Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Hey, there are folks.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Good morning on this Sunday, November twenty third, and while
you were sleeping, the President was tweeting with welcome to
this Sunday or early Sunday edition of Amy and TJ.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
Robes.
Speaker 3 (00:16):
I need to check my language here first. It's so
easy to keep saying he was tweeting. It's not a tweet,
is it? Can you still call it a tweet if
it's not Twitter.
Speaker 4 (00:23):
You're not supposed to. He's posting on social posting on
social Sorry okay, but it's so easy to say tweet.
Speaker 3 (00:29):
But it didn't go with my intro. While you were sleeping,
the president was posting that's no good. Okay, So you'll
get where we're coming from.
Speaker 1 (00:36):
Now the president. Look, the President has.
Speaker 3 (00:38):
Been notorious about his messages, and he was on one
once again overnight. Now ropes, this was your idea, like, wow,
he's this president is giving us content every single night,
and we.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
Have it in the morning.
Speaker 3 (00:52):
Why not do a collection of his overnight messages in
an episode? This is We could almost do this seven
days a week, but trying in here on Sunday, I.
Speaker 4 (01:01):
Think actually this it jumped out at me because the
posts I was gonna say. Tweets too, range from comical
to frightening, to enlightening to what the hell is he
talking about? I mean, it runs the gamut, but it
evokes lots of emotions, and I figured, Man, if we
just read these and people could all see them in
(01:23):
one space, we don't have to interpret it's wow.
Speaker 3 (01:28):
So yes, from the collection we have here, there were
nothing short of fifteen messages the president has sent since
in the past twenty four hours. Now, that is my count.
That is, it is higher. There are some retweets and
reposts and things he's done that I can't necessarily keep
up with all of those, but essentially, folks in the
past twenty four hours and late last night his last
one was at midnight last night. Actually, the President was
(01:50):
talking about everything from Sedition to Marjorie Taylor Green Newsmax,
Larry Summers and Elon Musk. We're all a part of
the President's tweets yesterday.
Speaker 4 (02:03):
It's remarkable just now that we're going to be probably
doing this on a regular basis. It is wild to
me that the access we have to where his head is.
Think about any other president especially, but really, frankly, a
lot of politicians you don't know what they're thinking and
what they're doing. You know what President Trump is thinking,
(02:24):
and you know he barely sleeps. But there's so much
insight into where his head is and what makes him
tick if you just read what he is putting out there.
He is giving people so much content, and I think
it maybe it's so much people kind of just laugh
it off or glaze over or don't really pay attention.
But when he says things we've talked about this, he
(02:45):
means them.
Speaker 3 (02:46):
And some of these robes to your I guess so
many of his tweets make headlines, right, and news networks
will take those particular ones, and that seem to be
the most outrageous, But there are so many day in,
day out, and this is I'll give you credit for
when you said, I'm like, holy hell, he says he's
handing us here, guys. There's so much news and so
(03:06):
much understanding. And is he not as much as people
might try to come or want to some complain about
the things that he does say? Are we not getting
more access to a president and insight into his thoughts
and having him put out his own words more than
we have ever seen.
Speaker 4 (03:25):
The answer to that is absolutely And Carolyn Lovett says
a lot of things that rub a lot of people
the wrong way, but one thing she does say that
we can confirm is true. She says, this is the
most transparent president in history. And with what you just said,
she's kind of right.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
And then there are some people listening says, Okay, he's
not the most transparent. He's just the most talkative, saying
a lot, but he's really not given us what we want.
Speaker 4 (03:52):
Well, he's definitely not giving people what they want, or
at least a lot of folks, but he is saying
what he what's on his mind in a way that
just it's just in real.
Speaker 3 (03:59):
Yeah, and we don't get that. So, folks, we're going
to start at midnight. This is the president. We're going
to go start going backwards here. But yes, at midnight,
your president of the United States was tweeting. Is there
another it? Can it still be a tweet? It's a
it's a message you sent it. It's a tweet, even
if it's.
Speaker 4 (04:16):
Not tweet this podcast. Let's go ahead, all.
Speaker 1 (04:19):
Right, midnight? He wrote this.
Speaker 3 (04:21):
Many great legal scholars agree that the Democrat traders that
told the military to disobey my orders as president have
committed a crime of serious proportion and a exclamation point
at the end of that one, Robes, this kind of
went away the sedition thing. He is still on it,
even though he said no, I'm not calling on anybody
to be killed. He is not letting this go.
Speaker 4 (04:43):
No, that's right, because that was at midnight. But about
forty five minutes before that, he put out the traders
that told the military to disobey my orders should be
in jail right now, not roaming the fake news networks
trying to explain that what they said was okay, it
wasn't and or will be. It was sedition at the
highest level, and sedition is a major crime. There can
(05:06):
be no other interpretation of what they said. So, yes,
he might be backing off of the death penalty jargon
he was using a few days earlier. But he is
saying that these six lawmakers should be in prison for
the video they released.
Speaker 3 (05:22):
We should mention several points throughout his messages over the weekend, Robes,
he was reposting or pointing out other people who are
in support of his sedition idea. So he is looking
for other people to shore up people outside of his
administration to shore that up. He also posted at nine
to ten pm last night two video clips of conservative
(05:44):
commentator Mark Levin, who, of course you listened to it
more than I did, but it was essentially supporting the
president's positions on some of the stuff.
Speaker 4 (05:51):
Basically just saying all of the president's policies are brilliant
and amazing. That is what I got out of Mark
Levin's arry, and anyone who thinks otherwise is an idiot.
That's how I summed it up.
Speaker 3 (06:04):
Okay, well, it was like it was total, but two
of them end up like twenty minutes between two.
Speaker 4 (06:08):
Yes, one was fourteen when was heah around six?
Speaker 3 (06:11):
So yes, correct, thank you for the summary, all right now,
About forty minutes before that, he posted a BBC article
On the BBC as we know, right.
Speaker 1 (06:21):
He is well how much did he sue it?
Speaker 4 (06:22):
One it was fifteen billion, because it's always the beast,
I think it was fifteen billion. But yes, you had
two of the heads of the BBC actually stepped down
and admit that they made a mistake by editing Trump's
speech on January sixth that seemed to basically elicit storming
the Capitol and left out the part where he asked
(06:43):
them to peacefully protest.
Speaker 3 (06:44):
All right, So he posted an eight twenty eight an
article with this title BBC has questions to answer over
edited Trump speech. So, as you see, he spends on look,
I'm aware of this, but to roll this is the
first time I've really sat and gone through one after
the other. He spends a lot of time doing PR
for himself.
Speaker 4 (07:03):
I was just gonna say he is a one man
PR machine. Now he has Carolyn Levin talking to reporters
in the press gaggles. But and he will obviously hold
court as well in the Oval office on Air Force one.
But he is constantly on top of his PR.
Speaker 3 (07:21):
So that's from eight thirty until midnight, the President put
out several tweets for here by our count all of
them having to do within some way explaining, justifying or
making a case for headlines or things he had been
criticized for. And he posted twenty minutes of a clip
(07:41):
of somebody completely supporting him. So this is what the
president is on from eight thirty on last night. Earlier
in the day, Wow, he was don't you notice as well?
He has clusters, yes, like you could see like in
a fifteen minute period. He might be ten that go
out kind of a thing, but he sits down, like
what is he doing?
Speaker 4 (07:58):
I think he takes breaks to eat and maybe nap,
and that's it. And then the rest of the time
he is consuming what people are saying about him, looking
at what media reports are telling folks, and then having
his own say or yeah. He promotes what he wants
and he tears down what he doesn't like all day long,
(08:19):
throughout the night.
Speaker 3 (08:20):
So let's see, around just before six o'clock, he had
at least and I'm counting here one two wow, between
five forty three and five fifty three, So in a
ten minute period, I'm looking at what five six posts
that he makes in a.
Speaker 1 (08:40):
Ten minute period.
Speaker 3 (08:41):
That's hard for me to do. He's beat me for
the week in a ten minute period. I didn't post
that many times for the week.
Speaker 4 (08:48):
He's beaten me in a month. I hardly post it
all that, you know, Literally, I have come now to
the point where I realize social media is so much
hard work. I've kind of given up. We keep saying
we need to do better, we need to be promoting
our podcast and what we're doing, and yet when you
start working as much as you do. That part of
it falls by the wayside. He's the president of the
(09:08):
United States, busier than us, way busier than us, and
manages to post in ways I don't even know how
he has enough time in the day to do what
he does.
Speaker 3 (09:17):
Well, maybe he realizes the value of social media more
than we do.
Speaker 4 (09:21):
Row he won the election, I would say, in large part.
Speaker 3 (09:24):
That's how we lost our jobs. Now, five fifty three pm,
he reposted a message from something called Maga Voices, obviously
something on an account on Twitter, obviously supportive of the
president and conservatives, but he retweeted a message from them.
Their message said, and I quote, Elon Musk just told
his two hundred and twenty nine million followers that he
(09:46):
wants to thank Donald Trump for everything he's done for
the world. Such an epic moment for America. We are
so back. Okay, So maybe it's obvious why he might
repost that.
Speaker 4 (09:56):
Yeah, did he mention that he basically chided Elon Musk
for not thanking him, and so he basically asked for
some gratitude, And then Elon knows exactly how to kiss
the ring. At this point, he knew and he found
out what it was like to go against the president.
So now he is back on board, and yes, thanks
(10:17):
to the President. After he was called out for not thinking.
Speaker 3 (10:19):
These people aren't this rich because they're stupid. He self
preservation is probably one of the best traits of somebody.
Speaker 1 (10:25):
That's that rich.
Speaker 3 (10:27):
Five point fifty three was that message five to fifty
two Robes One minute before he reposted a message from
You don't have to I don't have to explain what
this one is, but a group on Twitter calling themselves
Fan Trump Army.
Speaker 1 (10:40):
You're familiar with this group?
Speaker 4 (10:41):
Nope, but it's self explanatory. We always like to say
we walk into a restaurant and says tacos and tequila.
You know exactly what you're getting Fan Trump Army. I'm
pretty sure I know what I'm getting.
Speaker 3 (10:50):
No, what you're getting now. This one included a segment
from Fox News that highlighted the Supreme Court decision in
Trump's favor over immigration.
Speaker 1 (10:59):
You see this a little bit, Robes. We've seen he will.
Speaker 3 (11:01):
Repost a segment from Fox or Newsmax or something that
he feels the supportive of.
Speaker 4 (11:07):
His cause, certainly incentivizing for folks who want to get
more followers who want to get more eyeballs, who want
to be considered more mainstream or at least credible in
terms of the audiences they're trying to bring in. You
get Trump to retweet you, You're on.
Speaker 1 (11:21):
The map, all right, five point fifty two.
Speaker 3 (11:23):
A moment before that, No, it was in the same
minute he posted the video itself from Fox News. And
then in the same minute he must have seen somebody
else speak positively about that same video, and he posted
that this was all in the same within the same
minute these were up. He's quick, dude is on it also.
Five point fifty reposted another message, this one again Robes.
(11:47):
Not a lot of this anything policy related so far.
Speaker 4 (11:51):
It's it's not policy. It's more about winning the ability
to maintain after creating a policy, like any legal victory
anything were the Supreme Court or a judge or anyone
basically rules in his favor. Yes, he's all over.
Speaker 3 (12:05):
It, okay. And then there's a Nick sore Tour. I
don't know this generleman, but a conservative journalist. But at
five pif fifty the President reposted a message from this guy,
and Robes, I am surprised. As much as he talks
about Epstein. But this was another Again he reposted this
(12:27):
long message that this guy posted.
Speaker 4 (12:28):
I think what he's trying to do is obviously he's
been connected with him in so many ways. It's followed him,
it's dogged him. So he knows people are not going
to stop talking about it. So if he can just
change how they're talking about it, and so let's talk
about how the Democrats are now being exposed according to him,
so he reposted this. It says, holy crap, House Oversight
(12:48):
Chair James Comb were just exposed Hakeem Jeffries on the
House floor for soliciting a meeting and donations from Jeffrey
Epstein even after Epstein was a convicted sex press. This
Epstein thing going to backfire massively on the Democrats. Democrat
fundraisers invited Epstein to an event or to meet privately
(13:09):
with a Keem Jeffries as part of their twenty thirteen
effort to win a majority. Comer said the text of
their email solicitation to Epstein has been released.
Speaker 3 (13:17):
Wow, okay he is now he's being very consistent about
this as of late, saying Democrats are the ones who
got a problem with Epstein, not us, and he's starting
putting names out and anything he can do to actually
flip Is it possible you can after all this, you
can flip this conversation to be Oh, it's actually democrats.
Speaker 4 (13:39):
After Epstein wrote in his own emails, Trump knew about
the girls, and yet still he is able to turn
the tables in some way.
Speaker 3 (13:47):
Okay, But does he just need to turn them in
his own party, with his own MAGA group to make
sure because he can get them on board.
Speaker 1 (13:54):
I mean, you remember Piggy Peggy, they were defending that.
Speaker 4 (13:57):
Look, I think if you are a rabid, fervent follower
and believer in President Trump, you will take any opportunity
to justify that. And aren't we all like that as humans?
When you think something or you feel something, and then
there's one bit of information that can validate how you feel,
then you're gonna run with it. So yes, I think
(14:18):
that he knows that people are looking for fuel to
point the finger in the other.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
Direction, and he's giving them. What did you just say?
Something to run with? All? Right?
Speaker 3 (14:27):
Saturday five forty three, Again, just a few minutes before
all that, he wrote this note quote, thank you Greg
Kelly of Newsmax for this wonderful piece on Sedition a
must watch, and he posted that video again. This was
someone who was making a case that is in line
with the one he's trying to make about Sedition, and
(14:48):
he's highlighting the Newsmax is a conservative, right leaning news
organization that you and I as soon as I told
you they're based in Palm Beach, Florida.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
You like, hey, let's apply.
Speaker 4 (14:59):
The and I'm like, maybe not, but no, but to
your point, the like Newsmax, I've never heard of it.
And then you said, wait, how do we know the
name Greg Kelly? Like, oh, he was a former Fox
News anchor. But it's funny. So now I'm thinking about
Greg Kelly, I'm googling Newsmax. This is all these folks
who know that they need to be put on the
map or need to have some sort of recognition. This
(15:21):
is exactly how you do it right.
Speaker 3 (15:23):
You get his attention, you say something favorable. There's so
many times we watch particular news channels and there'll be
a guest or an anchor and you absolutely are sure
they are talking to one person and one person alone
in their performance.
Speaker 4 (15:38):
President Trump, We've watched it and we've said, wow, I
know they're hoping President Trump is listening.
Speaker 3 (15:44):
We have seen that plenty. All right, well, folks, stay here.
The President was not done. I had a few more
for you when we come back. What he had to
say about Marjorie Trader Brown, which is what he calls
her now. Also he has some to say about Chicago,
the trillions of dollars he's bringing in the best political
poll numbers he's ever received in his life. And folks,
(16:06):
would you believe he was just getting warmed up? Stay here,
all right, we continue on Amy and TJ. This is
really it is. You know what some of us entertaining,
as you said, Robes about some of the things he,
the president tweets.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
But if you sit and just.
Speaker 3 (16:29):
Read through a day or two of his stuff, you
get such an insight into this man, what he is thinking,
and what he's thinking and what's pissing them off.
Speaker 4 (16:40):
Oh, you know exactly what he is feeling, at least
in that moment. He's obviously changed his mind with days
in perspective, but yes, you know where his head is
at really, hour by hour throughout the day, each and
every day. That is unprecedented. Can you imagine even doing
that as a human being? Like if you were just
(17:01):
putting out how you were feeling or what you were thinking,
or your reaction to anything you were seeing on social
media all day long, you're the like, you're the opposite.
You're so private, So I mean, this has to feel
so strict, like this is this is a very interesting
way to go about your life. But I guess at
that point, if you're talking, maybe you're not allowing people
(17:23):
to talk as much about you because you're giving them
stuff to talk about. You're directing the commedy.
Speaker 1 (17:26):
You're steing racked down robes. That is where we screwed
up terribly.
Speaker 4 (17:31):
Yes, you continue to do so sometimes, but.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
You let people fell in the blanks. And he never
gives folks an opportunity. You never have to wonder what
he thinks about something, and if you do, it won't
be long before he gives you an answer. What time
his last one last night? What we say around midnight night? Yeah, okay,
now let's go back. You know what time his first
one was, folks, It was at six forty five am.
This man is engaged from six am hour until midnight
(17:56):
during the day.
Speaker 4 (17:57):
Yeah, and he's telling you everything he thinks and feels
along the way.
Speaker 3 (18:01):
He started with six forty five, am. Marjorie Trader Brown
is what he calls her. Now, this is how we
started it, Marjorie Trader Brown.
Speaker 4 (18:08):
It's smart because I have to think about what her
name actually is, because now it's so easy to that
that that just makes sense. And I can because I
know why he's calling her that. I had to go, wait,
what is her name Marjorie Taylor Green? But it's hard.
I had to think about it.
Speaker 3 (18:25):
You remember you didn't like We like the name Trader
better than Brown as a nickname because you don't have
to explain the brown. The brown was funny to me
when he started using it. He said, because her name
is green and grass. When it starts to rot, it
turns brown. I thought, okay, he had to explain it,
but I still.
Speaker 1 (18:40):
Thought it was solid.
Speaker 4 (18:41):
And now it's Marjorie Trader Brown, so he wrote. He
wrote Marjorie Trader Brown. Because of plummeting poll numbers and
not wanting to face a primary challenger with a strong
Trump endorsement where she would have had no chance of winning,
has decided to call it quits. Her relationship with the
worst Republican congress in decades Tom Massey of Kentucky, also
(19:03):
known as Rand Paul Junior.
Speaker 1 (19:05):
Another good nickname.
Speaker 4 (19:06):
That's good because he votes against the Republican Party and
really good legislation. Did not help her for some reason,
primarily that I refused to return her never ending barrage
of phone calls. That was my favorite line, Marjorie went bad,
thus you know the brown. Nevertheless, I will always appreciate
Marjorie and thank her for her service to our country.
(19:27):
President DJT he sounded.
Speaker 1 (19:30):
Like he reserved a little option there for her to
come back into the fole.
Speaker 4 (19:33):
It was a little strange, that last little compliment.
Speaker 3 (19:36):
But we see what happens, Mom, Donnie, Marjorie Taylor Green
Elon Musk people that you would think he would actually
send off to some prison in a frozen tundra somewhere
if he could Elon's back in the fore.
Speaker 4 (19:50):
Cracks the door open, you know what you did wrong.
If you'd like to come back, you know what you'll
have to do to re enter.
Speaker 3 (19:56):
Wow, damn, just a crack, just the crack in the door. Well,
all right, all right, that was at six forty five.
You're talking about Margie j Y the Green seven on
one AM yesterday quote, I have just gotten the highest
poll numbers of my political career. Why does he do quotes?
I don't understand some of his quotes. Sometimes he put
(20:17):
political career in quotation marks.
Speaker 4 (20:18):
I guess, I don't know why you put that in quotes,
Maybe to distinguish from his high ratings when he wasn't
a politician, Like I don't really know.
Speaker 3 (20:30):
We well anyway, he starts off that way, I've gotten
the highest poll numbers of my political career. While my
great work on the economy has not been fully appreciated,
it will be exclamation point. Things are really rocking. Capital
are on rockin and no g he shortened it rocking,
not rocking, rocking.
Speaker 4 (20:45):
When he put a little yeah you like that, yeah,
little apostrophe over the end like Rockin' quote.
Speaker 3 (20:51):
Stopping wars and foreign relations seems to be a strong suit.
Also great the border and stopping crime. I predict that
the economy will, with the already highest stock market ever
and prices coming sharply down from the Biden disaster, will
soon be at the top of the list make America
great again. So first thing on his mind that he's
sitting out is talking about a political adversary. Now I
(21:12):
guess and now seven oh one, check me out. I'm awesome.
He starts the day off. I'm awesome this way.
Speaker 4 (21:18):
Yeah, we should all start our day off just telling
ourselves we're awesome? Am I too? Good for our mental
health and our productivity?
Speaker 3 (21:24):
Could I tweet with him? Could you tweet with him?
Tip fa tat? Like every time he's sends something. Okay,
he's talking about his political adversary. Do you have an
adversary the first thing in the morning you would write about?
Speaker 4 (21:35):
I don't want to spend my time on that.
Speaker 1 (21:36):
No, okay.
Speaker 3 (21:37):
Then the next thing he's talking about is uh, I've
got he's bragging about where he is in his political career.
Speaker 4 (21:44):
But that seems so weird. I could never do that.
Speaker 1 (21:47):
No. No, Then in nine on one he went again
nine on one. This was a pretty long one. Heroes.
He's talking about tariffs.
Speaker 4 (21:54):
Yes, he says, we are taking in trillions, all caps
of dollars in tariffs and investment dollars from lands because
of tariffs. I have stopped five of the eight wars
directly because of the threat of terriffs. If they don't
stop fighting, or better yet, if they start there is
almost no inflation and the worst in USA history Under
Sleepy Joe Biden. The stock market just hit an all
(22:16):
time high for the forty eighth time in nine months.
I don't know if that's true, but that's what he says.
Speaker 1 (22:22):
It's been doing gangbusters.
Speaker 4 (22:23):
It has been doing well. But also the highest pull
numbers we didn't mention are is that is a stretch.
Speaker 1 (22:27):
We're not sure what he's looking at.
Speaker 4 (22:29):
He's coming down from the lowest maybe he's going up
from the lowest pull numbers ever. But okay, all right,
he says there is almost no inflation and the worst
in USA history. Inner sleepy Joe Biden. The stock market
is hit an all time high. Okay, I already said
this to Leonard Leo Coke and all of the countries
and slimeballs that have ripped off the United States of
(22:49):
America for years through the use of their own tariffs.
We don't have a court system that's going to let
you destroy our country any longer. This is the richest, strongest,
and most respected the USA has ever been November fifth,
and the tariffs are the reasons why. Thank you for
your attention to this matter. Exclamation point. President DJT so.
Speaker 3 (23:10):
Not sure what happened between nine oh one and about
three in the afternoon, but he had a little break.
He wasn't putting as much stuff.
Speaker 4 (23:15):
He was meeting with foreign leaders signing. I don't know.
Speaker 1 (23:19):
I was just saying, you think, what was his schedule yesterday?
Speaker 4 (23:23):
Six hours? That is a long window for him not
to be on social media.
Speaker 1 (23:27):
But he did.
Speaker 3 (23:27):
There was a three thirty eight yesterday. This was for
you folks in Chicago. Quote, massive crime and rioting in
the Chicago Loop area. Multiple police officers attacked and badly
injured three hundred people rioting, six victims shot, one critical,
one dead. In the meantime, Governor Pritzker and the low
IQ mayor of Chicago are refusing federal government help for
a situation that could be quickly remedied. The people are
(23:49):
chanting bring in Trump.
Speaker 1 (23:52):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (23:53):
I didn't see any other reports anywhere that they were
literally chanting that, so I didn't know if he meant
that figuratively or literally. But yeah, there was a Yes,
that was a nasty open ideal in Chicago where I
don't know if you saw, please correct me. I saw
at least five maybe six shot.
Speaker 4 (24:08):
Yes, it was around those numbers. I didn't. I don't
have the exact but yes, it was a violent weekend
in Chicago.
Speaker 3 (24:14):
They had a particular what was it they were all
collect Oh the Christmas tree lighting?
Speaker 4 (24:18):
Oh yeah, four yeah, so and a fourteen year old
was among those killed. Eight teenagers injured. So this they
call it a chaotic Chicago shootings. Yes, all around the
lighting at the Christmas tree.
Speaker 1 (24:29):
It's it's awful, and there's video of it.
Speaker 3 (24:32):
It is a scary scene where you see people take
off and scattering when gunfire. Sorry, so he's talking about
something there. Of course, that is real, that is relevant,
and it's factually correct. We've seen him call people low
IQ before. I don't think anyone is immune from that. Necessarily.
Speaker 1 (24:48):
He throws that around to any and everybody, man, woman, child.
Speaker 4 (24:52):
He's indiscriminatory when he calls people stupid in various ways.
Speaker 3 (24:56):
And the thing people are chanting bring in Trump. He
might just be making the argument that, hey, people see
this and want me to take action. I don't know
if he meant literally that people were.
Speaker 4 (25:05):
In the street. I think if that happened, there would
be video and we would be able to see that.
But I think maybe in his mind, folks are basically
chanting that in their minds, that's what he sees.
Speaker 3 (25:18):
Look, this was what we gave you here, what was
twenty four hours for the president and the messages he
puts out.
Speaker 1 (25:24):
I am grateful for content. I am grateful. I wish
ever Biden Obama. Obviously Twitter was around during Clinton and Bush.
Speaker 3 (25:32):
Can you imagine those guys putting out no Tony tweets
today about what they are thinking on personal levels, how
they feel about this other person. This is not what
is traditionally presidential.
Speaker 4 (25:45):
Fine, this is something you usually say for your journal
and you keep it to yourself. He's sharing it with
all of us, and so why not talk about it.
Why not let people read it, hear it, see it. Look,
I wasn't somebody, and I think a lot of folks
this is the truth. Who aren't fans. And I'm not
saying if you have a political leaning and you're against
President Trump, probably you're not going on to true social
(26:07):
to read about him. You're probably trying to avoid Trump headlines.
But I don't think that's smart. I think this is
something everyone Republicans, Democrats, independents, whomever. It actually is worth
a read. It actually does matter what he's saying, because
this isn't somebody who usually just spouts off. He follows through.
Speaker 3 (26:25):
So hope, don't just pay attention to some of the
sound bites you see on teal television. Don't just pay
attention to the major speeches that he makes. This man
speaks every single day and every single night directly to
you in a way that's different from anything you're going
to see at elector on a teleprompter. And I know
he goes off the cuff here and there, but roades
to you. I think you make a very good point.
It's important no matter who you are, this is your president.
(26:46):
This is what he's saying, and you should be aware.
Speaker 4 (26:48):
And if he you know, he and Carolyn Levitt will
constantly be complaining that his policies and his feelings and
thoughts are all filtered through a left leaning biased media.
So here's one way to avoid all of that and
just read it for yourself and think what you want
to think about what he says for yourself.
Speaker 3 (27:09):
You know, you made that point, and we made it
before we started. We don't need to interpret, we don't
need to add any commentary to these things.
Speaker 1 (27:16):
For the most part, he said it. That's what he said.
Speaker 3 (27:20):
And as we are wrapping up here now, folks, he
is not nothing yet this early ropes. We don't have
anything new yet from the President to report from his tweet,
but we can't wait till he starts posting, yes slash
tweeting again.
Speaker 4 (27:35):
And with that everyone, thank you so much for listening
to us on this Sunday morning. I'm Amy Robock alongside TJ.
Speaker 2 (27:40):
Holmes.
Speaker 4 (27:41):
We will talk to you soon