D'Souza: Patel's selection proves Trump has learned from mistakes

Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Watch above as Dinesh D'Souza breaks down why President Trump selecting Kash Patel as his FBI director shows that Trump has learned from his past mistakes.

Transcript below.

Let me turn to Kash for a moment. And I expected a massive freak out. And sure enough, turn on the MSNBC. And you can see guest after guest after guest coming on to pile on Kash. And they all seem to think this is the worst appointment of all.

And again, the way we've learned to read these people, when they say this is the worst appointment of all, you know it's the best appointment. You know it's the appointment that's going to actually hold these people accountable. When they say things like, "Kash isn't really qualified," well, all you have to do is read the Trump post, which lays out Kash's qualification.

He's eminently qualified for this job. What they mean is not that he's a, quote, danger to democracy, he's a danger to their evil bureaucracy. And so they conflate the two, because they know that the American people don't care about their evil bureaucracy, the American people would want that to be smashed.

And so they make a false equation, a sleight of hand from their evil bureaucracy to democracy, as if Kash needs to be stopped because he somehow threatens American democracy. Susan Glasser, who is one of the Obama worshippers and part of that ugly circle. She goes, "worth noting that there is already in fact a Trump-appointed FBI director."

This is a kind of sly dig at Trump for appointing Christopher Wray, which in fact Trump did. He extended Christopher Wray in 2016. And here's what I write.

I say, "look, this is the difference between Trump 2016 and Trump 2024. Then this was Trump's philosophy: Let me try and work with these nice people."

I think Trump genuinely thought that. He thought, "you know, look, Christopher Wray seems like an upstanding guy. He's going to do his job."

"Let me try to make peace with the establishment to see if I can function within that framework." But he's realized that that was a serious mistake. In fact, part of my worry about Trump was that he is a very magnanimous guy.

You notice that he's willing to overlook past atrocities. You know, "oh yeah, Joe Scarborough and Mika, come see me. Oh, Justin Trudeau, fly down to Mar-a-Lago."

This is not to say that Trump is agreeing with them or giving into them, but he's willing to hear them out. He's willing to sit down with them. This is Trump.

And part of my concern was has Trump fully ingested the lessons of 2016? Does he fully realize the depth and the width of the police state? Does he recognize what needs to be done to go after these people?

And Trump has now answered this question. He's answered it with his appointments. He's shown by picking certain people and not others that he recognizes entirely what is at stake.

So Trump's new philosophy, I think, can be summarized this way. "I now know where all the snakes are. It's time to smash their heads in."

And that is the meaning of the cash appointment.

 

Salem News Channel Today

Sponsored Links

On Air & Up Next

  • Turning You On to Classical Music
     
    Dennis gives an in-depth view of the lives and music of the most powerful and   >>
     
  • The Hooley Hour
    5:00PM - 6:00PM
     
    The Hooley Hour brings you music from, and inspired by, Ireland. Tune in to   >>
     
  • The Jake Underwood Show
     
    The Jake Underwood Show is the daily conversation hub for Northeast Ohio,   >>
     
  • Armed American Radio
    8:00PM - 11:00PM
     
    Armed American Radio is the official radio program of The United States Concealed Carry Association.
     
  • Inside the Great Outdoors
    11:00PM - 12:00AM
     
    The show focuses not only on hunting and fishing, but also includes an endless   >>
     

See the Full Program Guide