
Bannon`s War Room WarRoom Battleground EP 898: Promises Made Promises Kept With Reducing Housing Cost; Free Tina Peters
Nov 25, 2025
Peter Tickton, attorney for Tina Peters, shares insightful legal updates and discusses her treatment in custody, highlighting concerns about her health and the political motivations behind her case. Gail Slater, a former antitrust division head, reviews the DOJ's strategies for promoting market competition and tackling big tech monopolies. They dive into affordability in housing, wage-fixing criminal cases, and even touch on historical parallels in executive action. The conversation is both informative and passionate, pushing for accountability and justice.
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Antitrust As Pro-Competition Enforcement
- The DOJ Antitrust Division sees itself as a law enforcer protecting free-market competition, not as a regulator.
- Gail Slater emphasizes breaking consolidated markets to lower prices and increase consumer pocketbook benefits.
Target Concentration To Lower Prices
- Focus antitrust actions on big tech and concentrated industries to restore competition and lower consumer prices.
- Prioritize cases that produce measurable remedies, like the RealPage rental case and major suits against Google.
Criminal Charges For Wage Fixing
- The Antitrust Division is expanding criminal enforcement into wage-fixing to protect workers' pay.
- Gail Slater highlights a precedent-setting conviction that sent a wage-fixer to prison for harming nurses' salaries.
