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Trump suggests giving himself and sons Congressional Medal of Honor in threesome remark

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen · Republican issues BOMBSHELL July 4th CONFESSION · July 2, 2026
Trump suggests giving himself and sons Congressional Medal of Honor in threesome remark
No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen
No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen
Republican issues BOMBSHELL July 4th CONFESSION
"Now, as I see my two beautiful sons sitting there, I think I'm going to give one to myself, one to them, and we'll have a threesome. Okay, I'll pick out one of the two. I'll give them the Congressional Medal of Honor for something for their genius at hunting and I'll get one for taking on Russia."
President Trump made bizarre remarks suggesting he would award himself and his sons Eric and Don Junior the Congressional Medal of Honor, then said they would have a threesome. The comment came amid discussion of Trump's net worth tripling while Americans struggle with affordability and his refusal to sign bipartisan housing legislation. Congressman Moscowitz responded that he would reserve comment on the remarks.

About this episode

Democratic Congressman Jared Moscowitz joins host Brian Tyler Cohen to discuss growing concerns about Republican disconnection from American economic struggles. The conversation centers on Republican Congressman Troy Nells' controversial comments that the 60 percent of Americans living paycheck to paycheck who cannot afford lobster tails and ribeye steaks simply don't work as hard as he does. Moscowitz responds by noting Congress has only worked 44 days in the first six months of the year and remains the least productive in modern history. The interview covers President Trump's refusal to sign bipartisan housing legislation despite promises to lower costs, his net worth tripling to over a billion dollars through cryptocurrency investments, and bizarre remarks about giving himself and his sons the Congressional Medal of Honor followed by a threesome comment. Moscowitz, who represents a Trump-plus-nine district, describes voter frustration with rapid gerrymandering in Florida and emphasizes that affordability remains the top issue for constituents. He criticizes Speaker Mike Johnson as merely cosplaying as speaker with no real autonomy from Trump, and notes Senate Republicans only stand up to the president when they're retiring or have been primaried. The congressman argues Democrats must come with positive legislation on healthcare costs, prescription drugs, and housing affordability when they regain power, not just opposition to Trump's policies.

Key takeaways

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