Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Morning, Europe out to enter the arena and join the
Battle to save.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
America with your host Sean Parnell.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
Good evening, America, Welcome to Battleground Live. This is the
show where we kick ass, and we take names and
we lock horns with the radical left. We never quit,
we never surrender. From sea to shining Sea and everybody
in between. Welcome Patriots on this Wednesday, This glorious Savage Wednesday.
(00:36):
At some point we're gonna have Savage Rich Barris on
deck to break down all of the news and the
just the absurdity and I mean this in the truest sense,
the absurdity of the Democrats and the RFK Junior here.
We got that in so much more today. But something
(00:57):
that I saw just before I went live, And sorry
I wasn't in the live chat as often as I
wanted to be today because there is a lot happening.
It's almost too much for the news to cover. And
in fact, that is exactly the point. That's what President
Trump and his team are doing. They are being ruthlessly
(01:20):
efficient with regards to implementing their agenda that he was
put in office to implement. They I'm serious, folks, things
are happening so fast and so efficiently. It's hard to
cover it all. But one of the things that I saw,
the Lake and Riley Act, was signed into law today.
(01:41):
It's the first bill that President Trump signed into law
in his second term in office. And there's something that
I just wanted you to see. Video that I wanted
you to see. Let me see if I can get
this work for you, but I want you to watch
President Trump react. President Trump's reaction while Lake and Riley's
(02:03):
mom is talking. Listen.
Speaker 4 (02:06):
We also want to thank President Trump for the promises
he made to us. He said he would secure our
borders and that he would never forget about LACN And yes,
he's a man of his word. Trust that he will
fight for the American people. Most importantly, I want to
(02:28):
thank our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, because without his sacrifices,
Laken's story would have ended on that horrific day that
she was taken from us. But because of him, we
can continue living knowing that we will see Lincoln again.
Speaker 3 (02:47):
Obviously, that is very very hard to watch, very hard
to watch. And you know, folks, I wanted to show
you that I wanted you to hear that and if
you're listening to the show, I really encourage you to
come on over here subscribe, and and and and join
(03:08):
us here on the video portion of the podcast. But
I like to show you that side of President Trump
that is never shown by our media, and only people
that truly know this man and have spent time around
this man can tell you about him. President Trump is
somebody who just really deeply cares about people. And yes,
(03:34):
you know he he's he's a hard hitter, Yes he's
he says what he wants to say one hundred percent
of the time. That's part of what I admire about him.
No matter what is happening around him, no matter how
bad or good things are, he is exactly the same.
No matter how he is at that podium today sign
the Lake and Riley uh, signing the Lake and Riley
(03:56):
Act into a law, no matter how he was at
the podium during that, He's exactly this behind closed doors.
I admire that. I think it's a form of mental toughness.
But he's also somebody that cares a lot about the
people of this country, who cares a lot about this country.
And I wanted to show you that of him, clearly
getting emotional as Lake and Riley's mother spoke at the
(04:18):
signing of that bill, because you don't get to see
that side of President Trump very often. Okay, let me
pivot to some other breaking news that happened just before
I went live. And as I'm going through this stuff,
make sure you smash that like button, the little gray
thumb beneath the video. When you smash it, it turns green.
When it turns green, it helps propel us to the
(04:38):
Rumble leaderboard, and we make it every single day because
of you all, So thank you. But news that broke
just before the show. President Trump signed to settlement papers
that are expected to require meta platforms, which is essentially
Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook to pay twenty five million bucks
(04:59):
to resolve a twenty twenty one lawsuit Trump brought after
the company suspended all of his accounts following the attacks
on the US HAVE, the attacks on the US Capitol,
the mostly peaceful protest on the US Capitol on January sixth.
Twenty two million dollars of this settlement is going to
go to Trump's presidential library, which, listen, this guy deserves
(05:26):
all of these wins more than just about anybody else,
Like and I mean that, I know he's the most
powerful man in the world. He's sure as hell doesn't
need me out here saying this for him. He can protect,
defend himself, and he has. But this guy has been
put through the ringer. But I'm telling you, folks these
first in his first week and a half of this
(05:47):
man's presidency, not only is he making good in the
promises that he made the American people, but he is
going above and beyond and exceeding all expectations for us.
And you know what heg seth the Department of Defense
his first couple of days. I mean, one of the
very first things that he did was pull General Milli's
(06:08):
former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, pull the
security clearance, pull his security guards, and then launch an
investigation into his background that might end up demoting Milly
from four stars to three stars, which you know, you
hear that, and you think, I mean to me, I mean,
that's a it's a big deal. It's a start. But
(06:30):
General Milly, you know, did some very very terrible stuff
while President Trump was in office and thereafter President or
General Milly called President Trump a wanna be dictator while
he was in his uniform. Milly obviously was responsible for
(06:53):
the collapse of Afghanistan, and many people say, well, you
know that falls with the Secretary of Defense. Yeah. Maybe,
but didn't have to be spending his time in Senate
hearings lamenting white rage in him his desire to learn
more about it that happened about three to four months
prior to the fall of Afghanistan. Rather than doing that
(07:14):
being on Capitol Hill schmoozing with all these politicians, maybe
he should have been planning a more responsible withdrawal, one
that did not end in the death of the needless
death of thirteen Americans, one that did not involve US
using Kandahar Airport as opposed to Bogram, which would have
made all the sense in the world. I mean, Millie
(07:39):
actually told his Chinese counterpart that he would let them
know prior to a US attack on the country if
there was going to be attacked. To me, that is
undermining the Chiney command. That undermines the commander in chief.
It puts him before the commander in chief. News continues
(08:01):
to come out on January sixth, I'm telling you, there's
Milly on his way out classified all sorts of things
that pertained to January sixth. I think that absolutely need
to be made public. But as evidence continues to come
out about January six you watch, I bet you that
Milly is at the center of a whole hell of
(08:22):
a lot of it. So I've got Savage Rich Barris
on deck here. I don't want to waste much any
time with him. Okay, without further ado, let me bring
my buddy on. It's Savage Rich Barris, the director of
Big Dada Pold, host of a great show called Inside
the Numbers. Welcome, my friend. I see you vaping back there.
Speaker 2 (08:42):
You don't see anything. What are you talking about?
Speaker 3 (08:45):
You know? What's you know? What's funny?
Speaker 2 (08:47):
Rich still came out?
Speaker 3 (08:48):
You know? So, so last last week we did our
show and I think we I think I had a
record viewing audience when you when you were on me
last week and during this show, you said that you
wear Lulu Lemon.
Speaker 5 (09:06):
Is this?
Speaker 3 (09:06):
Did I hear this? Correct?
Speaker 2 (09:08):
I got a Lulu Lemon hoodie. It's man's hoodie. Now,
my you know, my daughter loves Lululemon like all the
dancing girls love Lululemon. And my wife is like, what
is up with Lulu Lemon, I'm gonna try it. So
she got herself like a Lulu I don't know, like
pants and sweatshirt or something, and she's like, oh my.
Speaker 3 (09:26):
God, this is so nice.
Speaker 2 (09:28):
So at a convention when they were at it, she's like, look,
there's a Lululemon sweatshirt that's on sale. You want me
to like get it and see if you like it?
And you know, I'm like, I guess whatever, Laura, get
it for me. I will tell you right now, as
a heterosexual, I noticed how there you had to throw
that in there. I am telling you Lululemon is the bomb.
(09:52):
It is so cozy, it is so comfortable, and now
I know why they wear it.
Speaker 3 (09:57):
Plus it's got it.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
Then I love it, she said.
Speaker 3 (10:02):
And it's a I forgot what guarantee it is.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
I forgot what to guarantee is showing. But I'm telling you, brother,
it's legit.
Speaker 3 (10:11):
Hearing Laura yell in the background, just tell him you think.
Speaker 2 (10:15):
It's soft, she pops in and goes, you think it's
soft and you love it.
Speaker 3 (10:22):
So let me get this straight. So you you you
wear Lulu Lemon, and you also drive a super Root.
Speaker 2 (10:29):
For now, but now I drive just so everybody knows
I drive the Supero Touring Ascent with Java leather all
right in wood paneling. It's fly, okay, he says, So
you wear Lululemon and you drive a super Root. She
(10:52):
said that means I'm a dependable man. Oh lord, I'm
going out.
Speaker 3 (10:56):
You know what, if you've got the backing of a
good woman, hardly do it doesn't It doesn't matter what
you drive, it doesn't matter what you wear. She has
your back. It's fine.
Speaker 2 (11:07):
It's so true. That is so true.
Speaker 3 (11:09):
I've been wanting to ask you that for a week.
You could tell I've had this bottled up. I was like,
did I did Rich say that he wears Lulu Lemon?
Did I hear that?
Speaker 2 (11:16):
Right?
Speaker 3 (11:17):
Believe it's comfortable? Right?
Speaker 2 (11:19):
The only other sweatshirts that I think are as comfortable
as lu Lemon. And honestly, if I'm being I'm being like,
you know, totally unbiased, is that I pride myself and
how comfortable the people's pundin sweatshirts are hoodie and non hoodie.
And I was shopping around being a total pain in
the butt when Laura was looking for merch and in fact,
(11:41):
that's why we're looking for new merch now because their
quality was not the same. And I'm like, oh, that's
that's it, so we'll freeze it until we can do better.
I think Lula Lemon probably is not. Probably it's softer,
you know, and I always.
Speaker 3 (11:55):
It's expensive, isn't it?
Speaker 2 (11:56):
It is very And when she said on sale, I'm like, wait,
that's a sale, you know, because I just and she's
Laura is so good. I'll tell you what A lot
of friends I know and a lot of guys that
you hear their wives do this with their you know,
they buy this, they buy that. I'm mine. The only why,
the only problem that I have to worry about with
(12:18):
my wife when it comes to buying stuff, she's she
is the better one with money. The only problem I
ever have to worry about is when I take her
in the loaves or something. And then like, that's a
good problem to have. Guys, you know what I'm talking about.
Speaker 3 (12:34):
You know, I I agree. I I lucked out in
that department too. But do you know that Commander Melanie
and Savage Laura text during the show and make fun
of us, right they do?
Speaker 2 (12:46):
I found that out a few weeks ago.
Speaker 3 (12:50):
Dude, they talked shit on us while we do the show.
Speaker 2 (12:56):
That's when I realized it was going down because I like,
you know, your wife, you know, I see that smirk
and I'm like text you know. She's like, I'm talking
to Melanie and I'm like, what are you saying about us?
So funny though? Let them have their laughs? What else
are we good for? Honestly? Right?
Speaker 3 (13:14):
So okay, so shift gears with me? What do you
think about the Millie stuff and hag Seth wasting no
time going after Millie's security clearances, security detail and investigating
whether or not whether or not there's enough evidence to
demote him and take a star. What do you think
about all that?
Speaker 2 (13:31):
First of all, by their own logic and by their
own standards, General Millie's a criminal, right, Why would he
need a pardon? He obviously did something wrong, correct, And
it's great that they took the portrait down. But I'll
tell you what, Shawn, I almost prefer the humiliation route.
I think I would have left the portrait up. I
would have just changed the plaque. Like I said this before,
I'm serious, and it should say something like here is
(13:53):
General Milly a total moron who doesn't know how blitzkreen
works got the entire NATO offensive obliterated by the Russian army.
And oh, by the way, must be a criminal because
he needed a pardon from Joe Biden, who's also a criminal.
Like I would have put that in the plaque and
let that hang on the wall. Bro, I'd to let
it ride. Who's gonna stop him? Who's gonna stop him?
(14:16):
Could do whatever he wants. Those VA employees, you know,
back in twenty seventeen, wanted to play games with Trump's portrait.
Then nothing's off the table.
Speaker 3 (14:25):
Yeah, wait, what happened with that? Do I did this
slip my mind? Somehow? It didn't.
Speaker 2 (14:28):
Well, it's not happening now, although I imagine that's because
you know, they've been through it and they know and
I probably you maybe understand what I'm talking about. I'm
waiting for the tone to change at the VIA again.
It went right back to being garbage like it was
under Obama and under Trump, especially with the reforms, they
(14:49):
went from being out of control bureaucrats who don't care
at all about the veterans. And this is a general statement,
but it's a generally true statement, and it's sad, but
it's true to being somebody you who maybe they're kissing
your butt because they're worried about their job, but who cares.
They're kissing your butt, and you deserve your butt kissed,
you know. So I mean that's and and honestly, I
didn't realize until I left Florida as my primary how
(15:16):
good I had it, you know. And I really now
understand and feel for some of the other nightmare stories
out there. But tone will change, and I imagine they're
not going to try any tricks like they tried in
seventeen because it's just a different ballgame, you know. I mean,
it's like, honestly, the only.
Speaker 3 (15:32):
Way you like, you like what what President Trump and
Secretary of Haggsath they're doing with Millie. I mean my
perspective on it, of course. I mean it's like if
you're if you're a private, an army private, and you
lose your rifle, they might put you in jail. Like
you use the sense of item like night vision, they
will dock your pay until then, until you pass from
(15:53):
this earth, until you pay it back.
Speaker 2 (15:55):
You don't turn that in as to what happens to you.
You're exactly, Oh my god, are you kid. Yeah, I'm
not for nothing. But he really needs to be made
an example of because he is this generation. He or
he represents this class of brass who has completely lost
sight of the mission. They have been insufficient, inadequate, unsatisfactory
(16:21):
in their performance basically their entire careers. The guy doesn't
know how to win a war, even if you gave
him full reign to win a war. Like we are
in deep trouble when it comes to our military minds,
and part of that is because of the culture that
people like Millie and others have allowed to fester in
the you know, in our armed services. He needs to
be you know, proverbial of course, but I mean he
(16:44):
needs to be tired and feathered over there, he really does.
And the fact that he got a pardon you know,
I'm not somebody who thinks such a point.
Speaker 3 (16:52):
It's such a good point.
Speaker 2 (16:53):
Why why do you do wrong? Brother?
Speaker 3 (16:55):
But he clearly, he clearly, he clearly did. I mean,
you don't accept it's a empty party, so like no one,
no one even knows what the hell it's for.
Speaker 6 (17:04):
Yeah, And it goes back to that yeah, right again,
before all of this blurring of the lines between the
Biden family, financial interest and US foreign policy in Eastern Europe.
Speaker 2 (17:20):
And obviously he had a role in that. And look
there's a group of people him among them who really
blew the lid and started going rogue when Donald Trump
started to become a problem and threatened that Greevy train.
So it's like that the first Trump impeachment should have
showed everybody that, you know, a lot of the foreign
(17:41):
policy or the foreign assistance, especially military assistants, is a
major grift. It's a major money laundering project. This isn't
the freaking Marshall Plan. It's not anywhere near it. We
are we don't even live in a world like that anymore.
But you know, the Marshall Plan worked because it was
assistance going to It was like Western assistants going to
(18:04):
other Western assistants. Those were established instituted nation states that
have Western values in Western economies, industrialized fully industrialized economies
and also corruption protections. Not I mean, no country is perfect,
but that's why you'd done this scam where we just
send assistance all over the world doesn't work.
Speaker 3 (18:24):
I honestly think, I honestly think clear move to me
like like a huge money laundering operation Cyle. I mean,
did you see like some of the stuff that they
busted out, like fifty million dollars in condoms for people
in Gaza that Hamas just uses for bombs. And then
they're finding like, you know, eighty five million for diversity
(18:44):
scholarships in Burma, Like and then the list goes on
and on and on of things like that, and you're like,
you think to yourself, they're really spending eighty five million
dollars on diversity scholarships in Burma.
Speaker 2 (18:56):
Really. Steph is another horrible example of this, especially when
it comes to Hamas. All of that money, you know,
being used supposedly, Oh we need concrete, UNICEF is building schools,
blah blah blah. What a load of crap. They end
up going to terror tunnels all beneath Israel, you know.
I mean, it's a major scam. And you know this
(19:17):
thing with RFK, I don't mean to jump off topic already.
It's like Pete went through it. RFK is going.
Speaker 3 (19:22):
Through it now. Yeah, it's going to go through.
Speaker 2 (19:24):
What this really is all about is about like this
status quo attempting to stop big changes to exactly dams
that are designed not to help you, not to help me,
not even to advance you as foreign policy or security,
whatever topic it is that you're talking about. When the
case of RFK, it's certainly not to advance the health
(19:47):
of the American public. Looking how much money obviously went
to the Wuhan Institute which resulted in what sean. Come on,
we've danced around the bush. But we're all going to
find out the truth very soon, which is true most
of us already know, which is we had a hand
in designing a virus that leaked, at least leaked out
of an institute. We designed it, and it killed us
(20:07):
and a lot of people around then, around the globe.
And I actually don't think the leak is going to
be the end of this story. Maybe I agree completely,
but I don't it was leaked at all. I think
Donald Trump was a existential threat to this whole entire
status quo because folks, they have designed this system to
benefit them and to perpetuate this system, to self perpetuate
(20:31):
the bureaucracy and those who live off of the blob,
whether it's legally or illegally, and often it is illegal,
but it's working real well for them. It's killing the
rest of us. It's killing the rest of us literally,
but it's working great for them, and they are going
to do everything they can to try to stop it.
And you know, Jack Bisobo Poso, we were talking about
(20:58):
this the other week week and we were saying, how
like everyone's you know, of course rightfully focused on Pete,
but you know, the military industrial complex is bad. So
is big Pharma. Wait, you know, and I mean we
saw today senators, multiple Democratic senators obviously reading from sheets
written by Pfizer lobbyists and Maderna lobbyists, including one that
(21:22):
was an utter embarrassment from Mark Warner, who didn't he
just read you know it. I don't know if they
pre read this stuff beforehand and even look over the
idiocy that they're about to regurgitate.
Speaker 3 (21:35):
Yeah, let's talk about it. I mean, so a quick
update on so I definitely want to talk about RFK.
But yeah, the Senate confirms Lee Zelden right yeas the
administrator of Trump's EPA fifty two. Pam Bonnie Bondi, Trump's
pick for AG is out of Committee, out of Judiciary
twelve ten. And then RFK is in the hot seats
(22:00):
and he has a series of two different hearings. He's
got his hearing today, which I'm telling you.
Speaker 2 (22:05):
He knocked it out home.
Speaker 3 (22:06):
Look what I've taken impressed. Yeah, listen, man, I'm telling
you he he. I disagree with him on a lot,
a lot, but it's clear to me that he is
in this for the right reasons. He's asking the right questions.
(22:27):
You know, there is desperate need for reform within HHS.
And never in my life, rich I'm telling you, man,
every one of these hearings, it just makes it more
clear to me that never in my life have I
seen a group of people in this new Democrat party
that are They are so beemently opposed to critical thinking
(22:50):
and thinking about things differently and asking very basic questions
about Hey, is the way that we've always done things
the best way? Clearly there's been an a meteoric rise
in diabetes, in autoimmune diseases. Are these vaccines? All my
kids are vaccinated?
Speaker 2 (23:09):
Right like.
Speaker 3 (23:11):
In aurities? Yeah? I mean he's asking questions. I mean,
are the chemicals in our food making us unsafe? A
lot of these chemicals are banned in Europe and in
these Democrats. Not only do they not think like that,
they accuse him of being dangerous for simply asking questions.
And so listen to this sound this is this is
(23:33):
RFK talking about healthy kids and the rise of all
these crazy diseases and and just listen to this, and
then I want to get your take on It's like,
how can any American disagree with this? Listen to this?
Speaker 1 (23:43):
Yeah, I want to say something about what you first
said when I launched my campaign. It was about uniting
America and Democrats Republicans. There's no issue that she's united
more than this chronic health epidemic. There's no such thing
as Republican children or Democratic children. These are our kids.
(24:03):
Sixty six percent of them are damaged. I know what
a healthy kid looks like because I had so many
of them in my family. I didn't know anybody with
a food allergy growing up, peanut allergy. Why do five
of my kids have allergies? Why are we seeing these
explosions and diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, neurological diseases, depression, all these
(24:27):
things that are related to toxic environment. Why can't we
just agree with each other to put differences about so
many issues, intractable issues aside as a We're going to
end this I don't think anybody is going to be
able to do this like I have because of my
(24:48):
peculiar experience, because I've litigated against these agencies. When you
litigate against them, you get a PhD in corporate capture
and how to unravel it. I've written six books about
these agencies. I know a lot about them, and I
know how to fix it. And there's nobody who will
fix it the way that I do. Because I'm not
(25:10):
scared of vested interest. I don't care. I'm not here
because I want a position or a job. I have
a very good life and happy family. This is something
I don't need. I want to do this because we're
going to fix it. And the other thing is we
are attracting now a caliber of people to HHS like
(25:31):
never before in history. And they're entrepreneurs there, they're disruptors,
they're innovators of immense talents that are walking away, many
of them from growing concerns. They're not coming there or position.
They're coming there because they want to save our country.
And they're from across the political spectrum. And all these
Democrats are opposed to me for partisan issues. They used
(25:53):
to be my friends agreed with me. On all the
environmental issues I've been working on for my whole career.
Now they're against me because anything that President Trump does,
any decision he makes, has to be lampooned, derided, discredited, marginalized, vilified.
Speaker 3 (26:14):
I am so glad he said that part at the end.
Ye people were my friends just three months ago. Now
they're all. I mean, it's just you'd see through the bullshit. Man,
It's insane, how dumb. I'm sorry to say it, but
these Democrats are just so patently stupid when it comes
to this. And then this is they got their asses
(26:37):
kicked in this election, thank god they did. But these
questions that they're asking not just a barfk but of
all of these people show exactly why they got their
asses kicked. They're the party of the past. They have
no answers for any of the problems that we face
as a country. None.
Speaker 2 (26:54):
I feel like this is why they're losing. They had
two days last week where they were on message, even
though it was a lie, when they were on message
with the freezing government spending, and there was you know,
on point for a little bit, and then they went
off the rails again. And I did discuss this a
little bit on my show today. First of all, I
don't think any of those senators even though what corporate
(27:15):
capture is. I'm serious, I am deadly serious. I'm sure
they're all very stupid and don't understand what that term means.
But also they don't understand. You take somebody like what's
his name, Ron Right, and he's going on and on
about things that he said about the vaccines, efficacy and etc. Etc.
(27:38):
For the MR and a vaccine. You got Elizabeth Warren
arguing that there's other things we can do other than
to allow people to sue vaccine companies if those vaccines
hurt you. Like everything, every talking point they're using is
from twenty twenty. They're in the past. They're on the
ass end of it. Man. When it comes to our research,
and trust me, we are right. It is an overwhelming
(28:01):
majority of the American public who agree there. It's bipartisan.
It cuts across all race, age, party demographics, ideological demographics.
They are arguing that they are the party of corporatism now, which,
by the way, is a new modern word for fascism.
It means the same thing. It's when the government is
in a partnership with the private sector and directs labor, capital, manufacturing, etc.
(28:24):
That's called fascism. That's the economic definition of it. Right.
So they're arguing this and they're not winning these battles
because Americans elected President Trump to do bigger things and
they want to stick with the show. And I don't
know if you have this clip. I don't want to
blow it. But Ron Johnson channeled the American voter today
and that hearing when he just.
Speaker 3 (28:44):
Said, Man, I don't have it.
Speaker 2 (28:45):
I got and like, at some point the show has
to end. You know, Americans do care about this stuff.
We have enormous problems and we're never going to be
able to fix them if we cannot at least come
together on the issues where we know there's overwhelming consensus.
(29:06):
Like you're really gonna sit here and argue that your
lobbyists that were hired after the pandemic from pfizers should
have a bigger, greater voice in that chamber than the
voters who just elected a president. We just had an
election who told the voter what they intended to do,
this make America Healthy Again agenda. At first, I did
not It's not that I didn't take it seriously. I
(29:28):
just didn't think it would be as significant as it
ended up being in this election. It is very significant.
Speaker 3 (29:34):
I'm so glad you're bringing this up. Let me set
the stage what I said, what I said to my
wife today, I'm like, these Republicans, you know they you know,
here you have President Trump wins this historic victory in
spite of all the shit they threw at him and
RFK Junior, lifelong Democrat family of one of the most
(29:55):
the most well known Democrat family maybe in America's history. Seriously, Yeah,
and he says, you know what I'm done, He crosses
the aisle, wants to work with Donald Trump, the people
that he brought to the table, the coalition of support
that he had helped Donald Trump win this election. Of course,
(30:18):
these Republicans who have benefited in the Senate and in
the House, but and the Senate as well, mostly in
the Senate, right, yeah, of course, Like they're the ones
that benefit a lot from this, yet they're the same
ones that might not vote for him. It's just insane
to me. It just seems that it defies all logic
(30:41):
for me. Rich It's just and so I'm glad you're
bringing up the coalition because whether it's Tulsey Gabbard or
RFK Junior. They were vital parts to the Trump coalition, Michael,
and why we would screw them over and not confirm
them is beyond me. Because Trump made a promise to
not just RFK Junior, but every member of his movement
(31:03):
that he would that he would support make America Healthy again.
And he's making good in those promises. And Republican senators
are like, well, I don't know, just it just it
just bothers me. It just bothers me.
Speaker 2 (31:16):
Tom Tillis should keep in mind that Donald Trump now
has won his state by margins. He has never been
able to touch twice. All right. Obviously in Pennsylvania there
was a gap between the top of the ticket and
down ballid Republicans. Trump outperformed everybody. There's a reason for that.
We know from the polling. We went over this in
great detail. In the Great Lake States and the mid
(31:36):
Atlantic and even in New England, his support and the
Make America Healthy Again movement was a significant part of
that coalition. He won Michigan, one of the states where
we identified and we said, look, there are pockets and
Kennedy's supporters, and here the top five states, and guess what,
Michigan was one of them. And what happened. Michigan, the
state that everyone thought was the hardest of the big
(31:59):
three to in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan turned out to
vote for Donald Trump at a higher rate than even Wisconsin,
at a larger margin than even Wisconsin. And I'm telling
you that coalition had a big to do a big
hand in that. Mike Rogers, he fell short, right, Why
the National Republican Senatorial Committee should would do good to
(32:22):
keep this into consideration. There was a downvalid candidate in Wisconsin.
But guess what, there were third party ballots at the
presidential level two and Trump still won. So Arikovida fell short.
Why it's nothing against Arrakovida. He didn't really have a record.
Mike Rodgers did right, Sam Brown, he fell short for
numerous reasons. But here's the bottom line. There are voters
(32:42):
in that coalition they're not sure if they can trust
the Republican senators. And every single day they know they
can trust Trump. But every single day when these Republican
senators pull this crap, they're giving these voters another reason
to validate their skepticism of them. They don't. They're not
(33:03):
going to be transmutated or actually just like transposed from
Trump voters to Republican voters. That's not going to happen.
These people have got to make a decision if they
want to win them over. Are those donors and those
lobbyists more important, and you know it, should they be
given more wheat than the actual voter. And here's for
(33:24):
people who say, well, of course rich, that's who pays
the bills, that's who runs their campaigns. Here's what I'd
have to say to them, that really doesn't matter if
you don't have a damn voter base, all right, so
they can give you all the money under the God's
great you know sky, it doesn't matter if you can't
win a winning coalition.
Speaker 3 (33:43):
If camp I got, I got the Ron Johnson sound,
the great good he's part. He's listening and watching, listen
to the show, logs into the studio and uploads the
sound for me. This guy's a prime man. First time listeners, viewers,
this is the producer, the producer extraordinary for the Great
Wendy Bell on our show from nine to twelve. If
(34:04):
you're not following and subscribing over on the Wendy Belt radio,
So you definitely need to do it. But check out
this Ron Johnson sound at the sound that Rich Barris
was referencing earlier.
Speaker 5 (34:15):
Bobby, this is an answer to my prayers. We need
to get to the answers of this, but even more,
we need to heal and unify this divided nation. I'm
not necessarily the most optimistic guy, because we've got enormous
challenges facing this nation. But I thought, wow, here's somebody
from the left, somebody I don't agree with on many
(34:37):
issues politically, coming together with President Trump and focusing on
an area of agreement, something that the American people desperately
want finding out the answers what has caused autism? What
is causing chronic illness? Miss Kennedy, I know. I think
(35:03):
I've come to know what's in your heart.
Speaker 3 (35:06):
I think I know.
Speaker 5 (35:07):
The personal and political price you've paid for this decision.
I want to say publicly, I thank you for that.
I truly appreciate what you're doing here. Can't we come
together as a nation and do this?
Speaker 3 (35:30):
Can we do?
Speaker 5 (35:31):
Aren't you?
Speaker 3 (35:32):
Aren't you getting tired of this? I'm getting tired of this.
Speaker 5 (35:36):
So again, Miss Kennedy, I need to enter in the record.
This is just These are just eleven letters of support
signed by sixty three thousand people, thousands of doctors from
the American Association, Association, American Physicians and Surgeons, Independent Medical Alliance,
the North Carolina Physicians and Freedom Group, Governor Jeff Landry
(35:58):
from Louisiana. These are Americans, nonpartisan. A lot of a
lot of these people, I know because I've advocated with you,
A lot of them are Democrats. They put their political
differences asiety. So miss Chairman, I would like to nder
this in the record.
Speaker 3 (36:16):
Wow that I'm so glad, Thank you ROX for doing that.
But that was powerful because you know, Rich, it encapsulates
how I feel about RFK. I don't like, and I
think it speaks volumes of our movement, the America First Movement.
I just and I'm not talking about traditional Republicanism. I'm
talking about truck Republican Party. Yes, like are we want
(36:40):
to solve the problems that are set before us today.
It's not about the Republican answer or the Democrat answer.
It's about the right answer. And yes, and in the left,
you know, man, they just don't freaking get it. They
are partisan hack liars. And I mean that they just
disgust me and and their approach to issues a perfect
(37:04):
example of that of of of of just their lies
and hoaxes, or how they reacted to this federal funding
free saying it would freeze in titlements and Medicare, Medicaid
meals on wheels. All that was a complete lie, all
a complete lie. But they did it because they help them.
They thought that it would help them hurt President Trump,
(37:26):
and that sickens me. Man. And they're questions. By the way,
during this hearing, I'm sorry, Like I got two sound
bites that I want you to listen to because I
just want to, like, I want your reaction to them,
but I also just want to make fun of them
because they're just idiots. But listen to the SoundBite between RFK. Yeah,
listen to the sound bite between r f K and
Liz Warren.
Speaker 1 (37:45):
I'll comply with all the ethical God, that's not the
question you and I you have.
Speaker 3 (37:51):
You're asking me. You're asking me, not.
Speaker 2 (37:56):
Company.
Speaker 1 (37:57):
Yeah you are, No, that's exactly you're doing.
Speaker 2 (38:00):
Hell, look, no one should be fooled here of HHS.
Speaker 7 (38:07):
Robert Kennedy will have the power to undercut vaccines and vaccine.
Speaker 3 (38:12):
Yeah, blah blah blah. You know what, She's taken over
five million dollars from Big Farmer.
Speaker 2 (38:16):
I was just gonna say she will big Farmers d today.
This woman who wants us to believe that she's some
champion to the consumer. Do you remember that she is
the author of the Consumer Protection Bureau And here she
is making sure that vaccine companies can hurt you in
any way, shape or form they want, and they have
(38:38):
hacks like her to force their product on you.
Speaker 8 (38:41):
To create a fake a fake market for their product,
a fake need that it doesn't doesn't arise naturally, to
carve one out and then make you take it all
because they give her money.
Speaker 2 (38:56):
Her care for the voter and the consumer is about
what is real. As the Native American DNA she claims
to have running through her veins.
Speaker 3 (39:05):
She is so full of shit. And by the way,
I just want to say I said, I don't know
why it took me a little while to dono me.
I'm like, damn, nice work, well dude.
Speaker 2 (39:14):
And I just want to say this about Johnson because
like she's a perfect example of what Johnson was just
talking about and why manga does appeal and did appeal
to so many different kinds of people, black, white, young, old,
you know, working class, upper middle class, with everyone everyone.
This time, it's because of that exhaustion he was talking about.
(39:35):
They're exhausted with that bullshit. They're sick of that bullshit.
The four freedoms pull that we did, which I again
mocked more than two and more than two in ten,
one in five Americans said that they uh know someone
personally right, someone close to them is how we phrased it,
(39:57):
or they themselves who suffered a severe adverse effect from
the COVID nineteen vaccine. Less than half of the country
believes that it is safe and effective. And this woman's
going on, so this is the worst part about They're
acting as if these people deserve the credibility that they're
lending to right. This is an organization that oversees departments
(40:19):
and agencies that took bribes from Purdue to allow them
to claim oxy cotton was less addictive than other opiates
on the market. That fat slav piece of shit after
taking that bribe, then six months later spent most of
his days in the pool at Purdue Pharmasts, staring at Hooters.
(40:40):
These people are not some kind of above reproach class
of people who care only about the science and not
of money. No, it turns out they're faud they're fallible,
just like the rest of us. Sean, they love money
just like the rest of us, you know, and they
pretend like they're better. They pretend I call them expert lies.
(41:00):
All of these things we keep hearing about. They also
brought up conspiracy theories, right, otherwise known as expert lies.
Something that turns out to be true six months down
the road. They call a conspiracy theory that once was
brought to us and sold to us as expert truth,
and they actually turned out to be just nothing but
expert lies. Six months later, they're no longer conspiracy theories.
(41:22):
They're the truth, and they're just they're the truth that
we uncovered and found out that those experts that she's
holding up to be so so you know, so believable
and so credible, actually ended up just being a common
Line's a good point.
Speaker 3 (41:35):
It's such a good point about the whole expert lies thing.
And and I'm reminded of this segment between Dan Crenshaw
and Caitlyn Collins on CNN. Caitlyn Collins is like berating
him about you know, trans folks in the military and
how I mean. Crenshaw's basically saying his point is, they're
absolutely non deployable. You get a surgery, a gender altering surgery,
(41:58):
a gender altered We're arguing here, well, yeah, twelve months
of heavy narcotics and then on all these hormones absolutely
makes you non deployable. And she goes, she goes, well,
you're not a doctor. Shouldn't those decisions be made by
a doctor. I'm like, why do I need a doctor
to tell me what is blatantly tell us an expert lie,
(42:19):
to tell us an expert lie. And that's exactly how
they try to write a book.
Speaker 2 (42:23):
Expert lines, I should write a book because I got
I'm serious, I should. I should gather up all the
bs that they've ever taught us, all these experts ever
told us that turned out to be just pure bullshit.
Doctor Foci Fauci is constantly celebrated.
Speaker 3 (42:37):
You'll hear him get accolades.
Speaker 2 (42:38):
Going back to the AIDS epidemic in the National Institute
of Health kept less toxic drugs out of the hands
of patients who tried to obtain them illegally and elifitedly.
Speaker 3 (42:50):
So they could push doctor.
Speaker 2 (42:51):
Fauci's friend's toxic AZT on the population while they all died. Like,
this is unbelievable, Sean, that we relive this and rewrite
the history of it all. It's it's truly unbelievable. And
those those other drugs that you know that they they fought,
I mean, there's no other word. They fought and prevented
people to get later on ended up being standard treatments
(43:14):
and they had to reduce AZT because it was toxic
and killing people.
Speaker 3 (43:18):
So like this is and they celebrate him for it.
Speaker 2 (43:21):
They celebrate him for it, Sean, while people were being
tested like guinea pigs so his friends could make money.
There's a recent example of them doing just that with
their stupid viral pill that cost two thousand dollars a
pop for COVID that did not work. It didn't work,
and as it turns out, something cheap and I don't know,
if don't want to get chine, oh you're not on YouTube,
(43:42):
I don't have to worry about. As it turns out,
remdesippear didn't do shit, did it right? And you could
have just taken hydroxychloroicoin for three bucks a pill instead,
and you probably would have ended up with the same,
if not better results as it turns out after all right,
And by the way, ivermechan is not a horse based
all right, Like, I mean, this is another expert lie.
(44:03):
Fifty one intelligence agencies said that Biden's laptop is Russian
propaganda expert.
Speaker 3 (44:09):
Lie.
Speaker 2 (44:09):
Right, I mean, this is routine in our lifestyle or
our way of life. It's routine. I don't know when
we put this professional class, I don't care what they're
from the healthcare industry to the financial sector, the military life.
When did we put these so called experts up on
a pedestal to tell us things that a common sense
(44:32):
could you could deduce through common sense. No other illness,
even one that would be genetic, would be tolerated, putting
you out and making you just completely non deployable like
they have for you know, transgender surgeries in the military.
You could catch something legit, folks, you could have something
genetically wrong with you. They are not gonna let you
(44:54):
sit without being deployed or without being usable for you're
in the military. They're gonna put your ass out on
the street with a medical dish charge. But no man.
The experts tell us otherwise with transgender, you know, trans
generally make it a civil rights issue, and all of
a sudden they expect to be paying somebody for thirteen
fourteen months for doing nothing in the US military. Like
that doesn't happen with anybody else, nobody else.
Speaker 3 (45:17):
I agree with you.
Speaker 2 (45:19):
You give me six months to rehabilitate a friggin femur. Yeah,
it's it, Emerald Net Technically, it's really, it's really, You're
absolutely right, and like, okay, you're the other piece of
sound from the RFK hearing that was just equally absurd
to all the stuff that you just laid out so perfectly.
Speaker 3 (45:39):
By the way, was just I've been laughing about this
since it happened. Seriously, two things, folks, I want you
to listen to the sound bite, but if you're watching
the show, I want you to look in the background
to the left of RFK as he's being asked these
questions by Bernie Sanders. I know, watch.
Speaker 7 (46:03):
Supplortive all these onesies.
Speaker 1 (46:04):
I'm supportive of vaccines.
Speaker 3 (46:06):
Are you supportive of.
Speaker 7 (46:07):
These this clothing which is miligantly anti vaccine?
Speaker 1 (46:12):
I am supportive of vaccines. I will I want good
science and I want to protect.
Speaker 3 (46:18):
But you will knock help. Just listen to it again.
It's amazing supportive.
Speaker 1 (46:24):
Of these ones HEAs I'm supportive of vaccines.
Speaker 7 (46:26):
Are you supportive of these this clothing which is miligantly
anti vaccine supportive of vaccines?
Speaker 3 (46:34):
Will are you supportive of these onesies? I'm thinking to him, you.
Speaker 2 (46:40):
Do Trump, You do a lot of people.
Speaker 3 (46:43):
Good bro here like thinking, I'm thinking I'm watching a
few good men while prosecutors asking did you order the
code red? But he's not support these one days. Yeah
he's not. He's asking about a onondies. You're damn right,
I support these ones I mean, what the hell is happening?
(47:03):
And in the background to the left of RFK, so RFK,
in the middle of that line of questioning, starts laughing
to himself. But then you could see Megan Kelly back
there just breaking down because these Democrats are just so
absurdly stupid. I don't care what anyone says. They're fundamentally
unserious people. They have no answers for the American people.
(47:27):
And I mean, seriously, somebody in Bernie Sanders office blew
up those onesies and made poster boards out of them
so they can be shown in a Senate hearing. Well,
he while he grills RFK Junior about onesies, I mean,
are you Johnson bro?
Speaker 2 (47:42):
That was Johnson and Johnson. They're pushing making sure they
get their money's worth from that senator, and he took over.
Speaker 3 (47:50):
He took one and a half million.
Speaker 2 (47:52):
From I think that onesie, brother, I think that onesie
is the same onesie from the from the Liquid Champo
campaign they push. It looks like the same color and everything.
I mean, I wouldn't even be surprised if they just
copied and pasted that on top of the ones they
used for that that marketing campaign. Look, there was one
time where he was I showed this as a clip
(48:14):
a part of it anyway, as a clip where because
I was trying to find an example where they weren't unserious, right,
and maybe there was a clip where we can give
people an example of a legitimate intellectual debate. And then
here's the kicker about it. Though, it was a debate
over whether or not RFK believed that healthcare was a
human right. And here's the you know, first of all,
(48:36):
I'll get into why I don't really believe he was
being honest about that. It's just a talking point to
get to the you know, it's just a talking point
to help achieve the same goal as the real motive,
which is protect big pharma. Right. So he goes on
and on and RFK gives him the not typical left,
not typical right wing answer about why he does not
(48:57):
think that healthcare is a human right. And Bernie Sanders
wasn't used to getting that. He's used to cut him off,
and he tried to cut him off, right. But here's
the kicker. Anyway, that question's totally irrelevant because as you know,
and you know Pete, so he went through the process.
I'm sure somebody explained to you the standard, the standard
for US Senators to vote whether to confirm or not
(49:17):
confirm a president's cabinet pick has nothing really to do
with a difference of opinion. It's whether or not they're qualified,
and he is eminently qualified to do this job. That's it.
That is the standard. Or of course, whether they did
something and they hold a view that is like anti
antithetical to like, you know, us, the US system, like
(49:40):
the way we do right and by the way, like
Lloyd Austin not believing in civilian control of the military
is absolutely a disqualified absolutely all right. I mean that's
a disqualifying view. But thinking that healthcare is not a
human right because if you burden, you know, unfairly burden
this system by smoking for thirty forty years, and then
(50:00):
you want free healthcare because it's a universal right. You know,
he twisted that I'm burning and burning didn't know what
to do it.
Speaker 3 (50:06):
He didn't know what to do. You didn't know what
because like that's the.
Speaker 2 (50:09):
Left wing interpretation of why it's not. But you're right,
I mean, really rich, brilliant.
Speaker 3 (50:15):
He turned it around on him and and he's he's
fundamentally correct. So when Obamacare gets past, I'm a young
thirty something, I'm a young thirty something. Now I'm forced
to buy healthcare monthly that's super expensive. Otherwise I have
to pay a fee to sharadize somebody. Yeah, to subsidize
(50:37):
somebody who is, you know, perhaps older, perhaps smoked their
whole life, or maybe was unhealthy. It just didn't seem
fair to me at the time. And I think that's
why RFK made the point and his hearing that people
are very, very very unhappy with Obamacare and would rather
be on private insurance if they can afford it.
Speaker 2 (50:59):
And the right wing for people who don't know the difference.
I mean, we just explained what he said. That's more
like a left wing fairness issue or populist fairness issue.
And that's Bernie's language. And yet he wasn't expecting it
to be hurled at him, so he just tried to
cut him off and redirect because he didn't know what
to do with that. But the right wing, typical right
wing answer to it not being a human right is
(51:22):
because you cannot tell a doctor or a physician who
did a spend he put the eight years of his
time probably financial resources into getting that profession right, the
ability to practice medicine, you can't now tell him that
he's not allowed to charge or be compensated for his
(51:42):
labor right. And so that's why it's not a human right,
because you cannot force that man to do work for nothing,
or woman to do that work for nothing, to practice
his trade, to practice his craft for nothing. That's like
indentured servitude or slavery.
Speaker 3 (51:59):
Right. The only way.
Speaker 2 (52:00):
Bernie can get around that is by saying, but the
government pays for it. The government's going to compensate him.
And that was why it was so brilliant that RFK
just did what he did, because you're now saying the
government should just compensate everyone, willy nilly for treating a
guy who was not a good collectivist. He was an
unfair burden on the system. He smoke for forty years,
he poisoned the pool, you know. So that's Bernie talk.
(52:23):
That's speaking of Bernie in his own language. And he
just didn't know what to do with it.
Speaker 3 (52:26):
He knows what to do.
Speaker 2 (52:27):
With the right wing answer. He knows, and he's practiced
and he's ready, but he is not ready for what
RFK threw at him, which was just beautiful. And I'm
watching it and I'm like, don't do it, don't do it,
don't do it. And then i saw him going that way,
going a different way, and I'm like, oh, wow, that
was good, because honestly, I probably would have fallen into
that trap. I would have went the right wing way,
(52:49):
you know what.
Speaker 3 (52:50):
You know, what else is kind of crazy is that
we got a lot and from Cortes Masto, senator from Nevada,
was asking questions about like are you to obey trum?
Are you are you, Yeah, definitely, definitely, But it's like
more of like, are you just going to be a
rubber stamp for Trump? Are you just going to like
just listen to everything Trump says? And I keep thinking
to myself, the American people elected Trump. They elected Donald
(53:16):
Trump because they want his agenda implement. It doesn't mean
you have to be a yes man. But what the
Democrats are pushing these cabinet nominees to say is that
they will disobey Trump. They will they will not move
forward with the agenda that Trump was elected to put
in place. That whole point, and ultimately, to me, every
(53:39):
time I hear it, it's an insult to the American
people who put Trump there.
Speaker 2 (53:43):
It is because then we've talked about this before. He
is an extension of their sovereignty. The voter is the sovereign. Collectively,
we are the sovereign. We have no other representative in
the executive branch other than the president. He or she
right when she is elected. Isn't it extension of our sovereignty?
And then they pick their cabinet, they fill their government,
(54:05):
and they act on our behalf. What the Democratic senators
are asking all of these nominees is will you, you know,
not acknowledge that the voter is sovereign? And will you
engage in sedition? I mean that is what they exactly
come out and say it. Are you willing to engage
in sedition? I cannot honestly believe that not one of
(54:27):
Trump's I mean, who would think they'd ask you such
a question, you know, But now that we have seen
them ask it over and over again, I am dying
for somebody, hopefully it's Tulsi or something, and just come
out and saying, senator, are you asking me to subvert
the will of the US voter and the exactly where
and they're duly elected representative? Are you asking me whether
(54:49):
or not I agree with the fundamentals of democracy and
self governance because what you're talking about is not self governance.
What you're talking about is a bureaucratic tier that comes
out like a wellspring of of fascism, which is what
you guys preach day in and day out with this bullshit.
I mean, they can leave that part off, but you
(55:10):
know what I'm saying, but like, yeah, the first part
they should absolutely say absolutely. And by the way, the
ripe better get very familiar with this term. Fascism. It's
not corporatism. There's no corporatist wing of the Democratic Party.
That is a nice, new shiny word. They repackage factism.
It's like every year for Christmas, somebody gets the gift
they don't want to get. Maybe they try to pass
(55:32):
it off next Christmas to somebody else. It's the same
shitty gift nobody wants. They just put a new shiny
paper on it. All corporatism is is shiny paper, new
shiny paper. It was last year's shitty fascism that nobody
wanted making the rounds again. Come on, people don't fall
into their vernacular. And speaking of vernacular, you know what's crazy.
(55:55):
The last thing a second. They constantly were calling him
conspiracy theorists, and till the Scub honestly did well with this,
and he said, do you believe in any conspiracy theories? Right?
Do you are you a conspiracy theorist in anything? Or
have you pushed something that ended up being a conspiracy theory?
And it was he wasn't being saying it to be
a prick. He was saying it to RFK could literally
(56:16):
say nothing I pushed ended up being a conspiracy theory
and The ironic part about all of this is that
the term conspiracy theory to mean what we know it today,
did not show up in the American vernacular until The
New York Times began to use it in their coverage
of people, particularly alternative investigators, who did not believe the
(56:41):
commission investigating his uncle's assassination. And now they're using it.
It's almost insulting. Now they're taking that a great point.
It was like, no, if you didn't believe the Warrant Comission,
you're a conspiracy theorist, right. If you didn't believe the
government's official account of the assassination of Jail, which of
course whitewash their participation in it. If you don't believe that,
(57:04):
you're a conspiracy theorist, right. And now they have the
audacity to use this as a course with negative connotations
to attack his nephew. It's it's just unbelievable. Some stuff
is like unserious and laughable, Sean, and even pathetic, Like
(57:24):
you know that we cannot rise to the occasion and
fix some of these or at least there's a big
part of the government that's fighting our ability to do that,
like you said before, like that's the difference between MAGA
and everything else. And then there's just a eubris that's
just so insulting. You know, it actually is insulting, and
I cannot believes to the point of it's like offensive.
(57:47):
It's an insult that really offends. This is a term
you created to whitewash his uncle's murder, and now you're
using it to attack him. It's honestly, by the way,
because what Wyden did was leave off that six six
year old cut off because I know that case. Barnes
was on the case too, that was dealing with the
(58:09):
ability to prevent mandates on for the COVID vaccine with
six years and younger, and you brought that up there.
You pushed his conspiracy theory and tried to take vaccines
from people. It's just so it's so offensive, It really.
Speaker 3 (58:21):
Is so savage. Rich, tell us where we can find you.
Speaker 2 (58:26):
It's that time already, isn't it.
Speaker 3 (58:27):
Oh, it's always like so it's it goes so fast.
Speaker 2 (58:32):
Best places always is on locals, Brother, People's pundit dot
locals dot com, People's Pundit dot locals dot com.
Speaker 3 (58:39):
All right, anything on deck for you and savage Laura,
This weekend.
Speaker 2 (58:42):
Oh, you know, the usual, the usual.
Speaker 3 (58:46):
Maybe drive around the subaru, maybe hit lows. I don't know,
if we have time.
Speaker 2 (58:50):
I was thinking we'll snug in our Lululemon together, curl up,
watch the notebook or something.
Speaker 3 (58:55):
You know.
Speaker 2 (58:58):
No, you know, brother, work work as always. The administration
keeps us on our toes, doesn't he. I mean, don't
they all. I mean that's the difference between the Trump
administration and anything else. And I'm not saying Bush June
like w was lazy, certainly wasn't, but like Obama was
a lazy dude. Bill Clinton was effective, but he was
a little lazy. Got up late, came to that. This
(59:20):
guy just keeps going. Bro, it never ends, it never ends,
and he keeps showing your toes. You're ready for a
show an hour before it, and you got to change
the whole sit.
Speaker 3 (59:31):
Now, That's what I was saying. At the top of
the show. I'm like, it's amazing, Like there's so much
stuff happening, you know, in order to cover all of it,
you have to like move quickly, you know, because there's
always something new breaking.
Speaker 2 (59:43):
Yeah, it's fun, though, like I said, the media hates
it because they are lazy and you saw them today
with all of their pre printed headlines in broh, yeah,
ready to go.
Speaker 3 (59:55):
This is who they are.
Speaker 2 (59:56):
It's a perfect example. That's that's who they are, that's
what they do, that's their system.
Speaker 3 (01:00:02):
Have a great week with my friend. I'll see you
soon YouTube brother of yours, all right, take care of
my friend. That's Savage Fritz Barris, the best polster in
the business. Definitely go follow, subscribe People's Pundit on Rumble.
It's a great show inside the numbers. Definitely subscribe to
them on locals too, if you can. You get first
look at all of this new polling. And he was
(01:00:24):
the most accurate polster of twenty twenty four. We have
him on the show every single Wednesday for well over
a year now. He's the best, and there's a reason
why we have him on. So definitely support Savage Rich Barris.
All Right, folks, smash that like button, that little gray
thumb beneath the video. When you smash it, it turns green.
That when it turns green, it propels us to the
(01:00:45):
leader board. Smash that like button on your way out,
and as always, folks, that's it for Battleground Live. God
bless you all, and God bless this amazing country that
we call home. Take care, good night and I will
see you on Thursday. Have a good night.