of the bad actors abroad, whether that's in Venezuela, whether it's in Iran or other parts of the world. These are all things that the president's going to talk about. To your point about prescription drugs, the most favored nation status reforms that the president has worked really hard on so that Americans are not paying an unfair burden of the research and development that goes into these drugs. They're then sold far cheaper in every other developed country in the world. It's time that we expect other countries who are benefiting from these technologies to also contribute toward the research and development that goes into them so that Americans alone are not bearing that cost. Congressman, Republicans definitely have a formidable success record from last year, along with President Trump. But Democrats are going to use fear. They're going to say, you know, it's the age old women are going to lose. Women are going to lose their reproductive rights. Minorities are going to lose their voting rights. Everybody's going to be losing rights. How do you counter their message, especially with you guys already having gotten the Save America Act out of the House? But they are going to they're going to harp on all of these fears, which I hate to say it. It brings voters to the poll. Yeah. And unfortunately, we've seen far too many people in Congress looking for attention at any cost. And I just had my five-year-old son join me last week in Congress. I brought him out here, and I tell him all the time that not all attention is good attention. And I think a few members of Congress would benefit from that lesson as well. I also shared with you, I brought my mother as my State of the Union guest tonight, so I can tell you that I will be on my best behavior, and I will not be getting kicked out of the State of the Union. Mom will be watching, and maybe a few other members could benefit from that as well. And, you know, I'm willing to offer my mom is a disciplinarian to any of them that would benefit from that. I think that would be a benefit. That would be. That's a good idea. We might shape up Congress quickly. That's good. I can tell you, she's very well practiced. Oh, yeah. Yeah, that's about what you need to manage Congress. So that's pretty good. All right, I want to turn to something that you're taking the lead on. I know it's close to your heart personally. Aviation safety. We have a great industry. It's pretty safe, but there are things that we can be doing to use technology to make it safe for the Potomac crash a year ago, January, was an eye opener to a lot of people on just the failures that occurred. Tell us what you're up to and how it's going to make our airlines even safer. Yeah, I've introduced and thank you. We've put forth a number of reforms that I've submitted. I obviously have some experience in this, having flown helicopters in the Army before coming to Congress, flown night vision goggles and logged time flying the same and similar types of aircraft. the helicopter that tragically was involved in that collision over Washington, Washington, D.C.'s airport and crashed into the Potomac. And, you know, over 60 lives were lost in that tragedy. We've got to make serious changes to what's going on and not to get too granular with the particulars and the details of technology. But just as an example, the American Airlines flight had a technology called ADS-B, which is the precision kind of positioning broadcast of where that aircraft is for awareness of other aircraft and air traffic control. They had ADS-B broadcasting out of the aircraft, but they did not have the receiver coming into the aircraft. The helicopter had ADS-B coming into the aircraft, but not going out of the aircraft. The airplane had collision avoidance technology on board, but the helicopter did not. And all of these things need to integrate and intermesh together. It's going to take some changes within the Department of War to change their protocol of how they use these technologies. We want to protect national security and sensitivity of missions when they are sensitive in nature to protect that national security interest. And there are ways to do that. I have an ADS-B out loophole bill that would require the Department of War to use this broadcasting technology for their position unless they are conducting a sensitive or secret mission. And only during the phases of flight where it is secret or sensitive, when they come back over Washington, D.C. airport and they're flying across the Potomac River at the base of the runway being used for landing, at that point, they ought to turn this on so that everyone can know where their location is to keep everyone safe. The Rotaract is one that was introduced by Senator Ted Cruz. It's being voted on in the House today. It is a step in the right direction that I intend to support on the floor today. And then we'll see where that kind of goes from there. But fundamentally, we have to change the practice and the protocol that the Department of War has been using. We've got, in my opinion, too many spoiled generals looking to get flown on helicopters around Washington, D.C. and other parts of the country. We've got to change that practice to really improve upon aviation safety. So we're not introducing risk into the national airspace. It's important work that needs to get done. And I'm doing my best to really balance all of this in the way that is appropriate and take the findings of the NTSB report and put those into practice and change our protocols of how this happens. That's really great. Congressman, you've had some important conversations lately. I just finished watching the Charlie Sheen documentary. And if I learned anything from that, it's that there is a deficit of these services in this country when it comes to recovery. but you've had some important conversations in Michigan about addiction recovery. Tell us what you found. Yeah, I had the benefit of when I was in the state legislature sitting next to my seatmate when I was in the state house was a really strong addiction and recovery advocate. This is really eye-opening, and you look at the cultural effects of so many things that have happened in our country, and these are real things that we've got to improve upon. I'm really proud that we've seen a decline or a decrease for the first time in so long of opioid and fentanyl overdose deaths. That is attributable a lot to obviously the work that's been done here in Congress, as well as the president to halt the flow of fentanyl into our country. But also look at addiction and recovery therapies and treatments that we can invest in to give hope and give confidence and give recovery to more and more Americans. That is something we need to do. It's a it's a cultural thing we need to fix. but it's also an enforcement of halting the flow of these illegal drugs into our country so that more Americans are not found to have these tragedies arise. And prevention is the best thing we can do, but then addiction and recovery are also pieces that we need to invest heavily in. And I'm proud of that work that we're doing. There's more that we have to do. We're still losing far too many Americans to these overdose deaths but really getting at the root is going to be so critically important And I hope the president brings up and speaks about some of that tonight as well Yeah So we got about a minute left real quick I want to ask about Iran We already disabled their nuclear program or set it back quite a ways. If the president were to launch another military attack, his regime changed the ultimate goal. Well, I think certainly, you know, the Ayatollah is a belligerent, you know, basically pseudo dictator in Iran that has destabilized the entire region. I lost friends in Iraq to the hands of Iranian produced munitions and bombs that were used to kill friends of mine in Iraq. And there are families that are shattered in our country through the loss of life during the war on terror that was born a lot of that out of the efforts that were undertaken in Iran. So it is not in any way too soon to see a change of leadership in Iran. And I'm hopeful that the people there will continue to rise up, continue to voice their desire for freedom. And I think there are things we can do short of us sending military troops on the ground into Iran that would enable the people of Iran to take ownership of their own country, whether that's technology that bypasses the internet censoring, whether it's cell phones that directly connect to satellite technology to allow them to bypass the censorship that's going on, or whether it's other organizing efforts that we can take to really empower the people in Iran that have to decide this for themselves, what the next steps of their country is going to be. They don't want to live under the thumb of the Ayatollah. Their currency is devalued down to almost nothing. They've had an oppressive regime for decades now, longer than I've even been alive. This is really serious stuff that I'm optimistic about the direction that the Iranian people are taking to bring about fundamental change in their country. And I just hope and pray that that will continue to take effect so that we can have a peaceful relationship with Iran. Hey, folks, don't go anywhere. When you come back from the commercial break, Joe DiGeneva, one of the great legal minds in our country, one of the greatest and most accomplished prosecutors of his generation. Up next, we're weighing on Bill Clinton, weaponization, the recent revelation that Kash Patel and Suzy Wiles' phone records were taken. Holy moly, so much for him to weigh in. We'll be right back. Welcome back, everybody. After Hillary Clinton's deposition yesterday, she stated that she wants the truth to come out while accusing the House Oversight Committee of engaging in partisan political theater. This, of course, raises an important question about transparency. Will individuals like Hillary and Bill Clinton be held accountable if there was wrongdoing? Joining us now to discuss this is former U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C., and friend of the show, Joe DeGeneva. Joe, great to see you. Good morning. I want to ask you about any instances in that interview that seemed concerning for Hillary Clinton. I expected her to inject a little bit more opportunity for, I guess, plausible deniability, but there were numerous instances where she answered the questions unequivocally. She said she had no knowledge of any of Jeffrey Epstein's crimes. She had never met him. She really didn't leave any wiggle room for herself. What problems did you see for her testimony? Well, I think there are very, very few problems for Hillary, first of all. When you're as arrogant as Hillary Clinton is, you're arrogant for a reason. It's because you're a smart ass and you think you're smarter than everybody else. Who knows whether or not she stepped in it? I've always felt that the Epstein thing was a big waste of time. Nothing that's occurred over the past few weeks, including all the big stuff in England, has convinced me otherwise. All the criticism of the Justice Department about not prosecuting anybody. Unfortunately for them, you need evidence to prosecute people. Some of this is unseemly. It's ugly. You wonder why people would have ever gotten close to this thug, this ugly, oleaginous creep. But the bottom line is this. I don't expect much from Hillary, and she fulfilled my promises. And Bill Clinton, the only thing you need to know about Bill is his famous statement. It all depends upon what the meaning of is is. So questioning him, I'm sure, will be troublesome for the committee members who are pretty lousy question askers. Yeah, that's always been a trick with Congress. They don't know how to interrogate like a great prosecutor like you do. Let me ask you about what I think the Epstein scandal was designed to distract from, which is these almost daily bombshells that are now coming out of the FBI and Justice Department files. We haven't gotten any accountability, but we have a level of visibility now to abuses that even I couldn't have imagined a few years ago. The president's chief of staff and FBI director being monitored by the FBI. Their phone records are taken, allegedly one consensual thing. You've got now the proof that we got out of Fannie Willis that she was coordinating directly with the Biden DOJ, Biden White House, and J6 Democrats to create a double deputy, double drain, double resource drain on Trump by creating a state case that mirrored Jack Smith. And then you go to Arctic Frost, you go back to Crossfire Hurricane. How bad, I mean, you were inside these agencies in a different era where the rule of law still reigned. How bad are these violations and do we have a prosecutable set of cases against those who ran the FBI and the intelligence community? Absolutely, there are prosecutable cases. That's the first thing. I wrote a memo for the administration early on, which I sent to the White House and to the Justice Department, which I never got a response from them about, which bothered me immensely because it showed the lack of seriousness and organization. It is very clear that President Trump and private citizen Trump was the victim of a brazen plot conspiracy to deny him his civil rights, both as a candidate in 2016, as a private citizen thereafter, and as a candidate in 2020. The most shocking thing to me, that there has been no discussion whatsoever of the famous Susan Rice memo on January the 20th, 2017, which she sent to herself, establishing that on January 5th, President Obama, Vice President Biden, John Brennan, Clapper, the director of the FBI, the DOJ attorney general, met in the Oval Office and discussed an investigation into the incoming president of the United States. And the only thing Barack Obama could say was, do it by the book. This, to me, goes into a criminal conspiracy against Donald Trump, you may not be able to indict Obama, but he should be named as an unindicted co-conspirator along with Susan Rice. This is a huge matter. It's been totally ignored. And I hope that the prosecutor down in Florida, Jason Redding Quinones, understands this. I don't know if he does. He's a very bright fellow. I don't know if he has the guts to do what has to be done in this. You cannot worry about the political fallout from this. You must do what is right. And doing what is right is indicting a group of CIA, FBI, national security people for crimes against Donald Trump. People don't like Donald Trump. That's too bad. You don't have the right to frame him for crimes he didn't commit. Yeah, I think in the dictionary next to CYA, there will be a PDF image of that Susan Rice memo. Joe, I want to ask you about the other side of lawfare. I am not convinced that all of the cases against President Trump that led into the 2024 election are done away with. And I also am not disillusioned into thinking that they won't continue to go after him after his presidency. Is there a high level of concern for you? Or do you think that now, especially now he has executive privilege that has been reaffirmed, that that is not necessarily a great concern? Well, unfortunately, the presidential immunity may not help him in the cases in the state courts. And we now have seen a series of attorneys general and local prosecutors like Larry Krasner in Philadelphia make statements that they're going to, quote, get the president after he leaves office. You've heard people like Hakeem Jeffries and others make statements like that. This is very disturbing. It's unsettling in a democracy. But here's what the Democrats are doing. They're doubling down on dirty. They started the lawfare against Donald Trump in 2016. They have continued it to this day. He has not weaponized the Justice Department against them. He's investigating the crimes that they committed against him and others. And what the Democrats are going to do, or they say they're going to do, obviously, if they take the House, they're going to impeach the president. They're going to try to, at least anyway. I don't think they'll ever be able to convict him in the Senate. But the bottom line is this. When I saw the other day that Kash Patel and Susan Wiles had had their phone records and other things seized by the FBI, and the thing that gave it away that it was dirty was when they said that Susan Wiles' lawyer consented to the monitoring of the call. I knew that was a lie. No lawyer would ever consent to a conversation with his client being monitored by the FBI. And now we know that he has categorically denied that that occurred. That was a federal crime. That was the FBI illegally monitoring a private citizen. This is just the beginning of it. The grand juries for this need to be endless, and they need to start tomorrow. Yeah. And there is pretty strong signs of a lot of activity in Fort Pierce right now A lot of it seems to be centered around John Brennan who might be just an early figure in this but there does seem to be some really substantial activity I know a lot of people who had their records subpoenaed It does seem to be cranking up I want to go down to what you were talking about with the Larry Krasners, because the reason they feel so emboldened to do it in the future is that it happened in the past with Alvin Bragg, with Fannie Willis, with the Arizona Attorney General, with the Wisconsin Attorney General, and there's been no consequence. What we now see in these documents that Fannie Willis tried to keep from just the news for three years, we win the lawsuit. And now you see she's coordinating every bit of this. The Biden White House says, waive executive Povich for a state case. That's very rare. She gets that. We want your federal workers to testify here. They get their waivers. The January 6th committee is not even done with its work. It's sending its material down to the state. And Jack Smith's going to indict President Trump for the same crimes. and she's going to do something similar. It seems like this was a double drain, double jeopardy strategy where the feds and the states are all working together. There is no doubt about it, John. You've hit the nail on the head describing the facts and the circumstances. This was a conspiracy. In my view, this isn't a complicated case. This is first year prosecution instruction. There was a conspiracy against Donald Trump. There have been several of them, several plots to harm him. And there is no doubt that that coordination between state and federal people under these circumstances. There's nothing wrong necessarily with state and federal coordinating to solve crimes. But when you're doing it to deny someone their civil rights, that's an entirely different thing. It'll be a great defense for them to present that they were only trying to protect the republic from Donald Trump. But it'll have to be a defense. It's not going to be something that's going to prevent an indictment. I believe that Fannie Willis and Jack Smith should be indicted. I believe that the time for that has long overdue and I hope that Ford Pierce and Miami are considering it. If she is indicted, Fannie Willis, and if she skates through the system and she ends up relatively unscathed on the other side, what is there as a deterrent to people in the law community? Is it professional shaming? Is it firing from their law firms? What is it that can dissuade people in the law community from doing this again? Well, I'm not sure she's going to skate. First of all, these cases are not going to be brought on her home territory. They're going to be brought in Florida. They're not going to be brought in Washington, D.C., where you have biased juries and regrettably, may I say, biased federal judges. I have never seen a more disgraceful group of federal judges than the one in my old courthouse in Washington, D.C. It's simply awful. By the way, bar associations are not going to disbar any of these people unless they're committed a crime. All bar associations in this country are left-wing hangouts. They're disgraceful. Look what they did to Rudy Giuliani. Absolutely outrageous in New York and D.C. Totally unnecessary. Being disbarred for making arguments in court that the other side doesn't like and they just happen to control the penalty system? Ridiculous. Fannie Willis needs to be indicted, and so does Jack Smith. And even if they're acquitted, that's a signal. You want to do this kind of stuff, you want to corrupt the federal law enforcement process, you want to corrupt the state law enforcement process, you're going to pay a price. In that sense, I believe in what the Democrats say. The punishment is the process. All right, folks, one more good one to go. Dr. Peter McCullough right around the corner. Don't go anywhere. We'll be right back. Welcome back, America. I'm always excited when we have this next guest. He is one of the most cogent voices in the world of medicine. And he also happens to be the chief scientific officer, one of our great partners here at Justinews, the wellness company. We welcome back Dr. Peter McCullough. Sir, good to have you back on. Thank you. All right. I want to start with something a little closer to home here in the nation's capital, a quarter billion gallons of human waste dumped into the Potomac River and a large potential for downstream problems in the water supply around the nation's capital. There's a lot about the incompetence that led to the failure, the inability to fix the pipe, not take care of it before it broke. But at the end of the day, now we've got a potential health crisis heading into the spring when the snow thaws here. What should we all be worried about and what should we be doing to take an early precaution? We're talking a massive sewage spill, human waste. So that means E. coli, salmonella, viruses like hepatitis A, rotavirus. The water is not drinkable in any way. It's not even swimmable. I'd be very cautious in going out in the water downstream from that spill. Our pets shouldn't be drinking the water. And people should be thinking that if they got a bacterial gastroenteritis, they should have a medical emergency kit on hand so they can handle Remember, E. coli and salmonella GI infections are readily treatable, but you need prescription antibiotics. Yeah, that's a great point. That's something you made so easy for all of us. I mean, the revolution that your company has created in telemedicine, we don't have to wait for the crisis to hit. We can have it on hand when it hits because we're prepared. And that's something amazing that the wellness company has done. There has been a lot of concern, a lot of talk about cancer turbo cancels. We just saw a young star on television, James Van Der Beek, dying early of collateral cancer. Why do we think we're seeing this surge? And what are some of the important things we can be doing to protect ourselves from that potential danger? My hunch is that the most common cancers, colon, prostate and breast are all going up. I think it's due to the pandemic, John. And I would predict that it's both SARS-CoV-2 infection that 90% of us had and the COVID vaccines. They both load the body with the spike protein. The spike protein reduces our ability to detect and wipe out these cancer cells early, our natural tumor detection systems. I think we're all at increased risk for cancer. I got to tell you, I'm very worried about this. I examine all my patients very carefully, myself and my family. I'm warning people, stay on guard. I think we've got about a 5 to 15 year window of cancer concern. We should all be on alert. You can see it. I mean, the rates are jumping. There's no doubt about it. Another place where cancer has been a big issue, the use of glyphosate in weed herbicides like Roundup. President Trump, RFK want to get rid of it. But right now, the ag industry is just too dependent on it. We're sort of in a catch-22 perhaps. We certainly are. We're talking about Roundup or glyphosate. It's the most commonly used herbicide. When you get a big jug of Roundup, that's about 41% glyphosate. There's enough medical literature to suggest it is associated with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, a form of adult cancer of the lymph nodes. And the greatest concern are people who work with it, like farmhands, people who are spraying it. largely you have to have a lot of exposure. It's not people like you and me living in suburbia in America. We have relatively little exposure. Now, Bayer Monsanto has a multi-billion dollar settlement. People can actually place claims now for over 20 years. But RFK has come out and level with the country that we are dependent on this. We will need risk mitigation strategies. I think very importantly, we need to protect the farm workers. One of the things we've done at the wellness company is developed the shield system. The shield system is a system of oral capsules taken three times a day and then a drink. It combines the most potent botanical and medicinal herbs that are anti-cancer. Real quickly, about 30 seconds left. You were the first person to tell me this. Ivermectin is a potential fighter of cancer. Now the National Cancer Institute is studying it. It's a big moment in the fight against cancer, isn't it? It certainly is. We need to see ivermectin and mambazole in combination in large cancer trials. The results are just too good pre-clinically and in small human studies. Yeah, and you were the first to give us that insight so well over a couple years ago. We're so lucky to have this partnership with you and all the great folks at the Wellness Company. Sir, great to have you on again. Look forward to having you on soon. Thanks for joining us. Thank you. All right, folks, that wraps up our Friday edition of John Solomon Reports, the podcast from Just the News. A big thank you to Congressman Tom Barrett, to the great prosecutor Joe DiGenova, and to Dr. Peter McCullough. Also, a big thank you to our good friends at the wellness company, twc.health.com. That's how you get great discounts there. And also, our good friends at ifcj.org. Go check them both out. They're two great partners here with us. Back tomorrow with a two-day special starting Saturday and Sunday, you're not going to believe this, but the tin cans that our food comes in, you know, when you pop open a soup can or a can of peas or a can of vegetables, they're going up in price because of an unintended consequence. We're going to explain that for two straight days. You're going to really enjoy that. Saturday and Sunday, Saturday will describe the problem. Sunday will describe the solution. I'm very excited about that. Stay tuned. We've got a lot of fun stuff ahead. Until then, God bless you and have a great, great night. you