Brendan Carr will end FCC censorship; kevin O'Leary: DOGE savings just release the hounds
Brendan Carr will end FCC censorship; kevin O’Leary: DOGE savings just release the hounds
Marc Lotter: Brendan Carr will end the era of censorship and protect free speech. “I think he’s a great choice to lead the FCC.”
kevin O’Leary: There is A LOT of room for savings across the federal government — which brings the DOGE into play. “I don’t see any reason why these two can’t just release the hounds.”
State Dept Spox Matthew Miller: “The Secretary phoned Secretary-designate Marco Rubio yesterday to offer his congratulations on his appointment and to pledge to him, as we have said publicly, that we will do everything within our power to make it a successful transition.”
https://www.facebook.com/HygoNewsUSA/videos/1117079383167193
Brendan Carr will end FCC censorship; kevin O’Leary: DOGE savings just release the hounds
Key Points
Marc Lotter: Brendan Carr will end the era of censorship and protect free speech
- “I think he’s a great choice to lead the FCC
- ”
kevin O’Leary: There is A LOT of room for savings across the federal government — which brings the DOGE into play
- “I don’t see any reason why these two can’t just release the hounds
Transcript Highlights
The following is transcribed from the video audio:
- Ultimately, I think also with his promotion of Brandon Carr to the chair of the FCC, he’s already a commissioner and he was appointed during Trump’s first term
- But having him be chair also is gonna allow him to make sure that we do not see the censorship we saw coming from the tech, big tech during the COVID years and afterwards
- And I think he’s a great choice to lead the FCC, to get the government out of the censorship business that we’ve seen them engaging in under the radical left
- Here’s a breakdown of federal spending just so that folks at home know where their tax dollars are going
- Healthcare 25%, Social Security 20 to 25%, Defense 13 to 15%, Safety Net programs 10%, interest on the national debt 8 to 10%
- The way it breaks down is 61% of spending is mandatory, 13% is on debt service, 26% is discretionary, which really will be the target of Doge
- And that is a small piece of the pie to try to ring $2 trillion out of, Kevin
- I think healthcare could be another place of savings
- We haven’t really used any technology there yet
- We haven’t really digitized medical records
Full transcript: 521 words transcribed via Whisper AI.