Back to episode — Episode 2791 CWSA 03/27/25
Context —
little bit less secure, but it's only two hours before the strike—it's pretty unlikely that any notice is going to get to them in two hours. So life is just one decision after another. But if you were to read the news, it would look like half opinions. You know, a real opinion is you take the positive and the negative risks of everything you do. Okay, it could go this way, but it could go that way…
← Previous segment →udge who's been selected for this, who is randomly selected, totally randomly, is somebody named Judge Boasberg. Have you heard of him? Again, if you knew what was happening, you wouldn't know anything. If you knew who, you might know everything. So Boasberg, he's the activist judge who is blocking Trump from deporting violent gang members. He's the one who delayed, intentionally delayed, the release of Hillary Clinton's emails until after the 2016 election. He's considered an activist, anti-Trump judge.
So pulling it all together, it does look like an op. Because none of us would really believe that Ratcliffe's chief of staff—if that's what he was—Alex Wong. Now by the way, this is not confirmed that Alex Wong is the person who did it. That's just an accusation. But at the moment, since we know that Ratcliffe did not have any contact with, would not have had Goldberg's number on his own phone, and that a staffer was involved and almost certainly was the reason that Goldberg got added, and then you add to it of all the people in the world, add in Goldberg was the most dangerous thing you could do. So of all the people in the world, just that one guy gets added. And of all the people in the world, David Brock and Norm Eisen had a lawsuit that seemed like it was practically ready to go. And of all the people in the world who are randomly selected to be the judge, it's this Boasberg guy. That is a lot of coincidences, my friend.
Now again, if you didn't know the players and you didn't know that Alex Wong was actually part of the organization that is now suing them, it wouldn't look like it was necessarily a plot. But as soon as you know who the players are, it just screams. It just screams like it's a RICO plot anyway.
So now that we know that the big problem was the imaginary concern of what could have happened but didn't happen, I've suggested that Trump should create a Department of Imaginary Concerns. And it would be only to handle Democrat complaints. And the new department could have imaginary policies to combat the imaginary concerns. So you place things like climate change in there. Climate change, at least the crisis part of the climate change, you put the Russia collusion thing in there. You put the Houthis could have found out by hacking Signal in there. You put Trump might steal your democracy in the Imaginary Concerns Department. That Musk might steal our Social Security numbers, you put that right in the Department of Imaginary Concerns. And that there might be a constitutional crisis. Yep, that's the Department of Imaginary Concerns.
Now I'm not completely serious about this, but just think how funny it would be if every time one of these hoaxes comes up and Trump is asked about it, he says, oh, I've delegated that to the Department of Imaginary Concerns. But are you trying to steal our democracy? You know, that's a perfectly good question. So I've delegated that to th
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e Department of Imaginary Concerns. Did you agree with Putin to have sex with him if he stops the fighting? Well, you know, no, but I'm going to assign that to the Department of Imaginary Concerns, and we'll come up with an imaginary policy to make sure it doesn't happen again. So Byron York had some funny comments about Politico. So Politico had a statement in it that said there's no administrat…
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