The War For The Soul Of Our Movement (Ep. 2546)

The War For The Soul Of Our Movement (Ep. 2546)

The top 1% of earners pay 40% of all federal income taxes — but Bernie Sanders, AOC allies, and socialist candidates consistently claim they pay close to zero.

Jul 6, 2026 1:15:56 Difficulty: Beginner Played

TL;DR

Dan Bongino returns from a July 4th Bahamas vacation to celebrate America's 250th birthday and declare war on two fronts: the left's socialist creep into blue and purple states, and what he calls "fake MAGA doomer grifters" trying to destroy the conservative movement from within. He uses John Bolton's guilty plea on classified information charges as Exhibit A that the "no there there" crowd is wrong, then walks through Bernie Sanders, Gavin Newsom, and New York's Zohran Mamdani as proof that the left doesn't believe its own talking points. The single most useful takeaway: the top 1% of earners already pay 40% of all federal income taxes — a fact their opponents consistently get spectacularly wrong.

#income tax distribution #rent control economics #MAGA movement integrity #socialist candidates 2026 #California population exodus #John Bolton guilty plea #Bernie Sanders hypocrisy #Trump economic philosophy #doomer grifters #American exceptionalism #July 4th 250th anniversary #Supreme Court rulings #New York rent freeze #progressive income tax #Dan Bongino #America 250th anniversary #socialism #communism #income tax #top 1% #rent control #Bernie Sanders #Gavin Newsom #Zohran Mamdani #John Bolton #Avilia Chavelier #MAGA movement #grifters #Supreme Court #free market #California exodus #Trump #July 4th #doomer

Dan Bongino covers America's 250th Independence Day, the fight to preserve the republic against socialist infiltration of blue and purple states, Supreme Court landmark rulings, and a war within the conservative movement against what he calls fake-MAGA doomer grifters.

Chapter list
  • Dan Bongino kicks off episode 2,546 with a burst of patriotic energy, celebrating America's 250th anniversary and reflecting on his own morning ritual of gratitude. Back from a week off, he tells the audience he kept a running file of stories the whole time and is ready to deliver them. He describes waking up every morning saying he loves Jesus and opening himself to positive energy before picking up his phone. The backdrop is a simple but powerful point: of all the people who have ever lived, you happen to have been born in the place where the best ideas won — a constitutional republic still standing after 250 years. Flags fly in the chat before the show even formally begins.

  • Bongino uses the 250th anniversary energy to launch a new audience engagement initiative: the 1776 Live Club, kicking off today on Rumble. Every week, one viewer who watches live and gets active in the chat can win $1,776 in cash. The entry mechanic couldn't be simpler — no purchase, no form, just participate in the live chat and post the best comment. Official rules are at bongino.com/1776. He frames it as a straightforward expression of gratitude to his audience: 'I just want to give you money. Why? Because we like to give money away.'

  • Bongino delivers the first sponsor read of the episode for DeleteMe, framing it around his own concern about being doxxed given his high-profile and sometimes contentious public presence. He explains that a quick internet search can reveal your home address and phone number, and that DeleteMe actively removes that information from hundreds of data broker sites. The pitch is personal — he says he's had security incidents and genuinely uses services like this. The offer is 20% off at JoinDeleteMe.com/Bongino using promo code Bongino.

  • After the DeleteMe ad, Bongino dives into a deliberately anticlimactic 'Weekend Update' segment. He was in the Bahamas — not liberating a communist country, just wading in clear blue water with his youngest daughter watching sea turtles swim up. He describes dockside evenings on cheap Walmart folding chairs, friends with cigars, a few vodkas he doesn't usually drink, and a Navy SEAL spinning yarns. The segment is a deliberate exhale before the political intensity to come. He notes he grew up in the city and didn't learn to swim until he was a Secret Service agent, making the sea turtle moment genuinely novel. The real point, unspoken but clear: stepping outside the media ecosystem into the actual world reminded him most people are decent, sane, and not consumed by the online chaos.

  • This is the philosophical spine of the episode. Bongino returns from vacation to find the same coordinated chaos he left — fake-MAGA commentators claiming to have explosive evidence they never produce, defamation suits going nowhere, and a Tower of Babel strategy designed to make conservatives turn on each other. He reads out what he calls 'the tally sheet': on his side, a documented list of arrests, convictions, plea deals, and ongoing investigations across multiple major cases. On the other side: multiple defamation suits, not a single named suspect that holds up, and an endless loop of conjecture. He argues these grifters are no different from the socialist left they claim to oppose — both use the same strategy of loud fabrication, isolation from truth, and subject-pivoting when cornered. The vacuum of institutional trust created over 30–40 years makes the grifters' job easier, but Bongino says the overwhelming majority of the movement hasn't fallen for it.

  • When Bongino was on vacation, the Bolton story broke — and it landed exactly as he predicted. Bolton changed his plea to guilty on one count of retaining classified information, faces up to 5 years in prison, and a fine exceeding $2 million. Bongino catalogs the parade of media headlines that called the FBI investigation a 'revenge raid,' a 'distraction,' and proof of Kash Patel's 'gangster list.' The Wall Street Journal, he notes, even documented these fake news failures. He uses the Bolton outcome as a clean, concrete example of the exact pattern he described in the previous segment: false claims made loudly, and then quietly ignored when proven wrong. He is careful to note Bolton is entitled to his day in court and that the process worked as a republic's should.

  • Bongino delivers the American Financing ad, targeting homeowners who are carrying credit card debt at 25%+ interest rates while sitting on home equity. His argument is direct: that low mortgage rate you're protecting isn't saving you if you're drowning in credit card interest. American Financing helps people refinance and use equity to break free from that cycle. The company claims an average savings of $800/month for customers. No upfront fees, no pressure, and starting today may allow borrowers to delay two mortgage payments. The number is 888-994-7660 and the web address is americanfinancing.net/bongino.

  • Bongino gives a notably personal sponsor read for All Family Pharmacy, showing the camera a travel medication pack the company sent him before his trip — including motion sickness medication that helped his daughter Amelia on the water. He describes the service model: complete a quick online medical form, a licensed physician reviews it, prescribes if appropriate, and the medication is shipped directly. The current promotion is a BOGO sale — buy one, get one free — on ivermectin, mebendazole, ivermectin cream, and hydroxychloroquine through midnight July 7th. The website is allfamilypharmacy.com/bongino and there's a call-in number at 561-717-6794.

  • The Bernie Sanders segment is Bongino at his most caustic. He plays a clip from an interview where Sanders is asked directly why, as a champion of the working class who rails against private jets and carbon emissions, he flies private. Sanders' answer — that he needs to reach 30,000 people at rallies and can't wait in an airport line — is delivered without irony. Bongino points out the obvious: every wealthy person finds flying private convenient, which is exactly why Sanders' class-warfare rhetoric is fraudulent. He draws the explicit parallel to the doomer grifters: the same pattern of claiming moral superiority while living the opposite, and laughing at the suckers who believe them. 'Stupid is a choice,' Bongino declares. 'You don't have to be stupid.'

  • Gavin Newsom embodies the next layer of Bongino's argument: elite politicians who know their own policies are destructive but promote them anyway for political gain. Bongino explains that Newsom worked behind the scenes to kill California's billionaire tax ballot measure, understanding that wealthy residents would flee if it passed. But when his progressive base pushed back, Newsom filmed what Bongino calls a 'hostage video' demanding a national billionaire tax instead — good enough for everyone else, just not California. An old clip then catches Newsom in a private setting admitting flatly that California's tax rates 'are not competitive, period.' The results are visible in the data: Los Angeles leads the nation in population exodus, California lost 500,000 residents in two years, and New York is set to lose two congressional seats.

  • The Caleb Hammer segment is the comedic and intellectual heart of the episode. Hammer asks a basic question to a blue-haired socialist guest: if you want the rich to pay 'more' taxes, what do they pay now? The answer — 'none, I think it's zero' — is both wrong and revealing. Hammer then walks through the actual IRS data: the top 1% pay approximately 40% of all federal income taxes; the top 10% pay 50–60%; the bottom 50% pay just 1%. He also reveals that the U.S. has the most progressive income tax system in the entire Western world. The guest had no idea. Bongino uses this to make his recurring point: these people want to reshape the economy based on premises they cannot verify and refuse to look up, even though the answer is a 10-second AI query away.

  • Bongino escalates with a 'classic' clip: John Stossel interviewing Al Sharpton and asking how much the top 1% should pay in income taxes. Sharpton says 15% would be fair — then claims they currently pay 'very much less than 5%.' Stossel informs him the IRS figure is 34%, nearly double what Sharpton said would be fair. Sharpton's response is immediate topic change: 'well, if you deal with the quality of their lives...' He never acknowledges how far off he was. Bongino then asks the audience directly: what is the difference between this behavior and what the doomer grifters do? When you give them evidence — Bolton pled guilty, the top 1% pays 40% — they just pivot to the next conspiracy. He calls the audience 'marks,' comparing them to tourists in '80s Times Square buying fake Rolexes out of a jacket.

  • Bongino shifts the lens from taxes to the broader capitalism-versus-socialism debate, using a clip from a debate involving PragerU-affiliated commentator Franklin Camargo's colleague. The debater asks a DSA member why people put themselves on boats and risk death to reach the United States, when no Americans are making that journey in reverse. The DSA response — 'my grandma is here,' 'it's anecdotal,' 'there are multiple factors' — is precisely the dodge Bongino has been diagnosing all episode. He adds his own data point: tens of thousands of Canadians cross into the U.S. to get healthcare despite Canada's 'free' system, and an estimated 14 to 30 million immigrants living illegally in the U.S. are often cited by the left itself as evidence those home countries are too dangerous to return to. The free market doesn't need a gun pointed inward. The socialist systems do.

  • The Colorado segment is Bongino's geographical broadside. He told listeners the previous week that the communist takeover was spreading into purple states, and Quiroz's congressional primary win in Colorado is his proof. She supports free pre-K and college funded by taxing millionaires, and argues that existing public infrastructure — roads, fire stations — already constitutes socialism. Bongino methodically corrects her: government spending on services is not socialism. Socialism is government ownership and control of the means of production — factories, businesses, housing. Spending tax revenue on a road does not make the asphalt company state-owned. He calls the conflation 'impressionable-stupid logic' and warns that people actually believe this reasoning because they see a well-maintained road and conclude the government economic model that paid for it must be correct.

  • Bongino follows the Colorado socialism segment with what he considers the most morally serious clip of the episode: Quiroz, who is heading to Congress, saying on camera that the 9/11 terrorist attacks were the 'inevitable consequence' of American foreign policy destabilizing the Middle East. Bongino does not mince words — he calls her a traitor and says flying a jumbo jet into a building full of innocent people, forcing them to choose between burning alive or jumping 110 stories, cannot be rationalized by foreign policy grievances. He uses the clip to drive home why his opening framing — 'there is a war for the soul of this country' — is not rhetorical excess. When a future member of Congress can say this and get elected, the stakes are existential.

  • The Chavelier segment combines policy critique with classic Alinsky-style rule application: make them live by their own rules. Chavelier ran on a platform of seizing the means of production, abolishing police, prisons, and borders — and unlike most socialist politicians, she appears to know exactly what those phrases mean. Bongino explains the term clearly for listeners: a family-owned calculator factory in Tuscaloosa is a means of production. Seize means to take it. No compensation. That is what she is proposing. Then comes the New York Post reveal: her father is a landlord renting his Miami condo for $1,750 a month. Bongino asks directly: is she planning to seize that means of production? Of course not. Just like Bernie, she is full of it. He calls her a fraud who has never held a real job but wants to control the economic lives of millions.

  • Mamdani's rent freeze is Bongino's real-world case study in applied socialist economics. The rent guidelines board froze rent for over 2 million New Yorkers in rent-stabilized apartments. Bongino walks through the mechanics: a landlord who cannot profit from an apartment will not rent it. Supply falls. Demand rises because below-market rents attract more applicants than there are units. Black markets emerge through subletting. Landlords stop maintaining properties because they cannot afford to invest in units that lose money. He calls rent control 'one of the most economically debunked fallacies in human history' and compares it to gun control in one key respect: criminals ignore gun laws the way landlords work around rent laws. Trump, he says, understands this because he lived through the Dinkins/Koch/Lindsay era of New York's collapse.

  • Bongino delivers the Helix Sleep ad with characteristic personal detail — he owns the Midnight Luxe, tracks his sleep, and says the data backs up the experience. He used to wake up sore and overheated in the Florida summer. That changed with Helix. The cooling upgrade matters especially in summer heat waves. The offer is 20% off sitewide, 25% off Luxe mattresses, and 30% off Elite mattresses at helixsleep.com/dan, backed by a 120-night sleep trial and a lifetime limited warranty.

  • This segment binds together the show's running themes. Bongino recounts a pre-show chat with Trump before a major interview that drew 300,000 live streamers. Trump launched into a detailed technical explanation of the brine-and-salt refrigeration mixture used to fix Wollman Rink — a New York ice skating facility no one could repair for decades that Trump fixed in six months as a private citizen. The level of granular operational knowledge impressed Bongino. That hands-on expertise is why Trump's instincts on rent control and communism are credible. Then comes the clip: Trump says he would be the greatest communist in history because free everything is the easiest political sell ever devised. Free rent, free food, free housing — everyone votes for you. The problem: after 2–3 years, no food, no housing, no military, no law and order, squalor, third-world conditions, and collapse. It has happened for thousands of years. Always does. Always has.

  • The cannibalism segment is Bongino's warning for the conservative movement. He has been arguing all episode that fake-MAGA grifters operate exactly like the socialist left. Now he shows where that road ends on the left: a progressive senator, one of the most liberal in the country, being confronted in a public park by fellow progressives who open by praising his trans legislation — then tell him he 'does not belong here anymore' because of his position on Gaza. 'It breaks my heart,' they say, as they shout him down. Bongino plays it almost in its entirety because it perfectly illustrates his theory: when a movement abandons logic and evidence as its organizing principle, it runs out of external enemies and starts consuming its allies. The purity spiral accelerates. He warns this is what happens if the conservative movement doesn't stop the grifter chaos on its own side.

  • The episode closes on an unabashedly optimistic note with the Oliver Henry clip — a British man who bought a last-minute World Cup ticket in Dallas, started documenting his trip, went viral, got seen by the President, and ended up backstage with a thumbs-up photo. Henry says he now understands the American dream for the first time. Bongino uses the moment to crystallize his worldview: Team America is about facts, service, and earned opportunity. It's not Team Commie, Team Grifter, or Team Slick-haired Zeros. He then delivers a characteristically blunt message to his critics — 51,000 people are in the stadium on a Monday morning in summer during a major news week, and he's not going anywhere. He teases tomorrow's Supreme Court content: birthright citizenship and why the mail-in ballot ruling was wrong. Vince and Haley from the Bongino network sign off.

  • Bongino closes by encouraging viewers to download the Rumble app, noting it's free, that Rumble Premium reduces ads, and that shows can be watched on smart TVs. He gives shout-outs to network talent including Tim Pool and Steven Crowder alongside the in-house talent Haley Carradine (Scrolling with Haley, weekday noon) and Vince (weekday mornings 8 AM Eastern). Vince and Haley record brief interstitial sign-offs. The episode ends at the 4,543-second mark.

Means of production
In Marxist theory, the physical assets — factories, land, tools, machinery — used to produce goods. Bongino uses it to explain why socialist candidate Chavelier's call to 'seize' them would include private businesses and landlords.
Limousine liberal
A pejorative for a wealthy progressive who advocates left-wing economic policies while personally benefiting from the wealth and lifestyle those policies would supposedly redistribute.
Doomer grifters
Bongino's term for conservative-adjacent podcasters and commentators who, in his view, fabricate or exaggerate crises within the MAGA movement to build audiences and monetize distrust.
Black pill
Internet slang for a nihilistic worldview that rejects hope of political or societal improvement. Bongino uses it to describe commentators who argue the conservative movement is irredeemably lost.
Rent control
Government regulation capping the price landlords can charge for rent. Economists broadly regard it as counterproductive because it reduces housing supply and incentivizes property neglect.
Progressive income tax
A tax system where higher earners pay a higher percentage of income. Bongino cites data claiming the U.S. already has the most progressive income tax system in the Western world.
DSA
Democratic Socialists of America, a political organization that advocates for democratic socialist policies including expanded public ownership and social programs.
Geofencing
A technology that uses GPS or RFID to create virtual geographic boundaries. In the context of the episode it refers to a Supreme Court case about law enforcement use of location data to identify criminal suspects.
Manichaean
Relating to a worldview that divides everything into a binary struggle between good and evil, with no middle ground. Bongino uses it to describe the high-stakes nature of the current political fight.
Cannibalism theory
Bongino's term for the political phenomenon where ideological movements without grounding in facts eventually turn on their own members in purity tests, devouring allies who fail to meet shifting ideological standards.
Tower of Babel
A biblical story about a project to build a tower to heaven that God stopped by causing its builders to speak different languages. Bongino uses it as a metaphor for foreign-funded efforts to make conservatives turn on each other.
Alinsky Rule 4
From Saul Alinsky's 'Rules for Radicals': 'Make the enemy live up to its own book of rules.' Bongino invokes it to point out socialist hypocrisy when their own lives contradict their stated values.
Rent-stabilized apartment
A New York City housing category where rent increases are limited by law. Bongino discusses Mamdani's decision to freeze rents entirely for the 2+ million New Yorkers in these units.
Discursively
Moving from topic to topic without a strict linear order; wide-ranging in thought. Bongino uses it to describe President Trump's conversational style during their pre-show chat.
Solzhenitsyn
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, a Russian author and dissident whose works — including The Gulag Archipelago and The First Circle — documented the horrors of the Soviet prison system. Bongino recommends him to liberals who doubt communism's real-world consequences.
Brine and salt refrigeration
The use of a salt-water brine solution in ice rink refrigeration systems to maintain ice surface temperature. Bongino references Trump's precise knowledge of this system from the Wollman Rink project.
Phantom Zone
A fictional prison dimension from Superman lore. Bongino uses it metaphorically to describe the intellectual void that grifters pull their audiences into with conspiracy theories and baseless claims.

Chapter 2 · 02:50

1776 Live Club Contest Launch

Bongino uses the 250th anniversary energy to launch a new audience engagement initiative: the 1776 Live Club, kicking off today on Rumble. Every week, one viewer who watches live and gets active in the chat can win $1,776 in cash. The entry mechanic couldn't be simpler — no purchase, no form, just participate in the live chat and post the best comment. Official rules are at bongino.com/1776. He frames it as a straightforward expression of gratitude to his audience: 'I just want to give you money. Why? Because we like to give money away.'

Leisure
Data point $1,776

The War For The Soul Of Our Movement (Ep. 2546) · Jul 6, 2026

Bongino launched a weekly $1,776 cash giveaway for viewers who watch the show live on Rumble and participate in the chat, tied to the show's 1776 Live Club contest.

Chapter 5 · 12:00

The War for the Soul of Our Movement: Grifters vs. the Real MAGA

This is the philosophical spine of the episode. Bongino returns from vacation to find the same coordinated chaos he left — fake-MAGA commentators claiming to have explosive evidence they never produce, defamation suits going nowhere, and a Tower of Babel strategy designed to make conservatives turn on each other. He reads out what he calls 'the tally sheet': on his side, a documented list of arrests, convictions, plea deals, and ongoing investigations across multiple major cases. On the other side: multiple defamation suits, not a single named suspect that holds up, and an endless loop of conjecture. He argues these grifters are no different from the socialist left they claim to oppose — both use the same strategy of loud fabrication, isolation from truth, and subject-pivoting when cornered. The vacuum of institutional trust created over 30–40 years makes the grifters' job easier, but Bongino says the overwhelming majority of the movement hasn't fallen for it.

Chapter 6 · 18:50

John Bolton Pleads Guilty: 'No There There' Was Wrong

When Bongino was on vacation, the Bolton story broke — and it landed exactly as he predicted. Bolton changed his plea to guilty on one count of retaining classified information, faces up to 5 years in prison, and a fine exceeding $2 million. Bongino catalogs the parade of media headlines that called the FBI investigation a 'revenge raid,' a 'distraction,' and proof of Kash Patel's 'gangster list.' The Wall Street Journal, he notes, even documented these fake news failures. He uses the Bolton outcome as a clean, concrete example of the exact pattern he described in the previous segment: false claims made loudly, and then quietly ignored when proven wrong. He is careful to note Bolton is entitled to his day in court and that the process worked as a republic's should.

Claims made here

Former National Security Advisor John Bolton pleaded guilty to one count of retaining classified information in a diary entry and faces up to 5 years in prison and a fine over $2 million.

Dan Bongino no source cited

News
Data point $2M+ fine

The War For The Soul Of Our Movement (Ep. 2546) · Jul 6, 2026 News

Former NSA John Bolton pleaded guilty to one count of retaining classified information and faces up to 5 years in prison plus a $2 million fine. Every media outlet that called the FBI investigation 'revenge' or a 'distraction' was simply wrong.

Chapter 9 · 26:35

Bernie Sanders, Limousine Liberal: The Private Jet Hypocrisy

The Bernie Sanders segment is Bongino at his most caustic. He plays a clip from an interview where Sanders is asked directly why, as a champion of the working class who rails against private jets and carbon emissions, he flies private. Sanders' answer — that he needs to reach 30,000 people at rallies and can't wait in an airport line — is delivered without irony. Bongino points out the obvious: every wealthy person finds flying private convenient, which is exactly why Sanders' class-warfare rhetoric is fraudulent. He draws the explicit parallel to the doomer grifters: the same pattern of claiming moral superiority while living the opposite, and laughing at the suckers who believe them. 'Stupid is a choice,' Bongino declares. 'You don't have to be stupid.'

Chapter 10 · 30:30

Gavin Newsom's Billionaire Tax Hypocrisy

Gavin Newsom embodies the next layer of Bongino's argument: elite politicians who know their own policies are destructive but promote them anyway for political gain. Bongino explains that Newsom worked behind the scenes to kill California's billionaire tax ballot measure, understanding that wealthy residents would flee if it passed. But when his progressive base pushed back, Newsom filmed what Bongino calls a 'hostage video' demanding a national billionaire tax instead — good enough for everyone else, just not California. An old clip then catches Newsom in a private setting admitting flatly that California's tax rates 'are not competitive, period.' The results are visible in the data: Los Angeles leads the nation in population exodus, California lost 500,000 residents in two years, and New York is set to lose two congressional seats.

Claims made here

Los Angeles leads the nation in massive population exodus.

Dan Bongino no source cited

California lost 500,000 residents in 2 years as people fled high costs and COVID restrictions.

Dan Bongino no source cited

New York is projected to lose 2 congressional seats due to population loss.

Dan Bongino no source cited

Chapter 11 · 34:30

The Blue-Haired Liberal Doesn't Know What the Rich Pay

The Caleb Hammer segment is the comedic and intellectual heart of the episode. Hammer asks a basic question to a blue-haired socialist guest: if you want the rich to pay 'more' taxes, what do they pay now? The answer — 'none, I think it's zero' — is both wrong and revealing. Hammer then walks through the actual IRS data: the top 1% pay approximately 40% of all federal income taxes; the top 10% pay 50–60%; the bottom 50% pay just 1%. He also reveals that the U.S. has the most progressive income tax system in the entire Western world. The guest had no idea. Bongino uses this to make his recurring point: these people want to reshape the economy based on premises they cannot verify and refuse to look up, even though the answer is a 10-second AI query away.

Claims made here

The top 10% of earners pay 50 to 60% of all federal income taxes, while the bottom 50% pay only 1%.

Dan Bongino Caleb Hammer show / IRS data

The United States has the most progressive income tax system in the entire Western world.

Dan Bongino no source cited

Business
Data point 40%

The War For The Soul Of Our Movement (Ep. 2546) · Jul 6, 2026 Business

A socialist guest on Caleb Hammer's show said the top 1% pay zero in income taxes. The actual figure is 40%. She also had no idea the U.S. has the most progressive income tax system in the entire Western world.

Business
Data point 50-60%

The War For The Soul Of Our Movement (Ep. 2546) · Jul 6, 2026

In the Caleb Hammer clip, it was noted the top 10% of earners pay between 50 and 60% of all federal income taxes, with the bottom 50% paying just 1%.

Chapter 12 · 38:40

Al Sharpton vs. John Stossel: A Classic in Motivated Ignorance

Bongino escalates with a 'classic' clip: John Stossel interviewing Al Sharpton and asking how much the top 1% should pay in income taxes. Sharpton says 15% would be fair — then claims they currently pay 'very much less than 5%.' Stossel informs him the IRS figure is 34%, nearly double what Sharpton said would be fair. Sharpton's response is immediate topic change: 'well, if you deal with the quality of their lives...' He never acknowledges how far off he was. Bongino then asks the audience directly: what is the difference between this behavior and what the doomer grifters do? When you give them evidence — Bolton pled guilty, the top 1% pays 40% — they just pivot to the next conspiracy. He calls the audience 'marks,' comparing them to tourists in '80s Times Square buying fake Rolexes out of a jacket.

Claims made here

At the time of a classic John Stossel interview, the IRS reported the top 1% of taxpayers paid 34% of all income taxes.

John Stossel IRS data

Business
Data point 5%

The War For The Soul Of Our Movement (Ep. 2546) · Jul 6, 2026

In a classic clip replayed on the show, Al Sharpton claimed the top 1% pay 'very much less than 5%' of income taxes; the actual IRS figure at the time was 34%.

Chapter 13 · 42:10

Capitalism vs. Socialism: Why Nobody Flees America

Bongino shifts the lens from taxes to the broader capitalism-versus-socialism debate, using a clip from a debate involving PragerU-affiliated commentator Franklin Camargo's colleague. The debater asks a DSA member why people put themselves on boats and risk death to reach the United States, when no Americans are making that journey in reverse. The DSA response — 'my grandma is here,' 'it's anecdotal,' 'there are multiple factors' — is precisely the dodge Bongino has been diagnosing all episode. He adds his own data point: tens of thousands of Canadians cross into the U.S. to get healthcare despite Canada's 'free' system, and an estimated 14 to 30 million immigrants living illegally in the U.S. are often cited by the left itself as evidence those home countries are too dangerous to return to. The free market doesn't need a gun pointed inward. The socialist systems do.

Claims made here

The top 1% of earners in the United States pay approximately 40% of all federal income taxes, according to IRS data.

Dan Bongino IRS data / ChatGPT query

Business
Data point 40%

The War For The Soul Of Our Movement (Ep. 2546) · Jul 6, 2026

According to IRS data and ChatGPT queries cited on the show, the top 1% of earners pay approximately 40% of all federal income taxes — far more than most liberals believe.

Chapter 14 · 46:40

Colorado Goes Communist: The Purple State Warning

The Colorado segment is Bongino's geographical broadside. He told listeners the previous week that the communist takeover was spreading into purple states, and Quiroz's congressional primary win in Colorado is his proof. She supports free pre-K and college funded by taxing millionaires, and argues that existing public infrastructure — roads, fire stations — already constitutes socialism. Bongino methodically corrects her: government spending on services is not socialism. Socialism is government ownership and control of the means of production — factories, businesses, housing. Spending tax revenue on a road does not make the asphalt company state-owned. He calls the conflation 'impressionable-stupid logic' and warns that people actually believe this reasoning because they see a well-maintained road and conclude the government economic model that paid for it must be correct.

Claims made here

There are at least 14 to 30 million illegal immigrants living in the United States.

Dan Bongino no source cited

Tens of thousands of Canadians cross into the United States to access healthcare despite Canada offering free universal healthcare.

Dan Bongino no source cited

Society & Culture
Why No One Flees to Venezuela

The War For The Soul Of Our Movement (Ep. 2546) · Jul 6, 2026 Society & Culture

Tens of millions of people have risked their lives crossing borders to reach the American free market. Zero Americans are boarding boats to escape to Cuba, Venezuela, or Russia. If socialism is so great, why does the traffic only flow one direction?

News
Data point 14-30M

The War For The Soul Of Our Movement (Ep. 2546) · Jul 6, 2026

In a clip debating socialism vs. capitalism, it was cited that at least 14 to 30 million illegal immigrants live in the United States, used as evidence that people flee socialist countries for the American free market.

Chapter 15 · 50:00

9/11 Blame America: Congressional Candidate Quiroz

Bongino follows the Colorado socialism segment with what he considers the most morally serious clip of the episode: Quiroz, who is heading to Congress, saying on camera that the 9/11 terrorist attacks were the 'inevitable consequence' of American foreign policy destabilizing the Middle East. Bongino does not mince words — he calls her a traitor and says flying a jumbo jet into a building full of innocent people, forcing them to choose between burning alive or jumping 110 stories, cannot be rationalized by foreign policy grievances. He uses the clip to drive home why his opening framing — 'there is a war for the soul of this country' — is not rhetorical excess. When a future member of Congress can say this and get elected, the stakes are existential.

Chapter 16 · 52:10

Avilia Chavelier: Seize the Means of Production (Her Dad's Landlord)

The Chavelier segment combines policy critique with classic Alinsky-style rule application: make them live by their own rules. Chavelier ran on a platform of seizing the means of production, abolishing police, prisons, and borders — and unlike most socialist politicians, she appears to know exactly what those phrases mean. Bongino explains the term clearly for listeners: a family-owned calculator factory in Tuscaloosa is a means of production. Seize means to take it. No compensation. That is what she is proposing. Then comes the New York Post reveal: her father is a landlord renting his Miami condo for $1,750 a month. Bongino asks directly: is she planning to seize that means of production? Of course not. Just like Bernie, she is full of it. He calls her a fraud who has never held a real job but wants to control the economic lives of millions.

Claims made here

Avilia Chavelier's father is a landlord who rents his Miami condo for $1,750 a month.

Dan Bongino New York Post

News
Data point $1,750

The War For The Soul Of Our Movement (Ep. 2546) · Jul 6, 2026

New York Post reported that socialist candidate Avilia Chavelier's father is a landlord who rents his Miami condo for $1,750 a month, undermining her 'seize the means of production' platform.

Chapter 17 · 56:20

Mamdani's Rent Freeze and the Economics of Rent Control

Mamdani's rent freeze is Bongino's real-world case study in applied socialist economics. The rent guidelines board froze rent for over 2 million New Yorkers in rent-stabilized apartments. Bongino walks through the mechanics: a landlord who cannot profit from an apartment will not rent it. Supply falls. Demand rises because below-market rents attract more applicants than there are units. Black markets emerge through subletting. Landlords stop maintaining properties because they cannot afford to invest in units that lose money. He calls rent control 'one of the most economically debunked fallacies in human history' and compares it to gun control in one key respect: criminals ignore gun laws the way landlords work around rent laws. Trump, he says, understands this because he lived through the Dinkins/Koch/Lindsay era of New York's collapse.

Claims made here

Zohran Mamdani's Independent Rent Guidelines Board froze rent for more than 2 million New Yorkers in rent-stabilized apartments.

Dan Bongino no source cited

Business
Rent Control Economics 101

The War For The Soul Of Our Movement (Ep. 2546) · Jul 6, 2026 Business

When government freezes rent, landlords stop investing in buildings they can't profit from, supply shrinks, demand surges, and black markets emerge. Mamdani froze rent for 2 million New Yorkers. The predictable result is less housing, not more.

News
Data point 300K+

The War For The Soul Of Our Movement (Ep. 2546) · Jul 6, 2026

Dan Bongino recalled that when President Trump appeared on his show before the last presidential election, the episode drew approximately 300,000 live streamers simultaneously.

Chapter 18 · 58:40

Sponsor: Helix Sleep

Bongino delivers the Helix Sleep ad with characteristic personal detail — he owns the Midnight Luxe, tracks his sleep, and says the data backs up the experience. He used to wake up sore and overheated in the Florida summer. That changed with Helix. The cooling upgrade matters especially in summer heat waves. The offer is 20% off sitewide, 25% off Luxe mattresses, and 30% off Elite mattresses at helixsleep.com/dan, backed by a 120-night sleep trial and a lifetime limited warranty.

Chapter 19 · 59:45

Trump on Wollman Rink, Real Estate, and Why He'd Be the Greatest Communist

This segment binds together the show's running themes. Bongino recounts a pre-show chat with Trump before a major interview that drew 300,000 live streamers. Trump launched into a detailed technical explanation of the brine-and-salt refrigeration mixture used to fix Wollman Rink — a New York ice skating facility no one could repair for decades that Trump fixed in six months as a private citizen. The level of granular operational knowledge impressed Bongino. That hands-on expertise is why Trump's instincts on rent control and communism are credible. Then comes the clip: Trump says he would be the greatest communist in history because free everything is the easiest political sell ever devised. Free rent, free food, free housing — everyone votes for you. The problem: after 2–3 years, no food, no housing, no military, no law and order, squalor, third-world conditions, and collapse. It has happened for thousands of years. Always does. Always has.

Chapter 20 · 1:03:00

The Cannibalism Theory: Progressives Devour Their Own

The cannibalism segment is Bongino's warning for the conservative movement. He has been arguing all episode that fake-MAGA grifters operate exactly like the socialist left. Now he shows where that road ends on the left: a progressive senator, one of the most liberal in the country, being confronted in a public park by fellow progressives who open by praising his trans legislation — then tell him he 'does not belong here anymore' because of his position on Gaza. 'It breaks my heart,' they say, as they shout him down. Bongino plays it almost in its entirety because it perfectly illustrates his theory: when a movement abandons logic and evidence as its organizing principle, it runs out of external enemies and starts consuming its allies. The purity spiral accelerates. He warns this is what happens if the conservative movement doesn't stop the grifter chaos on its own side.

Chapter 21 · 1:08:00

Oliver Henry, Team America, and Closing Remarks

The episode closes on an unabashedly optimistic note with the Oliver Henry clip — a British man who bought a last-minute World Cup ticket in Dallas, started documenting his trip, went viral, got seen by the President, and ended up backstage with a thumbs-up photo. Henry says he now understands the American dream for the first time. Bongino uses the moment to crystallize his worldview: Team America is about facts, service, and earned opportunity. It's not Team Commie, Team Grifter, or Team Slick-haired Zeros. He then delivers a characteristically blunt message to his critics — 51,000 people are in the stadium on a Monday morning in summer during a major news week, and he's not going anywhere. He teases tomorrow's Supreme Court content: birthright citizenship and why the mail-in ballot ruling was wrong. Vince and Haley from the Bongino network sign off.

No indexed bits in this chapter.

Show stoppers

Business
Data point 40%

The War For The Soul Of Our Movement (Ep. 2546) · Jul 6, 2026 Business

A socialist guest on Caleb Hammer's show said the top 1% pay zero in income taxes. The actual figure is 40%. She also had no idea the U.S. has the most progressive income tax system in the entire Western world.

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4 / 12 cited (33%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

The top 1% of earners in the United States pay approximately 40% of all federal income taxes, according to IRS data.

Dan Bongino IRS data / ChatGPT query

At the time of a classic John Stossel interview, the IRS reported the top 1% of taxpayers paid 34% of all income taxes.

John Stossel IRS data

The United States has the most progressive income tax system in the entire Western world.

Dan Bongino no source cited

Former National Security Advisor John Bolton pleaded guilty to one count of retaining classified information in a diary entry and faces up to 5 years in prison and a fine over $2 million.

Dan Bongino no source cited

California lost 500,000 residents in 2 years as people fled high costs and COVID restrictions.

Dan Bongino no source cited

Los Angeles leads the nation in massive population exodus.

Dan Bongino no source cited

New York is projected to lose 2 congressional seats due to population loss.

Dan Bongino no source cited

The top 10% of earners pay 50 to 60% of all federal income taxes, while the bottom 50% pay only 1%.

Dan Bongino Caleb Hammer show / IRS data

There are at least 14 to 30 million illegal immigrants living in the United States.

Dan Bongino no source cited

Avilia Chavelier's father is a landlord who rents his Miami condo for $1,750 a month.

Dan Bongino New York Post

Zohran Mamdani's Independent Rent Guidelines Board froze rent for more than 2 million New Yorkers in rent-stabilized apartments.

Dan Bongino no source cited

Tens of thousands of Canadians cross into the United States to access healthcare despite Canada offering free universal healthcare.

Dan Bongino no source cited