Tucker Confronts Mike Huckabee on Americas Toxic Relationship With Israel

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Summary

➡ We’re about to share an interview we had with US Ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee. The backstory of this interview is interesting and relevant. It started with a Twitter conversation and led to a series of negotiations about the interview’s timing and location. The interview is important as it sheds light on the US-Israel relationship, Huckabee’s actions as ambassador, and the potential for a major war with Iran.
➡ The speaker wanted to meet with Benjamin Netanyahu to discuss accusations of anti-Semitism and to express his concerns about the treatment of Christians in Israel. He also recommends Masa chips as a healthier snack option. Despite his efforts, he was unable to secure a meeting with Netanyahu and was accused of being an anti-Semite. His trip to Israel ended with a strange encounter at the airport where his team was questioned about their activities.
➡ The text discusses the complex issue of land rights, particularly focusing on Israel and the Jewish people’s claim to the land. It questions whether ancestry, history, or conquest should determine who has the right to a land. The text also compares the situation in Israel to other countries like Ireland and Britain, asking if the same principles apply. Lastly, it touches on the impact of conflict in Gaza, mentioning the unfortunate casualties and destruction caused by warfare.
➡ The text discusses a heated debate about the conflict between Israel and Hamas, focusing on the number of civilian casualties, including children. The speaker criticizes both sides for their actions, but also highlights Israel’s attempts to minimize civilian casualties. The speaker also expresses concern about the recruitment of children as soldiers by Hamas. The conversation ends with no clear agreement on the number of casualties or the morality of the actions taken by both sides.
➡ The speaker is discussing the conflict in Gaza, comparing the number of civilian casualties in urban warfare environments. They argue that despite the reported numbers, Israel’s actions have resulted in fewer civilian deaths than other modern urban conflicts. The speaker also debates the intentions of the Israeli Prime Minister, questioning his use of biblical references in speeches. The conversation ends with a discussion about a specific incident involving a boy in Gaza.
➡ Tony Aguilar, who was fired from GHF, claimed to have seen an IDF soldier shoot a boy, but the boy was later found alive. Aguilar also claimed that US contractors used live ammunition to control crowds, which is disputed. The discussion also covers the politics of war, with questions raised about the influence of Israel on US foreign policy, particularly in relation to Iraq and Iran. The importance of every life and the tragedy of war are also emphasized.
➡ The speaker expresses concern about various countries, including Israel, having nuclear weapons. They question the financial support the U.S. provides to Israel, arguing that the country is more prosperous than the U.S. The speaker also worries about the potential costs if Iran were to obtain a nuclear weapon, and the impact on the U.S. economy if Iran attacked energy facilities in the Gulf. They believe the U.S. is not thriving and is in debt, and they fear a potential economic depression.
➡ The speaker discusses various global and domestic issues, expressing concern over threats like Hezbollah and Iran, but also emphasizing the importance of focusing on American issues like border security and drug problems. They question whether the U.S. government is prioritizing the right concerns, and argue that while global threats are important, domestic issues should not be overlooked. They also highlight the importance of public opinion in shaping policy decisions, and express frustration over perceived neglect of American interests.
➡ The speaker discusses the influence of foreign countries on American foreign policy, particularly China, Iran, and Israel. They express concern about the potential for war with Iran, which they believe is not supported by the majority of Americans. They also discuss the role of Israel in American foreign policy, suggesting that Israel has a significant influence. The speaker emphasizes their desire for American leaders to prioritize American interests.
➡ The text discusses the complex situation in Israel and Palestine, focusing on the experiences of Christians living in the region. It highlights issues such as the impact of Israeli settlements, restrictions on movement, and the threat of violence. The text also discusses the role of the U.S. in advocating for its citizens in the region, and the challenges posed by terrorism.
➡ The text discusses the complex political and social issues in the West Bank, including the control of the Palestinian Authority and Israeli government, the treatment of Christians, and the possibility of a two-state solution. It also touches on the corruption within the Palestinian Authority and the rights of Palestinians living in the West Bank. The text ends with a discussion about the mistreatment of Christians in Jerusalem and the need for respect and tolerance among different religious groups.
➡ A group of evangelicals visited Israel, funded by the state, and were advised not to preach about Jesus during their stay. This raised questions about the freedom to express religious beliefs in public. However, it was clarified that there are no laws against preaching in public, except for proselytizing to minors or offering incentives for listening to religious presentations. The conversation also touched on religious freedom in other regions, praising the United Arab Emirates for their progressive approach, including a shared place of worship for Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
➡ The U.S. ambassador, Mike Huckabee, was interviewed in Israel, where the interviewee’s team was interrogated and their personal information was demanded. The interviewee was upset by this and felt that the U.S. government should have supported them instead of siding with the Israeli government. The interviewee also criticized the U.S. government for censoring criticism of Israel and prioritizing Israel’s interests over those of its own citizens. The interviewee concluded by expressing their love for Israel and their desire to return for a longer visit.
➡ The speaker recounts meeting Jonathan Pollard, a man who was imprisoned for selling secrets, twice. The first time was at a speech in Jerusalem, and the second time was at the embassy after Pollard’s wife passed away. The speaker disagrees with Pollard’s actions but believes he served his time. The speaker also mentions meeting various people during his time at the embassy and discusses a prayer app called Hallow. Lastly, the speaker addresses the issue of American sex offenders fleeing to Israel and expresses support for their extradition back to the U.S.
➡ The text discusses the issue of accused child molesters from the U.S. finding refuge in Israel, and the speaker’s role in advocating for their extradition. The speaker clarifies that such matters are handled by the courts, not the Prime Minister, and they have not been asked to intervene. The text also mentions a specific case of an Israeli cybersecurity official charged with child molestation in the U.S. who fled to Israel. Lastly, the text includes a promotion for Brooklyn Bedding mattresses and a discussion about the alleged ties of Jeffrey Epstein to intelligence agencies.
➡ The text discusses a debate about the release of certain documents, the extradition of an accused sex offender, and the right of Israel to exist. The speaker argues for the release of evidence to settle debates and end name-calling. They also urge for the extradition of accused sex offenders from Israel to the U.S. Lastly, they discuss the concept of Zionism and the right of Israel to exist, both legally and biblically, comparing it to the rights of other countries to exist.
➡ The discussion revolves around the legitimacy of Israel’s existence, with the argument being that Israel has a right to exist due to its historical ties to the land, adherence to international law, and recognition by international bodies. The debate also touches on whether this principle applies universally to all nations, with the speaker asserting that it does, provided there’s a proven connection to the land and history. The conversation also delves into Christian Zionism, the belief in the biblical promise of land to the Jewish people.
➡ The text discusses the theological and political implications of Christian Zionism, focusing on the belief that God gave the land of Israel to the Jewish people. The conversation explores the boundaries of this land, as described in the Bible, and questions who the modern descendants of the biblical Jews are. The text also touches on the right of Israel to exist and its citizens’ right to safety, while questioning the legitimacy of Israel claiming more land based on biblical promises.
➡ The text discusses the complex issue of who has the right to the land of Israel. It explores whether this right is based on religious affiliation, ethnicity, or both. The conversation also touches on the history of Israel, the role of religion and language, and the treatment of Christians in the region. The debate remains unresolved, highlighting the complexity of the issue.
➡ The text discusses the complex issue of who has the right to live in Israel. It explores the idea that Jewish people, even those who have converted to Christianity, have been welcomed and given full rights in Israel. The text also delves into the idea of using genetic testing to determine who are the descendants of Abram and thus, who has the right to the land. However, the text also acknowledges the discomfort with determining rights based on bloodlines and the complexities of defining who is Jewish.

Transcript

We’re about to play you an interview we did with US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee two days ago in Israel. In general, it’s never worth talking about the backstory behind an interview. It’s kind of not the point. It makes it about the interviewer, not the person being interviewed, for one thing. For another, it’s not that interesting most of the time. And for another, it’s kind of off the record. You know, the other person hasn’t consented to you telling the story. So in general, we don’t do that. Who’d want to hear that? Let the interview speak for itself.

But in this case, we want to tell you just a few things about how this interview came about because they are pretty interesting, revealing, and now weirdly relevant, apparently. So. This interview with Mike Huckabee came about a couple of weeks ago on Twitter. One of our producers showed me. He said something to the effect of, you’re talking to Middle Eastern Christians, Tucker Carlson, maybe you should talk to me. Why don’t you come do an interview? And I paused for a minute. I’ve thought in the past about trying to interview Mike Huckabee, whom I’ve known for over 30 years and worked adjacent to at Fox.

And I had mixed feelings about it, mostly because it’s hard, if you’re me, to interview Mike Huckabee because of just the personal affect. Mike Huckabee is jovial, comes off as friendly. He’s a grandfather when annoyed. I can be nasty in interviews. And so it takes a lot of self control to interview someone like Mike Huckabee, not because I hate him, but because it’s hard to ask him tough questions and not come off as a jerk, which I often am. But I thought in this case, yeah, I should definitely do this for a bunch of different reasons.

Mainly the United States is moving toward a big war, a real war with Iran, a regime change war, the biggest war we’ve had since the invasion of Iraq in the spring of 2003. And Israel is driving that. We are doing this at the behest, at the demand of the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. So it seems like now is the time for more Americans to understand the dynamic between the US And Israel and to call attention to that. And for another, Huckabee’s behavior in, in the last year in Jerusalem as the ambassador has been very, very striking.

He famously had a meeting with the most damaging spy in American history. And why did he do that? He hadn’t been asked by anybody up until two days ago. Why did you do that? So I wanted to be able to ask him that. And so we accepted and then began the usual negotiations about when and where the interview would take place. And we were constrained because we weren’t expecting this. We wanted to do it quick, but we had tons of travel, so we threw them a date. Them being the American embassy, we can do it on this date.

And they were very accommodating. And then the question became, well, where do we do it? Maybe a Christian holy site. We said, we’ve got to get in and out really quick. Got to be back to do a bunch of other interviews, but we’ve got this timeframe. They said, well, why don’t you do it at the U.S. embassy? Or maybe we said that. Great. U.S. embassy. So the U.S. embassy is about an hour, 55 minutes from the big airport in Israel, Ben Gurion. So we said, okay, what about security? Now, at this time, the Israeli government, the Prime Minister included, were attacking me in this show.

Netanyahu suggested I was a Nazi, for example. And so we thought, you know, how about security? Obviously not because the Israeli government necessarily would do something bad, because there are a lot of people in Israel who think because they’ve been told, you know, that I’m an anti Semite or a Nazi or want to kill Jews. This kind of crazy overstatement. All untrue, obviously, but it would be good to have security. And I should say, having done interviews on six out of seven continents over 35 years, I’m not very security conscious at all. Never really feel uncomfortable, but this seemed like a prudent thing to do.

So we were told by the embassy spokesman, no, we’re not going to provide security. And so we said, okay, I guess we’ll get private security, but could we get someone from the embassy to ride in the car with us from the airport to the interview? And we were told no. Could we get what they call a control officer, just an American with us in an official capacity as an embassy employee with us. No quote, for legal reasons, we can’t do that. So I thought, well, that’s very strange. And then they said, but instead, we’re turning you over to the Ministry for Foreign affairs mfa, and they’re going to arrange everything in Israel.

Well, this was within 24 hours of the Deputy Foreign Minister, Sharon Haskell, releasing a video calling me an anti Semite and an enemy of Israel. This was the person who the embassy was telling us was going to handle all of our travel. So it was at this point that I just called, I called the spokesman for the US Embassy in Israel, and I said, okay, I’m an American citizen responding to an invitation from the American ambassador to Israel. And by the way, I’m the son of a US Ambassador, so I have some sense, not an expert, obviously, but I have some sense of how this works.

And I think that the US Ambassador has discretion to send somebody from his office to the airport to accompany someone in. I think that’s right. And if it’s not right, tell me what law you’re talking about, what legal reason you’re talking about that would prevent that. And now you’re sending me over to a government official who’s been calling me a Nazi. That’s the person in charge of getting us to the embassy. Like, what is going on here? And the embassy spokesman, who’s totally nice, said, well, this was the decision of someone called David Brownstein. He’s the dcm, the number two guy in the embassy.

And I said, well, put him on a text exchange. Like, what is going on here? And so Brownstein got on and didn’t answer the question, but basically said, well, okay, let’s just do the interview at the airport, in the diplomatic reception area at the airport, okay? I said, we’re gonna be flying in from Europe and we had to be in and out really quickly. So at great expense we chartered a plane, which I never do because I’m cheap, but we did. And so then I said to them, okay, I want to send you the flight information, tail number, flight number, route, and I want you to pass that on to the Israeli military, just so you know, they don’t mistake us for an Iranian drone or something.

I mean, not to be paranoid, but again, this is probably the most violent country in the world. Israel. Is there a country in the world where a higher percentage of the population has held a gun or shot someone? I mean, I don’t know the answer, but this is a country famously waging a seven front war with all of its neighbors. You know, so this is also the country that bombed the USS Liberty, knowing we know this from NSA intercepts that it was an American ship. So don’t, you know, just send the military our flight information and, you know, we can all just sort of know it’s on the record and we can all calm down a little bit.

No, they said, the US Embassy said, no, this is your flight is not a matter of concern to the Israeli military. I said, okay, now, now you’re making me uncomfortable. Isn’t the airspace of Israel the purview. Of the Israeli military. Aren’t they in charge of maintaining the integrity of their airspace? When you fly over the country of Israel or any country, its military keeps track of you because that’s their job. So why wouldn’t you send our flight information to the Israeli military? You’re making me nervous. I sent this exchange. I took a screenshot of it and sent it to a bunch of people, including in the US Government, because I’m not a paranoid person and I’m not a jumpy person.

I said, is this weird behavior? Yeah, it’s really weird behavior. All of them said that. So I got pretty aggressive and just said, look, you got to do this, okay? And they, to their credit, got back to us and said, yes, we will do that. But I just thought that was completely bizarre and menacing, by the way. Now, at the same time, and I think this is relevant, certainly it goes to motive. I was attempting to set up a meeting, as I have been for the past three months, with the Prime Minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, who I’ve dealt with a lot in the past and who denounced me as a Nazi in public.

A member of the Woke Reichstag. And why was I trying to do that? Not an interview. I knew he wouldn’t sit for an interview, but I wanted just to meet with him in person. One, to show that I’m willing to go to Israel. I don’t hate Israel as a country. But two, just to say directly to him, this is bad. This should be de escalated. This kind of rhetoric doesn’t help anybody. Calling people, calling me specifically a Nazi and an anti Semite when you know that I’m not, by the way. If I was, I would just admit it.

I’ve said many times I think anti Semitism is immoral. It’s against my religion, just as hating any group on the basis of their bloodline is immoral. So the new year is here. But that does not mean you’ve got to overhaul your whole life. Despite claims to the contrary, you don’t have to take drastic measures. Make a few changes here and there, and you’ll be a lot better off. And you can start with the snacks in your pantry. Now. Products from Standard American Chip brand. These brands are, let’s be honest, pretty repulsive. Filled with chemicals that make you feel heavy and bloated.

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Or you can click the link in the video description or you can scan the QR code to claim this outstanding offer. And so I really pushed hard for this meeting and I called a lot of people who know him and who are in regular contact with him. In fact, I went to go see some of those people directly. Please can you help me get a sit down for five minutes with Benjamin Netanyahu? And I probably called or met with 6, 7, 8, maybe more people on this question. People in official capacities, people in the Israeli government.

I know, I know a number of people in the Israeli government, people in Israel, a friend of mine in California who knows him. I mean, I really, really tried. And I did so for two reasons. One, because there was a threat to my family, the Israeli government and Netanyahu himself tried to punish two members of my family. I won’t be more specific, but actually punish two members of my family because he, as he has said in public many times, believes in blood guilt. Amalek, when someone commits a crime against you, you punish not just him, but his family, his bloodline.

There’s no idea that’s less Western than that, more anti Christian than that. Christians reject that. Netanyahu doesn’t. That’s why he’s talking about Amalek. And he was going after my family literally. So I felt very threatened by that. But moreover, I think it’s bad for my country to have people using that kind of language, round them up, bring them to the camps, gas chambers, Nazis, anti Semitism. It scares the heck out of people. It makes people crazy and hysterical. And certainly in my case, none of that is true. I hate collective punishment. I hate attacking people on the basis of their bloodline.

I hate antisemitism and anti white racism and all of this, or any kind of racism, period. And I’ve said that a lot. So using that kind of language against someone who is not fundamentally your enemy, who just in my case, I want Christians in areas controlled by Israel to be treated with dignity, to have rights. And I don’t want the US Government Involved in a war, a regime change, war with Iran. Those are my priorities, and I’ve said them out loud. I have no secret agenda. So to attack me as a Nazi for saying that suggests a total unwillingness to compromise.

Anyone who doesn’t agree with us 100% must be destroyed. His family must be attacked. My family. And must be written off as a Nazi. Well, when you do that, it makes people hysterical. It increases the temperature to a point that someone’s gonna get hurt if you keep talking that way. And it’s just bad. It’s bad for the United States. It’s bad for the world. So I wanted to deliver that message. I finally wound up talking to a guy called Yoram Hazoni, who is an Israeli who famously organizes the American National Conservatism Conferences. And I said to him, look, you’re having a National Conservatism conference in Jerusalem this summer.

You asked me to speak at the first, I think the first National Conservatism conference in the United States, and I did. Obviously, I believe in national conservatism. America first. I think every nation should put its own people first. That’s why you have governments. And I would like to speak at this one. And moreover, I would like you to ask your friend Benjamin Netanyahu to meet with me. And we had this sort of long back and forth, and it was, no, you cannot speak at the National Conservatism Conference because you’re an anti Semite. No, I’m not. I said, yes, you are.

You said. And I said, well, I really would like to speak to Bibi to kind of deescalate this. And he said, it would not be in his political interest to meet with you. It’s almost verbatim what he said, therefore, no. So then I realized you’re dealing with people who are unreasonable, who are inflexible, who are, in fact, fanatical. And then add to that, of course, that my tax dollars are paying them. It was all pretty distressing. So that was the backdrop behind our very brief and highly intense trip to Israel. So we show up on Wednesday, fly in from Europe again at great expense, and show up at the diplomatic terminal at Ben Gurion Airport, where this interview is going to take place, which is bizarre in itself.

Filthy building. The windows are so dirty in the terminal, you can’t see out them, barely. There’s, like, exposed drywall. The whole thing is depressing and grim. There’s litter outside. Like, what is this? This is the diplomatic terminal in Israel. I thought that was very strange, having been in A lot of diplomatic terminals. I’ve never seen a rattier one. We go in and Huckabee’s there. And of course, he’s totally friendly, as he always is. Very, very friendly guy and cheerful. And we sort of chat and the whole place is filled with these guys in T shirts, thuggish looking guys in T shirts who are some kind of security.

So we do the interview. You’re about to watch it. It’s very long at two and a half hours. Ish. And I try my hardest to be friendly. I think I kind of succeeded. You can judge for yourself. But I really got the sense, and again, you can decide as you watch it, that Huckabee was not well able to answer any of the questions, but also not really in charge. He really got the feeling of a guy sort of trying his best to repeat the talking points, but very constrained, like unable to say certain things not because those things might harm the interest of the U.S.

government. He was happy to attack, for example, the U.S. military and say they’re more brutal than the Israeli military. Okay. But unwilling to say certain things because they might reflect poorly on the Israeli government. And sort of thinking about this for a second, you’re like, wait, you’re the U.S. ambassador. You’re our representative to a foreign country. Why is your red line criticism of that country? Shouldn’t you be representing us? And it was very obvious he was representing the Israelis. Obvious. And again, you can judge for yourself. But anyway, so we do this interview. It was cordial, and at the end, we’re set to fly out.

We have a time. We have to get out. And the plane is sitting right outside and we’re ready to go. And for some reason, the Israelis still have our passports. There are five of us there, and four of us are flying out on this plane. One’s flying out commercial with our gear. So my business partner and I sort of standing there, we’ve never left the airport, never went anywhere. But our two producers have spent the night, the night before in Tel Aviv. And they’re called into rooms and given the third degree. Now, keep in mind they’re about to get on a plane and leave.

In fact, we’re late. We have to get out of there. We have a slot to get out, and security, whoever this is, won’t let them go. So I don’t really know what’s going on at this point. I’m like, where are our guys? We got to get out of here. So one of them comes out and he says, that was the weirdest experience in my life. They asked me questions about the interview. Who did you speak to? Keep in mind, this was like eight feet from where we did the interview. Well, the U.S. ambassador, Mike Huckabee. What did you talk about? Why did you ask those questions? Was it a hostile interview? Now, of course, everything in the diplomatic terminal is taped.

Everything in Israel is taped. It’s a police state, It’s a surveillance state. Obviously, you go to Israel, they put software on your phone. Everybody knows this. They’re constantly spying on you, more than probably any other country. And so they know the answers to these questions. But they’re asking my producer, like, where do you work? How many people work there? Do you go to the office? Where is the office? What are their names? They’re doing, like, an intel op and humiliation exercise on my producer. This isn’t security. We’re leaving right now. And they’re holding his passport. The interrogator is holding the passport in his hand as he’s asking these questions.

So he’s telling me this, and I said, this is the most outrageous thing I’ve ever heard. Pockaby’s gone by this point. You’re an American citizen who’s just had a conversation with the US Ambassador, and some thug is demanding details of that conversation. I hope you didn’t answer. And he’s like, no, I didn’t. I don’t know what to say. Meanwhile, our last guy, the youngest man who was traveling with us, our last producer, is still in a room being questioned. So I pull over one of the guys and said, we got to get out of here. So I don’t know what this is about.

It’s outrageous, and there’s nothing I can do about this point, but we got to go. And this woman comes up to me and says, look, let’s just go. We’re going to bring you to the plane and he’ll come later. I said, no, it’s my producer. He’s being interrogated, asked totally over the top, fully inappropriate questions that have nothing to do with security at all. Pull up your website. Show us your text exchanges with other people on your staff. What are your politics like? And again, what did you say to the US Ambassador and what did he say back to you? Those are not relevant questions if you’re trying to keep your country secure.

Those are intel questions, and they’re over the top. And I said, I want this guy out now. Let’s go. We gotta go. And they said, no, no, just leave him here. We’ll bring him to the plane later. Twice they told me that. Just leave your guy behind. No, I don’t think so. So I was enraged by this. Get on the plane, we get a text from a reporter who somehow knew that this had happened. I have no idea how. I had no interest in publicizing it. Actually, there was a long trail that showed that the US Embassy had been coordinating against us in a.

In a public relations battle before we even got there. You know, they were leaking that we. We demanded to do it at the airport because we were afraid to go into Israel. We’re cowards. Okay? We’re cowards. Right? And so I just said to the reporter by text, you know, they pulled my guys into a room interrogating them. This is outrageous. Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. The interesting thing is I never heard from Huckabee or anybody to this moment from the US Embassy about what security did to my producers. They didn’t ask us, and instead, Huckabee went out and called me a liar.

So it raises again the question, who exactly is Huckabee working for? We’re American citizens in a foreign country. He’s our ambassador. He represents our country. We pay his salary, but he’s taking the side of the foreign government without even calling to say, hey, what happened to you at the airport? Did you get hassled? Did your guys get hassled? No. He just immediately repeats their lies without even consulting us. So what are we looking at here? We’re looking at the reality, which is if you’re an American in Israel, you can be certain that your government will take the side of the Israeli government and not your side.

And really, is that so different from the experience of Americans in the United States? Can you be sure that your government will take your side over the Israeli government? No, of course not. They will always take the Israeli government’s side over yours. And that’s the core problem. Even if you support a war with Iran, I think we really. The most pressing issue for Americans is that we kill the Ayatollah or whatever. You still have a fair expectation that your government, because it is yours, you pay for it. It exists to serve you, and for no other reason.

You have an expectation that your government will take your side against a foreign government. But the daily lived reality, the obvious truth visible to every single American, is that’s the opposite of reality. In fact, if you criticize Israel in your country, your government will work to censor you. If there’s a standoff between you and Bibi, you know whose side your government’s Going to take Bibi’s side. That is not sustainable. That is too humiliating. It’s too clearly an inversion of the natural order. Your government exists for you, not for a foreign government. But that’s not how we live in this country or in Israel.

So that’s what we learned. And one last thing. The Israelis apparently went, probably with the help of Mike Huckabee, went to the surveillance tape inside the diplomatic terminal and pulled some clip. They’re of course, getting all their little bots online to promote it. Of me with my arm around somebody to show that actually I’m lying about what happened. That person was our driver who drove us from the plane to the terminal a short drive. Very nice guy, good guy, Israeli guy. And right when we arrived and he said, could I get a picture? Of course. He’s a nice man.

So I just put my arm around him, took a picture. That’s what that is. That was before the interview. It was before our producers were hassled by the thugs and asked ridiculous questions. It was before any of this happened. So that’s just another installment of the propaganda war. Thought we’d give you the backstory on that. People seem to be more inflamed, not just emotionally, but physically and more tired than ever. And food is part of the reason bad food tastes good, but not good for you. For most of human history, people ate actual food. Stuff that your body recognizes.

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I was grateful to be invited. Thank you. I was grateful because I don’t like all the name calling. I’ve engaged in some of it. I want to apologize for that. But in general, I don’t think people should be going immediately to motive, calling each other Nazis or antisemites. I said I hate the Christian Zionists. I lost control of myself. Of course, I don’t. I’ve apologized for that. I have problems with my anger. And so I just want to apologize to you, since you are a Christian Zionist. You and I have known each other for over 30 years.

Over 30 years. That is totally true. Back when you were in Little Rock. So, yes, the newspaper. That’s why I wanted us to have a conversation, talk to each other and not about each other. And I appreciate very much your coming here to. Of course. And I’m only staying a couple hours, unfortunately, because I kind of shoehorned this in. But I hope that I will be back soon, and I hope that I can come back soon because I want to. I actually like. Despite what you may hear, I actually like the country. I’ve been here a lot, and there are a lot of things I love about it, and I want to talk to people in it for, like, a week.

Good. And get a better sense of it. So I want to ask you. Everyone I’ve talked to in preparation for this has said the same thing. Jonathan Pollard. I’m just going to show the name to you and have you explain. No, I’m glad you asked. You know, of course, interestingly, there’s been a lot of things about it. You’re the first person who has asked me about it, which I find amazing. So I’m glad you did. Really? Yeah. The very first person. Good. Well, it’s better to, like, hear it. Sure. I met Jonathan Pollard two times. Once I was making a speech in Jerusalem.

This has been a few years ago. His wife was still alive at the time, and he was there, and someone introduced me to him and his wife. I said hello to them. That was it. Hi. Nice to meet Esther, his wife. And that was it. I went and made my speech and I left. Later, his wife passed away here in Israel, and I sent him a note and just said, I’m sorry to hear about your wife. I remember meeting her at the hotel and sorry to hear it. He then asked could he come and see me.

He wanted to come and thank me for being kind to him. He came to the embassy. I think we met for maybe 30 minutes. We had a nice, pleasant visit. The funny thing was the New York Times reported that it was a secret meeting. Tucker, if you’ve ever been to the U.S. embassy, you would know there’s no such thing as a secret meeting at the US Embassy. There are cameras everywhere. You walk through Marines, you walk through security, you walk through the front office, and there’s a dozen or more people that are going to check you out when you come.

And before you get there, you’re going to have to give us your passport information, you’re going to have to be vetted and screened and all of this stuff. So the idea that it was secret was ludicrous. The whole idea is, look, Jonathan Pollard did something that was terribly wrong. He sold secrets. He shouldn’t have done it. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison and spent 30. Actually was. I think. Yeah, I think he was sentenced to maybe more than 30 years, but he spent 30 years in prison. Most people convicted of something similar, which was one count, I believe would have spent two to four, but he spent 30.

I don’t have a problem with him spending 30 because I think what he did was despicable. I’m not defending anything about what he did, but even people like the former director of the CIA, a number of other senators on the Senate Foreign Relations of the Senate Intel Committee, said that he should be allowed to leave and move to Israel if he wanted to. So it, to me, was not as big a deal that I had this basically courtesy meeting. He wanted to thank me for being nice to him when his wife died. That’s pretty much the story you advocated for his release when you ran for.

I remember it in 2011, long before he had served 30 years. And I agree with you that there are a lot of people languishing in prison, you know, in our country and in this country, many countries, you know, for longer periods than they deserve. And I think it’s a Christian impulse to want to see them free. But this was the greatest traitor in modern American history who sold our battle plans, sold our battle plans against the Soviet Union, our main enemy in the Cold War, to the Israeli government, which, according to our Reagan CIA Director, Bill Casey, then gave them to the Soviet Union.

So this was the most profound betrayal of the United States in my lifetime. Why advocate for that guy’s release before he serves his full sentence. If that were the case in 2011, it would have been because I had a number of friends that suggested that he had more than served time and he didn’t want to live in the US Anymore. He wanted to live in Israel. And. But my association with him, again, I had never met him until I met him in Jerusalem at a hotel. That was the first time I had ever encountered him. I’m friends with a million bad people, or I’ve talked to a million bad people.

I’m sitting here with you. I mean, come on. I mean, she’s the same with tax collectors. So I. Trust me, I am. Do not judge people who are friends or know or enjoy the company of immoral people, because it’s not an endorsement of their immoral behavior. Pollard is different. I think once you become U.S. ambassador, the representative of the President of the United States in the United States of America in a foreign country, and then you invite not only the most damaging betrayer in our lifetimes, but also a guy who continues to advocate for betrayal. So he gave an interview, as I know you know, in 2021, to Israeli media, in which he said, I would encourage Jewish Americans with security clearances to spy for Mossad against their own country, the United States, because.

And I’m pretty much quoting him, all Jews should have dual loyalty. That’s a. I mean, that’s not repentance. That’s not someone who feels bad about what he did. That’s someone who’s encouraging American Jews to betray their country. That’s pretty heavy, don’t you think? Oh, I do, and I disagree with that wholeheartedly. I think. Let’s remember, it was President Trump who probably facilitated his departure. And I’m certainly supportive of President Trump. I think you are. Pollard’s not. He called him a madman after your meeting. That’s why I say Pollard is not, for me, the real issue. It was the fact that he did something that was despicable.

I’m not denying that. Of course he did. And he paid dearly for it. 30 years in prison. And he should have. That’s what he should have done. No question about it. But why meet with him in the US Embassy? Your colleagues said they were shocked. They said. Who were the colleagues that said they were shocked? Quoted on background in the New York Times. Background. I think the meeting was in August. This could all be fake. That’s why I’m asking you. Well, the same New York Times said it was a secret meeting, and I’m telling you there’s no such thing.

As a secret meeting in the US Embassy. Do you see why the US Ambassador hosting a convicted betrayer of his own country who’s encouraging Americans to continue to betray their country would seem shocking? Well, I would say that it wasn’t that I. You make it sound like I’m hosting a meeting. I simply met with him. I meet with people all the time. You can just walk in without a. No, they have to have an appointment. Of course they do. Oh, so it is hosting him then, I think. Well, I don’t know if it was hosting, but it was certainly he was able to come to the US Embassy to have a meeting at his request.

I did. And frankly, I don’t regret it. I met with a lot of people over the course of the time I’ve been here and we’ll meet with a lot more. That’s it. So if you spend the evening at my house, you are guaranteed to find yourself in a conversation about the Hallow app. We talked about it this morning. It is the best prayer app ever. This Lent, Hallow’s Pray 40 challenge invites users to step out of the noise of everyday life and dive into something much deeper. The parable of the Prodigal son. It’s a story about a man who leaves home, wastes everything, hits rock bottom, and then realizes something transformative.

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There have also been and there continue to be, dozens and dozens and dozens of sex offenders. Accused sex offenders from the United States who fled to Israel, including one recently an Israeli government official who was caught trying to molest a 15 year old girl and fled to Israel and is not going back to the United States to stand charges for attempted molestation of a child. Have you advocated for the Israeli government to return him to the United States? I’m not familiar with that case. It has not come to us at the embassy, so I’m not aware.

Is this the person in Nevada? That is correct. Okay, I heard about It. I would imagine so. Yeah, I heard about it, but I heard about it through open source media. It was never something that was presented to us. But I would have no problem with him being extradited back to the U.S. you’re the president’s and our country’s representative in the state of Israel. So I think it would fall to you to advocate with your friend, the Prime Minister, to say, wait a second, we have a very close relationship. We’re obviously the single largest source of outside funding for this country.

How can you take an accused child molester and shield him from American justice, send him back to the United States? Have you ever had that conversation? No, because the Prime Minister would not be the proper person. That may be right. Israel, pardon my ignorance, that would deal with an extradition. It would go through their court system. And so the Prime Minister is separate, very similar to what we have in the US where there is a separation of powers. So it would go through something other than the Prime Minister. Have you advocated to the courts, to judges, to anybody in the Israeli justice system? There has never been a request for me to engage in that.

I would be happy to do it if. If the White House sent a message to me, I do work for the President. I serve at his pleasure. If anyone at the White House were to say to me, would you please go and make a case for it? But probably if that were to happen, it wouldn’t come through the embassy as much as it would likely come from the Department of Justice at the US In DC they would make the request. They might involve us, but they very likely would not. Does it seem strange to you that people accused of child molestation in the United States are allowed to have refuge in our.

Within the borders of our closest ally? How that doesn’t make sense to me. Well, I would say that if you’ve molested an American child, shouldn’t you be required to justice? It’s an allegation. Let’s be clear. One of the things about our system of jurisprudence, you’re innocent until you’re proven guilty. Because beyond a reasonable doubt. So if the charges are there, should he be extradited? I would say so the charges are there, yeah. Okay, so they should be. But that’s a Justice Department decision and they’re the ones who should be pursuing it. To my knowledge, they haven’t.

They certainly haven’t engaged the U.S. embassy over. Why would the Israeli government harbor fugitives from justice in the United States? I’m not sure that there are dozens. Dozens and dozens. In fact, there’s an Israeli group that keeps track of them. That is dedicated Jewish Israeli group dedicated to combating the molestation of children and keeps a long list and any of you can look it up and I would. Tucker, I hope you’re not saying that you think the Israelis support the molestation of children. Obviously, I’m not saying that. I’m saying that the Israeli government allows shields accused child moles from justice in the United States.

I’m not sure I could say that that’s something that is provable. I don’t know. But I am not aware that the Israeli government is shielding people. You obviously want to sleep well and fashionably. Brooklyn Bedding can help here tcn we take sleep time seriously. Try to get eight hours. And a lot of the people here cannot help rave about their Brooklyn Bedding mattress. The first thing you’ll notice about your mattress is how stable they feel. That’s because they’re built to last for decades, not just years. It’s American durability, by the way. We when we bring in a new advertiser, we have the send stuff to the whole staff and people test it and they love this.

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It’s not available anywhere else, only on the show, so take advantage while you can. Visit BrooklynBetting.com promo code Tucker well, they are and I’ll give you a and I just want to make sure that I pronounce this, this man’s name correctly. It’s Tom, I believe. Alexandrovich, I think. That’s right and I’ve written it down. But of course my hand ring is so terrible I can’t read it. But yes, he is an Israeli, I believe, cybersecurity official who was at a conference in Las Vegas last year and was caught up in a sting designed to catch people soliciting sex from children.

He was one of a number of people arrested for this. He was arraigned and charged. Charged. And then two days later, he fled to Israel and did his first hearing by zoom. He was allowed, for some reason, to leave for a foreign country, having already been charged for a attempted molestation of a child. And he remains here now. And there have been many news stories about this, and I just wonder if you would ask the Israeli government to send to put him on a plane and send him back to face justice for attempting to molest an American child.

It doesn’t seem complicated. No, I wouldn’t mind doing that. But I want to find out if the Justice Department in the US has already sought to extradite him. Is there anything in process? I don’t know. Why wouldn’t they seek to extradite? I have no idea. That’s a question for the Justice Department. I have many questions for the Justice Department. Like why are millions of Epstein files still classified? Why do you think that is? I have no idea. I haven’t kept up with that. I’ve never met the man. I don’t know him. You haven’t kept up with the Epstein disclosures? I mean, only from a distance.

I’m 6,000 miles away from D.C. these days. You attacked me personally for suggesting that Jeffrey Epstein had ties to Mossad. I’m not saying he’d work for Mossad. I don’t think we know that. But there’s no question that he had extensive contact with CIA. I think you said it a turning point event. Everybody knows Jeffrey Epstein. I said everyone thinks. And it turns out everyone was right. That he did have. I’m not sure everyone was right or everyone thinks. Okay, but you said that I was lying, and I don’t want to make this about. I don’t think I said you were lying, Tucker.

I don’t recall. I’m just saying, why don’t we release all the files and then we don’t need to guess. I got no problem with that. Go ahead. Well, because you weighed in on it and said that this was not true when. Of course, I said there was no evidence. Well, there’s quite a bit of evidence. But you haven’t apparently bothered to read any of the files. Is that what you’re saying? I have not read the Epstein files. Apparently, you have. Well, they’re on the Internet. But when you say that there’s. That everybody knows that Jeffrey Epstein was a Mossad agent.

He said everyone believes that. I don’t think everybody does. I don’t know. Well, everyone knows that he had contact with. And by the way, not just Israeli intelligence, American Intelligence, which is more. Much more distressing for me. I’m not Israeli, I’m American. I don’t want my government having any contact with someone like Jeffrey Epstein. So the shame. I wouldn’t either is on the United States, as far as I’m concerned, just to be totally clear about that. Everyone’s very sensitive about the Israel connection. Not at all sensitive about the US Connection, which I find very revealing. We should care about what our government does first, I think.

But since you weighed in on it and said there’s no evidence, I’m surprised that since that evidence has been open to the public for a month, since you’ve already weighed in publicly on this question, that you’ve made no effort to evaluate that evidence. Why is that? I just told you. I was certainly not aware that there were some specific allegations. I knew about the former Prime Minister, but I don’t know him. I’m not sure I ever met him in my many times. You know, I’ve been to Israel over a hundred times since 1973. The first time I came here was 1973, July.

And that’s almost 53 years of coming and going to this country. So I know the country well. I know a lot of people here, but I don’t know everything. And I don’t know everybody, but I do a lot of people, of course. No. And I. And I can see your love for it, and I. I think that’s great. I. But I’m talking about the US Government and its responsibility to, you know, there’s a lot of complaint about conspiracy theories, and everyone, you know, he’s a hater. Everyone’s assigning motive, but there’s a way to end these conversations very quickly with facts.

And I’m highly confused by. Have you brought this up to the President? No, I don’t. I don’t work for him. I’ve said this many times, you don’t work for him. But you. You go to the White House and you see people there. You and J.D. vance are very good friends. So have you brought this up to them? Because I have brought this up in public, not on my portfolio, but apparently it’s highly, very strongly on your mind. And I’m such a significant concern for me, should be for everybody, but. Well, there’s an acute. There is a charged child molester.

But I’m saying if you are very involved in the details of this. I’m not. And you think it’s the US Government that’s hiding and shielding somebody, then bring it up to the people that you Personally, I don’t think that I know it because the Justice Department has said we have millions of documents we’re not releasing. Why are they not releasing? I. I’m asking you as a U.S. government official. Well, but what. The answer is a government official at the embassy in Jerusalem. That has not one thing to do with the Justice Department and what they’re investigating on any given day, unless it involves.

And I don’t want to argue or talk in circles, but you were the one who brought it up and said it’s absolutely not true. I was only responding to what I’ve heard you say. Okay. But now that you know there’s evidence and we can settle this debate. You haven’t looked at the evidence and you’re not pushing for the release of the total corpus of evidence. And I’m confused because I want to believe that your goal is to get to the truth, and the fastest way to do that is by releasing the evidence. Don’t you think you suggest that I can release the evidence? I’m suggesting that you could call for it right now.

Well, I. Fine, call for it. Let’s have it all open. I thought it was being all opened up for everything. I. Once it’s open, I hope you’ll read it because it’s really interesting. And then it puts to rest a lot of the debate and it ends the name calling, because we can say, here it is right there, and we don’t have to call people names. We can just assess the documents. Let me ask you, would you bring it up? I hope you will bring it up to people at the White House. Oh, I’ve brought. I’m bringing it up right now.

I’m bringing it up now. And I’m asking. I just want to say this one last time as the US Ambassador to Israel, I hope that you will make a formal request to the Israeli government to send every accused sex offender in this country back to the United States to face justice. And I don’t understand why that hasn’t been done. I’m confused. Well, we’ll try to clear up all the confusion that we have. Well, if someone’s been accused of trying to molest a child, I think it’s. Then, then certainly. And I’ll check with the Justice Department because it is a DOJ issue and it would be handled through doj, the US to the court systems in Israel.

That’s how it would be handled. But the first step is the Israeli government saying, yes, we will allow you to extradite this person back. The person is being Shielded by the government. That’s why the person’s here. That’s why he fled here, so he wouldn’t have to stand trial for trying to molest a child. I want to get to the. As I said at the outset, I said something awful that I regret that my wife barked at me about. I lashed out at Christian Zionists and evangelicals. And I just want to say again that I’m sorry. I’ve always liked them because they’re pro life and they’re also really nice people.

So for the third time, I’m sorry that I said that. I think part of my problem was I don’t understand the theology. And you are not a fake Baptist minister. You’re an actual minister. You had a church for many years. You’re an actual theologian. So. And I mean this with sincerity, I hear people say, those who bless Israel will be blessed. I know it’s a reference to Genesis. I don’t understand the connection between that concept and modern Israel and the geopolitical world. And so I’m going to stand back and let’s first define. Because, you know, from my days as a debater in high school and college, one of the things I knew you didn’t start the debate till you define the terms.

Amen. Let’s define the term. Thank you. Thank you. What is a Christian Zionist? What does that mean to you? What does it mean? I don’t know. It’s the people who call me a Nazi for asking what Israel means. I mean, that’s kind of my. I don’t even know. But here’s the point. If you say a Christian Zionist is a person who has a brain virus and is guilty of heresy, that’s a pretty big charge. I know I shouldn’t have made it. I shouldn’t have made it. I made it out of anger and ignorance. So Christian, I think we can agree, as somebody who follows Jesus Christ.

Exactly. Has a personal relationship with Jesus Christ, believes in his death, burial, resurrection, has repented of one’s sins and have accepted him as one’s savior. Would that be fair? Christian? Define that. Zionist. A Zionist simply means a person who believes that the Jewish people have a right to have a homeland where they have security and safety. Did you believe that the Jews have a right to live in Israel? Do you believe that Jews have a right to live in Israel? That would be a Zionist. That’s all a Zionist is. I have a million questions about what all of those terms mean.

Yeah, but conceptually, I wish Israel no harm. I don’t want to See, I’m very. You want them to have a place where they can live with safety and security. So I. I saw this recently in an extremely telling exchange between the Lieutenant Governor of Texas, who I know and I’ve always liked, and a woman I don’t know, never met, who’s on the Religious Liberty Commission or something. And she said, I’m a Catholic, but I’m not a Zionist. And they have this ferocious exchange. And he kept saying, and everyone on the panel seemed to keep saying, you have to believe in Israel’s right to exist.

Which I never kind of questioned, just for the record. But it did raise two questions I think are really important, and I hope you’ll answer them. One is, where does that right come from? I would say it comes from. Essentially, you could say it comes from the Bible. I would say that it does. But it comes also from a long iteration of historical precedents, going to the Balfour Declaration of 1917. It comes from the League of Nations. 1927. It comes from the United Nations, 1947, the Declaration of Independence of the Israel State in May of 1948.

They were immediately attacked. They won the war. They were attacked again in 1956. They won the war. They were attacked again in 1967 by five countries. They won the war. They were attacked again in 1973 in the Yom Kippur War. They won the war. The point is, does Israel have a right to exist? They also had wars in 1982 in Lebanon. They’ve had. Remember, two of those. They’ve had Lebanon again in 06. I was there. No, I’m very familiar with the modern history of the state. Okay, Pretty familiar, I think. But a Zionist simply means somebody who believes that Israel has a right to exist.

Now, the question is, do you believe Israel has a right to exist? I guess. I mean, I want Israel to exist. Well, no, but I want to know what that means. So, like, do other countries have a right to exist? Well, they do exist. Do they have a right to exist? You keep saying Israel has a right to exist. And I want to know what other countries have existed. They have a legal right. Because every international body in the last 100 years has said the Jewish people have a right to their indigenous home. My question is, so that’s a legal right.

Do they have a biblical right? I would say that, yes. But you may say they don’t. I don’t know. I’m actually sincerely interested in finding out what you mean by a biblical right. But first, to the legal right. Does any other country on the planet have the same right that Israel has to exist? Well, you could say, does Jordan have a right to exist? When it was Trans Jordan and the Brits came and divided up the Middle east and they gave some land to Jordanians and they gave some land to the Saudis, and they gave some land to various Middle Eastern countries, and it was all carved up and.

And the French gave Lebanon its right to exist. Do they have a right to exist? Do they? Well, why not? Okay, so that’s my. So every country. Does the US Have a right to exist? I’m asking you. Okay. And I’m telling you I think the US Has a right to exist. Okay? We came here, we came there. We’re in Israel now talking. But does the US Have a right to exist? Does anyone question whether we have a right to exist? I don’t. Yeah, but. But I. Of course, I’m for America, you know, Good for you. But I.

So every current country on the map has the same right to exist that Israel has? Is that what you’re saying? I think what we’re saying is that when a country has established itself and it is following international law, it has been deemed by numerous bodies that it is indigenous to its homeland, as Israel is. This is its homeland. It goes back 3,800 years to the time of Abraham. It’s not that the Jewish people just showed up here in 1948 and said, we’re gonna. We’re gonna have some land. Hold on. So those are two different tracks. And I just want to make sure that we separate them so I understand each one separately.

All right, so you’re saying there’s the modern legal framework, and so you said a country that abides by international law has a right to exist. I would say that that is a part of. Would the inverse be true, that a country that does not abide by international law forfeits its right to exist? Not necessarily if it has the capacity to stay and make its case known. But there have been Jewish people in this land. Okay, but that’s a necessary land for 3800 years. Okay, so. But you’re saying as the modern nation state with borders and a military and a Knesset and just all the kind of trappings of a modern country, all of which I support, that country has, every country on the planet has the same right as Israel to exist because it does exist? Is that what you’re saying? I’m just trying to understand the concept here.

Well, I think what we’re trying to get to is Christian Zionism. And you’ve taken this way off the road here. I know that I have. I don’t mean to Christian. Zionism is a separate thing, but I just keep hearing people say Zionism is the belief. That’s the fundamental argument that’s going on. Does Israel have a right to live in their indigenous, ancient, historical land, a land that has been affirmed throughout international organizations, a land that has direct ties to the Jewish people? I just want to know if this is a universal principle. I guess that’s what I’m getting at.

Because if it’s not, then it’s meaningless to me. Because as a Christian, I believe in universal principle. Something is right for everyone or it’s wrong for everyone. We don’t believe in special cases. But here’s the question. If the Jews didn’t have this land, would the Jews have a right to any land? I don’t know. I’m not attacking the Jews. I’m asking if this applies to every people in every nation. Does every nation have the same right to its own homeland, to its own physical land that you say Israel does? I feel like we’re in a rabbit hole here.

No, I think it’s a very straightforward question. Does that right extend to other countries than Israel? But the most important thing that is going on in our culture right now is whether or not the people that are yelling in the streets from the river to the sea, whether that. That’s a legitimate point of view to say that there should not be a Jewish homeland. There should not be. I’m not a Jewish state. You’ll never hear me say. I just want to. I know you haven’t said it, but this. That’s the argument. One of the arguments going on globally in the United States, excuse me, has pretty narrow view, I would say, in our media culture what’s happening around the world.

There are plenty of countries having this debate. Stonehenge is a lot older than the first temple in Israel. And it was built by the same people who live there. Now it’s the same people and they are being pushed off their island and outnumbered by people from other places. And so in Great Britain, in Ireland, which is also a country with a nation of people, a race, if you will, that is being displaced, replaced. Who are they being replaced by? Immigrants. Okay. From other places. I just wanted to clarify because I was one of the. Well, just as a demographic matter, it’s just like, you can look at the numbers.

It’s not controversial. Just look at the numbers. There’ll be a minority in their country and their people have been there longer than Jews have been in Israel. And so they’re having this debate, too. That’s all I’m saying. And lots of places are having this debate. So does that principle apply to everyone or is it specific just to Israel? I think it applies specifically to Israel. It applies to anyone who can prove that they have some connection to the land in connection to the history, in connection to international law. But Israel, I think, does have an exploration of international law.

So if. Again, but let me finish this tesser, because here’s the point. We’re talking about Christian Zionism, the idea that as a Christian, I believe in both the Old and the New Testament. Why wouldn’t I? I’m a person of the book. There are 80 million evangelical Christians in the United States. What makes us who we are is our adherence to the scripture, our belief that the Bible, all of it, not part of it, but all of it is the word of the living God. Yeah. So if I believe in the Old and the New Testament, I do believe that there is a very specific call to the Jewish people that started with Abraham, and he called them out of what is now modern day Iraq.

Said, come where I send you. He came. This is the land. Genesis 12:3. He says, I will bless those who bless you, curse those who curse you. In Genesis 17, he looks out of the world. He says, look, and this is where I’m giving you the land. I think it’s. Since that time, there have been people living in this land connected to that moment of history. So there is a historical connection. I’m not even broken. I. You’ve said that. And I want to ask you what that means a little more specifically, if that’s okay. But first let me just say that you could say the same thing of Britons who’ve been there in their land longer.

Does anyone try to tell the Britons, they. The Brits, they can’t live there anymore? No. What’s happening is. But they are saying that to the Jews. Oh, okay. Okay. But I just wonder if you would extend. Extend the same sympathy or the same principle. You don’t. You seem like this is. You think I’m trying to trap you. I’m not. I’m at all trying to trap you. It’d be as simple as saying native Britons have no problem with the native Brits having their land, having the right. My point is I don’t know that there is a biblical connection for the Brits.

Okay. But I would say. So that’s what it comes down to. Take that off the table and I think there’s still a basis for the Jews having this little bitty strip of real estate. And it is. I’m not even arguing with you. I’m just trying to. At all. I’m just trying to understand what it is that you’re saying because it’s, it’s not obvious to me. And maybe it’s an IQ problem, but I’m having trouble understanding this. But let me just go back to. Just clarify one thing. You’ve brought up international at least twice, maybe three times, as a basis for Israel’s legitimacy.

If Israel was out of compliance with international law, whatever that is, would it be less legitimate? Depends on if the law and the way it’s applied is legitimate. There are some applications of so called international law that are not legitimate. I agree. Look at the ICC or the icj. I agree. Utterly ridiculous. One of the reasons I’m so grateful President Trump and Secretary Rubio are pushing hard trying to get rid of the ICC and the ICJ is because they have become rogue organizations that are no longer really about an equal application of law and justice. I don’t know enough about it to say if that’s true or not, but I just, I’m interested that you yourself appeal to international law as a basis of his.

Israel’s. What I’m looking at is the whole of the last 100 years. The Balfour Declaration is not exactly international law, by the way. It was a letter, I think it was maybe, maybe not law, but it was a declaration. It was an assumption and a declaration that was done by Lord Balfour in the, in Great Britain. At that time, this land was under the British Mandate. And he said the Jews should have the land that was theirs from 3,800 years ago. It was simple as that. Right. And I’m not debating that. I’m just not international law.

It was a colonial power saying, okay. But then later it was divided up the world after under the League of Nations, under the United nations, and then because of the victories that Israel had against those who tried to annihilate them. And it wasn’t just that they were trying to take a little piece of their land, they tried to annihilate them. And there is still to this day the shouts of from the river to the Sea. And Tucker, that means only one thing. Not the shrinking of Israel, but the annihilation of Israel. That’s different. I don’t think you can say that you know what it means actually, because you don’t know what’s in people’s hearts.

So why don’t we just deal with the facts? Maybe some people mean it. I know it’s in their mouths. I know it’s in their minds, but I’m not. Look, you’ll never hear me say that. What you will hear me say is I’m confused by what the definitions are. So let’s go through this. You’ve appealed to Genesis. Genesis 15 says it’s Abram. It’s pre Abraham. It’s Abram. Receives from God the news that his descendants will inherit the land. And you tell me, as the theologian, if I’m getting this wrong, but from the Euphrates to the Nile, I think that’s right.

And that would include like, basically the entire Middle East. That would be the Levant. So that would be Israel, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon. It would also be big parts of Saudi Arabia and Iraq. It would be. I mean, not sure we’d go that far. I mean, it would be a big piece of land. But here’s the point. It would be a lot of places that are now countries. But this particular area that we’re talking about now, Israel, is a land that God gave through Abraham to a people that he chose. It was a people, a place and a purpose.

We can look at it that way. Christian Zionism. I want to go back, because that’s where we started on this. I’m not going to let you off on this because you have said three times that God gave this land to this people. And so it is entirely fair for me with respect, to ask what land are you talking about? Because I just read Genesis 15, as I have many times. And that land, I think it says from the Nile to the Euphrates, which is once again basically the entire Middle East. So God gave that land to his people, the Jews, or he didn’t.

You’re saying he did. What does that mean? Does Israel have the right to that land? Because you’re appealing to Genesis. Yeah. You’re saying that’s the original deed. It would be fine if they took it all, but I don’t think that’s what we’re talking about here today. What would be fine? Well, it’s exactly what we’re talking about today. But here’s what I don’t think. You think it would be fine if the state of Israel took over all. They don’t want to take it over. They’re not asking to take it over. But you’re saying that the reason that Israel is legitimate, has this inherent right to exist is in part because God gave it to his people.

And I am going to the same Bible that you’re referring to and noticing that that is a huge piece of land. So if God gave them that land, then they have a right to take it. Now, by your definition, unless I’m missing something. I think you’re missing something because they’re not asking to go back to take all of that, but they are asking to at least take the land that they now occupy. They now live in, they now own legitimately, and it is a safe haven for them. May I ask, though, as. Because you’re appealing, you’re explaining what Christian Zionism is and your theological beliefs, and I think you just said it would be fine with you if the state of Israel took all of Syria, all of Lebanon.

That’s. That’s really not exactly what I’m trying to figure out. I’m asking. Is that what you said? I thought that’s what you just said. It was somewhat of a hyperbolic statement in that, you know, if that’s what you feel like that we’re talking about, but it isn’t. We’re talking about this land that Israel, the state of Israel now lives in and wants to have peace in. They’re not trying to take over Jordan, they’re not trying to take over Syria. They’re not trying to take over Iraq or anywhere else. But they do want to protect their people now.

They’re not trying to take over Lebanon. But you’re saying that as a religious man, as a Christian, a Christian Zionist, you agree with a lot of religious communities here in Israel that the justification for this country is theological. It’s a contract between God and his people. And I’m telling you that that contract includes a tract of land that is much larger than. Than the current nation states. So you may be a bigger Zionist than even the Jews are that live in. I’m trying to understand the implications of your theology for geopolitics because you’re saying that the present government of Israel has a moral right to take over what are now other people’s countries.

No, I didn’t say that. Then what are you saying? I’m simply saying that the people who live in Israel, I think, have a right to have security, have safety. They have a right to be able to live in this land that they have a connection to for 30. I told myself when I said a prayer that I would not get annoyed. But as someone who is, you know, the father of daughters, when I see child molesters hiding in Israel and escaping American justice, I think I have a right to safety in my country, too. So you can understand that.

I think most people feel they have a right to safety. I do think Israel has a right to safety and I hope that for them, and I’m sincere. But I’m an American and I have a right to safety in my country too. Of course you do, and I think so. But I just want to get to this point. If Israel were to say God gave us in Genesis 15, all of Lebanon, all of Syria, all the way up to Iraq, would that be legitimate in your view? I don’t think in this particular day and time they’re asking for it.

Would it be legitimate? I’m not sure that it would be. Why? Because you just said that God gave it to them. That there is an understanding that the people of Israel today, now if they end up getting attacked by all these places and they win that war and they take that land, then okay, that’s a whole nother discussion. But you and I started out, we started talking about something simple, Christian Zionism. But it turns out it’s not because I don’t. The core of Christian Zionism, you said, and I’m quoting you, is the understanding, the belief, the theological understanding that Jews have a moral and legal.

We went through the legal, moral deriving from the biblical. From the promises in our Bible which we share with the Jewish people, the first part of the Old Testament, that it derives from God’s promise to the Jews. And so I have two questions. What are the borders of that? And who are those people in 2026? And you’re not the first person I’ve asked, but you’re the most reasonable, most gentle, most theologically informed person. So I’m really hoping for an answer. The first question was the borders. I can’t get an answer. Those borders are. So I’m going to give up.

But the second question is every bit as pressing, which is, who are the people? Who are the modern. Yes. Who are the descendants? So we know, and I believe, and I agree with you as a Christian, that God promised this land from modern day Iraq to modern day Egypt to this people, the Jews, to Abram’s. Actually, not to the. To Abram’s descendants, as it says in Genesis 15. Who are his descendants now and how do we know who they are? I think they’re the Jews and we know who they are because they’ve always been a Jewish people.

There has been an unbroken line of Jewish people and they’ve lived in this land for 3,800 years. Sometimes not very many of them because they were chased out all over the world. They were hunted down. They were almost annihilated during the Holocaust. They came back to this day. Tucker, they represent, you know, how many Jews there are in the whole world. Please. I understand. First of all, the greatest genocide of Jews no one ever mentions was by the Romans, where they were literally banned from Jerusalem for 500 years. Yeah, of course. And. And it’s all awful.

And I’m opposed to all of that. I’m opposed to mass killing of anybody, period. I’m opposed to hear you say that. I mean it. Yeah. And I hope you agree on that. I believe that. My question is. And it’s not a bumper sticker answer, it’s a sincere answer. How do we know? Because what you’re saying is that certain people have a title to a highly contested region. They own it in some deep sense. So I think it’s fair to ask, who are they and how do we know? So the current prime minister’s ancestors weren’t from here.

Within recorded history. He has no deed. Bibi Netanyahu. On one side is families from Poland. They’re from Eastern Europe. So how do we know that he has a connection to the people who God promised the land to Abram’s descendants. How do we know that? Well, if you take the genealogies that come not only from the Old, but the New Testament, you see that there is a historical connection through the entirety of the Old and the New Testament that details the Jewish connection to this land. Does that include Bibi’s family? How do we know that if his family were here? But how do we know it’s the same people? No.

Why is that crazy? If. If you say to me, if they speak the same language, if they worship the same God, if they follow the same Bible, if they follow the same cultures and traditions, and they always pray next year in Jerusalem, and they pray for the peace of Jerusalem, and they pray facing toward Jerusalem. Does that not give you a little bit of a clue as to who they are? Let’s go through those things. Because I would like to have a rational. This is a conversation I’ve wanted. Bless you. Thank you for doing this. Let’s just go through those things.

Okay. So one of the things I admire most about Israel is they resurrected a dead language in 1948. Good for them. Well, they really didn’t resurrect. Was existent. Okay. I’m not. That’s not. But that’s a compliment. I’m not slightly. No, no, no. But it is the first time in all of human history that a language has survived through this length of time. It’s, it’s. It’s. I would call it. You might not, but I would call it a miracle, one of many. Okay. That you can attribute to this. I think it’s wonderful, as someone who loves language.

Netanyahu’s parents did not speak Hebrew. Okay. They didn’t live in this region. Netanyahu, the founders of this country, were mostly secular. Some of them were avowed atheists. They were not praying for the peace of Jerusalem. They weren’t praying at all because they didn’t believe in God. There’s no genealogy linking their families to the people of this land 3,000 years ago. They’re none. So how do we know since they didn’t share a language, they didn’t share a religion, they had no religion whatsoever. How do we know that they had a right to come here from Eastern Europe, but they were scattered the land, they were scattered to understand.

They were scattered all over the world. There were many in Ethiopia, they were in Russia, they were in Poland, they were throughout Asia. Jews were all over the place. But they were still Jews. They were still Jews. Okay, so then let me get to the nub of the question, since again, a lot is at stake. A lot of money is at stake. Land is very valuable. Israel has a lot of resources. By the way, if you’re accused of a crime, you can hide here. That’s a pretty good passport to have. It’s a good thing, right? So who’s entitled to it? I don’t understand.

And you’re very discouraged in the United States from asking this question for some reason. It’s a totally rational. I’m not discouraged. No, you’re not Discouraging others do. You’re like the only person I got this conversation with. Gevrols be like, shut up, Nazis. It’s a foundational question. Are you speaking of an ethnic group or a religious group? Well, I think you’re looking at. For many people, it is religious. There are people who may not have a deep religious connection to Judaism, but they’re still Jews. Okay, so it’s an ethnic category. It is ethnic, but it is also religious.

It is rooted in religion. You can’t take it out of it. Now, that means. Then how can an atheist. Well, I will tell you this. There are some people who say, I’m Christian. They never go to church, they never pray, they never read their Bible, they don’t tithe. But they’re not entitled to citizenship on the basis of that. They’re not entitled citizen, but they still call themselves Christians, even though they identify in that way. Here’s the difference. You’re saying that people who have this identification have a deed to a huge chunk of land on the Mediterranean.

Okay, so there’s, you know, it’s a right. You keep telling me it’s a right. And so it’s totally fair to say if you come to my house and say, I’ve got the title to your house, I get to ask, may I see it? Where’d you get it? And that’s exactly what happened here. People from Europe, Eastern Europe came here, in a lot of cases, atheists, and kicked out a lot of people who lived here. Well, but they did not just throw people. They bought a lot of land. There’s no question about that. They buy a lot of land, but they also, in 1948, kicked out a lot of people in the war.

It was a war. I agree. Look, I’m not wanting to relitigate the history. I’m just saying it’s a fact. Including a lot of Christians. A lot of Christians wound up fleeing and they lost their homes and they’ve never been allowed back. And all of this was justified on the basis of this identity that forms. That is the ticket to the right that you keep referring to. So my question is very simple. I’m going to wait patiently for an answer. Does this right derive from religious affiliation or from genetics? And I would say it’s both. But I would also say that when you said the Christians were kicked out, Tucker, Christianity is growing in Israel and there is a big lie that goes out there.

But let me finish this, because I keep hearing that Christians are really not treated well in Israel. That’s just simply. That’s a lie. It is a lie. There are lots of different. There are 34,000 Christians in Israel in 1948. There are of hundreds, 184,000 Christians here today. And by Israel, what are you counting? You’re talking about the land? What territory are you counting? You’re counting Israel proper. Are you counting the west bank as well in Gaza? I mean, when you say Israel, those numbers apply to what landmass it would be in Israel proper. Okay, there are 184,000.

Now I’ll tell you where Christians are not doing very well. They’re not doing very well in the Muslim controlled countries. There’s almost no Christians in Qatar, for example, except those who live in the Christian ghetto. Who are the service workers. I’m sorry, Look, I don’t want to argue with you. There are many more Christians in Qatar than there are In Israel. That’s not true. It actually is true. And I refer you to Wikipedia, Mr. Ambassador. Wikipedia. I refer you to the government of Qatar, the government of Israel. These are knowable facts. Like, and I’m in Jordan, by the way, the numbers are down.

In Syria, the numbers are down. In Lebanon, the numbers are down. They’re just tell you that about twice as many Christians. But they live in the enclave. They are not native Qataris. Okay, we’re mixing so many different categories here. I’m just saying I get things wrong all the time. You’ve just gotten something wrong, and I think it’s important to acknowledge it. There are many more Christians in Qatar than there are in Israel. Fact, how many? Now you caught me. I don’t know. I can look at my phone. But I was just there. And there are many more, like, whatever.

But I just want to get to the point that forms the basis of this whole conversation, which is who has a right to the land? And you said it’s a mixture of religion and ethnicity. Because as I noted, and you agree, many of the founders, maybe the majority of the founders of modern Israel did not believe in God at all. So they were not religious Jews. They weren’t religious at all. They were atheists. They were atheists. I believe them. So that suggests it’s ethnic. But it’s also true, as you well know, because there’s a famous court case about this, that ethnic Jews who convert to Christianity do not have the right of return.

That was settled by the Israeli Supreme Court. I’m very confused. So that would suggest it’s not ethnicity because you invalidate your Jewishness by converting to Christianity. There are a number of messianic Jews who live in Israel who are here. I’m aware of that number. But you’re not contesting what I’m saying because it’s a very famous court case. The right of return has to do with your mother, your grandmother. It has to do with family ties. Ethnic. There is a lot of. Sure. Ethnicity is a big part of the right of return. Great. To make aliyah, to come to Israel, to live here.

Then if both of your parents are Jewish and you have an ethnic right to land, you are one of Abram’s descendants, but you convert to Christianity. How is it you don’t have the right to return? I’m totally confused, but I know a number of people who have returned as Christians but have Jewish history. Are you saying that Jews who convert to Christianity have a right, a legal right to return? Because I, I know that they do. Whether. When you say, do they have a right to return, do they prove it’s a. It’s a legal category, as in government, which is their family history, their grandmother, their mother.

And there are many aspects of that. I’ve read it. I think that’s Jewish people who are Christian, and they came here, made aliyah, they had Jewish blood, Jewish history, they were Christian, messianic. But they came here and they were welcomed here, and they were given full legal rights. Absolutely. And a passport. So clearly it’s not true that you invalidate your right of return by converting to Christianity. That’s just false. I’m not aware of that. I know that there are a number of Christians here. I go to church with Christians every week here. Of course. Do you have a right to come and say, I am an ethnic Jew, even though I practice Christianity, Therefore, I have every bit as much right to move into a settlement in the west bank or into East Jerusalem or anywhere I want.

Galilee, anywhere. Because I am returning to the land of my forefathers. I have a legal right in the state of Israel, even though I’ve converted to Christianity. You’re saying that’s true? I’m saying I know people have done it. Now, can I tell you what the law specifically is? I’m not sure. Well, it’s really significant. I’m a Christian. I don’t have any Jewish roots. So therefore I cannot quote you the law. If you want me to do that, I’ll look at it. Well, it really matters because you’re saying, in fact, people in the United States are being called antisemites, a lot of them, including me, because they somehow don’t believe that Israel has a right to this land.

Do you think Israel has a right to this land? No. You haven’t defined what the land is, and you haven’t defined who Israel is. So I really don’t know. It is the land they’re living in now. The borders that they have. The borders are moving. The borders have moved in the last year. What do you mean the borders have moved? Well, they are the 1967 borders. I’m including, you know, the West, Jerusalem and Judea and Samaria. What are the borders of Judea and Samaria? Well, you basically take the Jordan river and it’s west of the Jordan river to the Mediterranean Sea, to the Lebanon border.

And Israel did have control of the Sinai. They gave that to Egypt. They had control of it. They gave it away in 1979 in the peace agreement, whatever you call it, the land that was taken from Jordan in 1967. You call it Judea and Samaria. There’s a significance to that that I don’t fully understand. I’m against it. I don’t know what it’s. The biblical 80% of the Bible happen in Judea and Samaria. We’ve also established that the Bible gives Jews the right to occupy the land from the Nile to the Euphrates. So I’m very confused by why we’ve shrunk the land and why we’re.

Israel has shrunk the land. They have made that decision. That’s why they gave away now. They gave them. Now’s the point for giving away a lot of things. Abram’s descendants are the ones who have the right to have this land, correct? Yes. Okay. Why don’t we do genetic testing on everybody in the land and find out who Abram’s descendants are? It’s really simple. We’ve cracked the human genome. We can do that. Why don’t we do that? Would you be against doing that? I have no idea what that would prove. I mean, maybe it would be. What do you mean? It would prove who Abram’s descendants are and who has a right to live here and who doesn’t, according to the theology that you yourself just explained.

And so I’m very confused as to why we don’t do that. If you believe the theology that you’ve just explained to me, would we do that all over the world? And everybody, this is the only country in the world that you’ve said has this covenant with God, that this people have a moral and legal right to the land. What about people who convert to Judaism? Would they have a right? Well, you’ve just. You’ve just said there are Judaism. So you just told them they can make aliyah. They may not have. You just told me that it doesn’t matter.

You told me moments ago, trying to keep track, that it doesn’t matter whether or not you believe in God or whether or not you practice Torah Judaism or Rabbinic Judaism, which is something else that I don’t even know if we should. I don’t even know what that means. But it doesn’t matter whether you’re, quote, a religious Jew or not. What matters is that you are part of the Jewish people to whom God gave this land that extends from the Nile to the Euphrates. And so if you believe that, wouldn’t you want to know with a burning passion who those people are? And because of science, we can now know who those people are.

So why aren’t we finding out? I guess you could propose a DNA test for everybody who comes here, everybody who lives here. But the point I’m comfortable with secular nation states where it’s none of this is done on the basis of blood. I’m uncomfortable with that. I’ll just say that. But there are people who may not have bloodlines, but who have converted to Judaism. Are they going to be able to live here? Are you going to kick them out? By your standards, they can’t live here because you just said that they have a right to live here because God gave them the land, because they’re the descendants of Abram, they’re the citizens of Abraham.

But if they’re the spiritual descendants of Abraham and they’ve now decided that they’re converting to Judaism, then do they have a right to live in Israel? Well, there’s a whole legal literature in Israel on that question. And my understanding is that certain types of modern Judaism qualify a person and other types don’t. Is that your understanding? I don’t believe that people converted. And I could have this wrong, but I know people who face this personally know people. I don’t believe people who’ve converted in a Reform synagogue have the right of return. I don’t think that is because I know people who’ve married into Jewish families and they find out they don’t have the right of return.

So that is perplexing to me. Yeah, I know my experience is a little different than yours. I know people who have definite Jewish connections, family relations, but now they’re Christian. Some are not necessarily practicing Jews. They’re more secular Jews, as you’ve discussed, that they come back here. Okay, I’m not against that. I’m just wondering, since you have, since you began this conversation by asking me did I think they had a right to come here. Yeah, that’s my question was on what basis do they have the right? And I’m trying because God granted it to them. And I also said because that there should be a land where Jews can live in peace and safety.

And I asked you what a Jew was and you couldn’t answer it. You said it partly is religious, but doesn’t have to be. It’s partly genetic, but it doesn’t have to be. And so that you can see why I’m confused. I think I was very clear that being Jewish is an identification either through blood or through faith that you’re Jewish. It may be that you’re a blood Jew, but you don’t necessarily practice Judaism, just like there are people who say they’re Christian, but they don’t do a thing to demonstrate what Christians do. There are a lot of bad Christians, including me some of the time.

A lot of the time. But I don’t have a right to real estate on the basis of my claim of Christianity. You don’t have a right to real estate if you’re talking about a specific parcel, but if you’re talking about a land, I think what we’re talking about is. That’s all I’m. All I’m saying. And there was a designation to the family of nations, of the world, that there would be a Jewish homeland. Let’s get to that point, because I think you’ve taken us on several trails here, and I’m not sure we can follow them all.

But is there a reason that the Jewish people that represent. And I want to get back to this because you didn’t let me finish while ago, they represent 0.2% of the world’s population in the entirety of the world. There are about 16 million Jews total, and 8 million of them live here. The rest live mostly in New York or South Florida and a few other places. Okay, so this is a small population of people. They have connection to this land historically, biblically. Do they? Yes, they do. If Bibi’s family, we know they lived in Eastern Europe, there’s no evidence they ever lived here.

He’s not religious, but in what sense? Do you have his family tree? No, we don’t. Do you? He doesn’t. So no one does. That’s the point. So how do we know that he’s connected at all? And if there has been a practice of Judaism and a connection to the language, the Bible, the land, his ancestors didn’t. He doesn’t practice Judaism in any rigorous way. His ancestors didn’t live here. They didn’t speak the language, and there’s no evidence they ever lived here. So on what basis does he have a right to come? Very much speaks the language.

He has fought for the land. His family has fought for the land. No, I’m not dodging the obvious question, which is where does this right come from? And the reason it’s meaningful. Who knew that answer? Because there are a lot of people in the territory that Israel controls today, particularly in the west bank, who, through genetic testing, we can know. Their families have been here for thousands of years. We don’t know whether they practiced Judaism, whether they were Samaritans, pre Islam. We don’t know that. A lot of them, we know, have been Christians for 2,000 years.

They have less of a right to. To the land than someone whose ancestors. The only thing we know about them is they lived in Latvia or Poland. They’re Eastern European. How does that work? They’re Jewish. By what definition? They’re Jewish by their. But how do we know they have any connection? They’re Jewish by their faith. They’re Jewish by the connection to the language. Jewish by the connection to the Torah. But how do we know that Bibi, specifically Bibi’s ancestors ever lived here? How do we know that? I’m not sure if I understand your question. How do we know if the prime minister of Israel’s ancestors ever lived? Maybe I could ask you, how do we know they didn’t? I mean, there’s.

Well, it’s. On the basis of the claim that they did that. All kinds of things happen. People are displaced. There’s a money flow. I mean, there’s. It’s a big question. A lot hangs on this. It’s not some theoretical thing like, oh, you know, did my grandparents do this or do that? It’s like, no, no, we have a right to be here because my ancestors were here. Okay, how do we know they were here? I’m totally unable to process what you’re trying to get at. It goes back. Do Jewish people have any land on this planet that should be theirs? Do I feel that way about all peoples? I feel that way about Jewish peoples.

I feel that way about. Okay, then you don’t mind them having this? Is there any country. Let me ask you this, but bluntly. Is there any country that European peoples have a right to exclusively? I think they have attained their land through conquest. I mean, let’s ask ourselves. Britons attain their land through conquest. No, they’ve always been there. The Romans, the Greeks had all these. Let’s speak. No, no, let’s. Well, you could certainly say that here. The Romans. The Romans controlled this, as you know. And they expelled. They don’t anymore. Jerusalem. Amen. I want them to control it.

Hope not. I’m anti Roman. Okay, we’re on the same page. Okay, but my question is very simple. Is there any European peoples that possesses the same right to their land that the Jews, including people whose ancestors lived in Eastern Europe, possess here? The Britons, we know, the British people, the Scandinavian people, the Irish people. Their ancestors have been there for thousands of years. That’s provable. Through genetic testing. Do they have a right to their land exclusively? Is anyone saying they don’t? Yes, of course, yes. No one will say they will. And I’m asking you, do they have that right? And I’m not sure what.

What that question involves because no one is trying to force them out of their land, of their homes. But here, hold on. Why won’t you answer that question? Because I just did. So the Irish people have the same right to their land that the Jews have. Biblical connection. Okay, but I’m a Bible believer. Okay, so that is. But it’s also a principle. And that is. And you’ve said it 15 times, sometimes people have land because they were able to attain it through war. They were able to attain it when it was challenged. I understand that there’s all kinds of consort, but we can’t say that about the Irish world.

Borders change all the time. Not actually the borders. The borders of the island of England have not changed, nor. But the governor. Those are just two examples. So you’ve got the indigenous people there. Do they have a moral right to that as their homeland? And I think they would probably say, yes, we do, because we have ancient history. What does we do? I’ve never thought about whether. Now that I’m raising the question, and you’ve spent a lot of time thinking about the right of the Jewish people to their homeland. Do the Irish have the same right to a.

A homeland? As long as they can defend it. And as long as they, you know. As long as they can defend it. But Tucker, here’s the point. I’m telling you. Wait, hold on, hold on, hold on. Now you just flip cab. You’re the minister here. Yeah. And I’m telling you, as long as they can defend it, and if they can’t defend me, to tell you that. I think that what is very, very special here is that there is a biblical as well as an ethnic and a historical. So you can take any one, but if you add them all together, biblical, historical and ethnic, you have a very strong case that the Jewish people are living in a land that is indigenous to them, that has been their historic homeland for 3,800 years.

You can repeat it as. And you can also look in the archeology. The stones cry out, okay, you’ve been to the City of David for a time. I have. Okay, so you know, then that. And I love it. It’s an amazing place. It may be the greatest archeological discovery in all of history, because it’s stunning. And they still continue to find things that date the Jewish people to this land archeologically for 3,800 years. We can date the British people to their land much longer, much thousands of years longer. Stonehenge is 3,000 years older than any building built by the descendants of Abram in this country.

And so I just. It’s fine. I’m not trying to invalidate anyone’s right. I’m just one wanting you to affirm that right. But it makes you uncomfortable and you won’t. And I don’t know why, because I’ve never honestly sat down and asked myself, are the lines around the. It’s an I, so we know what the lines are. I’m saying, but are those lines. Are those rooted in something other than the historical connection? Well, great, then they should have it. But that’s. They have a right to have it. But then you said if they can defend it, and if they can’t defend it, they lose the right.

But I didn’t say it was exclusive, one or the other. I think you’re really going off the chart. I just want to know if these principles apply universally or if they only apply to the people of Israel. And my answer appears to be just, the people of Israel, they’re the only ones with these rights. And I just reject that. I didn’t say that. But I’m saying we are talking about Israel. We’re in Israel. We’re talking about Christian Zionism. Because you’ve made some disparaging statements about Christian Zionists. You’ve apologized for our. For which I appreciate. And now we’re trying to define Christian and Zionist, and it seems like we’ve gone way, way off of that, as you suggested.

As a former debater at the outset, I’m trying to get to terms and a common understanding of what the words mean and the term. And I’m no closer to that than I was when I began. You’re not closer to the term Christian, what that means? I think it’s someone who follows Jesus. And that’s my next question. There are a lot of Christians in the west bank, and there were a fair amount of Christians in Gaza, and some of them had been killed. There were 5,000 in Gaza. Yeah, yeah. And two different churches were hit by the IDF.

Christian Hospital was hit seven times by the IDF. And I don’t understand. They were not hit seven times. They were. There were different. I know. And one of the times, it was a rocket that was shot by Hamas, and all the news agencies reported that the IDF shot the rocket. They said, did the IDF ever hit the hospital or the churches? They did. Why? Accidentally. And they apologized for it, and it was very unfortunate. But also, you got to remember there were times Hamas often hid caches of Arms under hospitals. Were you bothered by the fact that the IDF hit Christians? I’m bothered that anyone got killed in Gaza.

But you know why I’m bothered if you’re a Christian minister? Because here’s the thing. You can’t say that the Christians are Islamic extremists. No, but I can say that they would side with the Christians over the secular government of Israel. But I would look at it even more broadly. I would ask you this. Why was there so much suffering, and continues to be suffering in Gaza? It’s because Hamas, which could have built a Singapore, built a Haiti. They have a landmass the size of Las Vegas. They built tunnels underneath that are larger than the London Underground.

Over 500 miles of tunnels. They didn’t build it to move people from one hospital to the other, one marketplace to the other, but to hide terrorists, to hide weaponry. And on October 7th, they went over there and they massacred 1200 civilians. Massacred, mutilated, humiliated them. You’re never going to get me to defend Hamas. Sorry. Please don’t. I’m not going to. But I’m telling you, I’m appalled by it. How many civilians have been killed by the IDF in Gaza? We don’t know. You know why? We don’t know. What’s your guess? Well, the only numbers we have come from this dubious entity called the Gaza Health Ministry.

You know who that is? Well, why does Israel have a. Have a. Some kind of. Count on it. We also know that a lot of the people who were killed were, in fact, warriors, sadly. How many kids were killed? We don’t know. What’s your guess? I don’t know. I’m sure it was thousands. And it’s thousands of kids were killed. Some of the kids who were killed had been recruited to be in the military. Kids as young as 14 years old. Terrible kids. Do you hear yourself? I wonder. I just said that There were kids as young as 14 that were recruited to be Hamas soldiers who were given arms.

How do you feel about kids being killed? I think it’s horrible. You know what I also think is horrible? I think it’s horrible that 1200 people were slaughtered by people across the border and 252 people were taken hostage. 48 of the 1200 were Americans. Three more. And then when are all lives equal? When Hamas could have ended this on October 8th and given all the hostages up. They didn’t. Leaving no choice. You’re never going to get me to defend Hamas. I’m not pro Hamas. I hope. Totally opposed to slavery, slaughtering Innocence. Whether Hamas does it or whether the government of Israel does it in much larger numbers.

And the reason I’m opposed to it is because I’m a Christian and I believe that all souls are created by God. I do not disagree with that wholeheartedly. But I said, how many children have been killed? War is a horrible thing, period. And we don’t know. We know that a lot of the numbers were reported by God. But you said you think thousands of children have been killed. Yeah. And a lot of times. You know why they got killed? Because Hamas. Hamas would gather up the children and put them in the targets. Do you know what Israel does? They send page messages and they send texts to every cell phone in Gaza, and they say, we’re going to hit this particular target.

They drop leaflets and they announce where they’re going to hit. Nobody does that. The US doesn’t do that. Israel does that in order to prevent. Let me finish this. They do this in order to prevent civilian casualties. What Hamas does, they say, oh, this is the target. And by gunpoint, they push people into those various places. And then when people get killed, they say, look, Israel just slaughtered these people, even though it was Hamas who moved them into harm’s way, knowing that it was going to put them in a place of danger and death and destruction.

And they do that because they don’t care. You say you care about life, I care about life. It’s interesting that they don’t care about life. I’m not saying that Hamas does. You’re never going to get me to defend Hamas. Good. I’m anti Hamas. Said that three times. And I believe your dig at the United States is very revealing. Why is it revealing? Because your priorities are very clear. No, no, no. Yes, they are. No, no. Yes, they are. And as an American, permit me a moment of outrage because I said many civilians have been killed. And you said, right in the middle of your elaborate defense of the IDF’s killing of civilians, including children, you said, they do a better job than the United States does.

That’s my country and my government. It’s my country. What flag am I wearing here? Well, I. I’m asking why is it? What flag am I wearing? Well, that’s, of course, my flag as well. And it’s my flag. It’s who I serve. So why the dig at the United States in the middle? It’s not a dig at them. No, no, no, no. You. You’ve totally misrepresented. What did you mean by that? I did not take a dig at the U.S. what I’m saying is. So the IDF is more humane than the U.S. i’m saying military. I’m just saying that Israel takes steps that we don’t take and no other country that I’m aware of takes to try to prevent because no matter what Israel does, they’re going to get accused of genocide.

That may be right. And I’m, I’m just telling you that they. But then let me ask you on that question. I’m, you know, I. That’s such a politically loaded question. But I resent the idea that you think that I’m not loyal. Loyal to the U.S. look, I’m not saying you’re not loyal. I’m merely noting what you just said, which was that the IDF takes greater pains than the US Our military does, to spare civilian lives. And I guess my question is, when was the last time the US military killed this many civilians? Do you know? Well, it could have been Nagasaki, Hiroshima, could have been Iraq, Afghanistan.

We don’t know the full number. And I think most Christians would say all of those things were atrocities because innocents were killed in large numbers. And we don’t believe in that. And so that’s not really a defense, is it? War is a horrible thing, Tucker. And there are people who end up unfortunately being killed that shouldn’t have been. I would tell you that I wish that none of those people in Gaza had been killed after October 8th. Well, I say none of them. I’m glad Mohammed Sinwar was killed. I’m glad that some of those warriors, the people who masterminded and carried out the atrocities, occupied for several Hamas operatives.

How do you feel about their deaths? If they participated in that, then God help them, I’m telling you. What does that mean, God help them? I don’t know that they were 14 years. No, but I’m telling you that when someone commits the acts of atrocity and then they hold hostages, if these were your children being held hostage in garbage Gaza, what would you do to get them out? I wouldn’t want to kill 14 year olds, I’ll tell you that. Let me ask you something. Would you do whatever it took to get your kids back if they were being tortured, raped, starved? I would not kill children, period.

Well, I’m just telling you. And I would never make excuses for killing children either. And I’m not talking about targeting children. I’m talking about told me that 14 year olds deserve to die because they’re working for Hamas. I’m telling you. My question is, can you hear yourself? I do hear myself. So do you think a 14 year old child has agency? Do you think that he deserves to die because he’s being used by adults? Isn’t his death a crushing tragedy? He’s holding a gun and he’s pointing it at someone who’s trying to save a hostage. And the only way to save that hostage.

I’m telling you, war is a horrible thing. It’s a horrible thing and a lot of innocent people. I think I’m the one who thinks war is a horrible thing. No, no, no, no. I think what you don’t. I’m trying to explain how horrible it is and you’re saying that the 14 year old deserved to die. We don’t execute 14 year olds. I’m putting words in my mouth that I didn’t die. I don’t know what you’re saying. I never said deserve to die. I say there are people who die. That it’s unfortunate. But I’m saying that you are not giving Israel credit for having done everything they possibly could to a level that quite frankly, in urban warfare, there has never been a war that is criticized Israel.

Criticized Israel. But it’s a foreign country and I would much rather criticize a foreign country than my own. Feel free to do that. They can handle it. They pivoted against our country. No has done a better job than our military does. I simply gave you the illustration and I helped you understand that Israel goes to links that no other country, including ours, goes to in the middle of an urban war. And yet Israel ended up with fewer civilian deaths in an urban war than any urban war of record. You said you didn’t know how many civilian deaths there were.

So how can you say that if you took Gaza’s numbers, Hamas’s numbers, you said you would know what the numbers are. We don’t. You just told me that. Then how can you say it’s a lower number? But if you took the numbers that they reported, which is like 50,000, 24 or 25,000 of those were actual warriors, how many civilians? If you, if you took, the numbers range from 120 to 78. Those ones I just read, I don’t know if that’s real. I don’t know either. I’m asking you. Yeah, and I’m selling you. Those numbers I’ve not heard, have not read.

The numbers that I think are more reportable are somewhere in the 60,000 range. Where do those come from? The Gaza Health Ministry. You said those from mosque. Valid numbers. I think they are. I don’t think that they’re Accurate. But I’m saying. Let’s just say. I’m saying they’re inaccurate, but they prove that Israel’s doing a great job. Let’s assume that the most widespread numbers, the largest numbers that have been reported out of Gaza by Hamas. Yes, let’s assume they’re true. That’s what I’m saying. I’m not saying they are true, but assume they’re true. Let’s just take them at their word.

Then you still have a lower number of civilians killed than in any urban warfare environment in modern history. Fact. Is that a fact? Yes. What are you comparing it to? To any urban warfare. Iraq. Where? Afghanistan. Where in Iraq? Where in Afghanistan? There aren’t many urban areas in Afghanistan. I don’t think there was any fighting in urban areas in Afghanistan. Kabul, I don’t know. Was there, Was there, Were there pitch battles in Kabul over long periods of time? I don’t. 20 years in Kabul. I don’t. Throughout all of Afghanistan. But what. So what were those rates you’re talking about? What are the rates there? You just.

The number of people who were killed into the tens of thousands. I’m asking you to. I don’t know the answer. I’ve never heard of any of this. You brought it up. You said the IDF has killed a lower proportion of civilians in urban warfare than in any urban conflict in modern history. I’d never heard that before. I don’t know what are the controls for that? And you said, well, would you. The US Military killed more civilians. Would you agree that the real tragedy was that Hamas continued to force this war? Hold on. You just once again said that the IDF is more humane than the United States military.

You just said that. You said in Iraq and Afghanistan the US Military killed more civilians than the IDF did in Gaza. You just told me. I never heard that before. And my question is, how do you know that? What are those numbers? And I’m trying to explain to you that there were extraordinary efforts to keep the numbers to you. I think there were tens of thousands. I’ll get them for you. Well, you brought it up. That’s the only reason I’m pushing that. But you. I’m wearing a flag. I work for a country. And you pretended or alleged that somehow I’m not loyal to this and I’m criticizing my own country and I’m not a better job than the US Military in Iraq and Afghanistan.

And I said, what are the numbers? And you said, I don’t know. So on what basis are you making the claim that the IDF in Gaza spared more civilians than the U.S. army and Marine Corps did in Afghanistan and Iraq. Why are you saying that? Like, on what basis are you saying that? From the conversations that I’ve had with the people who fought there. And I don’t have the exact numbers for you, but what I’m trying to help you to understand, and I don’t think you’re willing to go there, is that there was no desire to kill people indiscriminately in Gaza.

I don’t think there was any desire to kill people indiscriminately in Iraq, Afghanistan. Let me just say I think I know a bunch of people served in the Afghanistan. And I don’t believe your average IDF soldier wants to kill innocents. I just want to be really clear about that. I don’t think most soldiers want to do that. I think a lot of them in our country, in Israel, wind up doing that because that’s what war is about. And it really hurts them. And I know people who’ve done it personally, know them really well, and it, like, wrecks their lives.

But I don’t think your average soldier wants that in this country or any other. The leadership is a different question. And I want to refer you very specifically to a number of speeches the Prime Minister, your friend benchmark Netanyahu, gave in the aftermath of October 7, including one in November of that year when he referred to Amalek. Now, Amalek is a reference, a biblical reference, of course, you’ll be very familiar with that. The Amalekites were a tribe described throughout the bible, particularly in 1 Samuel, that obstructed the Jews as they fled Egypt. And God tells Samuel to give the instructions to Saul to kill the Amalekites.

And he says, and I’m sure you remember this, this is in 1st Samuel 15. Of course, I’m sure. I know you know it. He says, kill the men, kill the women, kill the children, kill the infants, kill the donkeys, kill the camels, kill everything. And Saul spares the king and he spares the animals. And for that he is punished by God. That is genocide. God is calling for genocide of the Amalekites of Amalek. And the Prime Minister of Israel at least once, I believe, on other occasions described the Palestinians in Gaza as Amalek. That’s calling for genocide.

And you know that. I totally disagree. Tell me then what it means. Because to say that Israel was attempting to commit genocide, first of all, that’s simply not true. I’m saying, what is the Prime Minister talking about? Why Would he refer to the Palestinians as Amalek? What is Amalek? You would have to ask him. I don’t know. I know what Amalek is. I do understand. 1st Samuel 16. I get all that. 1st Samuel 15. But I do understand, and it’s widely known. So if you say our enemy is Amalek and we are proceeding on the basis of God’s commands to us, you are calling for genocide.

Tell me how I’m missing something. Because if Israel wanted to commit genocide, they could have done it in two and a half hours. We can debate what happened in Gaza. I’m asking you why the leader of this country. Ask him. Well, what do you think? I don’t know. Does that bother you at all? People? I don’t know what he meant. I don’t know if it was an illustrative metaphor. I think what he was saying was that we’re not going to let anything keep us from getting our hostages back. Their sons and their daughters who are being brutalized, raped, tortured, starved, beaten.

Come on, Mr. Messer. No. There are many examples of justice in the Bible, but there are very. Israel gets accused of genocide regularly. I’m not accusing Israel of anything. I’m saying that the prime minister of Israel described the Palestinians. You think he wanted to do genocide? I’m asking why, of all the references in the Bible, and there are many to justice and there are many to reconciliation, that is a reference to genocide, as you know, killing every man, woman, child and infant. I’m quoting. And their animals, wiping them from the earth. And when they don’t do that, they’re punished.

When you say that at the outset of a war, and then you wind up with massive civilian casualties, maybe not as big as they were in Iraq, then I have to ask you, what is that? And is that kind of thinking consistent with Western values and with Christianity? Do we as Christians believe it’s okay to kill people’s children? No, we don’t. And neither do the Israelis because they didn’t go after their children. If they’d have wanted to kill all their children, Tucker, they’ve got the military capacity. They could have done it in less than a day.

I’ve heard you say that. I know. Why didn’t they? Why didn’t they? I think there are a lot of decent people in Israel who don’t want that. But I’m talking. Do you think that the prime minister wanted to. To wipe out every single person in Gaza? Do you really think that? I’m asking you what you think is the U.S. representative of our government. I don’t think that that’s what he wanted to do. Just ask him. Why are you referring. I never had to ask him that. Why? Because I never saw any evidence. Any evidence that Israel tried to wipe out every single person.

I just gave you examples that they tried to save civilian lives. But I’m not, by the way, I’m not. As I’ve said, and I mean this, I think most soldiers in most armies, including the Israel Defense Force, don’t want to kill civilians. I just don’t believe that. I think there are some lunatics. Can I ask you something? Yes. You platformed a guy. You had him on your show. Tony Aguilar. Don’t platform anyone. I interviewed people. Well, you interviewed not a liberal, so I don’t platform people. Okay. You interviewed Tony Aguilar, who claimed that IDF soldiers killed a little boy in his presence.

That didn’t happen. Okay. It did not happen. I don’t know if you know whether it happened or not. Well, I can tell you why I know it didn’t happen because we found that little boy less than a week later. All right? I was involved, heavily involved, in helping to extricate him from Gaza. Four different countries were involved in getting he and his mother to safety. Get them out of there. Tony Aguilar is a liar. Tony Aguilar claimed that he saw an IDF soldier shoot the little boy. He was fired from the GHF for cause, and he begged for his job back, and they wouldn’t give it back because they didn’t want him.

And he told them that if they didn’t give his job back that he would burn them down. Okay, so he goes out. No, let me finish this, because it’s important for you to understand, right? So this guy then goes out and makes up this story that he witnessed IDF soldiers shooting a little boy. I don’t know that he made it up. He seemed to believe it. To me, it’s possible. He’s wrong. I’ve been wrong many times. Well, this is a little bit more than just missing a fact. He claimed to be an eyewitness to the murder of a little boy.

Okay. A little boy that a week later we found. And you’re sure it’s the same little boy? We’re absolutely sure. How do you know that? Because we have pictures of him. We had descriptions of him. We know his name, we know his mother. He was extricated out of Gaza. It was a very delicate situation to get him out, because if Hamas had found out that he was still Alive, they would have killed him in order to validate Aguilar’s story. How do you know that? So he gets out. How do you know Hamas would have killed him? Why would they.

Wouldn’t they have wanted to kill him? Because that way they could have said that this story was true. If I’m just telling you what you’re saying is true and I have no basis of knowing. Yeah, I’m really glad because I don’t want little kids to get killed, even 14 year olds. Okay, you shouldn’t want anyone to get killed. But let me ask you, is it true? He also made the claim, and he had audio of it and video, too, that US contractors were using live ammunition to disperse crowds. And he had video of that. Do you know if.

Did he make up that video? There were times. Here’s what happened. Crowds would come toward the sites. They were given verbal warnings, and then they were given additional verbal warnings. And shots were fired either in the air, sometimes in the ground. And if they continued to come and threaten. There were times when there were people who were engaged in firefights that happened. Oh, they were armed. Sometimes they were. They were. Do you know of specific instances where they were armed? I can probably get you some specific information about that. I think I know the answer to that.

I don’t think there’s any evidence at all that they were. But I also know that. Are you okay with using live ammunition at aid distribution sites for families, women and children? Very rarely did this happen here. How about at all? Are you okay with that? No. I’ll tell you what, I’m not okay. No, no, no. I think you are so trying to put words in my mouth. You said that they were firing back, but then evidence that they were. On a Sunday afternoon, I can remember when there was widespread reports on BBC, CNN and the New York Times, and they said that 27 people were killed at a feeding site.

We had video extensively over that site. Not one single person. Not only were they not shot, nobody was shot at. There was not one bit of violence that happened at that feeding site. Trying to get me to defend BBC, not going to do that. It’s like defending Hamas. I agree with you. I don’t believe anything I see in the media. It’s just that it’s really simple. If people are using. And these were American contractors by the. These are not Israelis. I’m aware of American contractors run by some crypto minister or something was running the group. If they’re using live ammunition at an aid distribution site, that strikes me as Totally unacceptable.

They were not firing. Does it seem acceptable to you? They were not firing with. People got killed. There’s some of those people got killed because Hamas were trying to keep them from getting to the aid distribution sites because Hamas was controlling the food. Hamas made $500 million selling the food that was supposed to be given away for free. Defend Hamas. And what they were trying to do is to keep people from going to the sites where they were getting food for free. When we set GHF up, Hamas, the first thing that happened. I know, but I’m telling you, the first thing that people said was, wow, this is the first time we’ve had food that we got for free.

Is it okay to buy it? Unarmed people? I just told you it wasn’t. That’s awful. Yeah, it’s awful. Of course it’s awful. Are all lives equal, do you think? Of course they are. So the death of a Palestinian is every bit as important, significant as the death of his? Why wouldn’t it be? Of course it is. I don’t know. Of course it is. There’s no such thing as a human soul that God made that is less valuable than another. I’m pro life. Me too. So I believe that every life has intrinsic worth and value. There’s no such thing as a worthless or a completely disposable life.

That’s what makes me pro life. Tucker. I totally agree. And I believe that from the conception until the end of natural life. That’s why I would never say when confronted with the death of children, war is terrible because it minimizes the deaths of those children. It’s awful. I don’t think it minimizes. I think it’s outrageous. It’s a terrible thing. I wish we never had war. Why do we have war? We’re about to have one with Iran, it looks like. How many Americans do you think will die in that war? I hope none. None died last year when we participated in the 12 day war.

Not one. You said 20,000 would die and they didn’t. I said could and they could have and they could die now. And that’s a real risk. How many boots on the ground do you think the US has supplied for Israel over the course of its life? How many times have we put soldiers on the ground for Israel? Well, we had the Iraq war, which was for Israel. Nobody for Israel. How was it for us? Well, because it was a retribution against 9 11. Now, was it the best idea was. Was Iraq involved in 9 11? Our government thought so.

Why are 911 documents still classified? I Have no idea. Should they be unclassified? I think so. All of them. Right. I have no problem with that. Me, too. I like transparency. I like sunlight. I do, too. I hope you’ll call for that. I like free press. I like free speech. I totally agree. I really, I like all of that. But if. No, if there was no connect. I’ve never seen. I’m open to anything, but I’ve never seen any connection between the government of Saddam Hussein, the secular Baathist government of Saddam Hussein and the terror attacks of 9, 11.

I don’t know that there were. I don’t know. So I’m not sure, but I don’t know how. So why did we say Israel’s fault? Well, Benjamin Netanyahu, now prime minister, of course, exerted lots of pressure openly on the US Government to take out to regime change the Saddam government. I was there. I was in Washington, and they complied. I don’t think there’s any way to read it. Do you think Israel leads the US and pushes them and tells them what to do? Not on everything, of course. Let me be specific. I think the Israeli government, strong, strongly pushed the United States to take out Saddam Hussein.

There’s no question about that. I think the Israeli government right now on Bibi Netanyahu has been in the White House seven times in one year pushing for regime change in Iran. I think they’re on the verge of convincing this administration to affect regime change. Do you think the president is weak and is being pushed? I’m not saying that. I know. Well, I know. I know the president’s being pushed. Why do you think a foreign leader was in the White House seven times in one year? Are you okay with that? That’s a lot. You know, Israel is not just a friend or an ally.

It is a real partner. We have an incredible relationship with Israel in intelligence and in military, in culture, in values. You know, to be shocked that the Israeli prime minister would have that many meetings. It’s a lot. But I want to ask you the question, do you think President Trump is weak enough to let Bibi Netanyahu push him into something that he doesn’t want to do? I don’t. Look, I think, and I don’t know, of course, the answer to every question, including this one, but I think the president, President Trump really doesn’t like nuclear proliferation. And I don’t think he wants Iran to have a bomb.

I think he really, sincerely needs to. I hope you don’t want them to have a bomb. I want them to have a bomb. I Don’t want anyone to have a bomb, including Israel. I don’t know why we’re okay with Israel having nuclear weapons. I’m not. I’m not okay with Pakistan having them. I’m not okay with Saudi having them. Israel’s nuclear weapons were created, of course, with nuclear material stolen from the United States from a nuclear plant in Pennsylvania, as I know you know, I’m opposed to all of it. I don’t like nuclear weapons. It’s mass murder as far as I’m concerned.

So, no, I don’t want Iran to have a bomb. Obviously, the question is, what are the potential costs? And you have to factor that into any decision. And what are the costs if they were to get a nuclear bomb? They’ve said for 47 years, death to America. Well, I don’t think they target us. I don’t think is they’ve targeted President Trump specifically. Yeah, they’ve hired a person. Iran, BBC and Hamas. Not defending him. Good. All I’m saying, we’re in agreement on that. I want our country is not thriving. And we’re spending, you know, tens and tens and tens of billions of dollars over time defending Israel and helping it prosecute all this.

Do you know where that money goes? It goes to a lot of places. But let’s talk about that a minute. $3.8 billion a year. That money goes right back to the US to purchase weapons systems. For example, every round of ammo that the IDF shoots is manufactured just outside where I live in Little Rock, Arkansas. The components, a lot of them for the Iron Dome and the Arrow 3 missile defense systems are manufactured near Camden, Arkansas, which needs it, by the way. Camden’s economically depressed. You know the area. I do. And there are thousands and thousands of American jobs and there are billions and billions of dollars of expenditures that Israel makes in the US and buys the things that we can do.

I know how defense contracting works. I’m from Washington. No, I know this. I guess what I’m saying is America’s not thriving at all. And you think it’s Israel’s fault. I don’t think it’s Israel’s fault. Okay, well, good. I just think that what we’re doing isn’t working at all. And America is not rich. The President is doing some amazing things to get us back on Trump. Okay. I’m merely saying that over, say, the last 20 years, America’s not gotten richer or freer at all. And I come to Israel and the infrastructure we’re flying in, and I said to my buddy, I was like, man, first of all, looks great.

I love the agriculture in Israel because it’s beautiful. I love green. I love plants. I remember when it didn’t look like that. Yeah, yeah. First time I came here in 53 years ago. It’s great. It did not look like that great. Looks a lot nicer than our country. And it has higher standard of living. It has nicer roads than the United States. And so it’s like, okay, why are we sending all this money to a country that has a higher standard of living than ours? I don’t know that they have a higher standard of living. They do, actually.

They have free health care. They also have free abortion. Are you okay with that? I personally don’t like that. Why would we be subsidizing. Why would we send any money? We’re not. Why would we send any money to a country that provides free abortion? Because the money that we send does not pay for health care. It does not pay for abortion. It pays for military people. It’s like, if they don’t spend it on this, they’ll spend it on that. If they do spend it on that. And then we get many more times back on the return on investment when we’re not sending you any more money.

As long as. As you have free abortion. Well, that would be a policy decision for that. I would be okay with it because I hate abortion. I think it’s horrible. How much do you hate it? I hate it. Why are we sending them money if they’re paying for free? Because they’re not paying for abortions with the money. And because we in turn get billions of dollars. The return on investment is estimated somewhere between 412. These numbers. I just live there and I know, and I’m, by the way, I’m for American manufacturing. The defense industry is totally corrupt and seedy, as you know.

However, I like to see American companies thrive. Like, it’s complicated. I’m not an extremist or an absolutist on really anything other than abortion. However, net. Net, as we say, our country’s not really thriving. And I. We’re also totally broken. Why is that the case? Is it because we’ve done a lousy job controlling our border borders, A lousy job of controlling economy. It’s a lot of things, but we own that. I think President Trump is doing remarkable things to turn it around. I cannot imagine any President Trump. But if you’re saying the country is in trouble, saying we’re out of money actually is what I’m credit to what the president is doing to get us out of debt? Because I think that what he’s doing economically, I’m not supporting Hamas and I’m not attacking Trump.

Okay. Just with those baseline agreements. It’s also true that, like our debt is not sustainable. And so given that, like, what do you think it will cost? What did it cost to move all these, to move the fleet off Iran into the Persian Gulf? A lot less than it would to bury a lot of Americans if they ever got a long range ballistic missile. A lot less. Yeah. I don’t know. Tucker, I want you to understand that when Iran has told us for 47 years they’re going to kill us, do you think they would do it if they had the capacity militarily? What would happen if Iran took out any of the energy facilities in the Gulf, took out a bunch of them? What would happen to the United States economy, do you think? Well, our economy probably would survive because we have energy independence thanks to President Trump.

It would survive. Our economy is what would happen to markets. What do you think? It would be a terrible thing to happen globally. It’s why Iran is a global threat. It’s why Iran through its proxies, Tucker, this is another thing. People, they’re not blowing up energy infrastructure right now. But if we try to regime change them, they have said that they will. I don’t know if they will or not. I don’t either. Is that a risk that. But they have their own problems to defend if they try to do that and they lose their own energy capacity.

So if they took out and again, I don’t know what’s going to happen. And I guess we’re not supposed to think about worst case because that makes us pro Islamic or something. But I’m an American and I don’t want a depression in our country. It’s too fractured and unstable right now. I don’t think we want that at all. Okay. None of us want that. None of us want. Not right now. We don’t. Not at all. I don’t want it next year, next week, 10 years. Especially now all these states are basically in a state of insurrection against the federal government.

They’re not enforcing the most basic law of the land, which is immigration. And thank goodness President Trump is pushing back and he’s. I agree. I’m just saying to force if all of a sudden compliance markets just tanked and gasped, tripled or whatever and you had, you know, like a severe recession or something worse, that’s a massive cost. And I don’t see anybody factoring in that possibility. Iran has said it will do it. You’ve said 10 times they’re evil. Okay, I believe you. Then why wouldn’t they take out the Qatari gas fields they share with Qatar or refining petrochemicals extraction in any of the Gulf countries? That would cripple us.

Let’s. Well, are you worried about that energy wise? Again, we have independence because President Trump put measures in place that gave us the capacity. Do we set international energy prices in the United States? In some ways we do because our own market and our own production has a whole lot to do with what those world costs are going to be. If you took Saudi energy production production or Qatari energy production or Emirati energy production, that is making an assumption that if there were regime change that they would be more effective at attacking than we would be defending.

And that’s a pretty. Can we defend the straits for moves? Can we defend all of that energy infrastructure? Is anyone even asking these questions or it’s all like a Mark Levin episode. They’re bad. Okay, they are certainly asking the questions. That’s part of the whole process. Is it? I’ve raised this before and it’s like, shut up, Katarlson. You’re taking money from the jihadis. I’ve never taken a dime from anybody, obviously. I just care about the United States and it freaks me out. And no one else seems worried about this. In caring about the US you should care about the fact that the proxies of Iran have moved globally.

12 Central and South American countries have Hezbollah deeply embedded. Venezuela one of the worst. They’re in the Western Hemisphere already. Do we know how many. Where would you rank that on the. On the, like, list of concerns for the average American? Hezbollah. And I doubt most Americans think about it. I think about it because I know what they do. I know that if it weren’t for Iran, there wouldn’t be Hamas, there wouldn’t be the Houthis, there wouldn’t be Hezbollah. We wouldn’t have the problem on the border with Lebanon. We wouldn’t have the problem with Yemen, we wouldn’t have the problem on the border with Lebanon.

As I’m an American, I’m not having any problems on the border with Lebanon right now. I live in Maine. We don’t have problems on the border of Lebanon. Like, what are you even talking about? No offense. There’s 700,000Americans who live in Israel for one thing. Does that matter to you? Of course. Every American life matters to me. Every life you say matters the same. So that should matter when they start my country like I’m shelling civilians and civilians get killed and displaced. That should matter to all of us. But I mean there’s a genocide going on like in all kinds of different countries.

There’s a lot that’s sad and broken about the world. We know that as Christians Satan rules the world. But our job as like members of a nation state is to look after our community, our families. Right. So I don’t think any of the concerns that you’ve just raised, which I think are all real, I’m not disputing them at all, are even in like the top hundred for Americans the US government be spending this much time and money worrying about things that are not on the list of Americans concerns. Do we have self government? Does it matter what Americans actually think or doesn’t it? Of course it does.

But it also matters how much does it matter what the threat is to Americans. Do you think there’s a threat to Americans because of the proliferation of the proxies in Iran? Conceivably there is. I’m not pro Iran. But beyond conceivably, do you think that they mean it when they say it for 47 years, like in my town and no one’s doing anything about it at all? Nobody’s doing anything about that. No one’s doing anything about it at all. Okay. That’s a fact. We have a huge country. This is a country the size of New Jersey with no resources.

It’s just a tiny little country. We’re from a huge continental sized country that’s totally diverse, very, very hard to manage and police. And we have a lot of problems. And I just think if you ask Americans what do they want to spend their time and money worrying about, fixing, improving. No one’s going to mention the border with Lebanon that I know. Do you think? I doubt they will, but I think this don’t. There are people that the US government has monitoring what the threats are to Americans long term. Sure, yeah. Do you think there’s a threat? The question is when people thought There was a 37.

Well, but I don’t know that Saddam ever said he was going to take down America. But you just. The Iranian regime has said for 47 years they are. Well, you just. If they had the capacity of a long range ballistic missile and nuclear capability, do you think they’d light that puppy up and send it to us? I don’t know. But I know, I know this from sitting here last year. Four wars that I went through in less than a year. The Iranians rained Down ballistic missiles. Can I ask you a question? Like, how much does it matter what Americans think? Well, it matters every bit what Americans think.

That’s why Americans vote. It’s why Americans have the opportunity to have free speech. We want them to have that. Okay, so what percentage of Americans support a war with Iran? I don’t know. Do you know? I do. It’s. I think it’s around. I saw the numbers yesterday. I think it was like 21%. Okay. Is that enough to have a war with Ron? We don’t live in a world where you have a poll taken to find out whether our policy should be a particular direction. Because I thought you just said that. No, we care deeply about it.

But on the other hand, do we make the decisions of foreign policy and even domestic policy based on we carefully about it? What sense? How if we. We’re ignoring it, then in what sense do we, quote, care deeply about it? Well, I think we care deeply when we see there’s a threat. No, but about Americans opinions. So you’ve got 350 million Americans. They vote. They voted in this last election on the basis in part of the promise, no more wars. So now we’re about to have a war. Looks like 80% of people are against it in that range.

Let’s say it’s 70%, but nowhere near majority support for this war. And it’s not direct democracy, but it is a form of democracy. It’s representative democracy, the ultimate form of democracy in our system, in a republic. Because we’re not a true democracy. We’re a Republican. Exactly right. It’s a mediated democracy. It’ll be an opportunity for Americans to vote if they think that we’ve made the wrong policy decisions. I personally think the president is making the right policy decision, but I guess. But you just said it matters deeply what Americans think. And if the overall majority are against it, in what sense does it matter? Because what I hear is it matters what they think.

But it really doesn’t matter what they think, because. No, you take it in, you certainly ingest that, and then what do you do with it? Ultimately, once you ingest it, then you make sure that you have. No, you just gotta. It goes out the other end, obviously. No, it doesn’t. No, it doesn’t, Tucker. But you also have information that the average American may not have. They may not know what the threat is. How many Americans know that Hezbollah is in 12 Western Hemisphere countries? How many Americans care? Well, I would hope they would all care. How many Americans know How many people from Iran from terrorist cells have come across Joe Biden’s open border.

How. How many Americans? I definitely care about that. Okay, you. Why haven’t they been rounded up? But they’re trying. But you got all these blue state mayors and governors making it very difficult. Get it. But thank God President Trump is trying to get it done. Look, I’m totally all for that. Completely. I guess what I’m saying is that most Americans. I’ve never met an American who thinks, other than, like, the people who have ideological reasons to pretend they think it, that the imminent threat to America is anything having to do with Iran. The imminent threats to America include, like, bankruptcy from too much Debt, your son ODing on fentanyl, your neighborhood completely changing.

Because unlike Israel, Americans don’t have a right to their country. Country can just be completely changed by their legislature. New people can show up from foreign countries and not speak your language. And there’s nothing you can do about it because you don’t have a right because you’re not Bibi. Can you feel the resentment because it’s real. I’m not against Israel. I’m against the total destruction. Hide that very well. I’m mad at my lawmakers for not protecting my country with the care they’ve protected Israel. I don’t think that your country, my country, our country, has spent that much time protecting Israel.

I asked you a little bit ago, spend no time protecting my country. No, I ask you. Well, actually, they do. How? They are the tip of the spear. Every enemy they have is our enemy. Our country. Things that are targeted toward us often go through them. How do we have 60 million illegal aliens if they protected my country? Well, we didn’t protect our country because we had a president that opened up the borders and didn’t give a rich coming in since Reagan, 1986. Yeah, but that’s 40 years, President Trump, the credit for having closed the border.

I’m giving. I love the fact I campaigned for Trump because he said he closed the border. He did. Amen. Thank you, Trump. But we had Reagan, then we had Bush, then we had Clinton, then we had Bush again, Then we had that guy Obama. And then, you know, the presidents. Yeah. And they all presided over my country’s total transformation from a nice, clean, affluent, orderly society into, like, pretty kind of Third world. Actually, that’s not protecting us. That’s behaving with total contempt for my country. You said a moment ago that we do more. Are you inferred that we do more for Israel than we do for ourselves? Do you believe that? No.

I didn’t say we do more for Israel. It’s like, but where’s the care? Where’s the concern? Where’s the holy smokes? There are drug cartels in your neighborhood. You’re telling me about the border with Lebanon and like Hezbollah or Hezbollah or whatever you call it in some Latin American country. I don’t care. There are drug cartels in my neighborhood. I know people who’ve died of fentanyl ODs. Where’d the fentanyl come from? Probably from China. It’s from Mexico. From China through Mexico. Yeah. The precursor chemicals, they say come from China. I get it. And who’s in that axis with China? Iran.

Larry Fink is in that axis with. No, actually, actually, the heads of our biggest corporations are in that axis with China. I don’t care about Iran at all. I care about America. And if blowing up Iran makes my country richer and safer, I’m for it. And if it doesn’t, I’m totally opposed. It’s that simple. I think most Americans feel that way. Now, I asked you a question a little bit ago you never got back to. Because I think it’s an important one, because one of the things that I sense, a tension with you, you feel like that we do too much for Israel.

We’re getting nothing from it. And I ask you, how many. No, no, I don’t think we’re getting anything. How many boots on the ground has the US Placed on behalf of Israel? However many went to Iraq. We did that for Israel. No, I don’t think we did. You said we did it because of 9 11. That was the US justification for it. But it wasn’t for 9 11. So what was the actual reason? Well, that’s. The US government told us it was for 9 11. They told us that they were part of it, that they had weapons of mass destruction.

They knew. They all did with 9 11. Obviously, there’s no evidence. So what was the actual Israel was not in that component. Israel had no influence on our decision to invade Iraq. That’s not what the people who made the decision say. They say Israel. Well, let me get back to the point. Gave us that information about the fake weapons of mass destruction. What do you think that question was? How many. How many Americans put their boots on the ground for Israel? The answer is zero. Everybody who served in Iraq put their boots on the ground for Israel.

Did not. Did not. Where did we get the information about the weapons of mass destruction that wasn’t real. We didn’t get that from. You’re saying we got that from Israel. Did Israel was one pushed us into that? Well, absolutely. You really believe that? I know that for a fact and so does every. Yes. This has been widely written about and discussed. And I’m not attacking Israel. Like they thought it was in their interest to take out a government that was paying the families of suicide bombers. I get it. I’m not mad at Israel about that. I never have been.

I’m mad at the Bush administration and all the people who went along with this to the detriment of my country. That’s who I’m mad at, not Israel. Bibi’s doing what he can for his country, whether you agree with him or not. I want my leaders to do the same for my country. That’s it. I think the present leadership is doing just that. I truly do. And I don’t think that it’s at all accurate to even intimate that tiny little Israel is pushing the US into something it does not want to do. I totally. Our leaders appear to want to do it.

Our public does not want to do it at all. The public does not want war with Iran. Bibi does. He’s gotten seven. Seven trips to the White House. The average American question would be. Hold on. The average American doesn’t have that level of access. And a foreign leader does seven in one year. And now we’re moving toward war with Iran. The average American doesn’t want that war. The average American is outraged. Don’t you understand? I’m not attacking the BB at all. Strongest president I’ve ever seen in my lifetime. Going back to Eisenhower, for gosh sake. If you’re an American.

No, no, no. Listen to me, Tucker, for gosh sake. I’m not attacking Trump. I like Trump. I know, but you’re making it sound like that he is being pulled into something that he really doesn’t want to do or pulled into something because he’s persuaded. I’m neither saying that nor implying. I was in the meeting last week. I was in the meetings last summer. I can assure you President Trump is not being led into something at all. To be clear, Prime Minister Netanyahu. To be clear, I’m neither saying that nor implying it. Good. What I am stating out loud is true, and that’s that Prime Minister Netanyahu, Bibi Netanyahu has way more influence over American foreign policy than Americans do.

And we know this because he wants a war with Iran. The overwhelming majority of Americans don’t want a war with Iran, and we’re very likely to get a war with Iran. So who has more influence, Benjamin Netanyahu or 80% of Americans? And I’m saying that’s outrageous. That’s all I’m saying. I would counter that Bibi Netanyahu does not want a war with Iran to say that he wants a war. You know who’s going to be at the very front of that? His people. And I don’t agree with that. I’m with him enough to know he does not want a war.

He doesn’t. Does. Does he think that there may be a necessity of taking a war in order to prevent an attack on not just Israel? I don’t want the united argument, but I think I know too much. I mean, let’s. Let’s be real. Okay, so there was. Was, you know, Steve Woff, in my opinion, is just a sterling guy, just a good guy. Excellent. He’s a good guy. That’s my view. And kind of pro American and just couldn’t be nicer and wants the right thing. And he’s probably Trump’s best friend. He and maybe Jared, too, are involved in a negotiation with Hamas or you mean with Iran.

With Iran, yeah. I’m so sorry. Okay. And the Israeli government short circuits it by hitting Iran. So, like, they. What do you mean they short circuit about hitting Iran? They did everything they could to shut down the negotiations between the United States, the Trump administration and Iran. And look, I wouldn’t. They’re acting, again, in their own interest. But our country should also act in its own interest. That’s all I’m saying. And so don’t tell me that Bibi doesn’t want a war with Iran. He doesn’t. If Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff could be successful in getting the President’s demands, and keep in mind, these are the President’s demands.

What are those demands? No enrichment, no nuclear weapon. Quit killing your own people in the streets by the tens of thousands. You and I both agree that it’s a horrible thing to kill your own citizens, which Iran is. It’s a horrible thing to kill anybody’s citizens. Anybody’s citizens. We agree on that. Except that they’re 14 year olds working for Hamas, but whatever, it’s still a tragedy. No, it is. Sorry, I’m being a jerk. You really are being a. I am. I know, I know. You are being a jerk. I am such a jerk. I’m going to write down.

You’re right. Admitted. I know he’s a jerk. Oh, I am a jerk. Everyone knows that. I mean, I’m trying to. Really trying. Okay, okay. No, But I agree with you 100%. Of course, it’s a tragedy that could be done, and I pray it can. Yes. And you know why? Number one, because it would be wonderful for everybody. Number two, if there is a war, you’re going to be 6,000 miles from it. You know where I’m going to be in the bullseye. Do I want there to be a war? No. Do Israelis want there to be a war? No.

How many? I keep hearing Israel is fighting a seven front war right now. What are those seven fronts? Well, you got Lebanon, you have Egypt. Now, Egypt is not an active war, but you have the Muslim Brotherhood within Egypt, you’ve got the Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan, you’ve got Syria. Wait, they’re fighting a war with Jordan? With the Muslim Brotherhood that is in Jordan? Not directly with Jordan, not the government of Jordan. But are they. You’ve got Hezbollah, you’ve got in Lebanon, Houthis in Yemen, you have Hamas in Gaza, you have the threats that come from Iran.

And how many is that? That’s seven. That’s seven. Okay. I’d give you an eighth one. You know, the eighth one the media. Now, I would tell you there’s an eighth front war they fight. How many journalists has Israel killed in Gaza? I don’t know. Over 200, it seems like. Now, are they real journalists? Because a lot of those people that were supposedly journalists were actually Hamas fighters that are documented Hamas fighters. So that’s why I ask you, how many are actual journalists? You know, I. I don’t know, but a lot of them, I mean, they worked for big news organizations and they had press written on their chests.

Yeah. Some of them had UNRWA cars and they were also working for Hamas. So what’s the concern? Do you think that over 200 journalists killed in Gaza are all fake journalists who deserve to be killed? I have no idea how many. The total number is. I don’t have their credentials, but I know that there were quite a few that were actually Hamas fighters that protected Hamas. Ask the hostages. The hostages came back and they started telling about the number of people that were doctors in hospitals that held them hostage in their homes, or the number of people who were pretending to be journalists who were actually holding them hostage.

As someone who’s telling you that there’s a lot more. To what? As someone whose tax dollars helped pay for killing all those civilians in Gaza, I feel like I have a right to know how many were killed. And Israel won’t let outside observers in to figure it out. And I’m frustrated I just want to say that my last question is about Christians, both Christians who visit and Christians who live here, particularly in the West Bank. I spoke to someone recently, a Christian minister who grew up in a town right outside Bethlehem. We would know it as Shepherd’s Field in the New Testament, where the shepherds were tending their flocks in Matthew.

And of course, the angels come and announce the arrival of Jesus. And in nearby Bethlehem, his family’s been Christian, he says, for 2,000 years. He says where he grew up is now surrounded by settlements of people who are not from Israel at all. A lot of them are from the United States, Jewish settlements. They have different roads that the native Christians are not allowed to use. I don’t quite know how that works. And he described a story where his mother was shot outside their house by an IDF soldier for reasons no one ever explained. She survived, but no one was ever punished for it or even explained why they did it.

And he basically described being terrorized by settlers. And I wonder if that’s a concern for you, for the native population, the indigenous population. Did you say this happened in Bethlehem? It happened in Shepherd’s Field. So it’s a Christian village. Beth Sahur, I think, is its name. Outside. Right outside Bethlehem. If it’s in Bethlehem. It’s not in Bethlehem. It’s. Again, it’s. I think it’s Beth Sahur, I believe, is the name of the village. Because there are no Israelis in Bethlehem. None. There are no Jews in Bethlehem. Are there new settlements outside Bethlehem where he is from? Over in Area C, but not in Area A? There are none.

Well, he describes the town he grew up in. And I guess I. I wonder why a Christian whose family’s been there for 2,000 years. There are Palestinian Christians throughout today in Samaria. That’s true. I’ve been over to visit them. I know you have. And some have been. You know, we’ve advocated for some that are Muslim, but they’re American citizens. And we advocated because there was. But why can’t they just drive into Jerusalem to go to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher? Why do they need a prayer to do that if they’re from the. Because of the acts of terrorism that has made it impossible to do it.

You know, how many suicide Christians do you ask this question, so what do we do? Just say, you’re a Christian. Oh, yeah, I’m a Christian. But you’re wearing a suicide bomb. Do Christians do suicide bombs? They could if all they have to do is just say, announce I’m a Christian. There Were over a thousand. Why don’t just get an identity card that says I’m Christian? Let me just finish this. Before Israel put the Green Line up and before they took great care to put checkpoints in place, there were over a thousand suicide bombers in one year.

It was awful. I remember it. But I don’t think any of them are Christians. And they may not have been. Okay, but. But my point is we could find out if they were. So you’re saying we just trust somebody. If they come up and say, I’m a Christian, I just want to go to the Holy Sepulcher? Let’s me in. What I’m saying is that Christians have a right to go to the Holy Sepulcher. Israel does not own it. They’ve had possession of it since 1967. It doesn’t belong to Bibi. It belongs to me and you and every other Christian.

Bibi was probably a young person. I’m not even sure he was. No Christian should ever be barred from the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Should Christians be barred from Joseph’s tomb in Nabilus? I don’t know. Let’s just start with the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. And I don’t understand on what grounds they are. Well, they can’t if they’re Christians at Bet Suhur. So I don’t understand why they’re a threat. They’re not a threat. And why won’t you, as The Christian minister, U.S. ambassador to the State of Israel, say to the Prime Minister, you can’t allow this.

Your country exists in part because American Christians support you. So you have to treat us well. Part of the problem, Tucker, is that in the Palestinian Authority, and that’s what we’re talking about, there are Christians. Look, I know some Christians who live in Bethlehem, and that is Area a. Bethlehem was 80 plus percent Christian before Oslo. 80% Christian, less than 20% Muslim. Today, it’s flipped. It’s now 80 plus percent Muslim. It’s very few Christian. And some of the Christians that I personally know and know well are Zionist. Let that surprise you. They’re Zionists. They’re hardcore Zionists.

Some are. Let me finish my train of thought here, okay? So in the Palestinian Authority, they still teach children from the time they’re five years old that the greatest thing in the world is to kill Jews and that if they end up being a martyr and if they kill Jews, they will get a pension for life if they die. And if they don’t, they’ll get a paycheck for Life and their families will. And it’s called the Prisoners and Martyrs Fund. We call it pay for slay in the US it is against our law. A lot of Christians collecting on that? I don’t know.

Zero. So my question remains, and I’m a little bit frustrated at this point because I’m not defending Hamas. I hate suicide bombing. I hate suicide. I hate violence. I hate the killing of children, period. Why can’t a Christian who was born there, whose family’s been there for 2000 years, following Jesus for 2000 years, drive? Because it’s really close to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. He poses no threat. And why can’t the United States government advocate for him to do that? We do advocate for Americans because that’s our job. And it doesn’t matter whether Palestinian or Israeli.

We do that. But as far as when they. How many Americans are being held in Israeli prisons right now? Total? I don’t have a exact number on that. I don’t know. How can you advocate for them if you don’t know how many there are? Well, everyone that we know, we go visit, our consular goes there almost every week and visits the Americans. It’s not a large number as far as Americans, but when we have them, we go. We go to their trials when they’re on trial. So, yeah, we do a lot more than you’ve given us credit for.

Oh, I’m giving you credit? No, no, you’re not giving you credit because we don’t get much. We don’t get much. By the way. Not every embassy does that. I happen to know for a fact they don’t advocate for Americans in jail. We take our consular services across into the Palestinian Authority and help people over there. Some of those are Christians, some are not. Some are Muslim. But if they’re Americans and they have American citizenship and American passport, we help them. That makes me so happy to hear. I go to Ramallah. I sit down with the vice President and the Prime Minister of the Palestinian Authority.

We try to work ways to make things better. But the reason that sometimes it’s not just an absolute free passage. I’ll tell you why. Because there are too many incidences of terrorist acts, and Israel is not going to allow themselves. But the Christians didn’t do it, and they’re not going to do it. And Christians pay for all of this. They pay for a lot of events. It’s horrible. It’s fair. You can say it’s unfair, but here’s. You can’t punish the innocent. How’s that but you got to somehow make sure that you screen people. And that’s why the checkpoints.

Let me tell you what happened not too very long ago. We had a humanitarian aid truck that came across from Jordan. The driver was supposedly vetted. He was a former Jordanian military person. He came across the checkpoint, everything should be fine, right? He gets out of his truck, he takes a gun and he shoots two of the people. I believe it. Who are the Israelis at the checkpoint, One of whom was a young person less than a year in the job. His mother teaches in the American school where our embassy people go in Herz Aliyah. I get to make the phone call to the mother.

I’m going to tell you something. It was not the most pleasant day of my life. It sounds awful. It is awful. And so those kind of incidences are the reason that it is difficult to go from Judea, Samaria or the West Bank. Call it whatever you want. But if you’re in Area A, which is under the control of the Palestinian Authority and your education has been that killing Jews is a wonderful thing. I’m talking about the Christians. But the Christians, if they go to those schools, that’s too going to get that education. When was the last time there was a suicide bomb detonated by a Christian? I don’t know.

Never. Let me ask you this. Look, I’m not trying to defend, but I’m saying to you that if the curriculum doesn’t get changed, if the pay for slave doesn’t get changed, that doesn’t apply. You have a culture. Well, you say it doesn’t apply. Maybe it never has happened. I don’t know whether it’s ever happened. When will Palestinians in the west bank have the same rights as Israelis in the West Bank? Are you talking about the ones that live in the Palestinian Authority? I’m talking about people who live in the villages they grew up in. Yeah, but changed hands went from one government to another difference whether they live under the Palestinian Authority government or whether they live under Israeli.

If they live under Area A. Do you know the difference? I do. I’m saying if they live under Area A, they live under the Palestinian Authority government. They don’t live under Israeli government. But it’s controlled by the Israeli government completely. There’s no airport. They control the utilities. I mean, this is. It’s silly. I understand there’s a form of self government, but the big decisions are made by the Israelis government. Obviously I’ve been there. I know this and you know it too. So how long does this go on? You say that God gave the nation of Israel the right to this land.

Why not just take it, declare it Israel and make everyone a citizen? I don’t understand why that’s not happening. Well, you know what? There are people who think that that would be a much better. Well, what do you think? I think it very well could be. And if you ask certain people living in the PA under their very corrupt government, where 91% of the people think the government is hopelessly corrupt, that’s what the numbers are. They would tell you that they would be better off if the Israelis were the governing authority. Everyone gets voting rights. Would that be the case if they were all under Israeli authority? You know, there are.

Do you realize there are lots of Arab Israelis? I know. And they vote. Do you know they serve in the Knesset? I’m very aware of that. And I’m just wondering. And they serve on the Supreme Court. And did you know that it was an Arabic who sentenced a former president and Prime Minister to prison? I know all this. I just want to know what’s going to happen. Do you know how many Jews get to help govern Saudi Arabia or Qatar or Syria? I’m not attacking Jews. It’s a much more open government in society. And you make it sound like the Israelis.

I don’t think it sound that way. I’m just asking. No, I’m not attacking the nation of Israel. I’m just wondering what the plan is. So I’ve been hearing my whole life how bad the PA is. Okay, great, but what’s the plan here? So they’re moving all these Americans, people from around the world into settlements subsidized by Americans in the West Bank. Now they’re not moving them from around the world to the settlements. They’re people who make aliyah. They come. I’m just saying these are Israelis who live in Israel. Well, there are a lot of people. And Area C is Israel.

Okay. Okay. But does it remain a territory under military control forever? Does it just become part of the state? The Palestinian Authority? Correct. That’s the big question. Do you believe in a two state solution? And if you do, I would show you a map and I would ask you. Because this is. I don’t know. I don’t know what I think. I just think you need to treat people like human beings. And that’s not happening, obviously. And that would be. You don’t glorify their killing. Yeah. Let them go to their church if they want. See the yellow parts? Yeah.

That’s Palestinian Authority. The tan parts, that’s Area B. That’s the area that is mixed. Israel has military authority, but the Palestinians can live anywhere they want to in there. And the blue area, that’s area C. Area C is Israel. And Israelis can live in Israel. That’s what it is. Now, when people say they want a two state solution, I love to show them a map like this and I ask them, where does that state line up? There is no continuous. I don’t know why it works. You know, we’ve got a lot of states in the United States that need help.

So I’m not going to weigh in on other people’s states, to be totally honest. I just don’t want to pay for it anymore and just want to fix our own country. But let me ask you one last question, which is how Christians are treated in Jerusalem. I’ve talked to so many who’ve been spit on. Really? So many? How many? Well, two yesterday. Two. Okay. Yeah. Both Catholic clergy and both told me the same thing. Anglican clergy I interviewed. I just had dinner recently with a Greek patriarch. Well, there have been a million stories about this. Yeah, I know.

There are instances where Christians get heckled. Usually it’s people who are wearing clerical robes and they’re wearing crosses and it shouldn’t happen. It’s horrible. It’s as bad for that to happen as it is to spit on somebody wearing a kippah in New York City. Terrible. It’s horrible. And actually I should. To be fair, there is, and I just learned this, a Jewish Israeli group that keeps track of Christians being spit on in Jerusalem because they’re offended by it. And God bless them for keeping track and for being offended by it. But there are an awful lot of examples of that.

And my question to you, you’re against it, of course. You’re a Christian clergy. Horribly against it. What is it? So is the prime minister, the president, the foreign minister. So is. I get it. I think every. No one would defend the thinking person. But what is it? Why are they spitting on Christians? It’s very limited. It’s very, very isolated. Where does it come from? But for the most part, you know what? As Christians, we have freedom of movement here. Tucker, I go to church every Sunday. I play bass guitar in my church band. I get it.

I don’t get hassled being a Christian. Everyone here knows I’m the first evangelical to be ambassador to Israel. Do you think they hate me here? No. Are evangelicals recognized by the state of Israel? Yeah, they are. Yeah. Okay. And welcomed and appreciated. No, but like, as a religious, like, are there evangelical Churches in Israel. My Gosh, yes. There’s 184,000 Christians in Israel. I know, I know. And much larger than. But there are churches that are non denominational Evangelical here. Of course there are. And it ranges from when you say non denominational. Some of them are Affiliated Baptist assembly of God.

Some of them are truly non denominational people. Pentecostal. Some are messianic churches where most of the people are ethnically Jewish, but they are messianic. They believe in Jesus. There are a lot of those churches and they’re spread out all over Israel. So there’s freedom. You don’t. Oh, I know a lot of Christians in Israel, by the way. Yes. And as I said, I really hope I can come back and talk to more and come to church with me. Oh, I definitely would like to. Why? And I mean it, too. Yeah. Why would people spit on? Like, where does that come from? I think it’s from an evil heart.

Yeah. What else would it be? I agree. I mean, I don’t think anybody would ever spit on another person, even if it was, you know, I don’t care what a person’s religion is or what a person’s nationality is. I don’t hate anybody. I wouldn’t spit on anybody. I wouldn’t heckle anyone. And I find it repulsive. Nothing about it is defensible. I will say that the one this was off camera, but I interviewed this Christian leader here and I said, oh, that’s so awful. And he goes, you know, I feel blessed because Jesus was spit on. And it’s an opportunity for humility for me.

And I thought, wow, that’s a Christian. Let me tell you this. I’ve been coming in and out of Jerusalem and Israel for 50. Well, soon to be 53 years. Before I came as ambassador, I made over 100 trips here. I’ve never been spat on. I’ve never had someone yell at me. I’ve never had an experience where I felt uncomfortable or that I was unwelcome. If you spit on someone wearing a yarmulke in New York City, you go right to jail. They would not put up with that for one second. And they do put up with it here because it still happens.

That’s true. I’m sure they do go to jail in New York City. They should. And they should go to jail here. I’m against it. They should go to jail here. Amen. So there were all these Christian ministers who were brought over here, evangelicals in December, and I think mostly to attack me, but also probably had Other. Oh, they really weren’t here to attack you. I’m just joking. They were attacking me, but whatever. Yeah, and. But they were flown over by the state. The state paid for it and they had a conference here. I got one of the guides that they received when they arrived, and I think it’s real.

And it says, don’t preach about Jesus when you’re in Israel, we don’t allow that. Don’t do that. Really? Yeah. Why would a Christian minister agree not to preach about Jesus? I’m not sure because I’ve never heard someone tell another Christian minister not to do that. Interesting. Good. Well, I was totally baffled. What would be the purpose of going to church as a Christian if you didn’t talk about Jesus here? I wouldn’t agree more. Thank you. I can assure you that the church I attend, we talk about Jesus. I mean, we pray in the name of Jesus.

No, no, I don’t get it. To anyone else outside the church, are you allowed, like, could I stand on the corner and just tell people about Jesus here? You could. I’m not saying you’d get applause or that people would. Right, that’s fine. But I’m. But I’m saying there are people, that. There’s no law against that, though. Not that I’m aware of. The only laws that. That I know of, you can’t proselytize someone under the age of 18, and you cannot offer. Offer people things of value in order to cause them to listen to your presentation. For example, I can’t say, hey, for $10, would you let me give you this gospel track and.

And scream at. You can’t do that. Right. I don’t know if it’s enforced. I’m not sure. I don’t ever hear anyone arrested for it. But there. No, there’s no law against just like preaching to people. Walk down to the Old City. You’ll hear people, you know out there preaching on the street. Now, are they effective? I don’t know. I’m not sure that people are stopping and falling on their knees and saying, this is what I’ve been waiting for. I don’t know. But what I’m telling you is that the idea that you can’t say it. I know that there are places in the rest of this region where you can’t do that for sure.

Yeah. Qatar, you can’t wear a cross in public for sure. You can’t pray in public. I see a lot of people wearing crosses in Qatar, but in Qatar, I have. I don’t know what the laws Are. Yeah. In Saudi Arabia? Don’t think so. I doubt it. The one place is an exception is the Emiratis. And I love those folks because they are so progressive and they’re doing so many things to change the template of things. They have an Abraham House. That is. It is a combination synagogue, church and mosque. That’s pretty amazing, isn’t it, that they have the same building and they use it for all three of the major religions of the world.

And I think that’s incredible. But they’re really trying to do things that are beyond what anyone else in the region. They change their textbooks. They teach that Israel is not a nation they should hate or seek to annihilate. They’ve done some remarkable things following all this stuff in the. I agree with that. They have a Hindu temple in Abu Dhabi. You’ve been following all this, like, hate the Muslim stuff going on in the United States. On the right. I hear some of it, and it’s unpleasant. We shouldn’t hate anybody. Amen. Yeah. It’s not a good thing.

Hate is an evil thing. I don’t. You know, sometimes you say, I don’t support child killing. Okay, I don’t either. But I don’t support hate in any form. I think it’s a horrible thing. That is such a great standard, and I want to hold myself to that. And thank you for saying that out loud. I don’t hate you. I hope not. Governor, Ambassador, thank you very much for spending all this time. I appreciate it. I’m glad you came. Please come back. I will go with me to some places and a church. I want you to see that as Christians, we’re pretty free here.

Amen. Appreciate it. Thank you and welcome.
[tr:tra].

See more of Tucker Carlson Network on their Public Channel and the MPN Tucker Carlson Network channel.

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