Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:15):
All right, my friends here, we are welcome on the program.
It is the Laky Show, and it's the election day
in America. I want to say election day in Colorado,
which it is, but election day in America. Glad to
have you here on the radio show. All right. I
know some of you wear the red jersey, and some
of you wear the blue jersey, and some of you
wear a purple jersey, and some of you say, I
don't know if I wear any jersey at all. Some
of your shirtless out there. But listen, get out there
(00:38):
and vote. It is a beautiful opportunity that we do
have in America. And know the system is not perfect,
and I know there's a lot of folks that have
questions about our election integrity and it comes on both sides.
You know, Hillary thought Russia broke into the election. Donald
Trump thought it was all rigged. And I'm sure, however
this turns out tonight and then the coming days, I'm
(00:58):
sure somebody else is going to that it wasn't fair.
But we do have a pretty decent lead. I say decently,
not a perfect system, because there are countries in which
you just out and out know that it was not
Venezuela comes to mind. It was not right. And I
have so many people as I travel overseas, and many
of you know that I travel a lot, they all
(01:21):
just are kind of jealous and amazed at our system.
They're amazed and we get to vote on amendments. They're
amazed that we get to vote on propositions, which again
sometimes those direct democracy things bother me, but dog on it.
It is admired by many people that I talk to.
They're also amazed. In other countries that I do talk radio,
(01:42):
they say what do you do When I say, I
say what I want to say, and they say anything
as well. There's certain words you can't say because the
government issues a license. There's as Carlin said, there's some
words you're not supposed to say. Right, we don't say
those words. It's family. But yeah, we can critique our leaders.
I can critique the Red team, I can critique the
Blue team. And I've had guys in other countries say
(02:02):
you get to say a critique of the president, and
I say, yes, I want to. I say what I want.
You know, I'm not as long as you don't threaten
someone's well being, you can give a critique and they
said that is amazing. They said, I would be afraid
to do that in my country. And so we live
in this glorious place called America, and we go through
this area, this these areas of our calendar called election
(02:23):
rees season, and even off years, we go through this
thing where there's this bittery all and hatred towards each
other and we hate. We can't stand the smell of
that person because they're a Republican, and we have that
derangement syndrome that goes on. But take a moment today
if you could. Maybe it's not in you because you're
not a reflective person, you don't believe in a higher power.
(02:45):
But I truly believe what our founders said. Our founders
said that we are, by our creator, within a liable rights,
so right to life, liberty, the suit of happiness, and
that is ensconced in our founding documents. The rights that
you have today, the rights that you experience today, the
right to vote, the right to carry an arm, the
right to speak freely and have an opinion. Those didn't
(03:06):
come from government. Those didn't come from Donald Trump or
Kamala Harris, or Joe Biden or Barack Obama. Those were
given to you by God, and God gave us those rights,
and let's thank him for the rights that he has
given us, and that we have a government that so
far has not taken away too many of those rights.
And let's make sure that we vote today to make
(03:26):
sure that those rights that are given by God are
not attempted to be taken away by the government. I
have some audio here start just trying to inspire you
got to get out and vote. Very important vote. A
lot of times people think your vote doesn't count, of
a vote in Colorado doesn't matter. Well, it doesn't matter.
It matters on a lot of things. It could change
the dynamic of the state legislature. It could change the
(03:48):
dynamic of a court. It could change the dynamic of
what's in our state constitution versus what's not in our
state constitution. And it also could change future elections. For instance,
Kamala Harris is projected to be the winner of the
electoral votes of the state of Colorado. But looking at
the data, looking at the turnout, looking at the election
(04:10):
numbers as of yesterday, end of last night, it's a
very low turnout, which is very interesting that it could
be in some races. I'm not predicting it. I'm just
saying that it could be maybe closer than you think.
And then in two years, if Colorado has seemed to
have turned more purple, candidates might pay more attention to
(04:31):
you in future years. Because what happens when you become
a state that is hard red or hard blue, which
we have become a hard blue state, people don't come here.
Kamala Harris didn't come here to earn the votes, or
to have big rallies or to hear the people of Colorado.
She stayed in the swing states out there because she
knew that the electoral votes were here and that they
(04:52):
were locked down. So, in essense, you're better to be
a purple state or a swing state than a hard
red or a hard blue state, because then nobody hears
your Nobody hears your worries, nobody talks to you, nobody
attempts to earn your votes. They just assume they have them.
Let me play this audio. I think this is some
interesting audio to begin the show with, as we again
(05:13):
thank God for election Day and we get to participate.
This is an eighty five year old, ma'am. That is
I mean, I have the right audio. Yes, he's an
eighty nine year old excuse me, he's a lift driver,
meaning he's an uber driver. If enough to move with
the lift, I think most of you probably are. He
(05:34):
happens to be black, and he's talking about why it
takes he always takes time to go vote on election day. Now,
many of you already got your ballots in. Many of
you are, we're planning to vote. The low turnout shows
that a lot of folks were not that motivated to
get their ballot, and I hope you will. But this
is an eighty nine year old lift driver talking about
why he takes the time to go vote, and it
(05:55):
has to do with his life, and it has to
do with the journey that he has had on the
many circles around the sun on the planet, and he
just knows. He even asked people in his lift car,
hey have you registered to vote? And he tries to
help them understand the importance of this glorious day. So
here he is an eighty nine year old lifted driver
(06:16):
explaining why voting is important. Roll the audio.
Speaker 2 (06:21):
I was thirty years old before I could vote. I
was born in nineteen thirty five. Civil rights movement was
high when I was about thirty thirty five years old.
I had seen so many young men and women die
because of a right to vote. And I said, I've
got a vote. The people have to realize the price
that was paid for them to vote. I've been driving
lived for nine years. Even when I drive locals. I
(06:42):
asked him, I have be registered to vote. A lot
of them said my vote doesn't count. Oh yes, said
one vote can change a conversation, one vote can change
a whole society.
Speaker 1 (06:53):
So there it is, my friends, get out and vote.
If you weren't planning to vote, go vote. That's the
reason that I flew out to Missouri where my son
goes to college, and I flew out there and took
him his ballot and said, filled this out. He wanted it,
but I knew that if I fedexed it out to
him or he wouldn't get it back. I mean, college
kids are college kids, right. It was going to give
him too many hoops to jump through, and he's going
(07:15):
to say, listen, I got a study, man. I don't
have time to fill out a FedEx thing or take
it over to the student union building where they have
the just make it easy. So I made it easy.
I took a niggerplane. I flew out there. I took
him to a couple of meals and watched his team
play the college football and then I had him fill
out his ballot and he filled it out, and he
asked me about some of the things down ballot that
(07:36):
he didn't understand, and I coached him on him and
told him how I voted. I said, this is what
I think about that, but you make your own decision.
He gets to make his own decision. And for the
most part, from what I could tell, I did not
inspect his ballot, but I could see it. He didn't
cancel my vote out, which is always a proud dad moment.
He did not cancel his vote out, but he also
said that this is a long ballot. And I said,
(07:59):
you know what, if I were nineteen, I probably wouldn't
want to feel all that out. I said, if you
want to ask me more, I said, ask me more.
I'm happy to help you, happy to give you input.
But if you want to just vote for what you
voted for, you're good. He said, does it still count?
I said, yes, it still counts. He said, okay, I'm done,
and he handed it to me and proceeded to eat
his lunch as it was delivered to the table. So anyway,
(08:21):
I get out there and vote. It is election day.
The polls I think are very interesting, but they don't
matter because as we've seen, the last two polls showed
much different results than what actually ended up on the
final scoreboard. Hillary Clinton was supposed to wipe the floor
with Donald J. Trump back in twenty sixteen according to
the polls. That did not obviously happen, and it was
(08:45):
a surprise to many people. In twenty sixteen, Joe Biden
was supposed to win by like nine or ten points
over Donald J. Trump. It was really came down to
across several states. If you tally it up, it was
about twenty to thirty thousand votes that really made that
election go the way that it went. It was not
the electoral numbers, but those electoral numbers could have changed
(09:07):
with twenty to thirty thousand votes. So that was a
very close election. That was not a mandate election by
Joe Biden. That was a twenty thousand vote switch there,
and so it was much closer than the polls show
that it would be. And most of the closing polls
have come in here to show almost a fifty to
fifty forty nine nine forty nine forty eight, and they
(09:29):
say it is a toss up, now is it? I
don't know. According to the friends group that I hang
out in, I know it's not. But again, I probably
live in a bubble, and sometimes we judge the world
by antonote evidence rather than the actual fact. So I
don't know if it's a toss up. I don't live
in Pennsylvania, these purple states, and everybody's trying to get
(09:50):
I don't live in Michigan. I don't know the answer
to that. But I do know that pollsters are in
business and they have to earn a living and they
can't screw up all the time or else they're funding
or their dollars go away, their sponsors go away. They're
in business. They're not doing this for free, and so
at the very least, after getting burned the last two times,
(10:11):
you kind of figure maybe it's smarter them to come
back in and go, oh, we don't know, it's just
so damn closely, just so we don't know, because that
way they're not at least they're saying it's a toss
up as opposed to declaring one person's going to win,
and then for the last two election cycles that person
either didn't win or barely won, and so maybe as
a polster they gauge it in and tweak their numbers.
(10:33):
In other words, don't trust the polls out there, my friends,
get out there and vote and do your due diligence.
Now it is interesting because I think we can tell
that the media, for the most part, has a bias,
and you just have to be able to recognize that bias,
and that bias is oftentimes it's written in the script.
The people that you think are your journalists, your newscasters,
(10:55):
are really just script readers. They're reading what's on the
teleprompter about the news. Whether it's they have a freeze
and gonna hurt the tomato crops, or whether it's a
freeze and some e coli has broken out in some
burger shack, or whether it's about the presidential race. They're
just reading. They have no freaking clue what's going on.
They're they're just reading a script that has been written.
(11:16):
And I think most of us can honestly say that
there are biases that are out there and we can
recognize now The sad thing that people do is they
think that well, Fox has a bias, and MSNBC has
a bias, and Newsmax has a bias, but they can't
recognize on each of those networks who has the real bias,
which one is the actual newscaster. And then for some
(11:39):
reason they think the stations they grew up with, ABC,
NBCCBS are not biased at all. They know they're probably
the most biased of them all. And so you've got
to be careful where you get your news from. But
I but I just I want you to pay attention
as you watch the news results tonight, and watch how
it comes in, watch how it is reported to you.
(12:01):
And I would encourage you to flip around. I would
encourage you to change your channels a bit. I'll change
between two or three just to kind of get some
perspective of it. I'll also be on my smart devices,
my phone, my computer, and I'll be searching around just
to trying to get the full information because there's going
to be better reporting tonight. There's going to be worse
reporting tonight, but it shall be interesting how it all
(12:24):
plays out. All right, Good to have you here on
the show. Lots of things to talk about. Of course,
the election day is the top one in America today,
and we can discuss that for a sure thing. One
of the things the media has done is, and I'm
always cautious, when I started hearing these narratives and these
talks of a red wave, a red wave, a red wave.
We heard that in twenty twenty two. I never really
(12:45):
bought into it. I mean, the polls quote unquote, polls
showed that it was going to be and it it
really wasn't, but it was not. It was, but it wasn't.
The Republicans took over the House of Representatives. That was good,
They just didn't take it over by much. But there
were still victories in twenty twenty two. So you went
(13:06):
from this narrative, there's going to be a red wave
until oh my god, they were wrong. There's not a
red wave. Everybody loves Joe Biden. Now there was still
a wave. It just wasn't as big as a tsunami
that some people had said. And it did put some
checks and balances back in place on the final two
years of Joe Biden's presidency, but it was all narrative. Again.
You probably thought that twenty two to two was a
(13:26):
big loss, not realizing that Wait, we took over the
House of Representatives and Nancy Pelosi was known. Oh yeah,
we forgot about that because you were told and the
media set an expectation that it was going to be
a giant wave. Happened to be a very small wave,
but it still worked out in our favor. And yet
now you think you were defeated in twenty twenty two.
(13:47):
Why because the media told you that you were defeated.
I get very nervous when you start hearing these narratives
about this turnout, because first of all, they're telling you
how many male ballots are in, female ballots are in.
They're also telling you how many Republican ballots and Democrat ballots. Well,
some states, you have to wonder which ones are you
(14:08):
assuming that number, and which ones are you just saying
you did poll that. In other words, not all states
release that information about a registered Republican versus a registered
Democrat versus a male voter and a female voter. A
lot of that those demographics aren't released across the board.
And so when I hear that this is the case,
I really want to say, Okay, do you know that
(14:30):
for a fact or is that some poll that you
did to try to figure out the number of ballots
that have been returned. In other words, you've been told
to be very optimistic about the voter turnout right now,
and it does seem across the board that the Blue
team that usually votes early is not showing up in
the mass numbers that they did. And you would have
(14:51):
to think that according to just what we know, that
there are more Republicans voting early before. But today it
all comes down to today. Let me go through the
stat I went through for you yesterday that in twenty twenty,
if you only counted if for election was decided only
on early voting, then Joe Biden won every state in
the Union except Alabama. Again twenty twenty, if you only
(15:13):
counted the votes cast before election day, Joe Biden had
a forty nine state landslide. He only did not win
Alabama in early voting. If you only count the ballots
in twenty twenty that were cast by cast on election day,
then Donald Trump had a forty eight state landslide and
(15:34):
he didn't win Connecticut or Vermont. Other than that it
was a forty eight. So you can see that in
twenty twenty, the party affiliation and that party, the candidate
that you candidate that you supported was really defined and
could be identified by which whether you voted earlier, whether
you voted on election day. Those numbers now seem to
(15:55):
be tossed up in the air as a lot of
people that would have given Donald Trump that a landslide
of forty eight states on election day have now moved
into early voting category. The key is whether more people
are going to turn out and continue that voting on
election day as it cannibalized as the word they're using.
And it also it seemed that the numbers that Joe
(16:15):
Biden won a forty nine state landslide on early voting,
those numbers aren't coming back at the same as well.
So there's a lot of unknowns here and a lot
of comparisons as you look at twenty twenty and you say, Okay,
this is shaping up differently, but we don't have the
empirical evidence to say how it's going to shape up again.
Go through that again in your head. It's a fascinating
(16:36):
number that in twenty twenty, if you only counted early votes,
Joe Biden won a forty nine state landslide save Alabama.
Alabama did not go for him in early voting. However,
if you go on election day, every state in the
nation was won by Donald Trump, except Connecticut and Vermont.
So what that means is that even on election day
last year to our last election cycle twenty twenty, Donald
(16:58):
Trump on election Day one Colorado, Donald Trump on election Day,
he won California, but the Democrats got out and voted early,
and Joe Biden had gotten such a lead early that
they could not be overcome on election day. So again
there's a lot of different numbers. Voting has changed, ideas
have changed, thoughts have changed. I don't know how it's
(17:19):
going to shape up. But the key is I want
you to get out there and vote, if you would,
all right, one of the closing arguments, I've been amazed
by this. So we're going to talk about the psychological aspect.
Is there just kind of psychops thing going on to
tell you to vote and then Donald Trump's got the moment,
I'm no need to vote, or I mean, it's just
(17:40):
psychological warfare. I never trust the media. When the media
is running a narrative, I just don't trust it. And
even if it's a narrative that I like, even if
it's a narrative that I feel like I'm in the
Hallelujah the amen corner saying yeah, that's good. I don't
trust it. And unfortunately a lot of folks do trust
it because people love being in an echo chamber. They
love hearing their opinions, pat them on behind end, and
(18:02):
they go, see, I told you everybody thinks that way. No,
the media is telling you what everybody's thinking. It just
doesn't make it fact. And we get propagandas on both
sides a heck of a lot. And so I just
we're going to talk to this hour with JT. Young
about the just kind of some of the narratives out
there and how many of those could be a misleads
and miscues to try to get people to be over confidence.
(18:24):
Bill Pasco with Tea Party Patriots going to be joining
us from Washington.
Speaker 3 (18:28):
D C.
Speaker 1 (18:29):
Mark Mixed joins us to talk about the union votes
that are out there. Dan Wog checks in from the
field he's final day of his campaign and candidacy in
a state senate race. Professor John Ellis is going to
join us. Bill Walton of The Bill Walton Show we
got a power pack show. You don't want to miss
a portion of it. I'm glad to be here. It's
election day in Colorado again, get out and vote. Don't
(18:51):
drop him at the post office. You got to find
your election cycle if you missed yesterday. I had the
Larimer County Clerk and recorder on the program. Also the
Weld County Recorder was on the show yesterday as well.
That's Tina Harris and Carly Compass, respectively. And those interviews
are up on my website Jimmy Lakey dot com. And
both of those counties. In every county has a website.
(19:13):
Just I would just count election in your county. Name
your county and they can tell you where your dropboxes
are at. They can tell you where it is that
you can go vote in person. But happy election day,
my friends. Glad to have you here. It's Lakey on
the radio, the fifth day of November. You're of our Lord,
twenty twenty four, Jimmy Lakey News Talk six hundred kcol
(19:35):
standby more to come. All right, it's election day in America.
(20:39):
Lakey behind a microphone. You're in front of the speakers
the way the Good Lord intended it. This hour of
the program. I brought to you by Dan Campli's Dan
Campali's Law, a serious firm for serious cases. Let's do it,
my friends. We got a lot of great guests lined
up on the show, and my first one I want
to welcome into the show, if I may, is mister J. T. Young.
(21:00):
Interesting background bio A JT. Welcome to the program. Glad
to have you here. It's News Talk six hundred and casel. JT. Young.
How are you?
Speaker 4 (21:10):
I am fine. I really appreciate you having the only
show this momentous Tuesday.
Speaker 1 (21:15):
It is a big one. You're the author of a
book called Unprecedented Assault, How Big Government unleashed America's socialist Left.
First of all, give us your background. I always like
to let people know where an author is coming from.
I know you're a former congressional political analyst and a
policy advisor. Kind of give us that background and how
it ended up with this book again called Unprecedented Assault,
Big Government unleashed America's socialist Left.
Speaker 4 (21:39):
I really appreciate it. I'll try to give you a
quick thumbnail. I got my doctorate from Cornell University and
Government and was down here working on that when I
got the Washington bug, what we call Potomac fever, and
went to work on the Republican side for nineteen years
(22:00):
on Capitol Hill, seven years over in the House and
then in the Senate. And then I went into George W.
Bush administration and worked in Department of Treasury and at
OMB and then after that went into the private sector
when my wife and I started our family. So that's
(22:23):
how I did it. And then I've been writing for
about thirty years in various conservative publications.
Speaker 1 (22:30):
So you've written this book called Unprecedented Assault. How big
Government unleashed American socialists left. One of the problems that
I have is sometimes you call a member of Congress
and they're like, oh, yeah, we'll work right on that,
and then they never get any results because they're dealing
with four or five bureaucratic agencies. You have regulations. We're
not run by our Congress. Our members of Congress don't
really represent us directly. They have to deal with these bureaucracies.
(22:53):
And that's one of the frustrating things. When I vote,
I want to say who wants the smallest amount of government,
who wants limited government, and who wants to end all
of these I guess alphabet soup agencies that regulate this
and regulate that, and many of them do so just
they come. Depending on who wins the election, they will
create a regulation or they will uncreate a regulation, all
(23:16):
just pulled out of whole cloth. They just make it up,
and Congress didn't necessarily authorize it, but we have to
live by it.
Speaker 4 (23:24):
You're absolutely right, and this is certainly one of the
big things covered in the book, which is how far
we've devolved from what the founders really envisioned and what
the Constitution really entails. And what you're talking about with
the regulatory estate has been a sending of Congress's power
(23:50):
in giving that seating that power to regulators. I mean,
this should be just as you said, this should have
been in the oversight era and should have been what
Congress does. Instead, they've delegated so much, which has given
so much power to the executive branch, and that was
never intended and again completely antithetical to what the Constitution envisioned.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
Folks don't understand that in the context of our time.
We think, oh, the president is the president. He's kind
of like our king, but you know, he can slap
on the hand. But he gets to do what he wants.
You hear both candidates saying on the first day of office,
I will do this. On the first day of office,
I will do that. Our Constitution did not really envision
that kind of power. Take us back in time the
history lesson of what the Constitution envisioned for not only
(24:41):
the power of the presidency, but it said anything that's
not contained directly in these founding documents, that's a decision
for the state. That's not a decision for an executive order.
That's not a decision for the agency of this or
agency of that. That is a state decision if it's
not specifically contained in our founding documents. Kind of talk
on that and where we've devolved to.
Speaker 4 (25:03):
Great, great points. If you look, and this is one
of the biggest lies of the socialist left, is that
America was and is exceptional. In fact, exceptionalism is not
something America produced. It's something that produced America, and that
was codified in the Constitution. And if you read the Constitution,
(25:27):
and I would urge everyone should do this at least
once a year, go back and read it. It is
one of the most conservative documents for exactly the reason
you were mentioning that tenth Amendment that the whole idea
of the Constitution was to tightly regulate and contain the
(25:50):
powers that were given to a central government, and it
was never meant to be expansive or envisioned to be expansive.
And again, you're talking about the tenth Amendment, which was
the last of the Bill of Rights. It was added on,
and it was added on in order to get the
(26:12):
Constitution ratified because a lot of Americans actually thought that
even that limited government was too powerful. So to your point,
the original vision of what a central government would be
like that would govern the United States was for a
very constrain and limited powers to that government.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
Yeah, and unfortunately we have drifted far. We'll run short
on time. I want people to get a copy of
the books. I got a couple more questions real quick.
Unprecedented assault. How big government unleashed America's socialist leftist by JT. Young.
We'll tell you a boy getting that book. But again,
unprecedented assault by JT. Young. He's my guest here on
the program. Nobody in Washington, DC, ever wants to give
(26:58):
up power. Everybody wants to accumulate power. They want to
take power. They want to build their power base. Help
us understand how it is that Congress, year after year,
term after term, continues to seed its power and give
more power to these regulatory authorities. When it seems like
everybody else in Washington wants to maintain their power, Congress
(27:19):
continues to give up their power. What's up with that?
Speaker 4 (27:23):
I think, for one, is the government has become so
complex and so large, and so unregulated and so with
such little oversight that Congress has given up that role
that they now feel themselves ill equipped to do it,
and that this really is something that is incumbent and
(27:49):
they need an executive branch that also is favorable to say,
you know, we need to take government back to what
it was intended and of government was never to have
no government. And I think the same thing would apply
to the social safety net. I don't hear any real
conservatives saying there shouldn't be a social safety net. But
(28:13):
what there shouldn't be is it shouldn't be a way
of life. It was never meant to be permanent, and
we need to go back and look at a program
after program after program and ask ourselves how far has
it drifted away from what the original intent was of
just the program, but also of the larger government.
Speaker 1 (28:36):
Itself everybody, but wisely, our founders did not intend for
us to have this ever expanding branch of government. And
unfortunately there's very few people on either side of the
elected aisle that deal with this issue. But go back
read the Constitution, the tenth amend it, and realize that
the reason where we're 're at today is because government
has grown to where our founders never would envisioned it
(28:58):
to have grown. Now, the name of the book is
called Unprecedented Assault, How Big Government Unleashed America's Socialist Left. JT. Young,
the author of the book. If they want to pick
up a copy of the book and or follow you,
where do they go? Give a plug?
Speaker 4 (29:10):
Okay, jtdash Young dot com. We'll take you to the
website and they will tell you everything about how to
order the book. Obviously you can go directly to Barnes
and Noble, Amazon, Walmart. It's available. Came out a week
ago today. Really appreciate you given a mention to the book.
Speaker 1 (29:32):
JT. Dash Young dot com. JT. Dash Young dot com. Again,
the name of the book, Unprecedented Assault, How Big Government
Unleashed America's socialist left, and one of the things we
all got to do is start educating ourselves to what
our founders actually intended for our nation to look like,
and maybe we can get back there sometime in our lifetime.
Everybody stand by Lakey on the radio. Election Day in America,
(29:55):
six hundred k col.
Speaker 3 (30:03):
Hmm hmm.
Speaker 1 (30:41):
All right, glad to have you here. It should be
lucky my name a pleasure to be here Election Day
in America. Get out and vote if you haven't voted,
and it should be interesting see how it all goes.
It's all done, but the counting starts this evening. We
are already in November. I know that's hard to believe.
And I want to remind you that holidays are coming up.
(31:04):
I know we're all focused on election. Who's going to
be the president, who's around the Congress, who's going to
which amendment will pass, et cetera. But you need to
be aware and be sure that you're preparing for the holidays.
One of the reasons you do that is one of
the ways you do that is you've got to start
kind of picking up the house and maybe do some
maintenance and get that gas room ready for granny or whatever.
And also, don't forget the carpets. Don't forget the surfaces
(31:26):
of your home. Zero res of Northern Colorado is who
I use at the House of Laky to clean the surfaces,
the carpets, the tile, the grout, the showering closure. Ye,
it's good to vacuum the You know, you may clean
the bathrooms or clean the tile, and the housekeeper may come.
However you do it, you may do it yourself, whatever
the case may be. Have you ever had it professionally done? Yeah,
the vacuuming works, but you've got to get deep in
(31:46):
the fiber and the core of that padding that's under
that carpet. And yeah, the tile, the grout, it's one
thing to have it cleaned or clean it once a week,
but listen, professionally cleaned with the powerful tools that they have.
Zero residor the Colorado. Right now, three rooms of carpet
cleaned and zero resified. Ready for this? Ready for this?
You're ready for this? Three rooms of carpet cleaned and
(32:09):
zero resified for just one hundred and nine dollars. Go ahead,
get on the schedule heading into Thanksgiving. Go ahead and
get another schedule in advance heading into December. Maybe get
on the schedule. They maybe do a couple of visits
if you don't want to do it all at one time.
And again, just think that dirty mop running on those
tile floors, that nasty cloth running on your grout and
your countertops. Listen, have it professionally cleaned and get it
(32:30):
deep cleaned with zero res, but also those carpets as well,
and get all that junk out of there. The system
they use, there's no chemicals, there's no residue left behind.
It's fantastic. This is who I use in the House
of Laky, and I've used them for a decade, even
before they were on the radio station. I'd recommend it
for you as well. Zero res riz, zero res nocode
dot com, zero res nocode dot com. I recommend it
(32:51):
for you zero res nocode dot com. And if you
use on the website, you use promo code Jimmy. But
when you talk to them, if you get the number
off the website, tell them that I told you to call.
And they always take special care of my listeners. Zero
res as zero resonoco dot com. All right, good to
have you here on the radio show. Coming up on
the program. We got a lot of great guests on
(33:11):
the program. We're gonna check in with the Tea Party, Patriots,
Man about Washington, Man in Washington, Bill Pasco is going
to be on the show next hour. Also, Mark Mix
is going to jump in kind of talk about how
the union vote in this election could persuade it or
sway it, or maybe it's coming in differently. Mark Mix
of course follows the labor unions in America with his
great organization. He'll be on the program next hour as well.
(33:34):
I've got a great cast of characters. If you want
to jump in, Jimmy Lakey at iHeartMedia dot com. Jimmy
Lakey at iHeartMedia dot com, feel free to do so.
I do want to also comment, I always laughed at
the closing arguments are kind of what you expect from
these people, but I still want to know. I heard
it so many times over the weekend and even yesterday
I heard doctor Jill Biden referring to Kamala Harris as
(33:57):
a new way forward and a new generation of leadership.
You could be pro Kamala Harris all you want, but
can you really make that argument that she's a new
generation of leadership. She's been in Washington, DC, she's been
in the administration. What's the new way forward? When she
was asked about the new way forward, what would be
your new way forward? What would you change about the
Biden administration, she says, I can't think of anything. So
(34:18):
that's the most bizarre thing that if you're following the
election again, you don't have to like the Orange guy,
But how do you have any honesty about you when
you're going to say you're a new way forward and
a new generation. You're a sixty plus year old woman.
You've been in Washington, d C. And lived off the
government doll in government offices for pretty much your entire career.
(34:40):
That doesn't sound like JFK to mean, it really doesn't anyway.
I'll be back Laky on the radio election day six
hundred k col standby. Not even Barack Obama. He was
a new generation, for sure. He was