 I mean, just look, what do you have? Talk to them. Just tell me if you're in there. Two cameras. Two cameras. Why are you selling proof of this? For the South Korea. Can't ask the White House if I'm not being here. Represented. Can't not be here. Can't not be here. Well, as I heard the last night, the White House has a destroying school for the two cameras. Okay. They don't control this room, actually. No. We have, for more than a year, been working with COVID restrictions, fire standards, and so forth. And this room is only cool. And there are no tri-claws in the aisles. We know there's enormous interest today. But you're breaking the rules we've all lived under for more than a year. Okay. Ben, can you just check with the hide, please? Because we are so many. You know, the journalists here to law change this. The journalists here is fine. We're saying you can't have tripods in the aisles. And we are cool only. Yeah. These are the restrictions we work with every day. I know. This is where we work every day. Yeah. But can you just check one more time? Thank you. They don't control the room. Should we control the room? Yeah. No way. We could fill it up. Yeah. And then it's okay, right? Yes. So it's not their decision. Unreal. Imagine being vaccinated with the quad booster add-on and still freaking out about some arbitrary COVID rule that apparently the White House doesn't even enforce. But instead by self-appointed Karens like Kelly O'Donnell here, a well-known Democrat party hack from NBC. Now, I'm not 100% on this, but I'm pretty sure that Asian reporter that was being berated was actually there for an appearance by a Korean pop group called BTS. Seriously, I don't know anything about this group outside the fact I apparently do have some of their fortnight emotes. Anyway, hilariously, this altercation happened just before their press conference that was ironically addressing anti-Asian hate and disinformation. No doubt because they're still trying to deflect from the true source of most anti-Asian hate over to Trump and their political opponents. I really wonder how all of this would be playing out right now if this altercation happened between Fox News's Peter Ducey and that Asian reporter. One question I thought of while I was putting together this video and I found interesting about this exchange. What authority does Kelly O'Donnell have to enforce her arbitrary rules on this reporter? Sorry, I don't have her name. I hate having to refer to her as Asian reporter. But at one point she asked if somebody could go get a White House representative that she could ask about these COVID rules. And Kelly O'Donnell says that, no, no, that's not something the White House enforces. That's something that we journalists enforce in here. Who does she think she is? She has no special authority in that room than any other American citizen would have. This is my question. Is the White House press briefing room a public space? I ask because right on their website, it says that the location in one of the oldest parts of the White House nestled between the fabled residents and the West Wing is evidence alone of the key role the news media has come to play as an intermediary between the public and the executive branch of the United States government. The fact of the matter is the corporate press doesn't have any special privilege to free speech or journalism. The Constitution and the First Amendment make every American citizen a journalist. So here's my question. I honestly don't know the answer to it. Is the White House press briefing room a public space where every American citizen has the constitutional guaranteed right to exercise their freedom of speech? If you know the answer to this question, please let us all know in the comment section. All right, folks. That's all I have for this one. If you enjoyed it, please don't forget to punch that like button, share this video, and again, leave a comment to let us all know what you think. Thanks a lot. See you next time.