Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Is c J. Pierson uncensored. It's really devastating when the
President of the United States says that no amendment is absolute. Well,
I can tell you you absolutely don't do away with
an amendment with an executive order, which is not absolute. Hi, guys,
(00:24):
welcome to c J. Pierson Uncensored. C J. Pierson back
at it again. And today guys were talking about guns.
And the reason we're talking about guns is because apparently
Democrats paid guns. I know, no new news, but really
what they're trying to do right now is this unprecedented
assault on the right to carry in bear arms, all
(00:44):
justified not really by fact or truth or any really
real reality, simply justified by their feelings. As everything else
is that they believe. Um, you know the issue that
I really have with this from a constitutional perspective. You know,
the LOTS has been really good at messaging the gun
issue in terms of just making it seem like, well,
you don't need a gun to go down this kind
(01:04):
of deer, or you don't need this kind of gun
to go hunting. Well, I'm sorry, but if you think
our founding followers put the Second Moment the Constitution just
for hunting purposes, then you are actually a dumbass, And
I like, I don't know how to help you, but
I think maybe some of these stats and the research
beyond the issue can be as the second moment. It's
bigger than hunting, it's bigger than deer, it's bigger than game. Right,
(01:28):
It's about the ability to stand up in the face
of tyranny and when our freedoms are assaulted, when our
liberty is oppressed, When all of those things happen, it's
depending upon the citizen try to take their country back
or at least to stand up in the face of
that threat. Right, Because you know, let's let's get back
(01:49):
to this. Free America is found upon the idea that
it's based upon the consent of the governed, and when
it loses that consent, then well it's on. But how
does one express the fact that the government has lost
that consentful? One vehicle of that is the Second Amendment,
Because I guarantee you a country is a lot less
(02:11):
likely to be oppressive and to come, a country is
a lot less likely to be oppressiveing and trample upon
your freedoms if they know you're strapped. It's just some
matter of fact it's reality. Just as just as there
are a certain neighborhoods I'm sure burglars don't go because
they know, well when a neighborhood vote setting for center Republican,
it probably isn't the safest place for me to go.
(02:32):
Like you know, stealing in cars and all those things.
Criminals are not dumb, right, It's the same concept, and
and and and also to it, it's even bigger than that.
And it's not just tyranny. It's not just hunting. It's
about the ability for you to protect yourself in your home,
for you to protect the people that you love, right,
And so for the garage to say that you don't
(02:53):
have the right to protect yourself and your family, Like,
I'm just like, who, Like, who the hell do you
think you are to tell me how I protect me
and the people that I care about, right, Joe Biden?
Like I understand that you know you don't really care
too much about protecting people that you love, because if
you did, you tell Hunter Biden that stops snorting cocaine
or meths or whatever just drug of choices these days,
(03:13):
But I do people do, right, And so when we
talk about this issue, it's bigger than that. It's about
the idea that when you look at you know, things
like you know, like like rape, like sexual assault, it
gives women. It's an equalizer. And you'll hear that from
our guests later in the show who talks about what
(03:33):
guns do for women. It equalizes them. It gives them
the confidence to go out and then then and live
their lives without being fearful. I'm gonna look over their
shoulder at all times because it is hard to be
a woman in certain places across this country. And so
it's weird to me when you have these feminist liberals
who are like, no, no one needs guns. Women should
(03:54):
have guns because there are some scary people in this world.
And so why are we against the idea of giving
people some extra protection? Like why it literally actually at
all makes no sense, makes no sense. And so what's
interesting about this issue though, is that I said earlier
in the intro, it's actually not really rooted in fact
(04:15):
your truth, because if you actually look at the gun issue,
you have basically do think that every gun death in
America is caused by like mass shootings or or like
people killing other people. But reality, actually sixty one percent
of gun deaths in America are from suicide, people taking
their own lives all the times from a gun that
they legally bought and had registered to them. So it's
not people just going out and killing random people. It's
(04:38):
literally people choosing to take their own lives. And so
that becomes a different issue, because a mental health issue
an issue that I actually believe that we should really
look at um more comprehensively. But that's not something we
need to conflate. If people are dying because they are
dealing with depression or any other mental illness, and that's
how we deal with those issues by looking at how
(05:00):
do we deal with depression mental illness on a macro
scale across the country. How do we fix this issue.
It's not always gonna take every gun away from every
American who may not suffer from those issues, just because
we actually don't really know what to do. Yeah, that's absurd.
And so also here we have, you know, the fact
that a substantial portion of people committed mass shootings last
(05:21):
year you use guns they possessed illegally. Uh, you know.
So it's like you're talking about the fact that these
gun control walls that are already in the books that
they already don't work, then what's really gonna happen. You
look at places like Chicago, you get places like New York,
and you also look at these places where these mash
rooings have been You also look at places where these
mash rooings have been happening recently, and they literally are
(05:41):
all in blue states. Like you don't see these mash
roings having in Georgia or Florida or Texas. You see
them happening in literally like solidly blue places with strict
gun control laws. And it all gets back to the
same narrative that guys the common fact that we all
know criminals don't follow laws. What inherently makes them a criminal.
(06:02):
If a criminal actually gave a dame about the law,
they wouldn't be a criminal. But by virtue of their actions,
their choices, their mindsset, and who they are, they are
criminal based upon those things. And so when you tell
a criminal they need to follow additional laws, you know
what they say? They say no? And why do they
say no? Because they are a criminal? Right, I know, groundbreaking, Yeah,
(06:26):
but Nancy Pelosy would think it's groundbreaking. But you know,
any any other person who any person listens to c. J.
Prson Sensor knows that's just you know, it's just common sense.
But you know, beyond all of that, what's interesting is
that basically Biden has really made a point of going
after this non issue with a really crazy agenda here.
(06:47):
So he wants to ban all the soft guns, he
wants to institute this voluntary gun buy back program, and
really just uh, but he wants to pass you know,
he's also voice support for some congressional action passing the
violence again, swimming at elimiting lawsu exemptions for gun manufacturing
and being assault weapons and high capacity magazines, basically telling
and then I've never understood this because it's just like
(07:09):
really dumb to me, because it's like, so you're saying
that gun manufacturers people who simply make the guns. They
don't sell the guns, right, They're not involved in that,
they don't sell the guns. Well, I guess you could
maybe go to their website or whatever, but like their
primary function is to simply make the guns. Smith and
Lesson makes the guns, and they sell it through distributor
or whatever local gun story you have in your community.
(07:30):
Smith and Lesson has no idea what you're gonna do
with the product they make right, no idea what you're
gonna do with the product to bank? So how are
they liable for someone's actions with what they do with
that thing? Because are we gonna start like taking away
you know, lawsuit exemptions from scissor companies? Because I could
(07:51):
definitely take a pair of scissors and douce some damage
with it. And so should I be able to like
sue the leading scissor manufacturer because of what I did
with a pair of theres or this trash can that's
right next to me right now, I could do some
damage with this trash can. I had heard someone with
this trash can. So should we remove the liability protection
from trash communityfacturers? That's how nonsensical all this is, And
(08:17):
it's actually really funny because it just shows how flimsy
the left entire ideology is. When you start asking questions
like that, you just realize, like, damn, these people are
like not that smart, really not that smart. But you
know that's what we have coming for us. You know,
we have facts, we have logic, and we also thankfully
have brains. The great thing about all of this is
(08:39):
that there are people committed to standing up against this
assault on the second Moment because they realized that the
second moment is really the amendment that protects all the
other ones, and it's really integral and important and fundamental
to our freedom as a country. And so that person
who has really caught my eye when the leading gun
rights activists in Congress, she's huge deal, has been doing
(09:01):
great work on the health Her name, you'll probably know,
it's Carlos One Woolen Bogard, and she joins US rafter
the brink. So this interview is one that I'm especially
excited about. I think this congresswoman has made more waves
(09:22):
of almost any other freshman member uh in Congress, and
it's for really good reason. The reason actually just being
literally having a backbone really rare in Washington, UH, suddenly
rare in our Republican Party today, especially when you see
folks like MSNBC and CNNs desperately trying to elevate voices
like Mett Romney, Ben Sass and John McCain, trying to
(09:45):
pitch them as if they were the future of this party. UH.
You know, honestly, I reject that belief. I think that
Donald Trump made it very clear that we will no
longer go back to the days of cowards. We will
no longer go back to the days, but we didn't
know how to fight for the things in which we believe. Uh.
And I think that Trump is um led to a
new culture of conservatism that has been really led on
(10:05):
by people like Congressman Lord Bobert, who joins us now,
who has been on the front lines of the fight
in Washington to ensure that the America First agenda continues.
And she's gotten some flak from that from the left.
The left doesn't like her. But I've got to say
that when the left doesn't like you, I think that's
when actual real America loves you. And so, without further ado,
the cars when joins us now, thank you so much
(10:27):
for joining us, c J. This is such an honor
to be joined with you. And I think you're exactly right.
Gone are the days of politicians lying to people just
to get a seat in office. We are making promises
and we are keeping promises, and we are we are
really elevating the voice of the American people. And so
(10:48):
that's why I'm so honored to be here in this time,
to be fighting for for not just the Constitution, but
for righteousness, for for freedom, for liberty, and it's it
really as an honor to be the voice of so
many people. Yeah, and when when you were elected to Congress,
did you ever think that fighting for the Constitution and
(11:09):
fighting for just genuine American libes would be so controversial?
You have folks like Nancy Pelos, so you try to
prevent you from exercising your secondment right to the Capitol.
How do you respond to that? What has it been like?
What has it been like really being in the know
the I have the song, well, CJ, I'm gonna back
it up and and and take it a little bit
(11:29):
further than just fighting for the Constitution. I never would
have imagined that any anyone would campaign on loving America.
Who would have thought that that would be a campaign
topic topic? To reiterate your love for this country. That
should be an absolute that should be something that is
(11:50):
absolutely given when when someone is running to serve this country,
their love should be unwavering and unquestionable and all all
throughout the country. I heard many candidates, just like myself,
telling people how much they love America and and that's
why they were getting involved, because they love freedom and
(12:13):
they didn't want to see that go away. But we
have seen so many Uh, We've seen so many politicians
over the years, UH defy their oath of office, break
their oath of office. We send them to secure the
constitution of the United States, and so many of them
give our freedoms away and uh and then look you
(12:34):
in the eye and tell tell you, no, that's not
what we're doing. They will slash the Second Amendment to
pieces and then say, don't worry, no one is taking
your guns. Uh. So when Nancy Pelosi put up metal detectors,
she truly transformed the interior structure of the capital. Because
(12:54):
I am here in in office. Uh. You know, we
we uh, we've been exposing just how hypocritical that is.
She's fined with having armed National guards surrounding the capital
because she may or may not feel threatened, even though
we have the chiefs of police, we have all of
(13:15):
these folks on the board, uh saying that there is
no threat. And she's fine with having armed National guard
uh secure this building. Um, while we have the southern
border completely unsecure and uh, and people are truly being
harmed and uh and threatened because of that. Yeah. And
there's also hypocrisy if you have her openly supporting Biden's
(13:38):
gun control agenda, saying that regular folks like me and
other Americans can't protect ourselves, but she has the right
to be guarded, like you said, by legions of Army
National Guard soldiers, while Americans are just left to, you know,
just to deal with it, you know, call the police,
you know, if you're in trouble, they'll handle it. Uh
and and and and what is it like as think
(14:00):
like they're defunded. Yeah, yeah, you know, right, And it's
like and it's insane because it's like you you aren't
before you you know, you ran for Congress. You owned
a local business called the Shooters Grill, which is like,
we're staff like open carry, which I think is really cool,
but you were in business where like, this's hypocrisy in
this lunency, like doesn't pay the bills, it doesn't keep
(14:20):
the lights on, So it's not really all that commonplace.
Getting to Washington, has there been kind of a culture
shock for you basically being surrounded by so many people
just spouting hypocritical bs like that National Guard example, people
literally trying to take guns from away from you and
I but saying because we're in Congress, because we're the
important people. We deserve to have all the protection in
the world, right. Uh. That that's exactly what we're seeing.
(14:45):
We're seeing this level of elitism that says we're better
than you, were, smarter than you, we know how to
control your life more than you do. Uh. And that's
that's very obvious with um, with with everything that are
seeing when it comes to the shutdowns, when it comes
to the masks, when it comes to travel, and all
(15:06):
of these folks who are enforcing these mandates, these regulations, uh,
they are uh not following the rules themselves. I mean,
start with Nancy Pelosi. Um, she she doesn't like she
doesn't like armed guards, but she has them. Her her
security detail is armed and uh and she doesn't want
(15:28):
you to be able to protect yourself. She could get
her hair done and not wear a mask. We see, Uh,
we see all of these elitists going to uh going
to expensive restaurants and traveling to see their family for
the holidays, when the average American people are told, um
to stay at home, not work, uh, lose your your
purpose in life and uh and and of course just
(15:51):
sit back and wait for the government to be your answer. Yeah.
And you know. It's interesting about all that too, is
that you have all these people who are so eager
to stay at home. Well, we all don't live in
a mity million dollar home like Nancy Pelosi with industrial
refrigerators with twenty dollar pints of ice cream, and so
maybe home for her is a lot more exciting place.
But other people we just want to go outside. Um.
(16:12):
But I think the courageousness that that you really act
in every single day, I think it's it's why people
are so gravitated towards you, is because we we we've
seen the party when it's led by people like Romney,
and we've seen the party when it's led by people
like Adam kissing Joe, and that's not the future of
this party. As a young person, it would always frustrate
me when we would talk about how Obama is systematically
(16:34):
destroying the country, and we would talk about how the
left assistemw constroying the country. But we didn't fight like that.
Right we would just release these press releases, these tweets
and say, well, this is wrong, this is bad, But
we never actually fought like these people were actively trying
to undermine what the country was built upon. You come
from a Democrat household. You were raised by Democrats, but
you've embraced uh, you know, being one of the biggest
(16:57):
conservative fighters in the country right now, What was that
journey life for you? I grew up in a Democrat
household too, So I always on an interesting when people
really break that mold. What was that journey for you? Um? So,
as you touched on before, I'm not a politician. I
was frustrated with politicians. I was frustrated at the empty promises.
I was frustrated at folks coming from town to town
telling us one thing and then getting to office and
(17:19):
doing another, appeasing the other party with their voting, rather
than upholding their promises that they made to the people
that they serve. So I I was raised in a
Democrat household, But that's because my mom believed the lies
of the failed policies from the Democrat party. Uh. She
was told that she couldn't make it. Uh you you
(17:40):
cannot take care of your children without government assistance and
uh and if you try to make it on your own,
it won't be enough and your children will starve, they
won't have health care, you won't have a home. So
she believed that lie, and because of it, we were
stuck in a cycle of poverty and there was no
incentive for us to get out of it. It was
(18:00):
it was very hard to break through that cycle of
poverty the government has stuck in and uh that caused
me to stand in line at eleven years old for
bread and government cheese. That is not the American dream.
The American dream is not to have government taking care
(18:21):
of you and and and providing every your every need
um or your your most basic needs UM. When we
moved from a really rough area in Denver, Colorado, to
the Western Slope, it was the greatest thing that could
have ever happened to our family. We moved into a community,
and I think that that's something that's really missing in
(18:41):
these urban areas right now. We've removed God from schools,
We've removed God from the culture, and in turn, we've said,
don't look to your neighbor for a hand up. The
government will give you a hand out. So you don't
have churches doing community outreaches anymore like they used to.
There's there's so many regulations even on bake sales and
(19:03):
what the church can actually provide for their community. And
so we've we've totally separated, UH, church and community and
charity and and that outreach. And so when we moved
to a rural area in Colorado, we were a part
of a community and it was so wonderful. We had
neighbors that said hello to us. UH. That was really
(19:25):
a new concept and UH everyone was wanting to provide
answers to their neighbor on how they could better themselves.
I started working at the local McDonald's, and I can
still remember bringing my mom home my first paycheck. I
remember the pride. I remember how empowering it was to
have put my hand to something and created wealth. And
(19:49):
that's something that has never left me. I learned at
a very young age that I could do a better
job taking care of myself than government ever could you know.
I had to make really tough decisions growing up. UM,
but through that I learned when times get tough, you
have to get tougher. I made a difficult decision my
senior year of high school. I had my first son,
(20:10):
and I could either go back to the breadlines and
UH and waiting to get my E B T card
filled up, or I could go to work and provide
for my family. So I took a promotion at McDonald's
and uh, and I left high school. But for me,
there was more value in being able to provide my
family with with food and and the house myself than
(20:34):
to sit through biology class and and have government take
care of us. Uh. So uh, Now I've gone from
leaving high school my senior year working at McDonald's, I
worked in the oil and gas industry for a while,
and now I'm a business owner and I signed the
fronts of paychecks. These are the kind of life experiences
that I wish more people in Washington, d C. Had
(20:57):
because not a lot of people here know what it's
like to create a job and then keep that job
that you've created. They don't know how to go through
adverse times and come out the other side victorious. Yeah,
you know. And it was interesting about your story is
that the left will never tell it like that, right
that you were a teen mom who could have been victimized,
who could have victimized yourself, decided that you were going
(21:18):
to be done, that you were going to quit, but
you used that as an impatist to work harder, to
grind harder, and to go chase your dreams like you've
never chased them before you did. Your time at McDonald's,
you worked an when we asked industry, you built a business. Now,
any normal human being who wasn't blinded by parsonship and
just downright delusion would recognize that as like literally what
(21:38):
women empowerment actually is. But for being an outswoken conservative woman,
you don't get that same praise. What has that been like?
You know? Uh, well, I've certainly have learned to ignore
a lot of the critics. Um. I know that they're
not going to come over to my side anytime soon. Um,
but really, when when they're attacking, I know that we're
(22:00):
on on the right path. And I feel like President
Trump has done an excellent job and pioneering the way
for people like myself to not coward and run and
hide under a table when the attacks come. Um, really
to throw your shoulders backstand a little taller as tall
as I can at five zero and and and really
(22:21):
refused to bow down to the cancel mob. I remember
when President Trump was first being attacked by the left
wing media and remembering or just thinking, how is he
not crying under a table right now? How can anyone
endure so much hate? But he really pioneered the way
for us to follow, and and he showed that you
(22:41):
can come out of that stronger than ever. And having
defended so many other people, I feel like he had
no problem taking the arrows for everyone that he was protecting,
everyone that he was defending, everyone that he was standing
up and giving a voice to. He really reached out
to us forgotten voters. And uh. And so I look
(23:02):
to President Trump and and all that he endured on
behalf of the American people, and think, surely I can
I can do some of that. And it would be
selfish of me, um to turn away and cower back
and and just submit to to certain extremists and uh
and and and back back down. Um. Even God, I mean,
(23:23):
it's it's biblical to not back down. Um. God says
that he takes no pleasure in those who draw back.
He wants us to press in. He wants us to
move forward and and to break the mold. God is
a god of increase, a god of multiplication. He doesn't divide,
he doesn't withdraw, he doesn't retreat. And uh, and that's
(23:45):
something that we can certainly, um, look to scripture and
see that God can do exceedingly abundantly above all that
we could ever ask, think, hope, or imagine. You know,
even the word impossible says I'm possible. So to keep
moving forward and and hopefully there are women that are
(24:06):
hearing this message and are feeling empowered. And that's one
of the many reasons why I am such a strong
advocate for the Second Amendment, because it is our equalizer. Uh.
You know, we we have extremist groups that come out
and say that they don't want thoughts and prayers when
a tragedy happens, but they have no problem weakening women. Uh.
(24:30):
They think that they're empowering them with with equality acts
or or whatever, but but they're really lessening any empowerment
that we have. And a firearms certainly is something that
um that gives us a chance when there's a threat
of a larger potential aggressor definitely definitely will And I
(24:50):
know you've got to go votes. I won't keep you
too long. Uh you know, I know that you're gonna
be in the front lines of this fighting Congress with
Biden's new agenda to ban assault weapons, things like that.
Last question before you go, how do you really plan
to take this on and really show um, you know,
really ensured that the Second Amendment isn't something that simply
goes away under this new president. So Biden's uh is
(25:16):
acting by executive order because he knows that he can't
pass these horrible actions through the Congress. And UH so
that's exactly why we're seeing him uh try to uh
control our country uh through executive orders. And UH it's
really devastating when the President of the United States says
that no amendment is absolute. Well, I can tell you
(25:40):
absolutely don't do away with an amendment with an executive
order which is not absolute. Uh. And so all of
these things, UM there there to uh lessen our ability
to defend ourselves, to protect ourselves. Uh, and it's it's
just another step in the agenda to infringe on the
(26:02):
rights of millions of Americans. You know. We we see
the rioting, looting, the burning down of businesses, the the
violence is taking place in these inner cities, the active
insurrections that are present. And then uh, in the same uh,
in the same story that we're hearing that we're hearing
calls to defund our police, to to do away with
their qualified immunity. And that's why you're seeing more than
(26:25):
eight million new gun owners in America because Americans are
waking up and they're not going to put up with that.
They are going to have a way, um to protect themselves.
And if Democrats were really serious about a gun control
they would enforce the laws that are already on the books. Um.
If if gun control worked, if these legislations, if this
(26:46):
legislation really was effective, cities like Chicago and Washington, d C.
Will be looking a whole lot like Mayberry. Yeah, yeah, well,
thank you so much for joining us. Uh. I think
it's safe to say that Americas and good hands with
people like you leading the fight in our Congress. So
thank you so much for all the work you're doing
and we'll be rooting for you here. Thanks so much. CJ. Hi, guys,
(27:19):
welcome back. That was Congressman Lurd Bobard and absolute rock star, right,
Like I mean, like if that is the future of
the Republican Party, I'm actually super excited about where this
is gonna go because you know, I mentioned in our
interview with her, I've talked about accountless times in the
podcast before. We cannot go back, Like, people don't want
(27:40):
the Romney era again. People don't want the mccannair again.
People don't know who Bill Crystal is. Like literally, like
these people are the reason that Republicans used to lose
time and again. It's the reason we lost the Culture War.
It's the reason we we can't we couldn't repeal Obamacare
for good knows how long. Literally those people lack the
(28:00):
will to fight. And I kind of handing out in
a little bit when I said, those people would always
go out and they give these speeches and they talk
about how leftism was an existential crisis in this country.
It was a threat to everything we believed in in America,
a threat to our values with our draw our principles,
a threat to our sustainability as a country. But yet
their actions never reflected that urgency. Right, they would always
(28:22):
do these press conferences, and they would do these tweets
and all these things. They never actually knew how to
fight for America. And and and when I think about it,
and then the reason I know that to be true
is because I remember. I'm enough to remember when we
had a Republican majority. For some reason, you know, the
Republican majority, we couldn't figure out to defund plant parent
hunt beginnt to we didn't figure out to repeal and
replace obama Care, even we've been running on that very
(28:44):
thing since it literally became a law. We for some
reason couldn't do the very things that we've been talking
about doing since god knows how long, cycle after cycle,
decad after decade. It's the reason people lack faith in
both sides of the political aisle. And I think that
the solution to that, the remedy to that distrust and
(29:06):
that lack of uh, that lack of faith and in
our elected officials, is through leaders of integrity like the
congresswoman basically saying like, hey, you know, you can like me,
you can hate me, whatever, but at the same token,
I'm going to continue to fight for what I actually
ran on, the principles that I believe in. Now that
that might that might not be very Washington, that might
(29:28):
not be very I don't know, like career politician e.
But I think that's exactly what we don't need any
more of um And And the great thing about that
interview that really resonated with me and a lot of
you know this is that I was actually raised by
Democrats too, and the college woman talked about how really
The reason that her mom voted Democrat wasn't because she
was She was spoon fed the lives of the left.
(29:49):
The only way that she could really succeed and thrive
in this country is if the government was giving her
a check, cutting our check every month, or giving her
food stamps, or just you know, supporting our lifestyle. And
that is actually the same very lie that a lot
of people of color are spoon fed in this country,
that they would rather choose dependency than uplift. And that
(30:12):
is a real issue, right because it's like, why would
you want to be dependent on anything or anyone, especially
something as wishy washy and flicky as the US government, right,
Like we should be teaching people how to climb the
ladder of success, not to be stagnant or or just
you know, it boggles me. And it's literally actually why
I'm a Republican, because if I think, you look at
(30:34):
conservatism and you'll get liberalism, the two different, the two
defining differences between the two. It's conservatism is about, you know,
if you're poor right now, let's figure out ways to
give you the tools to climb up the ladder and
create wealth. Liberalism is about making being poor comfortable. It's
about basically basically saying like, you're gonna still be poor,
You're probably be poor forever, but we're gonna make it
(30:55):
comfortable for you to be poor, and that I just
don't think that's what poor people want. Like, honestly speaking,
I just don't really think that's what poor people want.
I think poor people have dignity. I think poor people
have seen wealth. I think they poor people have seen
people with wealth, and I think poor people want that right,
not just because they want money or anything like that.
It's just because they want comfortability and wealth and money
(31:18):
gives you comfortability, it gives you sustainability, allows them to
be able to know that they're able to put food
on their children, put food on the table, and closing
their children's back. That does a lot for human being.
Maybe not Hillary Clinton and anti pelosis they live in
their multimillion dollar homes, but for normal people who live
in normal places or in rough places, it means a
(31:40):
great deal. And I think that that's why conservatives need
to go out in these computers and say, hey, you
can vote Democrat, psyclafter Psycle Lacy, after election. You can
keep doing that, but you're gonna be right here every
single time. You do that, right here, this very place.
You're not going anywhere. Or we can try something new,
You're try something different. You can vote for people with
(32:00):
different ideas, different policies that are actually gonna help you
climb the ladder of success and create something for yourself
and create wealth, stop the cycle, and be the version
of yourself that you are so eager and desperately wanting
to be. That's what conservatism does, and that is what
liberalism doesn't do. Conservatism freeze. Liberalism puts you in shackles.
(32:24):
It attaches you to a government that doesn't actually really
think that it works for you, even though we all
know it does. But in other news, guys, a lot
has been happening this week. Literally America is burning once again,
which is weird because that's like intersam an election coming up,
Like what like, I thought liberals only burned down America
during election here, but now they just do it every
(32:46):
They do it every day. I guess it's just a
newfound hobby of there. So now in Minnesota there is
an issue with police shooting there which has been heavily poloicized.
The police chief has been fired. I'm pretty sure, the
city attorney has been fed, the cop who UM did
the shooting has been fired and also charged UM in
that case. And it's it's mind boggling to me, Like
(33:10):
it's just like being a cop in America right now.
Anyone who has the courage you gonna do it. I
really respect you and admire you, not just because you're
putting your life in the line and protect other people
that you probably don't even know, but also because you
have to in the back of your head thinking about,
like what is this going to happen to me? Like
when am I going to be politicized um and just
(33:31):
scape coded for simply doing my job as I was
trained to do. Uh. And then and it's just like
and then you're gonna have these people who, after these
shootings happened or think that the solution is to go
burn down their own communities. Like I don't know, I
was never this kid growing up. Whenever I got in
trouble or whenever I got mad, I never punched a wall.
(33:52):
The reason I never punched a wall because why would
I hurt myself over what someone else did to me? Right? Like,
why would I go inflicted by lee harm upon myself?
For something that someone else did to me. So if
you were genuinely mad about what the police are doing
to you in your community, why the hell are you
burning down your own community? Like seriously, that is oh my,
(34:16):
Like it is frustrating to talk about because it's just
like it makes no sense. Wow, my neighbor pissed me off.
I hate my neighbor. His dog keeps peeing in my lot.
I hate him, right, I hate him. I'm gonna go
burn my own house down just to a a lot him now,
just sending a message. Do you see how ridiculous that sounds,
(34:38):
how ridiculous that all that is as exactly what's happening
in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota right now. Because these people I
just don't know it is. It's there is no explanation
for it. I just kind of look at it and
I'm just like, wow, liberals being liberals, lives, lives, lives,
(34:58):
just living it up, you know, that's what they do.
They burned things to the ground and then they just leave.
They burned things to the ground and they leave, and
that is that. And pray for him, pray for him
because they most certainly needed these days. But guys, I
think this was a great interview. I want to thank
the Cashman again for Tom and guys, we're definitely gonna
(35:20):
keep lookin situation in MINNESOTAILL probably be talking about it
next week. Uh. That George the trial h Derek Shuban,
who was implicated the George Floyd shooting is ongoing right now. Um.
I'm not sure what the tomline is on a verdict
on that case, but I'm sure that if that doesn't
go the way they want, you know, who knows what's
(35:43):
going to happen there, right But anyways, anyways, guys, thank
you so much for watching or listening. Then we'll be
back here next week every single Friday. Uh, and I
can't wait to see you guys. Then be sure to
download this podcast on all platforms. I heart Radio, Apple
podcast or We're ever you get your podcasts, and I'll
see you here next week. Before we go, I want
(36:09):
to thank hoversmen, Will and Bodward again for a great interview,
and I of course want to thank you guys so
so much for listening. None of this is possible without
your support. If you enjoy today's show, please leave us
a review and raised with five stars. On Apple podcasts,
you can also bum me on Twitter, Parlor, Facebook and
Instagram at d c J Pearson special thanks to our
executive producers Debbie Liars and Speaker new to king Ridge.
(36:33):
Part of the game which three network