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00:00Yeah, please.
00:01The Press.
00:02In a court filing, the White House said that Elon Musk is not a Doge employee and has no
00:08authority to make decisions.
00:10Can you clarify for us today what his exact role is there?
00:14Yeah.
00:15Yeah.
00:16Elon is, to me, a patriot.
00:18So, you know, you could call him an employee, you could call him a consultant, you could
00:21call him whatever you want.
00:23But he's a patriot.
00:24I mean, look at the kind of things I just said, just write it down, just in case that
00:27question got asked, right?
00:29And which I'm surprised it took so long, actually.
00:32But you know what?
00:34Ukraine's a bigger deal because people are dying by the thousands a week, thousands.
00:40But look at this.
00:41From 90 to 99, Social Security, 6,054,000 people.
00:47Well, that's OK.
00:49Maybe that's possible.
00:50You know, 90 to 90, 99.
00:53Maybe it's possible.
00:54That's a lot of people, though, with that.
00:56But people that live to 100 to 109, 4,734,000.
01:01Wow, that's a lot.
01:03That means over 100 years old, there are 4 million people.
01:05I don't know.
01:06I don't know too many.
01:07I know people that are doing great in their 90s, but not too many people over 100.
01:11But over 120, from 120 years old, people that are 120 years old up to 129, 3,472,000 people.
01:25Wow, you know that can't possibly be because the record is like, I think it's one person,
01:31a woman lived to 127, but they have 3,472.
01:35Okay, but now we're going really in.
01:38People from 130 years old to 139 year old, 3,936,000.
01:45Wow, I wonder if people are getting paid with all this.
01:50I mean, are these checks?
01:51And that's what we're checking right now.
01:55People from 140 years old to 149 years old, 3,542,000, 140 years old and beyond.
02:06Now, now we're really going because we're looking to break the record by 25 years.
02:11People from 150 years old to 159 years old, 1,345,000.
02:20These are in the, by the way, these are in the computer files.
02:23This is what they do well.
02:24They're super, I asked Elon, who are these Doge people?
02:29He said, they're super brilliant computer people and they love the country.
02:33It's simple.
02:34Wait a minute, people from 160 years old to 169 years, 121,000.
02:40So 160 year old people, 170 to 179,000, 6,087.
02:48But now let's go into the real numbers.
02:53From 200 to 209 years old, 879 people.
02:59From 210 years old, I haven't met any of them.
03:03And if I did, I would bless them.
03:05I would, I would worship the ground they walk on.
03:09210 to 219 years old, 866.
03:15From 220 years old to 229 years old, 1,039.
03:22And then you have two people from 240 years old to 249 years old, one person.
03:30And there's one person that's 360 years old.
03:36That's just that.
03:37And then where's the money being spent, right?
03:40Let's go into that for just a second.
03:43$520 million for a consultant on the environment.
03:52It's called Environmental, Social, and Governance Investments in Africa and Mobilized Private
03:59Sector Resources, $520 million.
04:04Somebody got $520 million for an environmental, sounds like an environmental study.
04:10I've always been one that paid a lot of money for my environmental studies, but they, you
04:14know, I'd pay like $50,000, not $520 million, $520 million for ESG, $25 million to promote
04:26biodiversity, conservation, and promote licit livelihoods by developing socially responsible
04:34behavior in the country of Colombia.
04:36Well, it's nice, $25 million to go into Colombia for something that nobody ever heard of.
04:43$40 million to improve the social and economic inclusion of sedentary migrants, $40 million.
04:52$42 million for Johns Hopkins, great place to research and drive social and behavior
04:59change in Uganda, $42 million.
05:01What about us?
05:02What about social change in our country?
05:05$70 million for a center at Purdue to research university-sourced, evidence-based solutions
05:12to developmental challenges.
05:14I mean, these are massive numbers on things that nobody ever heard about.
05:19$10 million for Mozambique voluntary medical male circumcisions, $10 million for circumcisions
05:27in another country, $9.7 million for UC Berkeley to develop a cohort of Cambodian youth with
05:37enterprise-driven skills.
05:38In other words, let's teach them something about enterprise.
05:41What about our people?
05:43Can't we teach them about enterprise?
05:44$2.3 million for strengthening independent voices in Cambodia, $32 million to the Prague
05:52Civil Society Center, which is a very liberal group of people.
05:56I wonder how much of that money came back to the people that approved it.
05:59$14 million for improving public procurement in Serbia, $486 million to the Consortium
06:08for Elections and Political Process Strengthening, including $22 million for inclusive and participatory
06:16political process in Moldova, and $21 million for voter turnout in India.
06:23Well, why are we giving $21 million to India?
06:26They got a lot of money.
06:27They're one of the highest-taxing countries in the world, in terms of us.
06:31We can hardly get in there because their tariffs are so high.
06:34I have a lot of respect for India.
06:36I have a lot of respect for the Prime Minister.
06:37He just left, as you know, two days ago.
06:39But we're giving $21 million for voter turnout.
06:43It's voter turnout in India.
06:46What about, like, voter turnout here?
06:48We've done that, I guess.
06:49We did $500 million, didn't we?
06:50It's called the lockboxes.
06:52$20 million for fiscal federalism in Nepal.
06:58Listen to these numbers.
06:59This is all fraud.
07:01$19 million for biodiversity conservation in Nepal.
07:07$1.5 million for voter confidence.
07:10We want to give them confidence in Liberia.
07:13$14 million for social cohesion in Mali.
07:18$2.5 million for inclusive democracies in South Africa.
07:23$47 million for improving learning outcomes in Asia.
07:29Asia is doing very well.
07:31They're doing a lot better than we do in the schools, aren't they?
07:33$2 million to develop sustainable recycling models to increase socioeconomic cohesion
07:39among marginalized communities in Kosovo and Ashkali and in Egypt.
07:48We're talking about hundreds of billions of dollars, and we're doing it.
07:53But when I saw the Social Security numbers, I said, wow, that's really something.
07:59So we have — let's just go above 100 years old.
08:02We have millions and millions of people over 100 years old.
08:06Everybody knows that's not so.
08:09We have a very corrupt country.
08:11Very corrupt country.
08:12And it's a sad thing to say, but we're figuring it out.
08:16Now, the good thing about Social Security and what I read is, if you take all of those
08:21numbers off — because they're obviously fraudulent or incompetent — but if you take
08:27all of those millions of people off Social Security, all of a sudden we have a very powerful
08:33Social Security with people that are 80 and 70 and 90, but not 200 years old.
08:41You know, so it's a very positive thing.
08:42How about over here?
08:43Yeah, please.
08:44The Press Who resigned?
08:45The Press The head of Social Security.
08:50I don't know.
08:51I mean, I — resigned or got fired?
08:53I think got fired.
08:55You know, when you fire somebody, they always resign, and then they say, ah, we resigned.
08:59But when you have numbers like that, I think, really, it's — got fired.
09:05They have to get fired.
09:06Who would — who would keep them?
09:07How could you have numbers like this?
09:09Now, the big thing is, how many of these people got paid?
09:12Were they getting paid?
09:15Were they getting paid?
09:16How many of them were getting paid, Social Security?
09:18Because that's — if that's the case, it's a massive fraud.
09:20We'll have to call those great Palm Beach police into this situation, right?
09:24You guys would figure that out very quickly.
09:27But how many of them are being paid?
09:29I mean, maybe millions of them.
09:32But it's a total fraud.
09:33Also, a lot of illegal immigrants are in Social Security that shouldn't be there.