Thank you very much.
0:10
Very much appreciated.
0:17
And I don't mind making this speech without a teleprompter because the teleprompter is
0:24
not working. I feel very happy to be up here with you
0:30
nevertheless and that way you speak more from the heart. I can only say that whoever is
0:38
operating this teleprompter is in big trouble.
0:56
Hello, Madame First Lady. Thank you very much for being here.
1:05
And Madame President, Mr. Secretary General, First Lady of the United States, distinguished delegates,
1:11
ambassadors, and world leaders. Six years have passed since I last stood
1:17
in this grand hall and addressed a world that was prosperous and at peace in my
1:23
first term. Since that day, the guns of war have shattered the peace I forged on two
1:29
continents. An era of calm and stability gave way to one of the great crisises of
1:37
our time. And here in the United States, four years of weakness, lawlessness, and
1:42
radicalism under the last administration delivered our nation into a repeated set
1:50
of disasters. One year ago, our country was in deep trouble. But today, just eight months
1:57
into my administration. We are the hottest country anywhere in the world. And there is no other country
2:05
even close. America is blessed with the strongest economy, the strongest borders, the
2:12
strongest military, the strongest friendships, and the strongest spirit of any nation on the face of the earth.
2:20
This is indeed the golden age of America. We are rapidly reversing the economic
2:28
calamity we inherited from the previous administration, including ruinous price
2:35
increases and record setting inflation. Inflation like we've never had before.
2:41
Under my leadership, energy costs are down. Gasoline prices are down. Grocery
2:47
prices are down. Mortgage rates are down and inflation has been defeated.
2:55
The only thing that's up is the stock market, which just hit a record high. In
3:01
fact, it hit a record high 48 times in the last short period of time. Growth is
3:08
surging. Manufacturing is booming. The stock market, as I said, is doing better
3:14
than it's ever done. And all of you in this room benefit by that. almost everybody.
3:21
And importantly, workers wages are rising at the fastest pace in more than
3:26
60 years. And that's what it's all about, isn't it? In four years of
3:32
President Biden, we had less than $1 trillion of new investment into the
3:38
United States. In just eight months since I took office, we have secured commitments and
3:46
money already paid for $17 trillion. Think of it, four years less than a
3:52
trillion, eight months, much more than 17 trillion
3:58
is being invested in the United States and it's now pouring in from all parts
4:03
of the world. We've implemented the largest tax cuts in American history and
4:09
the largest regulation cuts in American history, making this once again the best
4:15
country on earth to do business. And many of the people in this room are
4:21
investing in America. And it's turned out to be an awfully good investment during this eight-month period. In my
4:28
first term, I built the greatest economy in the history of the world. We had the best economy
4:34
ever history of the world. And I'm doing the same thing again, but this time it's
4:39
actually much bigger and even better. The numbers far surpass my record
4:45
setting first term. On our southern border, we have successfully repelled a
4:51
colossal invasion. And for the last four months, and that's four months in a row,
4:57
the number of illegal aliens admitted and entering our country has been zero.
5:05
Hard to believe because if you look back just a year ago, it was millions and
5:11
millions of people pouring in from all over the world, from prisons, from mental institutions, drug dealers.
5:19
All over the world, they came. They just poured into our country with the ridiculous open border policy of the
5:26
Biden administration. Our message is very simple. If you come illegally into the United States, you're
5:33
going to jail or you're going back to where you came from or perhaps even further than that. You know what that
5:40
means? I want to thank the country of El Salvador for the successful and
5:46
professional job they've done in receiving and jailing so many criminals that entered our country.
5:53
And it was under the previous administration that the number became
5:58
record setting and they're all being taken out. You
6:04
have no choice. And other countries have no choice because other countries are in the exact same situation with
6:11
immigration. It's destroying your country and you have to do something about it.
6:18
On the world stage, America is respected again like it has never been respected before.
6:26
You think about two years ago, three years ago, four years ago, or one year ago, we were a laughingstock all over
6:33
the world. At the NATO summit in June, virtually all NATO members formally committed to increased defense spending.
6:41
At my request, from 2% to 5% of GDP,
6:46
making our alliance far stronger and more powerful than it was ever before.
6:52
In May, I traveled to the Middle East to visit my friends and rebuild our partnerships in the Gulf. And those
6:59
valued relationships with Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE, and other countries
7:05
are now, I believe, closer than ever before.
7:11
My administration has negotiated one historic trade deal after another, including with the United Kingdom, the
7:18
European Union, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines,
7:23
Malaysia, and many, many others. Likewise, in a period of just seven
7:29
months, I have ended seven unendable wars. They said they were unendable.
7:35
You're never going to get them solved. Some were going for 31 years. Two of
7:40
them 31. Think of it. 31 years. One was 36 years. One was 28 years.
7:47
I ended seven wars. And in all cases, they were raging with
7:53
countless thousands of people being killed. This includes Cambodia
8:00
and Thailand, Kosovo and Serbia, the Congo and Rwanda. A vicious violent war
8:08
that was Pakistan and India, Israel and Iran, Egypt and Ethiopia
8:16
and Armenia and Azerbaian. It included all of them. No president or
8:23
prime minister and for that matter no other country has ever done anything close to that.
8:29
And I did it in just seven months. It's never happened before. There's never
8:34
been anything like that. very honored to have done it. It's too bad that I had to do these things instead of the United
8:43
Nations doing them. And sadly, in all cases, the United Nations did not even
8:49
try to help in any of them. I ended seven wars, dealt with the
8:55
leaders of each and every one of these countries, and never even received a phone call from the United Nations
9:01
offering to help in finalizing the deal.
9:06
All I got from the United Nations was an escalator that on the way up stopped right in the middle.
9:13
If the first lady wasn't in great shape, she would have fallen. But she's in great shape. We're both in good shape.
9:20
We both stood and then a teleprompter that didn't
9:26
work. This is these are the two things I got from the United Nations. A bad escalator and a bad teleprompter.
9:34
Thank you very much. And by the way, it's working now. Just went on. Thank you.
9:40
I think I should just do it the other way. It's easier. Thank you very much.
9:46
I didn't think of it at the time because I was too busy working to save millions of lives. That is the saving and
9:53
stopping of these wars. But later I realized that the United Nations wasn't there for us. They weren't there. I
10:01
thought of it really after the fact, not during not during these negotiations which were not easy. That being the
10:08
case, what is the purpose of the United Nations? The UN has such tremendous
10:13
potential. I've always said it, it has such tremendous, tremendous potential,
10:20
but it's not even coming close to living up to that potential. For the most part, at least for now, all they seem to do is
10:28
write a really strongly worded letter and then never follow that letter up.
10:33
It's empty words and empty words don't solve war. The only thing that solves
10:39
war and wars is action. Now after ending all of these wars and
10:44
also earlier negotiating the Abraham Accords which is a very big thing for
10:51
which our country received no credit never receives credit. Everyone says
10:56
that I should get the Nobel Peace Prize for each one of these achievements.
11:01
But for me, the real prize will be the sons and daughters who live to grow up
11:06
with their mothers and fathers because millions of people are no longer being killed in endless and unglorious wars.
11:15
What I care about is not winning prizes, it's saving lives. We saved millions and millions of lives with the seven wars.
11:24
And we have others that we're working on. And you know that many years ago, a very successful real estate developer in
11:31
New York known as Donald J. Trump, I bid on the
11:36
renovation and rebuilding of this very United Nations complex. I remember it so
11:42
well. I said at the time that I would do it for $500 million, rebuilding everything. It would be beautiful. I
11:50
used to talk about I'm going to give you marble floors. They're going to give you terazza.
11:56
I'm going to give you the best of everything. You're going to have mahogany walls. They're going to give
12:01
you plastic. But they decided to go in another direction which was much more expensive
12:07
at the time and which actually produce a far inferior product. And I realized
12:14
that they did not know what they were doing when it came to construction and that their building concepts were so
12:19
wrong and the product that they were proposing to build was so bad and so costly.
12:25
It was going to cost them a fortune. And I said, "And wait till you see the overruns." Well, I turned out to be
12:32
right. They had massive cost overruns and spent between two and four billion dollars on the building and did not even
12:39
get the marble floors that I promised them. You walk on to Raza, do you notice that?
12:46
As far as I'm concerned, frankly, looking at the building and getting
12:51
stuck on the escalator, they still haven't finished the job. They still haven't finished. That was years ago.
12:59
The project was so corrupt that Congress actually asked me to testify before them
13:05
on the tremendous waste of money because it turned out that they had no idea what
13:10
it was. But they knew it was anywhere between two and4 billion as opposed to
13:16
500 million with a guarantee. But they had no idea. And I said it cost much more than $5 billion.
13:23
Unfortunately, many things in the United Nations are happening just like that. But on an even much bigger scale, much
13:30
much bigger. Very sad to see whether the UN can manage to play a productive role.
13:38
I've come here today to offer the hand of American leadership and friendship to
13:44
any nation in this assembly that is willing to join us in forging a safer,
13:50
more prosperous world. And it's a world that we'll be much happier with. A
13:57
dramatically better future is within our reach. But to get there, we must reject
14:03
the failed approaches of the past and work together to confront some of the greatest threats in history.
14:11
There is no more serious danger to our planet today than the most powerful and
14:16
destructive weapons ever devised by man, of which the United States, as you know,
14:22
has many. Just as I did in my first term, I've made containing these threats
14:28
a top priority, starting with a nation
14:33
of Iran. My position is very simple. The world's
14:38
number one sponsor of terror can never be allowed to possess the most dangerous weapon.
14:44
That's why shortly after taking office, I sent the so-called Supreme Leader a
14:49
letter making a generous offer. I extended a pledge of full cooperation in
14:55
exchange for a suspension of Iran's nuclear program. The regime's answer was
15:01
to continue their constant threats to their neighbors and US interests throughout the region and some great
15:08
countries that are right nearby. Today, many of Iran's former military
15:13
commanders, in fact, I can say almost all of them are no longer with us.
15:19
They're dead. And three months ago in Operation Midnight Hammer, seven
15:25
American B2 bombers dropped the 14 30,000 pound each bombs on Iran's key
15:32
nuclear facility, totally obliterating everything.
15:37
No other country on earth could have done what we did. No other country has the equipment to do what we did. We have
15:43
the greatest weapons on Earth. We hate to use them, but we did something that
15:49
for 22 years people wanted to do. With Iran's nuclear enrichment capacity
15:55
demolished, I immediately brokered an end to the 12-day war, as it's called,
16:00
between Israel and Iran, with both sides agreeing to fight. Fight no longer.
16:08
As everyone knows, I have also been deeply engaged in seeking a ceasefire in
16:13
Gaza. have to get that done. Have to get it done. Unfortunately, Hamas has
16:19
repeatedly rejected reasonable offers to make peace. We can't forget October 7th,
16:24
can we? Now, as if to encourage continued conflict, some of this body is
16:30
seeking to unilaterally recognize a Palestinian state. The rewards
16:38
would be too great for Hamas terrorists for their atrocities. This would be a
16:43
reward for these horrible atrocities, including October 7th, even while they
16:49
refuse to release the hostages or accept a ceasefire. Instead of giving to Hamas
16:56
and giving so much because they've taken so much, they have taken so much. This could have
17:02
been solved so long ago. But instead of giving in to Hamas's
17:07
ransom demands, those who want peace should be united with one message.
17:14
Release the hostages now. Just release the hostages now.
17:21
Thank you.
17:29
Thank you. as we have got to come together and we will come together. Got
17:35
to get it done. We have to stop the war in Gaza immediately. We have to stop it. We have to get it done. We have to
17:41
negotiate immediately. Have to negotiate peace. We got to get the hostages back. We want
17:47
all 20 back. We don't want two and four. As you know, I got along with Steve Whit
17:53
and others that helped us, Marco Rubio, we we got most of them back. We were
17:58
involved at all of them. But I always said the last 20 are going to be the hardest. And that's exactly
18:04
what happened. We have to get them back now. We don't want to get back two and then another two and then one and then
18:10
three. Have this process. No, we want them all back. And we want the actually
18:15
38 dead bodies back, too. Those parents came to me and they want them back. And they want them back very quickly and
18:22
very badly as though they were alive. They want them. They want them every bit as much as if their son or daughter were
18:28
alive. I've also been working relentlessly stopping the killing in Ukraine.
18:37
I thought that would be of of the seven wars that I stopped. I thought that would be the easiest because of my
18:43
relationship with President Putin, which had always been a good one. I thought that was going to be the easiest one.
18:49
But you know, in war, you never know what's going to happen. There are always lots of surprises, both good and bad.
18:56
Everyone thought Russia would win this war in three days. But it didn't work out that way.
19:03
It was supposed to be just a quick little skirmish. It's not making Russia look good. It's
19:09
making them look bad. No matter what happens from here on out, this was
19:14
something that should have taken a matter of days, certainly less than a week, and they've been fighting for
19:20
three and a half years and killing anywhere from 5 to 7,000
19:28
young soldiers, mostly mostly soldiers on both sides every single week. from 5
19:35
to 7,000 dead young people and some in cities, much smaller numbers, where
19:42
rockets are shot, where drones are dropped. This war would never have
19:48
started if I were president. This was a war that should have never happened. It shows you what leadership is, what bad
19:54
leadership can do to a country. Look what happened to the United States. And look where we are right now in just a
20:01
short period of time. The only question now is how many more lives will be needlessly lost on both sides. China and
20:09
India are the primary funders of the ongoing war by continuing to purchase Russian oil. But inexcusably, even NATO
20:17
countries have not cut off much Russian energy and Russian energy products,
20:24
which as you know, I found out about two weeks ago and I wasn't happy. Think of it. They're funding the war against
20:31
themselves. Who the hell ever heard of that one?
20:36
In the event that Russia is not ready to make a deal to end the war, then the
20:41
United States is fully prepared to impose a very strong round of powerful
20:46
tariffs which would stop the bloodshed, I believe, very quickly. But for those
20:51
tariffs to be effective, European nations, all of you are gathered here right now, would have to join us in
20:59
adopting the exact same measures. I mean, you're much closer to this. We
21:05
have an ocean in between. You're right there. And Europe has to step it up.
21:11
They can't be doing what they're doing. They're buying oil and gas from Russia
21:16
while they're fighting Russia. It's embarrassing to them and it was
21:22
very embarrassing to them when I found out about it. I can tell you that they have to immediately cease all energy
21:29
purchases from Russia. Otherwise, we're all wasting a lot of time.
21:35
So, I'm ready to discuss this. We're going to discuss it today with the European nations all gathered here. I'm
21:42
sure they're thrilled to hear me speak about it, but that's the way it is. I like to speak my mind and speak the
21:47
truth as we seek to reduce the threat of dangerous weapons today. I'm also
21:52
calling on every nation to join us in ending the development of biological weapons once and for all and biological
22:00
is terrible and nuclear is even beyond and we include nuclear in that. We want
22:06
to have a cessation of the development of nuclear weapons. We know and I know
22:12
and I get to view it all the time. Sir, would you like to see? And I look at weapons that are so powerful
22:20
that we just can't ever use them. If we ever use them, the world literally might
22:26
come to an end. There would be no United Nations to be talking about. There would
22:32
be no nothing. Just a few years ago, reckless experiments overseas gave us a
22:37
devastating global pandemic. Yet, despite that worldwide catastrophe, many
22:43
countries are continuing extremely risky research into bioweapons and man-made
22:49
pathogens. This is unbelievably dangerous. to
22:54
prevent potential disasters. I'm announcing today that my administration will lead a international effort to
23:00
enforce biological weapons convention which is going to be meeting with the
23:06
top leaders of the world by pioneering an AI verification system that everyone
23:11
can trust. Hopefully the UN can play a constructive role and it will also go be
23:18
one of the early projects under AI. Let's see how good it is because a lot of people are saying it could be one of
23:25
the great things ever. But it also can be dangerous, but it could be put to tremendous use and tremendous good. And
23:32
this would be an example of that. Not only is the UN not solving the problems
23:37
it should too often, it's actually creating new problems for us to solve. The best example is the number one
23:44
political issue of our time, the crisis of uncontrolled migration. It's uncontrolled.
23:51
Your countries are being ruined. The United Nations is funding an assault on
23:56
Western countries and their borders. In 2024, the UN budgeted $372 million in
24:04
cash assistance to support an estimated 624,000
24:09
migrants journeying into the United States. Think of that. The UN is
24:15
supporting people that are illegally coming into the United States and then we have to get them out. The UN also
24:22
provided food, shelter, transportation, and debit cards to illegal aliens. Can you believe that? On the way to
24:29
infiltrate our southern border. Millions of people came through that
24:34
southern border just a year ago. Millions and millions of people were pouring in. 25 million alto together
24:40
over the four years of the incompetent Biden administration.
24:45
And now we have it stopped. Totally stopped. In fact, they're not even coming anymore because they know they
24:52
can't get through. But what took place is totally unacceptable. The UN is supposed to stop
24:58
invasions, not create them and not finance them. In the United States, we
25:04
reject the idea that mass numbers of people from foreign lands can be permitted to travel halfway around the
25:09
world, trample our borders, violate our sovereignty, cause unmititigated crime,
25:15
and deplete our social safety net. We have reasserted that America belongs to
25:23
the American people, and I encourage all countries to take their own stand in defense of their citizens as well. You
25:31
have to do that because I see it. I'm not mentioning names. I see it and I
25:37
could call every single one of them out. You're destroying your countries. They're being destroyed.
25:44
Europe is in serious trouble. They've been invaded by a force of illegal ali
25:49
aliens like nobody's ever seen before. Illegal aliens are pouring into Europe.
25:54
Nobody is ever and nobody's doing anything to change it to get them out.
26:00
It's not sustainable. And because they choose to be politically correct, they're doing just
26:06
absolutely nothing about it.
26:11
And I have to say, I look at London where you have a terrible mayor, terrible, terrible mayor. And it's been
26:19
so changed. So changed. Now they want to go to Sharia law. But
26:26
you're in a different country. You can't do that. Both the immigration and their suicidal energy ideas will be the death
26:33
of Western Europe if something is not done immediately. They cannot this
26:39
cannot be sustained. What makes the world so beautiful is that each country is unique. But to stay
26:46
this way, every sovereign nation must have the right to control their own borders. You have the right to control
26:51
your borders as we do now and to limit the sheer numbers of migrants entering
26:57
their countries and paid for by the people of that nation that were there and that built that particular nation at
27:03
the time. They put their blood, sweat, tears, money into that country, and now
27:11
they're being ruined. Proud nations must be allowed to protect their communities and prevent their societies from being
27:18
overwhelmed by people they have never seen before with different customs,
27:23
religions, with different everything. Where migrants have violated laws, large
27:29
false asylum claims or claimed refugee status for illegitimate reasons, they
27:34
should in many cases be immediately sent home. And while we will always have a
27:40
big heart for places and people that are struggling and truly compassionate,
27:45
answers will be given. We have to solve the problem and we have to solve it in
27:51
their countries, not create new problems in our countries. And we are very helpful to a lot of countries
27:58
that are just not able to send their people anymore. They used to send them to us in caravans of 25 30,000 people
28:06
each. these massive caravans of people pouring into our country totally
28:11
unchecked and unvetted. But not anymore. According to the Council of Europe, in 2024, almost 50%
28:19
of inmates in German prisons were foreign nationals or migrants. In
28:24
Austria, the number was 53% of the people in prisons were
28:30
from places that weren't from where they are now. In Greece, the
28:36
number was 54%. And in Switzerland, beautiful Switzerland, it's 72% of the
28:41
people in prisons are from outside of Switzerland. When your prisons are filled with
28:46
so-called asylum seekers who repainted kindness, and that's what they did. They repaid kindness with crime. It's time to
28:54
end the failed experiment of open borders. You have to end it now. See, I can tell you I'm really good at this
29:01
stuff. Your countries are going to hell. In America, we've taken bold action to
29:07
swiftly shut down uncontrolled migration. Once we started detaining and deporting everyone who crossed the
29:13
border and removing illegal aliens from the United States, they simply stopped coming. They're not coming anymore.
29:19
We're getting a lot of credit, but they're not coming anymore. This was a humanitarian act for all
29:26
involved because on the trips up, thousands of people a week were dying.
29:31
Women were being raped. Nobody's ever seen anything like it. Raped, horribly
29:37
beaten, raped. On the trip up, the journey up. It was a long, it was a long
29:43
walk. It was a long, arduous journey indeed. But it was also a historic
29:48
victory against human trafficking throughout the region. What we did was a victory. And we saved so many lives of
29:56
people that wouldn't make the journey. That journey was loaded up with death.
30:03
loaded up with death. Dead bodies all along
30:08
all along the roads of jungles to get up. They go through jungles. They go through areas so hot you couldn't
30:15
breathe. They were dying of suffocation. Areas so hot that you couldn't breathe.
30:22
Dead bodies all over. By them not coming were saving tremendous numbers of lives. My people
30:30
have done a fantastic job in doing what they did and the American public agrees
30:37
with it. I mean, I was very proud to see this morning I have the highest poll numbers they've ever had. Part of it is
30:42
because of what we've done on the border. I guess the other part is what we've done on the economy. Joe Biden's
30:48
policies empowered murderous gangs, human smugglers, child traffickers, drug cartels, and prisoners. Prisoners from
30:55
all over the world. The previous administration also lost nearly 300,000 children. Think of that.
31:02
They lost more than 300,000 children, little children who were trafficked into
31:08
the United States on the Biden watch. Many of whom have been raped, exploited,
31:14
and abused and sold. Sold. Nobody talks about that. the fake
31:21
news doesn't write about it with many others, young children who are
31:27
missing or dead. And we found a lot of these children and we're sending them back and we've been
31:34
sending them back to their parents. They said, "Nobody knows who they are." They said, "Where do you come from?" And
31:39
they'll give us a country and we'll find out and we'll figure it out and we'll bring them back to their homes.
31:45
And the mother and father rushed to the door and their tears in their eyes. They can't believe that they're seeing their
31:51
son or daughter, their little son or daughter again. We've done almost 30,000
31:56
of them so far. Any system that results in the mass trafficking of children is
32:01
inherently evil. Yet, that is exactly what the globalist migration agenda has
32:07
done and it's what it's all about. In America, those days, as you know, are over. The Trump administration is
32:13
working and we are continuing to work to track down the villains that are causing
32:19
this problem. And also, as I said, to get back the 30,000.
32:25
We've already returned. Now, I think we're going to have another. We're going to find a lot. You're not going to find
32:31
all of them. 300, more than 300,000. Uh they're lost or they're dead. They're
32:36
lost or they're dead because of the animals that did this. To protect our
32:42
citizens, I've also designated multiple savage drug cartels as forest tech. And
32:49
you see this and you see it happening right before your eyes. Let's put it this way. People don't like
32:54
taking big loads of drugs in boats anymore. There aren't too many boats that are
33:00
traveling on on the seas by Venezuela. They tend not to want to travel very
33:05
quickly anymore. And we've virtually stopped drugs coming into our country by sea. We call them
33:12
the water drugs. They kill hundreds of thousands of people. I've
33:18
also designated multiple savage drug cartels as far as foreign
33:24
terrorist organizations along with two bloodthirsty transnational gangs, probably the worst gangs anywhere in the
33:30
world. MS-13 and Trend Aaragua. Trend Aaragua is from Venezuela, by the
33:36
way. Such organizations torture, maim, mutilate, and murder with impunity.
33:44
They're the enemies of all humanity. And for this reason, we've recently begun using the supreme power of the United
33:50
States military to destroy Venezuelan terrorists and trafficking networks led
33:57
by Nicholas Maduro. To every terrorist thug smuggling poisonous drugs into the
34:04
United States of America, please be warned that we will blow you out of existence. That's what we're doing. We
34:10
have no choice. Can't let it happen. And they're destroying I believe we lost 300,000 people last year to drugs.
34:18
300,000 fentinol and other drugs. Each boat that
34:23
we sink carries drugs that would kill more than 25,000 Americans. We will not
34:29
let that happen. Energy is another area where the United States is now thriving like never before. We're getting rid of
34:37
the falsely named renewables. By the way, they're a joke. They don't
34:44
work. They're too expensive. They're not strong enough to fire up the plants that
34:49
you need to make your country great. The wind doesn't blow. Those big windmills
34:54
are so pathetic and so bad, so expensive to operate.
35:00
And they have to be rebuilt all the time, and they start to rust and rot. Most expensive energy ever conceived.
35:07
And it's actually energy. You're supposed to make money with energy, not lose money. You lose money, the
35:12
governments have to subsidize. You can't put them out without massive subsidies. And most of them are built in China. And
35:19
I give China a lot of credit. They build them, but they very few wind farms. So why is it that they build them and they
35:24
send them all over the world, but they barely use them? You know, they use coal, they use gas, they use almost
35:34
anything, but they don't like wind. But they sure as hell like selling the windmills. Europe, on the other hand,
35:40
has a long way to go with many countries being on the brink of destruction
35:45
because of the green energy agenda. And I give a lot of credit to Germany. Germany was being led down a very sick
35:52
path both on immigration, by the way, and on energy. They were going green and they
35:59
were going bankrupt. And the new leadership, new leadership came in and they went back to where they were with
36:06
fossil fuel and with nuclear, which is good. It's now safe and you can do it
36:12
properly. But they went back to where they were and they opened up a lot of
36:18
different plants, energy plants, energy producing plants, and they're doing well. I I give Germany a lot of credit
36:24
for that. They've said this is a disaster. What's happening? They were going all green. All green is all
36:32
bankrupt. That's what it represents. And it's not politically correct. I'll be
36:37
very badly criticized for saying it. But I'm here to tell the truth. I don't care. It doesn't matter to me. I'm in
36:44
New York City. I'm feeling a lot safer. Crime, we're getting crime down. And by
36:49
the way, speaking of crime, Washington DC, Washington DC was the crime capital of America. Now,
36:57
it's a totally after 12 days, it's a totally safe city. Everyone's going out
37:03
to dinner. They're going out to restaurants. Your wife can walk down the middle of the street with or without
37:09
you. Nothing's going to happen. My people have done a fantastic job. And yes, I called in the National Guard, and
37:16
the National Guard took care of business. And they weren't politically correct, but they took care of business. We got 1,700 career criminals out,
37:24
brought them back to where they came from, the countries where they came from, or put them in jails. Washington
37:30
DC is now a totally safe city again. And I welcome you to come. In fact, we'll
37:36
have dinner together at a local restaurant and we'll be able to walk. We don't have to go by an armorplated
37:42
vehicle. We'll walk right over there from the White House. They've given up their powerful edge. A lot of the
37:50
countries that we're talking about in oil and gas such as essentially closing the great North Sea oil. Oh, the North
37:56
Sea. I know it so well. Aberdine was the oil capital of Europe. And there's
38:02
tremendous oil that hasn't been found in the North Sea. Tremendous oil. And I was with the prime minister I respect and
38:09
like a lot. And I said, "You're sitting with the greatest asset." They essentially closed it by making it so
38:15
highly taxed that no developer, no oil company can go there. They have
38:21
tremendous oil left. And more importantly, they have tremendous oil that hasn't even been found yet.
38:28
And what a tremendous asset for the United Kingdom. And I hope the prime
38:35
minister is listening because I told it to him three days in a row. That's all he heard. North Sea oil, North Sea.
38:41
because I want to see them do well. I want to stop seeing them ruining that beautiful Scottish and English
38:47
countryside with windmills and massive solar panels that go seven miles by seven miles,
38:54
taking away farmland. But we're not letting this happen in America. In 1982, the executive director
39:02
of the United Nations Environmental Program predicted that by the year 2000,
39:07
climate change would cause a global catastrophe. He said that it will be
39:13
irreversible as any nuclear holocaust would be. This
39:18
is what they said at the United Nations. What happened? Here we are. Another UN
39:23
official stated in 1989 that within a decade entire nations could be wiped off the map by global warming. Not
39:32
happening. You know, it used to be global cooling. If you look back years ago in the 1920s
39:38
and the 1930s, they said global cooling will kill the world. We have to do
39:44
something. Then they said global warming will kill the world. But then it started
39:50
getting cooler. So now they could just call it climate change because that way they can't miss. It's climate change cuz
39:57
if it goes higher or lower, whatever the hell happens, there's climate change.
40:02
It's the greatest conj job ever perpetrated on the world. In my opinion,
40:07
climate change, no matter what happens, you're involved in that. No more global
40:13
warming, no more global cooling. All of these predictions made by the United Nations and many others, often for bad
40:20
reasons, were wrong. They were made by stupid people that
40:26
have cost their countries fortunes and given those same countries no chance for success. If you don't get away from this
40:32
green scam, your country is going to fail. And I'm really good at predicting things. You know, they actually said
40:38
during the campaign they had a hat, the bestselling hat. Trump was right about
40:43
everything. And I don't say that in a braggadocious way, but it's true. I've been right about everything. And I'm
40:50
telling you that if you don't get away from the green energy scam,
40:56
your country is going to fail. And if you don't stop people that you've never
41:01
seen before, that you have nothing in common with, your country is going to fail. I'm the president of the United
41:08
States, but I worry about Europe. I love Europe. I love the people of Europe. And I hate to see it being devastated by
41:15
energy and immigration. This double-tailed monster destroys
41:20
everything in its wake. And they cannot let that happen any longer. You're doing it because you want to be nice. You want
41:28
to be politically correct. And you're destroying your heritage.
41:33
They must take control strongly and immediately of the unmititigated immigration disaster and the fake energy
41:39
catastrophe before it's too late. The carbon footprint is a hoax made up by people
41:47
with evil intentions and they're heading down a path of total
41:53
destruction. You know, the carbon footprint, it was a big big thing a few years ago. I remember hearing
42:00
about the carbon footprint and then President Obama would get into Air Force
42:05
One, a massive Boeing 747 and not a new one, an old one with old
42:10
engines that spew everything into the atmosphere. He'd talk about the carbon
42:16
footprint. We must do something. Then he'd get in and he'd fly from Washington to Hawaii to play a round of golf. And
42:24
then he get back onto that big beautiful plane and he'd fly back and he talk
42:29
about again global warming and the carbon footprint.
42:34
It's a conj job. At extreme cost and expense, Europe reduced its own carbon
42:40
footprint by 37%. Think of that. Congratulations Europe. Great job. cost
42:47
yourself a lot of jobs, a lot of factories closed, but you reduce the carbon footprint by 37%. However, for
42:56
all of that sacrifice and much more, it's been totally wiped out and then some by a global increase of 54%.
43:05
much of it coming from China and other countries that are thriving around China,
43:13
which now produces more CO2 than all the other developed nations in the world.
43:21
So all of these countries are working so hard on the carbon footprint, which is nonsense, by the way. It's nonsense.
43:29
You know, it's interesting. In the United States, we have still radicalized environmentalists
43:35
and they want the factories to stop. Everything should stop. No more cows. We don't want cows anymore. I guess they
43:40
want to kill all the cows. They want to do things that are just unbelievable. And you have it, too. But, you know, we
43:47
have a border strong and we have a shape. And that shape doesn't just go
43:52
straight up. That shape is amorphous when it comes to the atmosphere. And if
43:58
we had the most clean air, and I think we do, we have very clean air. We have the cleanest air we've had in many, many
44:04
years. But the problem is that other countries like China, which has air
44:09
that's a little bit rough, it blows. And no matter what you're doing down
44:15
here, the air up here tends to get very dirty because it comes in from other
44:21
countries where their air isn't so clean. And the environmentalists refuse to acknowledge that. Same thing with
44:27
garbage. In Asia, they dump much of their garbage right into the ocean. And
44:33
over about a one week and two week journey, it flows
44:39
right past Los Angeles. You've seen it. Massive amounts of garbage, almost too
44:44
much to do anything about. flowing past Los Angeles, past San Francisco
44:50
and then somebody would get in trouble because he dropped a cigarette on the beach. The whole thing is crazy. The
44:59
primary effect of these brutal green energy policies has not been to help the
45:04
environment, but to redistribute manufacturing and industrial activity from developed countries that follow the
45:12
insane rules that are put down to polluting countries that break the rules
45:17
and are making a fortune. They're making a fortune. European electricity bills are now four
45:24
to five times more expensive than those in China. and two to three times higher than the
45:30
United States and our bills are coming way down. You probably see that our gasoline prices are way down. You know,
45:36
we have an expression, drill, baby drill, and that's why we're doing we're
45:41
going to be much lower in a year from now. But they've come way down over the last year. As a result, every air
45:49
conditioner is like very uncommon to see one in some of
45:55
these countries because the electric cost is so high. So while the US has
46:00
approximately 1,300 heat related deaths annually, it's a lot. Europe loses more
46:07
than 175,000 people to heat deaths each year because the costs are so expensive
46:12
you can't turn on an air conditioner. What is that all about? That's not Europe. That's not the Europe that I
46:17
love and know. All in the name of pretending to stop the global warming
46:24
hoax. The entire globalist concept of asking successful industrialized nations
46:29
to inflict pain on themselves and radically disrupt their entire societies must be rejected completely and totally
46:37
and it must be immediate. That's why in America, I withdrew from the fake Paris
46:43
climate accord where, by the way, America was paying so much more than every country. Others weren't paying.
46:50
China didn't have to pay until 2030. Russia was given an old standard that
46:56
was easy to meet, 1990 standard. But for the United States,
47:01
we're supposed to pay like a trillion dollars. And uh I said this is another scam. The
47:09
fact is United States has been taken advantage of by the world for many many years but not any longer as you probably
47:14
noticed. I unleashed massive energy production and signed historic executive
47:20
orders to hunt for oil. But we don't have to do much hunting because we have the most
47:26
oil of any nation anywhere. Oil and gas in the world. And if you add coal, we
47:33
have the most of any nation in the world. Clean, I call it clean, beautiful coal. You can do things today with coal
47:38
that you couldn't have done 10 years ago, 15 years. So I have a little standing order in the White House. Never
47:45
use the word coal. Only use the words clean, beautiful coal. Sounds much
47:50
better, doesn't it? But we stand ready to provide any country with abundant, affordable energy supplies if you need
47:56
them, when most of you do. We're proudly exporting energy all over the world. We're now the largest exporter in the
48:04
United States. We want trade and robust commerce with all nations. Everybody, we
48:10
want to help nations. We're going to help nations, but it must also be fair and reciprocal. The challenge with trade
48:17
is much the same with climate. The countries that followed the rules, all
48:23
their factories have been plundered. It's really it's uh really sad to watch.
48:29
They've been broken. They've been broken by countries that broke the rules.
48:35
That's why the United States is now applying tariffs to other countries. And much as these tariffs were for many
48:42
years applied to us, uncontrollably applied to us. We've used tariffs as a
48:49
defense mechanism under the Trump administration, including my first term where hundreds
48:55
of billions of dollars in tariffs were taken in. And by the way, we had the lowest inflation and now we have very
49:01
low inflation. The only thing different is that we have hundreds of billions of dollars flowing into our country.
49:07
But this is how we will ensure that the system works for everyone and is sustainable into the future. We're also
49:15
using tariffs to defend our sovereignty and security throughout the world, including against nations that have
49:20
taken advantage of former US administrations for decades, including
49:27
the most uh corrupt, incompetent administration
49:32
in history, the sleepy Joe Biden administration. Brazil now faces major tariffs in
49:40
response to its unprecedented efforts to interfere in the rights and freedoms of
49:46
our American citizens and others with censorship, repression, weaponization,
49:51
judicial corruption and targeting of political critics in the United States. I have a little
49:58
problem saying this because I must tell you, I was walking in and the leader of Brazil was walking out. We saw him and I
50:06
saw him. He saw me and we embraced and then I'm saying, "Can you believe I'm going to be saying this in just two
50:12
minutes?" We actually agreed that we would meet next week.
50:18
We didn't have much time to talk like about 20 seconds. They were in they were in retrospect. I'm glad I waited because
50:26
this thing didn't work out too well. But we did talk. We had a good talk and we
50:31
agreed to meet next week if that's of interest. But he seemed like a very nice man actually. We He liked me. I liked
50:38
him. But if you uh and I only do business with people I like. I don't
50:44
when I don't like him. When I don't like them, I don't like them. But uh we had at least for about
50:52
39 seconds, we had excellent chemistry. It's a good sign.
50:57
But also in the past, Brazil, can you believe this? Unfairly tariffed our nation. But now, because of our tariffs,
51:04
we are hitting them back. And we're hitting them back very hard. As president, I will always defend our
51:10
national sovereignty and the rights of American citizens. So, uh, I'm very
51:16
sorry to say this that Brazil is doing poorly and will continue to do poorly.
51:22
They can only do well when they're working with us. Without us, they will
51:28
fail, just as others have failed. It's true. Next year, the United States will celebrate the 250th anniversary of our
51:35
glorious independence, a testament to enduring power and American freedom and spirit. We will also be proudly hosting
51:43
the 2026 FIFA World Cup and shortly thereafter, the 2028 Olympics, which is
51:50
going to be very exciting. I hope you all come. I hope that countless people from all over the globe will take part
51:56
of these great these will be great celebrations of liberty and human achievement and that together we all can
52:03
rejoice in the miracles of history that began in July 4th 1776
52:09
when we founded the light to all nations and it's something really that is an
52:15
amazing thing came out of that date it's called the United States of America in
52:20
honor of this momentous anniversary I hope that all countries who find inspiration in our example will join us
52:26
in renewing our commitment values and those values really that we hold so dear
52:32
together. Let us defend free speech and free expression. Let us protect religious liberty including for the most
52:40
persecuted religion on the planet today. It's called Christianity.
52:45
and let us safeguard our sovereignty and cherish qualities that have made each of our nation so special, incredible, and
52:53
extraordinary. In closing, I just want to repeat that immigration and the high cost of so-called green renewable energy
53:00
is destroying a large part of the free world and a large part of our planet.
53:06
Countries that cherish freedom are fading fast because of their policies on these two subjects. You need
53:13
strong borders and traditional energy sources if you are going to be great again. Whether you have come from north
53:22
or south, east or west, near or far, every leader in this beautiful hall
53:27
today represents a rich culture, a noble history, and a proud heritage that makes
53:33
each nation majestic and unique unlike anything else in human history or any
53:39
other place on the face of the earth. From London to Lima, from Rome to
53:46
Athens, from Paris to Seoul, from Cairo to Tokyo and Amsterdam to right here in
53:52
New York City, we stand on the shoulders of the leaders and legends, generals and
53:57
giants, heroes and titans who won and built our beloved nations, all of our
54:03
nations, with their own courage, strength, spirit, and skill. Our ancestors climbed to mountains,
54:10
conquered oceans, crossed deserts, and tked over wide open plains. They charged
54:16
into thunderous battles, plunged into grave dangers. And they were soldiers
54:22
and farmers and workers and warriors and explorers and patriots. They built towns
54:28
into cities, tribes into kingdoms, ideas into industries, and small islands into
54:34
mighty empires. You're a part of all of that. They were champions for their people who never
54:40
gave up and who never ever gave in. Their values defined our national
54:47
identities. Their visions forged our magnificent
54:53
destiny. Everybody in this room is a part of it in your own way. Each of us
54:58
inherits the deeds and the myths, the triumphs, the legacies of our own heroes and founders who so bravely showed us
55:05
the way. Our ancestors gave everything for homelands that they defended with
55:12
pride, with sweat, with blood, with life, and with death. Now the righteous
55:19
task of protecting the nations that they built belongs to each and every one of
55:25
us. So together, let us uphold our sacred duty to our people and to our citizens.
55:31
Let us protect their borders, ensure their safety, preserve their cultures, treasure and traditions, and fight fight
55:39
for their precious dreams and their cherished freedoms. And in friendship and really a beautiful vision, let us
55:48
all work together to build a bright, beautiful planet. A planet that we all
55:55
share, a planet of peace, and a world that is richer, better, and more beautiful than ever before. That can
56:00
happen. It will happen. It will happen. And I hope it can happen and start right
56:06
now, right at this moment. We'll turn it around. We're going to make our countries better, safer, more beautiful.
56:13
We're going to take care of our people. Thank you very much. It's been an honor. God bless the nations of the world.
56:18
Thank you very much. Bye.
56:36
On behalf of the assembly, I wish to thank the President of the United States.
56:59
[Music]
57:05
Heat up here.
57:20
Heat.
57:27
Heat.
58:15
Heat. Heat.
59:16
Heat. Heat.
59:39
Heat. Heat.
59:45
Heat.
59:56
Heat.
1:00:07
[Music]
1:00:31
Please be seated.
1:00:40
Please be seated.
1:00:55
[Music]
1:01:09
Heat. Heat.
1:01:52
Excellencies,
1:02:17
could you please take your seats in due respect to the next speakers.
1:02:24
The second row, could you please take your seat right now
1:02:33
in between to get them to go
1:03:26
Please take a seat now. With due respect to the next speakers, I
1:03:32
would kindly ask to gentlemen in the left row, please take your seats.
1:03:41
We will continue.
1:03:56
Excellencies, as we are receiving queries, I would like to assure you that
1:04:04
don't worries the UN teleprompterss are working perfectly. And by this technical
1:04:10
note, I would like to call on the next speaker. The assembly
1:04:17
will hear an address by his excellency Prao Wosu Anu, President of the Republic
1:04:25
of Indonesia. I request protocol to escort his excellency and invite him to
1:04:31
address the assembly.
0:10
Very much appreciated.
0:17
And I don't mind making this speech without a teleprompter because the teleprompter is
0:24
not working. I feel very happy to be up here with you
0:30
nevertheless and that way you speak more from the heart. I can only say that whoever is
0:38
operating this teleprompter is in big trouble.
0:56
Hello, Madame First Lady. Thank you very much for being here.
1:05
And Madame President, Mr. Secretary General, First Lady of the United States, distinguished delegates,
1:11
ambassadors, and world leaders. Six years have passed since I last stood
1:17
in this grand hall and addressed a world that was prosperous and at peace in my
1:23
first term. Since that day, the guns of war have shattered the peace I forged on two
1:29
continents. An era of calm and stability gave way to one of the great crisises of
1:37
our time. And here in the United States, four years of weakness, lawlessness, and
1:42
radicalism under the last administration delivered our nation into a repeated set
1:50
of disasters. One year ago, our country was in deep trouble. But today, just eight months
1:57
into my administration. We are the hottest country anywhere in the world. And there is no other country
2:05
even close. America is blessed with the strongest economy, the strongest borders, the
2:12
strongest military, the strongest friendships, and the strongest spirit of any nation on the face of the earth.
2:20
This is indeed the golden age of America. We are rapidly reversing the economic
2:28
calamity we inherited from the previous administration, including ruinous price
2:35
increases and record setting inflation. Inflation like we've never had before.
2:41
Under my leadership, energy costs are down. Gasoline prices are down. Grocery
2:47
prices are down. Mortgage rates are down and inflation has been defeated.
2:55
The only thing that's up is the stock market, which just hit a record high. In
3:01
fact, it hit a record high 48 times in the last short period of time. Growth is
3:08
surging. Manufacturing is booming. The stock market, as I said, is doing better
3:14
than it's ever done. And all of you in this room benefit by that. almost everybody.
3:21
And importantly, workers wages are rising at the fastest pace in more than
3:26
60 years. And that's what it's all about, isn't it? In four years of
3:32
President Biden, we had less than $1 trillion of new investment into the
3:38
United States. In just eight months since I took office, we have secured commitments and
3:46
money already paid for $17 trillion. Think of it, four years less than a
3:52
trillion, eight months, much more than 17 trillion
3:58
is being invested in the United States and it's now pouring in from all parts
4:03
of the world. We've implemented the largest tax cuts in American history and
4:09
the largest regulation cuts in American history, making this once again the best
4:15
country on earth to do business. And many of the people in this room are
4:21
investing in America. And it's turned out to be an awfully good investment during this eight-month period. In my
4:28
first term, I built the greatest economy in the history of the world. We had the best economy
4:34
ever history of the world. And I'm doing the same thing again, but this time it's
4:39
actually much bigger and even better. The numbers far surpass my record
4:45
setting first term. On our southern border, we have successfully repelled a
4:51
colossal invasion. And for the last four months, and that's four months in a row,
4:57
the number of illegal aliens admitted and entering our country has been zero.
5:05
Hard to believe because if you look back just a year ago, it was millions and
5:11
millions of people pouring in from all over the world, from prisons, from mental institutions, drug dealers.
5:19
All over the world, they came. They just poured into our country with the ridiculous open border policy of the
5:26
Biden administration. Our message is very simple. If you come illegally into the United States, you're
5:33
going to jail or you're going back to where you came from or perhaps even further than that. You know what that
5:40
means? I want to thank the country of El Salvador for the successful and
5:46
professional job they've done in receiving and jailing so many criminals that entered our country.
5:53
And it was under the previous administration that the number became
5:58
record setting and they're all being taken out. You
6:04
have no choice. And other countries have no choice because other countries are in the exact same situation with
6:11
immigration. It's destroying your country and you have to do something about it.
6:18
On the world stage, America is respected again like it has never been respected before.
6:26
You think about two years ago, three years ago, four years ago, or one year ago, we were a laughingstock all over
6:33
the world. At the NATO summit in June, virtually all NATO members formally committed to increased defense spending.
6:41
At my request, from 2% to 5% of GDP,
6:46
making our alliance far stronger and more powerful than it was ever before.
6:52
In May, I traveled to the Middle East to visit my friends and rebuild our partnerships in the Gulf. And those
6:59
valued relationships with Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE, and other countries
7:05
are now, I believe, closer than ever before.
7:11
My administration has negotiated one historic trade deal after another, including with the United Kingdom, the
7:18
European Union, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines,
7:23
Malaysia, and many, many others. Likewise, in a period of just seven
7:29
months, I have ended seven unendable wars. They said they were unendable.
7:35
You're never going to get them solved. Some were going for 31 years. Two of
7:40
them 31. Think of it. 31 years. One was 36 years. One was 28 years.
7:47
I ended seven wars. And in all cases, they were raging with
7:53
countless thousands of people being killed. This includes Cambodia
8:00
and Thailand, Kosovo and Serbia, the Congo and Rwanda. A vicious violent war
8:08
that was Pakistan and India, Israel and Iran, Egypt and Ethiopia
8:16
and Armenia and Azerbaian. It included all of them. No president or
8:23
prime minister and for that matter no other country has ever done anything close to that.
8:29
And I did it in just seven months. It's never happened before. There's never
8:34
been anything like that. very honored to have done it. It's too bad that I had to do these things instead of the United
8:43
Nations doing them. And sadly, in all cases, the United Nations did not even
8:49
try to help in any of them. I ended seven wars, dealt with the
8:55
leaders of each and every one of these countries, and never even received a phone call from the United Nations
9:01
offering to help in finalizing the deal.
9:06
All I got from the United Nations was an escalator that on the way up stopped right in the middle.
9:13
If the first lady wasn't in great shape, she would have fallen. But she's in great shape. We're both in good shape.
9:20
We both stood and then a teleprompter that didn't
9:26
work. This is these are the two things I got from the United Nations. A bad escalator and a bad teleprompter.
9:34
Thank you very much. And by the way, it's working now. Just went on. Thank you.
9:40
I think I should just do it the other way. It's easier. Thank you very much.
9:46
I didn't think of it at the time because I was too busy working to save millions of lives. That is the saving and
9:53
stopping of these wars. But later I realized that the United Nations wasn't there for us. They weren't there. I
10:01
thought of it really after the fact, not during not during these negotiations which were not easy. That being the
10:08
case, what is the purpose of the United Nations? The UN has such tremendous
10:13
potential. I've always said it, it has such tremendous, tremendous potential,
10:20
but it's not even coming close to living up to that potential. For the most part, at least for now, all they seem to do is
10:28
write a really strongly worded letter and then never follow that letter up.
10:33
It's empty words and empty words don't solve war. The only thing that solves
10:39
war and wars is action. Now after ending all of these wars and
10:44
also earlier negotiating the Abraham Accords which is a very big thing for
10:51
which our country received no credit never receives credit. Everyone says
10:56
that I should get the Nobel Peace Prize for each one of these achievements.
11:01
But for me, the real prize will be the sons and daughters who live to grow up
11:06
with their mothers and fathers because millions of people are no longer being killed in endless and unglorious wars.
11:15
What I care about is not winning prizes, it's saving lives. We saved millions and millions of lives with the seven wars.
11:24
And we have others that we're working on. And you know that many years ago, a very successful real estate developer in
11:31
New York known as Donald J. Trump, I bid on the
11:36
renovation and rebuilding of this very United Nations complex. I remember it so
11:42
well. I said at the time that I would do it for $500 million, rebuilding everything. It would be beautiful. I
11:50
used to talk about I'm going to give you marble floors. They're going to give you terazza.
11:56
I'm going to give you the best of everything. You're going to have mahogany walls. They're going to give
12:01
you plastic. But they decided to go in another direction which was much more expensive
12:07
at the time and which actually produce a far inferior product. And I realized
12:14
that they did not know what they were doing when it came to construction and that their building concepts were so
12:19
wrong and the product that they were proposing to build was so bad and so costly.
12:25
It was going to cost them a fortune. And I said, "And wait till you see the overruns." Well, I turned out to be
12:32
right. They had massive cost overruns and spent between two and four billion dollars on the building and did not even
12:39
get the marble floors that I promised them. You walk on to Raza, do you notice that?
12:46
As far as I'm concerned, frankly, looking at the building and getting
12:51
stuck on the escalator, they still haven't finished the job. They still haven't finished. That was years ago.
12:59
The project was so corrupt that Congress actually asked me to testify before them
13:05
on the tremendous waste of money because it turned out that they had no idea what
13:10
it was. But they knew it was anywhere between two and4 billion as opposed to
13:16
500 million with a guarantee. But they had no idea. And I said it cost much more than $5 billion.
13:23
Unfortunately, many things in the United Nations are happening just like that. But on an even much bigger scale, much
13:30
much bigger. Very sad to see whether the UN can manage to play a productive role.
13:38
I've come here today to offer the hand of American leadership and friendship to
13:44
any nation in this assembly that is willing to join us in forging a safer,
13:50
more prosperous world. And it's a world that we'll be much happier with. A
13:57
dramatically better future is within our reach. But to get there, we must reject
14:03
the failed approaches of the past and work together to confront some of the greatest threats in history.
14:11
There is no more serious danger to our planet today than the most powerful and
14:16
destructive weapons ever devised by man, of which the United States, as you know,
14:22
has many. Just as I did in my first term, I've made containing these threats
14:28
a top priority, starting with a nation
14:33
of Iran. My position is very simple. The world's
14:38
number one sponsor of terror can never be allowed to possess the most dangerous weapon.
14:44
That's why shortly after taking office, I sent the so-called Supreme Leader a
14:49
letter making a generous offer. I extended a pledge of full cooperation in
14:55
exchange for a suspension of Iran's nuclear program. The regime's answer was
15:01
to continue their constant threats to their neighbors and US interests throughout the region and some great
15:08
countries that are right nearby. Today, many of Iran's former military
15:13
commanders, in fact, I can say almost all of them are no longer with us.
15:19
They're dead. And three months ago in Operation Midnight Hammer, seven
15:25
American B2 bombers dropped the 14 30,000 pound each bombs on Iran's key
15:32
nuclear facility, totally obliterating everything.
15:37
No other country on earth could have done what we did. No other country has the equipment to do what we did. We have
15:43
the greatest weapons on Earth. We hate to use them, but we did something that
15:49
for 22 years people wanted to do. With Iran's nuclear enrichment capacity
15:55
demolished, I immediately brokered an end to the 12-day war, as it's called,
16:00
between Israel and Iran, with both sides agreeing to fight. Fight no longer.
16:08
As everyone knows, I have also been deeply engaged in seeking a ceasefire in
16:13
Gaza. have to get that done. Have to get it done. Unfortunately, Hamas has
16:19
repeatedly rejected reasonable offers to make peace. We can't forget October 7th,
16:24
can we? Now, as if to encourage continued conflict, some of this body is
16:30
seeking to unilaterally recognize a Palestinian state. The rewards
16:38
would be too great for Hamas terrorists for their atrocities. This would be a
16:43
reward for these horrible atrocities, including October 7th, even while they
16:49
refuse to release the hostages or accept a ceasefire. Instead of giving to Hamas
16:56
and giving so much because they've taken so much, they have taken so much. This could have
17:02
been solved so long ago. But instead of giving in to Hamas's
17:07
ransom demands, those who want peace should be united with one message.
17:14
Release the hostages now. Just release the hostages now.
17:21
Thank you.
17:29
Thank you. as we have got to come together and we will come together. Got
17:35
to get it done. We have to stop the war in Gaza immediately. We have to stop it. We have to get it done. We have to
17:41
negotiate immediately. Have to negotiate peace. We got to get the hostages back. We want
17:47
all 20 back. We don't want two and four. As you know, I got along with Steve Whit
17:53
and others that helped us, Marco Rubio, we we got most of them back. We were
17:58
involved at all of them. But I always said the last 20 are going to be the hardest. And that's exactly
18:04
what happened. We have to get them back now. We don't want to get back two and then another two and then one and then
18:10
three. Have this process. No, we want them all back. And we want the actually
18:15
38 dead bodies back, too. Those parents came to me and they want them back. And they want them back very quickly and
18:22
very badly as though they were alive. They want them. They want them every bit as much as if their son or daughter were
18:28
alive. I've also been working relentlessly stopping the killing in Ukraine.
18:37
I thought that would be of of the seven wars that I stopped. I thought that would be the easiest because of my
18:43
relationship with President Putin, which had always been a good one. I thought that was going to be the easiest one.
18:49
But you know, in war, you never know what's going to happen. There are always lots of surprises, both good and bad.
18:56
Everyone thought Russia would win this war in three days. But it didn't work out that way.
19:03
It was supposed to be just a quick little skirmish. It's not making Russia look good. It's
19:09
making them look bad. No matter what happens from here on out, this was
19:14
something that should have taken a matter of days, certainly less than a week, and they've been fighting for
19:20
three and a half years and killing anywhere from 5 to 7,000
19:28
young soldiers, mostly mostly soldiers on both sides every single week. from 5
19:35
to 7,000 dead young people and some in cities, much smaller numbers, where
19:42
rockets are shot, where drones are dropped. This war would never have
19:48
started if I were president. This was a war that should have never happened. It shows you what leadership is, what bad
19:54
leadership can do to a country. Look what happened to the United States. And look where we are right now in just a
20:01
short period of time. The only question now is how many more lives will be needlessly lost on both sides. China and
20:09
India are the primary funders of the ongoing war by continuing to purchase Russian oil. But inexcusably, even NATO
20:17
countries have not cut off much Russian energy and Russian energy products,
20:24
which as you know, I found out about two weeks ago and I wasn't happy. Think of it. They're funding the war against
20:31
themselves. Who the hell ever heard of that one?
20:36
In the event that Russia is not ready to make a deal to end the war, then the
20:41
United States is fully prepared to impose a very strong round of powerful
20:46
tariffs which would stop the bloodshed, I believe, very quickly. But for those
20:51
tariffs to be effective, European nations, all of you are gathered here right now, would have to join us in
20:59
adopting the exact same measures. I mean, you're much closer to this. We
21:05
have an ocean in between. You're right there. And Europe has to step it up.
21:11
They can't be doing what they're doing. They're buying oil and gas from Russia
21:16
while they're fighting Russia. It's embarrassing to them and it was
21:22
very embarrassing to them when I found out about it. I can tell you that they have to immediately cease all energy
21:29
purchases from Russia. Otherwise, we're all wasting a lot of time.
21:35
So, I'm ready to discuss this. We're going to discuss it today with the European nations all gathered here. I'm
21:42
sure they're thrilled to hear me speak about it, but that's the way it is. I like to speak my mind and speak the
21:47
truth as we seek to reduce the threat of dangerous weapons today. I'm also
21:52
calling on every nation to join us in ending the development of biological weapons once and for all and biological
22:00
is terrible and nuclear is even beyond and we include nuclear in that. We want
22:06
to have a cessation of the development of nuclear weapons. We know and I know
22:12
and I get to view it all the time. Sir, would you like to see? And I look at weapons that are so powerful
22:20
that we just can't ever use them. If we ever use them, the world literally might
22:26
come to an end. There would be no United Nations to be talking about. There would
22:32
be no nothing. Just a few years ago, reckless experiments overseas gave us a
22:37
devastating global pandemic. Yet, despite that worldwide catastrophe, many
22:43
countries are continuing extremely risky research into bioweapons and man-made
22:49
pathogens. This is unbelievably dangerous. to
22:54
prevent potential disasters. I'm announcing today that my administration will lead a international effort to
23:00
enforce biological weapons convention which is going to be meeting with the
23:06
top leaders of the world by pioneering an AI verification system that everyone
23:11
can trust. Hopefully the UN can play a constructive role and it will also go be
23:18
one of the early projects under AI. Let's see how good it is because a lot of people are saying it could be one of
23:25
the great things ever. But it also can be dangerous, but it could be put to tremendous use and tremendous good. And
23:32
this would be an example of that. Not only is the UN not solving the problems
23:37
it should too often, it's actually creating new problems for us to solve. The best example is the number one
23:44
political issue of our time, the crisis of uncontrolled migration. It's uncontrolled.
23:51
Your countries are being ruined. The United Nations is funding an assault on
23:56
Western countries and their borders. In 2024, the UN budgeted $372 million in
24:04
cash assistance to support an estimated 624,000
24:09
migrants journeying into the United States. Think of that. The UN is
24:15
supporting people that are illegally coming into the United States and then we have to get them out. The UN also
24:22
provided food, shelter, transportation, and debit cards to illegal aliens. Can you believe that? On the way to
24:29
infiltrate our southern border. Millions of people came through that
24:34
southern border just a year ago. Millions and millions of people were pouring in. 25 million alto together
24:40
over the four years of the incompetent Biden administration.
24:45
And now we have it stopped. Totally stopped. In fact, they're not even coming anymore because they know they
24:52
can't get through. But what took place is totally unacceptable. The UN is supposed to stop
24:58
invasions, not create them and not finance them. In the United States, we
25:04
reject the idea that mass numbers of people from foreign lands can be permitted to travel halfway around the
25:09
world, trample our borders, violate our sovereignty, cause unmititigated crime,
25:15
and deplete our social safety net. We have reasserted that America belongs to
25:23
the American people, and I encourage all countries to take their own stand in defense of their citizens as well. You
25:31
have to do that because I see it. I'm not mentioning names. I see it and I
25:37
could call every single one of them out. You're destroying your countries. They're being destroyed.
25:44
Europe is in serious trouble. They've been invaded by a force of illegal ali
25:49
aliens like nobody's ever seen before. Illegal aliens are pouring into Europe.
25:54
Nobody is ever and nobody's doing anything to change it to get them out.
26:00
It's not sustainable. And because they choose to be politically correct, they're doing just
26:06
absolutely nothing about it.
26:11
And I have to say, I look at London where you have a terrible mayor, terrible, terrible mayor. And it's been
26:19
so changed. So changed. Now they want to go to Sharia law. But
26:26
you're in a different country. You can't do that. Both the immigration and their suicidal energy ideas will be the death
26:33
of Western Europe if something is not done immediately. They cannot this
26:39
cannot be sustained. What makes the world so beautiful is that each country is unique. But to stay
26:46
this way, every sovereign nation must have the right to control their own borders. You have the right to control
26:51
your borders as we do now and to limit the sheer numbers of migrants entering
26:57
their countries and paid for by the people of that nation that were there and that built that particular nation at
27:03
the time. They put their blood, sweat, tears, money into that country, and now
27:11
they're being ruined. Proud nations must be allowed to protect their communities and prevent their societies from being
27:18
overwhelmed by people they have never seen before with different customs,
27:23
religions, with different everything. Where migrants have violated laws, large
27:29
false asylum claims or claimed refugee status for illegitimate reasons, they
27:34
should in many cases be immediately sent home. And while we will always have a
27:40
big heart for places and people that are struggling and truly compassionate,
27:45
answers will be given. We have to solve the problem and we have to solve it in
27:51
their countries, not create new problems in our countries. And we are very helpful to a lot of countries
27:58
that are just not able to send their people anymore. They used to send them to us in caravans of 25 30,000 people
28:06
each. these massive caravans of people pouring into our country totally
28:11
unchecked and unvetted. But not anymore. According to the Council of Europe, in 2024, almost 50%
28:19
of inmates in German prisons were foreign nationals or migrants. In
28:24
Austria, the number was 53% of the people in prisons were
28:30
from places that weren't from where they are now. In Greece, the
28:36
number was 54%. And in Switzerland, beautiful Switzerland, it's 72% of the
28:41
people in prisons are from outside of Switzerland. When your prisons are filled with
28:46
so-called asylum seekers who repainted kindness, and that's what they did. They repaid kindness with crime. It's time to
28:54
end the failed experiment of open borders. You have to end it now. See, I can tell you I'm really good at this
29:01
stuff. Your countries are going to hell. In America, we've taken bold action to
29:07
swiftly shut down uncontrolled migration. Once we started detaining and deporting everyone who crossed the
29:13
border and removing illegal aliens from the United States, they simply stopped coming. They're not coming anymore.
29:19
We're getting a lot of credit, but they're not coming anymore. This was a humanitarian act for all
29:26
involved because on the trips up, thousands of people a week were dying.
29:31
Women were being raped. Nobody's ever seen anything like it. Raped, horribly
29:37
beaten, raped. On the trip up, the journey up. It was a long, it was a long
29:43
walk. It was a long, arduous journey indeed. But it was also a historic
29:48
victory against human trafficking throughout the region. What we did was a victory. And we saved so many lives of
29:56
people that wouldn't make the journey. That journey was loaded up with death.
30:03
loaded up with death. Dead bodies all along
30:08
all along the roads of jungles to get up. They go through jungles. They go through areas so hot you couldn't
30:15
breathe. They were dying of suffocation. Areas so hot that you couldn't breathe.
30:22
Dead bodies all over. By them not coming were saving tremendous numbers of lives. My people
30:30
have done a fantastic job in doing what they did and the American public agrees
30:37
with it. I mean, I was very proud to see this morning I have the highest poll numbers they've ever had. Part of it is
30:42
because of what we've done on the border. I guess the other part is what we've done on the economy. Joe Biden's
30:48
policies empowered murderous gangs, human smugglers, child traffickers, drug cartels, and prisoners. Prisoners from
30:55
all over the world. The previous administration also lost nearly 300,000 children. Think of that.
31:02
They lost more than 300,000 children, little children who were trafficked into
31:08
the United States on the Biden watch. Many of whom have been raped, exploited,
31:14
and abused and sold. Sold. Nobody talks about that. the fake
31:21
news doesn't write about it with many others, young children who are
31:27
missing or dead. And we found a lot of these children and we're sending them back and we've been
31:34
sending them back to their parents. They said, "Nobody knows who they are." They said, "Where do you come from?" And
31:39
they'll give us a country and we'll find out and we'll figure it out and we'll bring them back to their homes.
31:45
And the mother and father rushed to the door and their tears in their eyes. They can't believe that they're seeing their
31:51
son or daughter, their little son or daughter again. We've done almost 30,000
31:56
of them so far. Any system that results in the mass trafficking of children is
32:01
inherently evil. Yet, that is exactly what the globalist migration agenda has
32:07
done and it's what it's all about. In America, those days, as you know, are over. The Trump administration is
32:13
working and we are continuing to work to track down the villains that are causing
32:19
this problem. And also, as I said, to get back the 30,000.
32:25
We've already returned. Now, I think we're going to have another. We're going to find a lot. You're not going to find
32:31
all of them. 300, more than 300,000. Uh they're lost or they're dead. They're
32:36
lost or they're dead because of the animals that did this. To protect our
32:42
citizens, I've also designated multiple savage drug cartels as forest tech. And
32:49
you see this and you see it happening right before your eyes. Let's put it this way. People don't like
32:54
taking big loads of drugs in boats anymore. There aren't too many boats that are
33:00
traveling on on the seas by Venezuela. They tend not to want to travel very
33:05
quickly anymore. And we've virtually stopped drugs coming into our country by sea. We call them
33:12
the water drugs. They kill hundreds of thousands of people. I've
33:18
also designated multiple savage drug cartels as far as foreign
33:24
terrorist organizations along with two bloodthirsty transnational gangs, probably the worst gangs anywhere in the
33:30
world. MS-13 and Trend Aaragua. Trend Aaragua is from Venezuela, by the
33:36
way. Such organizations torture, maim, mutilate, and murder with impunity.
33:44
They're the enemies of all humanity. And for this reason, we've recently begun using the supreme power of the United
33:50
States military to destroy Venezuelan terrorists and trafficking networks led
33:57
by Nicholas Maduro. To every terrorist thug smuggling poisonous drugs into the
34:04
United States of America, please be warned that we will blow you out of existence. That's what we're doing. We
34:10
have no choice. Can't let it happen. And they're destroying I believe we lost 300,000 people last year to drugs.
34:18
300,000 fentinol and other drugs. Each boat that
34:23
we sink carries drugs that would kill more than 25,000 Americans. We will not
34:29
let that happen. Energy is another area where the United States is now thriving like never before. We're getting rid of
34:37
the falsely named renewables. By the way, they're a joke. They don't
34:44
work. They're too expensive. They're not strong enough to fire up the plants that
34:49
you need to make your country great. The wind doesn't blow. Those big windmills
34:54
are so pathetic and so bad, so expensive to operate.
35:00
And they have to be rebuilt all the time, and they start to rust and rot. Most expensive energy ever conceived.
35:07
And it's actually energy. You're supposed to make money with energy, not lose money. You lose money, the
35:12
governments have to subsidize. You can't put them out without massive subsidies. And most of them are built in China. And
35:19
I give China a lot of credit. They build them, but they very few wind farms. So why is it that they build them and they
35:24
send them all over the world, but they barely use them? You know, they use coal, they use gas, they use almost
35:34
anything, but they don't like wind. But they sure as hell like selling the windmills. Europe, on the other hand,
35:40
has a long way to go with many countries being on the brink of destruction
35:45
because of the green energy agenda. And I give a lot of credit to Germany. Germany was being led down a very sick
35:52
path both on immigration, by the way, and on energy. They were going green and they
35:59
were going bankrupt. And the new leadership, new leadership came in and they went back to where they were with
36:06
fossil fuel and with nuclear, which is good. It's now safe and you can do it
36:12
properly. But they went back to where they were and they opened up a lot of
36:18
different plants, energy plants, energy producing plants, and they're doing well. I I give Germany a lot of credit
36:24
for that. They've said this is a disaster. What's happening? They were going all green. All green is all
36:32
bankrupt. That's what it represents. And it's not politically correct. I'll be
36:37
very badly criticized for saying it. But I'm here to tell the truth. I don't care. It doesn't matter to me. I'm in
36:44
New York City. I'm feeling a lot safer. Crime, we're getting crime down. And by
36:49
the way, speaking of crime, Washington DC, Washington DC was the crime capital of America. Now,
36:57
it's a totally after 12 days, it's a totally safe city. Everyone's going out
37:03
to dinner. They're going out to restaurants. Your wife can walk down the middle of the street with or without
37:09
you. Nothing's going to happen. My people have done a fantastic job. And yes, I called in the National Guard, and
37:16
the National Guard took care of business. And they weren't politically correct, but they took care of business. We got 1,700 career criminals out,
37:24
brought them back to where they came from, the countries where they came from, or put them in jails. Washington
37:30
DC is now a totally safe city again. And I welcome you to come. In fact, we'll
37:36
have dinner together at a local restaurant and we'll be able to walk. We don't have to go by an armorplated
37:42
vehicle. We'll walk right over there from the White House. They've given up their powerful edge. A lot of the
37:50
countries that we're talking about in oil and gas such as essentially closing the great North Sea oil. Oh, the North
37:56
Sea. I know it so well. Aberdine was the oil capital of Europe. And there's
38:02
tremendous oil that hasn't been found in the North Sea. Tremendous oil. And I was with the prime minister I respect and
38:09
like a lot. And I said, "You're sitting with the greatest asset." They essentially closed it by making it so
38:15
highly taxed that no developer, no oil company can go there. They have
38:21
tremendous oil left. And more importantly, they have tremendous oil that hasn't even been found yet.
38:28
And what a tremendous asset for the United Kingdom. And I hope the prime
38:35
minister is listening because I told it to him three days in a row. That's all he heard. North Sea oil, North Sea.
38:41
because I want to see them do well. I want to stop seeing them ruining that beautiful Scottish and English
38:47
countryside with windmills and massive solar panels that go seven miles by seven miles,
38:54
taking away farmland. But we're not letting this happen in America. In 1982, the executive director
39:02
of the United Nations Environmental Program predicted that by the year 2000,
39:07
climate change would cause a global catastrophe. He said that it will be
39:13
irreversible as any nuclear holocaust would be. This
39:18
is what they said at the United Nations. What happened? Here we are. Another UN
39:23
official stated in 1989 that within a decade entire nations could be wiped off the map by global warming. Not
39:32
happening. You know, it used to be global cooling. If you look back years ago in the 1920s
39:38
and the 1930s, they said global cooling will kill the world. We have to do
39:44
something. Then they said global warming will kill the world. But then it started
39:50
getting cooler. So now they could just call it climate change because that way they can't miss. It's climate change cuz
39:57
if it goes higher or lower, whatever the hell happens, there's climate change.
40:02
It's the greatest conj job ever perpetrated on the world. In my opinion,
40:07
climate change, no matter what happens, you're involved in that. No more global
40:13
warming, no more global cooling. All of these predictions made by the United Nations and many others, often for bad
40:20
reasons, were wrong. They were made by stupid people that
40:26
have cost their countries fortunes and given those same countries no chance for success. If you don't get away from this
40:32
green scam, your country is going to fail. And I'm really good at predicting things. You know, they actually said
40:38
during the campaign they had a hat, the bestselling hat. Trump was right about
40:43
everything. And I don't say that in a braggadocious way, but it's true. I've been right about everything. And I'm
40:50
telling you that if you don't get away from the green energy scam,
40:56
your country is going to fail. And if you don't stop people that you've never
41:01
seen before, that you have nothing in common with, your country is going to fail. I'm the president of the United
41:08
States, but I worry about Europe. I love Europe. I love the people of Europe. And I hate to see it being devastated by
41:15
energy and immigration. This double-tailed monster destroys
41:20
everything in its wake. And they cannot let that happen any longer. You're doing it because you want to be nice. You want
41:28
to be politically correct. And you're destroying your heritage.
41:33
They must take control strongly and immediately of the unmititigated immigration disaster and the fake energy
41:39
catastrophe before it's too late. The carbon footprint is a hoax made up by people
41:47
with evil intentions and they're heading down a path of total
41:53
destruction. You know, the carbon footprint, it was a big big thing a few years ago. I remember hearing
42:00
about the carbon footprint and then President Obama would get into Air Force
42:05
One, a massive Boeing 747 and not a new one, an old one with old
42:10
engines that spew everything into the atmosphere. He'd talk about the carbon
42:16
footprint. We must do something. Then he'd get in and he'd fly from Washington to Hawaii to play a round of golf. And
42:24
then he get back onto that big beautiful plane and he'd fly back and he talk
42:29
about again global warming and the carbon footprint.
42:34
It's a conj job. At extreme cost and expense, Europe reduced its own carbon
42:40
footprint by 37%. Think of that. Congratulations Europe. Great job. cost
42:47
yourself a lot of jobs, a lot of factories closed, but you reduce the carbon footprint by 37%. However, for
42:56
all of that sacrifice and much more, it's been totally wiped out and then some by a global increase of 54%.
43:05
much of it coming from China and other countries that are thriving around China,
43:13
which now produces more CO2 than all the other developed nations in the world.
43:21
So all of these countries are working so hard on the carbon footprint, which is nonsense, by the way. It's nonsense.
43:29
You know, it's interesting. In the United States, we have still radicalized environmentalists
43:35
and they want the factories to stop. Everything should stop. No more cows. We don't want cows anymore. I guess they
43:40
want to kill all the cows. They want to do things that are just unbelievable. And you have it, too. But, you know, we
43:47
have a border strong and we have a shape. And that shape doesn't just go
43:52
straight up. That shape is amorphous when it comes to the atmosphere. And if
43:58
we had the most clean air, and I think we do, we have very clean air. We have the cleanest air we've had in many, many
44:04
years. But the problem is that other countries like China, which has air
44:09
that's a little bit rough, it blows. And no matter what you're doing down
44:15
here, the air up here tends to get very dirty because it comes in from other
44:21
countries where their air isn't so clean. And the environmentalists refuse to acknowledge that. Same thing with
44:27
garbage. In Asia, they dump much of their garbage right into the ocean. And
44:33
over about a one week and two week journey, it flows
44:39
right past Los Angeles. You've seen it. Massive amounts of garbage, almost too
44:44
much to do anything about. flowing past Los Angeles, past San Francisco
44:50
and then somebody would get in trouble because he dropped a cigarette on the beach. The whole thing is crazy. The
44:59
primary effect of these brutal green energy policies has not been to help the
45:04
environment, but to redistribute manufacturing and industrial activity from developed countries that follow the
45:12
insane rules that are put down to polluting countries that break the rules
45:17
and are making a fortune. They're making a fortune. European electricity bills are now four
45:24
to five times more expensive than those in China. and two to three times higher than the
45:30
United States and our bills are coming way down. You probably see that our gasoline prices are way down. You know,
45:36
we have an expression, drill, baby drill, and that's why we're doing we're
45:41
going to be much lower in a year from now. But they've come way down over the last year. As a result, every air
45:49
conditioner is like very uncommon to see one in some of
45:55
these countries because the electric cost is so high. So while the US has
46:00
approximately 1,300 heat related deaths annually, it's a lot. Europe loses more
46:07
than 175,000 people to heat deaths each year because the costs are so expensive
46:12
you can't turn on an air conditioner. What is that all about? That's not Europe. That's not the Europe that I
46:17
love and know. All in the name of pretending to stop the global warming
46:24
hoax. The entire globalist concept of asking successful industrialized nations
46:29
to inflict pain on themselves and radically disrupt their entire societies must be rejected completely and totally
46:37
and it must be immediate. That's why in America, I withdrew from the fake Paris
46:43
climate accord where, by the way, America was paying so much more than every country. Others weren't paying.
46:50
China didn't have to pay until 2030. Russia was given an old standard that
46:56
was easy to meet, 1990 standard. But for the United States,
47:01
we're supposed to pay like a trillion dollars. And uh I said this is another scam. The
47:09
fact is United States has been taken advantage of by the world for many many years but not any longer as you probably
47:14
noticed. I unleashed massive energy production and signed historic executive
47:20
orders to hunt for oil. But we don't have to do much hunting because we have the most
47:26
oil of any nation anywhere. Oil and gas in the world. And if you add coal, we
47:33
have the most of any nation in the world. Clean, I call it clean, beautiful coal. You can do things today with coal
47:38
that you couldn't have done 10 years ago, 15 years. So I have a little standing order in the White House. Never
47:45
use the word coal. Only use the words clean, beautiful coal. Sounds much
47:50
better, doesn't it? But we stand ready to provide any country with abundant, affordable energy supplies if you need
47:56
them, when most of you do. We're proudly exporting energy all over the world. We're now the largest exporter in the
48:04
United States. We want trade and robust commerce with all nations. Everybody, we
48:10
want to help nations. We're going to help nations, but it must also be fair and reciprocal. The challenge with trade
48:17
is much the same with climate. The countries that followed the rules, all
48:23
their factories have been plundered. It's really it's uh really sad to watch.
48:29
They've been broken. They've been broken by countries that broke the rules.
48:35
That's why the United States is now applying tariffs to other countries. And much as these tariffs were for many
48:42
years applied to us, uncontrollably applied to us. We've used tariffs as a
48:49
defense mechanism under the Trump administration, including my first term where hundreds
48:55
of billions of dollars in tariffs were taken in. And by the way, we had the lowest inflation and now we have very
49:01
low inflation. The only thing different is that we have hundreds of billions of dollars flowing into our country.
49:07
But this is how we will ensure that the system works for everyone and is sustainable into the future. We're also
49:15
using tariffs to defend our sovereignty and security throughout the world, including against nations that have
49:20
taken advantage of former US administrations for decades, including
49:27
the most uh corrupt, incompetent administration
49:32
in history, the sleepy Joe Biden administration. Brazil now faces major tariffs in
49:40
response to its unprecedented efforts to interfere in the rights and freedoms of
49:46
our American citizens and others with censorship, repression, weaponization,
49:51
judicial corruption and targeting of political critics in the United States. I have a little
49:58
problem saying this because I must tell you, I was walking in and the leader of Brazil was walking out. We saw him and I
50:06
saw him. He saw me and we embraced and then I'm saying, "Can you believe I'm going to be saying this in just two
50:12
minutes?" We actually agreed that we would meet next week.
50:18
We didn't have much time to talk like about 20 seconds. They were in they were in retrospect. I'm glad I waited because
50:26
this thing didn't work out too well. But we did talk. We had a good talk and we
50:31
agreed to meet next week if that's of interest. But he seemed like a very nice man actually. We He liked me. I liked
50:38
him. But if you uh and I only do business with people I like. I don't
50:44
when I don't like him. When I don't like them, I don't like them. But uh we had at least for about
50:52
39 seconds, we had excellent chemistry. It's a good sign.
50:57
But also in the past, Brazil, can you believe this? Unfairly tariffed our nation. But now, because of our tariffs,
51:04
we are hitting them back. And we're hitting them back very hard. As president, I will always defend our
51:10
national sovereignty and the rights of American citizens. So, uh, I'm very
51:16
sorry to say this that Brazil is doing poorly and will continue to do poorly.
51:22
They can only do well when they're working with us. Without us, they will
51:28
fail, just as others have failed. It's true. Next year, the United States will celebrate the 250th anniversary of our
51:35
glorious independence, a testament to enduring power and American freedom and spirit. We will also be proudly hosting
51:43
the 2026 FIFA World Cup and shortly thereafter, the 2028 Olympics, which is
51:50
going to be very exciting. I hope you all come. I hope that countless people from all over the globe will take part
51:56
of these great these will be great celebrations of liberty and human achievement and that together we all can
52:03
rejoice in the miracles of history that began in July 4th 1776
52:09
when we founded the light to all nations and it's something really that is an
52:15
amazing thing came out of that date it's called the United States of America in
52:20
honor of this momentous anniversary I hope that all countries who find inspiration in our example will join us
52:26
in renewing our commitment values and those values really that we hold so dear
52:32
together. Let us defend free speech and free expression. Let us protect religious liberty including for the most
52:40
persecuted religion on the planet today. It's called Christianity.
52:45
and let us safeguard our sovereignty and cherish qualities that have made each of our nation so special, incredible, and
52:53
extraordinary. In closing, I just want to repeat that immigration and the high cost of so-called green renewable energy
53:00
is destroying a large part of the free world and a large part of our planet.
53:06
Countries that cherish freedom are fading fast because of their policies on these two subjects. You need
53:13
strong borders and traditional energy sources if you are going to be great again. Whether you have come from north
53:22
or south, east or west, near or far, every leader in this beautiful hall
53:27
today represents a rich culture, a noble history, and a proud heritage that makes
53:33
each nation majestic and unique unlike anything else in human history or any
53:39
other place on the face of the earth. From London to Lima, from Rome to
53:46
Athens, from Paris to Seoul, from Cairo to Tokyo and Amsterdam to right here in
53:52
New York City, we stand on the shoulders of the leaders and legends, generals and
53:57
giants, heroes and titans who won and built our beloved nations, all of our
54:03
nations, with their own courage, strength, spirit, and skill. Our ancestors climbed to mountains,
54:10
conquered oceans, crossed deserts, and tked over wide open plains. They charged
54:16
into thunderous battles, plunged into grave dangers. And they were soldiers
54:22
and farmers and workers and warriors and explorers and patriots. They built towns
54:28
into cities, tribes into kingdoms, ideas into industries, and small islands into
54:34
mighty empires. You're a part of all of that. They were champions for their people who never
54:40
gave up and who never ever gave in. Their values defined our national
54:47
identities. Their visions forged our magnificent
54:53
destiny. Everybody in this room is a part of it in your own way. Each of us
54:58
inherits the deeds and the myths, the triumphs, the legacies of our own heroes and founders who so bravely showed us
55:05
the way. Our ancestors gave everything for homelands that they defended with
55:12
pride, with sweat, with blood, with life, and with death. Now the righteous
55:19
task of protecting the nations that they built belongs to each and every one of
55:25
us. So together, let us uphold our sacred duty to our people and to our citizens.
55:31
Let us protect their borders, ensure their safety, preserve their cultures, treasure and traditions, and fight fight
55:39
for their precious dreams and their cherished freedoms. And in friendship and really a beautiful vision, let us
55:48
all work together to build a bright, beautiful planet. A planet that we all
55:55
share, a planet of peace, and a world that is richer, better, and more beautiful than ever before. That can
56:00
happen. It will happen. It will happen. And I hope it can happen and start right
56:06
now, right at this moment. We'll turn it around. We're going to make our countries better, safer, more beautiful.
56:13
We're going to take care of our people. Thank you very much. It's been an honor. God bless the nations of the world.
56:18
Thank you very much. Bye.
56:36
On behalf of the assembly, I wish to thank the President of the United States.
56:59
[Music]
57:05
Heat up here.
57:20
Heat.
57:27
Heat.
58:15
Heat. Heat.
59:16
Heat. Heat.
59:39
Heat. Heat.
59:45
Heat.
59:56
Heat.
1:00:07
[Music]
1:00:31
Please be seated.
1:00:40
Please be seated.
1:00:55
[Music]
1:01:09
Heat. Heat.
1:01:52
Excellencies,
1:02:17
could you please take your seats in due respect to the next speakers.
1:02:24
The second row, could you please take your seat right now
1:02:33
in between to get them to go
1:03:26
Please take a seat now. With due respect to the next speakers, I
1:03:32
would kindly ask to gentlemen in the left row, please take your seats.
1:03:41
We will continue.
1:03:56
Excellencies, as we are receiving queries, I would like to assure you that
1:04:04
don't worries the UN teleprompterss are working perfectly. And by this technical
1:04:10
note, I would like to call on the next speaker. The assembly
1:04:17
will hear an address by his excellency Prao Wosu Anu, President of the Republic
1:04:25
of Indonesia. I request protocol to escort his excellency and invite him to
1:04:31
address the assembly.