Your News Talk America with Jake Smith – 12/12/2024

Happy Thanksgiving

 

Your News Talk America with Jake Smith. Welcome to the digital and interactive program.

To participate live by asking and voting on questions, chatting with viewers, and watching the show, got to RealNewsTalk.com and click the "Watch Here" button. You can view questions by clicking on the "Recent", "Popular", or "On Deck" buttons at the top of the left column.

To ask a question fill out the field on the left. You may vote on questions by pressing on the up and down arrow to the left of each question. You can watch the show in the middle and see current questions below the show window. You are the "Producers", ask questions and your votes count. There will be way more questions than time which makes voting important.

You can chat with other Producers and comment in the chat which is in the right column. You can keep notes by clicking the link to the right of your name in the upper right corner. If you asked your question in Mukana, and there is an issue with ti or we run out of time we will send your question back to your notes. Show notes will be posted on https://www.RealNewsTalk.com and the shows will be posted the following week.


10:10 AM ET

Segment Topic:

Has Trump learned his lesson?  Will the person most affected by the Great Satan’ spying on Americans, put a stop to domestic spying?

Will Donald Trump Stop Domestic Spying?

By Judge Andrew Napolitano:

       During the course of an FBI written response to a Freedom of Information Act request asking about the trade names and suppliers of surveillance software the FBI had purchased, the government has yet again quietly acknowledged its antipathy to constitutional provisions that all of its employees have sworn to uphold.

       Since we are dealing with software used to spy on Americans in the U.S. and abroad, the constitutional right being transgressed is the right to privacy.

       This is the ancient natural right to be left alone, which the Supreme Court took 175 years to recognize as being protected by the Fourth Amendment. Since that recognition in 1965, however, notwithstanding near universal judicial acceptance of the constitutional protection of the right, the executive branch of the government has persistently negated it.

       Here is the backstory.

       The Fourth Amendment, which requires judicially issued search warrants based on probable cause of crime for all searches and seizures, protects the contents of devices that store data. Thus, the owners of mobile devices and desktop computers have a privacy right in the data they have stored there. Even a narrow interpretation of the amendment, which guarantees privacy in “persons, houses, papers, and effects,” must acknowledge that a computer chip is an “effect” and thus its owner enjoys this protection.

       It is an allegiance to the plain language, general understanding and definitive judicial interpretations of the Fourth Amendment to which all in government have sworn.

       During the first Trump administration, and likely behind the president’s back but with the knowledge of senior folks appointed by him, the FBI purchased Israeli-manufactured software known as zero-click. Zero-click refers to the ability of the user of the software to target and download the contents of a computer without the need for tricking an unwary target into clicking on to a link. The manufacturer of this diabolic software is known as NSO, and the trade name of the software is Pegasus.

       When President Joe Biden learned of the FBI’s use of Pegasus without search warrants, he banned it from government use, and his Department of Commerce banned all American purchases from NSO. The FBI now stores this software in a warehouse in New Jersey.

       Why didn’t Biden just do his job and prohibit all warrantless domestic spying?

       When Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., the former chair of the House Intelligence Committee, revealed that the Drug Enforcement Administration has purchased a similar product to Pegasus, called Graphite, from another Israeli manufacturer, called Paragon, Congress included in a $1.65 trillion omnibus legislation provisions that give the director of national intelligence power to prohibit all parts of the intelligence community from purchasing or using foreign spyware.

       Why didn’t Congress just do its job and prohibit all warrantless domestic spying?

       The answers to these questions reflect that the intelligence community knows too much about American presidents and too many members of Congress for Congress to defy it. Thus, Rep. Schiff’s proposal, which became law, was premised upon a supposed congressional fear that the Israeli-manufactured spyware, when employed by the FBI or DEA, could serve as a spying mechanism by the Israeli government on the American government.

       How quaint; spies spying on each other! Taxpayers paying for this. The Constitution trashed yet again. Congress concerned about itself and not the people it represents.

       When Rep. Schiff’s civil liberties-defending colleague, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., asked the DEA about this, it declined to give him a clear answer. Sen. Wyden was concerned about the DEA spying on Americans outside the U.S. Outside? Yes, outside. For years, the governments of presidents of both parties have argued that the Fourth Amendment only restrains law enforcement, not intelligence, and they have argued that the Constitution only restrains the government in the U.S.

       This discredited argument has been rejected by the Supreme Court since the 1940s, and as recently as 2008, when the court held that wherever the government goes to do its work, the Constitution goes with it. This holding is hardly novel. Rather, it is based on 400 years of British law that prohibited kings and sheriffs from removing defendants to places outside of Britain for torture and interrogation, only to be returned for trial.

       Were this rule -- wherever the government goes, so goes the Constitution -- not so, then nothing would prevent the FBI and DEA from doing what British officials tried to get away with.

       Now, back to the feds spying on us. Joe Biden’s DEA, and Donald Trump’s before it, takes the position that when it operates outside the U.S. -- such as its drug war against Mexico and Mexican civilians -- it also operates outside the Constitution. In order to prevent a judicial prohibition of its extra-constitutional lawlessness, lawyers for the DEA must labor mightily to keep its behavior and its well-discredited arguments from being aired in an American courtroom.

       They do this in two ways. First, as addressed above, is to use quiet threats to coerce government officials to decline to prohibit expressly these practices. And second, if necessary, to dupe federal judges and defense lawyers by creating a fictitious version of its acquisition of evidence. The fiction usually posits a foreign intermediary handing over evidence to the feds who hand it to other feds who do not know of its criminal origins.

       Criminal? Yes, criminal. Hacking a computer without consent or a search warrant is a crime, no matter where the computer is located, or by whom.

       Rep. Schiff and Sen. Wyden are well-intentioned. They each have a consistent track record of defending civil liberties from attacks by the government. But the culture in Congress today prevents full-throated congressional defenses of privacy, no matter which party is in control.

       We have elected a government and hired its employees to protect our liberties and our property. Today it does neither. Rather, it assaults them.

  • Will the new Donald Trump put a stop to this?
  • Is the drone invasion related to domestic or international spying on Americans?

Panelist:

NONE (Judge Napolitano last minute cancellation)

Questions:

Producers please provide the questions.


10:35 AM ET

Segment Topic:

  • Has the infiltration of our airspace by drones permitted our enemies to replace spying (previously done spy by spy satellites) to simply place a boat (acting like an aircraft carrier) offshore and fly drones into America with which could be mapping out targets to attack at some point in the future?
    • New Jersey Congressman Jeff Van Drew pointed the finger at Iran?
    • The Pentagon and FAA are embroiled in a Washington-based: NOT MY JOB MAN!
    • Drone invasion appears to have started after the results of the November election were known. Any connection?
    • Is the purpose to spy or to map-out potential targets on the Homeland?

Panelist:

Brigadier General Blaine Holt, USAF Ret.

Brig. Gen. Holt is a former Deputy United States Military Representative to (NATO). He supported the Military Representative and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in executing the U.S. political-military mission at the North Atlantic Council.

General Holt was a command pilot with more than 3,900 flying hours in a variety of aircraft. He is a

frequent contributor to Newsmax.

General Holt says in his latest opinion piece

Questions: 

Producers please provide the questions.


11:10 AM ET

Segment Topic:

  • What did the Mangione family know and when did they know it?

Fox News:

  • Blood is thicker than a viral surveillance image of a suspected killer grinning at a flirty clerk in the lobby of a New York City hostel.
  • Luigi Mangione, the former Ivy League computer science major now suspected of shooting UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in the back in New York City has dozens of cousins in his prominent Maryland family. But none of them appear to have recognized him after his smiling face went viral in connection with a nationwide manhunt that ended Monday.
  • One of Mangione's former high school classmates had a simple explanation – the suspected assassin is most recognizable for his dark, curly hair, which was covered up in images that the NYPD released before his arrest.
  • "I think when something so large-profile happens naturally, I automatically disregard that," former classmate Freddie Leatherbury told "Fox & Friends" Wednesday. He figured it could have been anybody – but not someone he knew.
  • NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny told "Your World" host Neil Cavuto that of more than 200 tips police received in the case, none of them named Mangione.
  • And the thing that I remember about Luigi, if anything, was his really distinct curly hair, and in all the security camera footage, all you saw was him with a hat on or a hood on," he said. "That wasn't a connection that I was making. And, of course, Italians in New York are a dime a dozen. So just the jaw structure alone, the face, that wasn't a connection that I was really rushing to make. So, I really just brushed it off when I saw it, to be honest."

Should those who are found to have delayed the arrest of the suspect be charged with wasting police time?

Panelist:

Producers

Questions:

Producers please provide the questions.


11:35 AM ET

Segment Topic:

Panelist:

Sample Questions:


Community Guidelines

Thank you for being part of the DTDMedia Community. We value our producers and encourage an active participation by having everyone ask questions vote and chat. In order to keep the DTD Media Community and this platform engaging and respectful to all members we request all commenters adhere to our guidelines.

Respectful Debate: We encourage a variety of opinions and open debate but please refrain from using threatening language or making direct threats. Civil discourse is key.

Accuracy and Ownership: Ensure that your contributions are either factual or clearly presented as your own opinions. Posts containing illegal, discriminatory, offensive or misleading content will not be tolerated."

Use Real Names: For a better and more respectful experience we encourage participants to use their real names rather than nicknames. People tend to be more considerate when their identity is known.

Language: Please use English when posting comments or questions as this is the primary language of our event.

Stay On Topic: Keep discussions relevant to the event topic. If you have a different topic in mind please wait for an appropriate session or thread."

Question Submission: When asking questions please use the designated questions field and select the appropriate category from the dropdown menu. Do not add comments in the question field; they will be removed. All comments should be posted in the chat section.

Be Respectful: Engage in discussions with kindness and respect for others. Differences in opinion should be addressed with civility to maintain a constructive environment.

Avoid Negativity: If you encounter negativity or hostile behavior consider your response carefully. Engaging in a positive and constructive manner helps foster a better community."

Moderation: We reserve the right to moderate and remove comments that are abusive, spammy, off-topic, or otherwise inappropriate. Even partial violations may result in the removal of a post.

Reporting Issues: If you notice inappropriate content please report it to our moderation team at the following email address: Event.Moderator@WGMD.com. Include a direct link or reference to the specific session or chat where the issue occurred. While we may not respond to all reports individually please know that your concerns are reviewed and taken seriously.

By following these guidelines you contribute to a positive and enjoyable experience for everyone. Thank you for your cooperation and for making this event a success!


Credits

Host
Jake Smith

Radio Director
Walt Palmer

Streaming Technical Director
Julia Hardy

 Real News Talk Logo Graphics
LED Pixels Light Effect
Storyblocks Asset ID: SBV-302248713

Credit for Music Track:
About The Lion and The Cuckoo
Artist: Radioactive Pokemon
Written by: Alexander, Denis
Album: Through the thorns of a dead forest
Visualizer: About The Lion and The Cuckoo