Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
Morning. You're about to enter the arena and join the Battle.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
To Save America with your host, Sean Parnell.
Speaker 1 (00:14):
Good evening, America, Welcome battle crew. This is Battleground Live,
the show where we lock horns with the radical left,
where we kick ass and take names. We never quit,
we never surrender. I'm your host, Sean Parnell, combat Vet,
New York Times bestselling author. And more importantly than both
(00:35):
of those things is that I'm a humble servant of America.
I love this country. So before we get into Savage Wednesday,
we've got Savage Rich Barris on deck, the director of
Big Data poll and the host of a great show
on Rumble called Inside the Numbers. He's gonna help us
(00:56):
break down what happened during the debate last night. And
if you follow Savage Rich Barris on Twitter or X again,
I don't know what the hell to call it now,
but if you follow him on Twitter, you could tell
that Savage Rich was particularly savage last night on X
(01:19):
as the debate was going on. So I can't wait
to hear about that and discuss the debate with Savage Rich,
and not just the debate breakdown. What I like to
do for all of you is give you a sense
of where the American people are right now and what
this race looks like today moving forward. So we'll react
to debate. We'll talk about the debate, but I also
(01:41):
want to do something that's a little bit forward looking
for you as well, because that's just what I try
to do. Before I get in too much to the show.
Make sure you smash that like button, that little green
thumb beneath the video. We have been making the leaderboard
on Rumble and the top fifty shows on Rumble, which
is amazing estimate to you. This show is yours. It
(02:03):
always will be, you know, Small You know the battle Crew,
Parnell's Platoon. We're not quite to where Bongino Army is
yet and probably won't be for quite some time, but
we got ourselves a little platoon and we're certainly happy
about that. Before I get into all of this, folks
and the politics of the day, please allow me to
(02:28):
spend a little bit of time on the twenty third
anniversary of September eleventh. You know, after twenty three years,
you think it would be easier for me, and I
don't know where you all are on this, but I
know that you likely remember exactly where you were, what
(02:52):
you were wearing, what you had for breakfast, who you
had conversations with, what the weather was like, what you
did that day. We all do. And for me, you know,
I think I've told many of you all my story
before about my day, what my day was like on
September eleventh, But for the we've got lots of new viewers,
(03:13):
I'll just tell you. You know, I was a sophomore
and a small college in western Pennsylvania called Clarion University.
I had no idea what I wanted to do with
my life none. I was an average student, barely a
best student, probably drank too much, was very listless, didn't
really have a mission. Felt like I was meandering my
way through life. And then I remember waking up with
(03:35):
a hangover on this rundown college couch in this run
down college apartment, and I remember sitting up in the
world was spinning and staggering over to the television set
and turning it on and watching it flicker to life,
just in time to see an airplane crash into the
World Trade Center. And in that moment, I was really scared.
(03:56):
I was shaken to my core. I was afraid I
was even more than those things that I was angry,
and looking back on that time, I had just had
a conversation with my friends college buddies the night before
about how my generation grew up in the eighties, at
(04:17):
our childhood during the eighties and teenage years in the nineties,
we didn't really have anything that tested us as a
generation of young men. And we all discussed that the
night before, and then September eleventh happens, and I'm watching
all of this unfold on our television set, and the
towers collapsing and people jumping from the windows to their deaths.
(04:42):
I remember people staggering out of the wreckage, covered from
head to toe and thick gray soot. Only thing you
could see your bloodshot eyes and a thousand yards stare.
But to this day, what I remember the most were
the first responders, police officers and firefighters or beat cops,
(05:02):
people who ran to flames and ran into flames instead
of running away from them. And take it from me,
you know a lot of the men that I served
with in the infantry in Afghanistan were people who I mean,
you grew up on a farm, spent their life outside hunting.
I mean, I was an outdoorsy type kid, but I
(05:23):
couldn't hold a candle to some of the people that
were in my platoon. They these people were true outdoorsmen.
I was just a city kid from western Pennsylvania. I
didn't come from a long line of military generals or
senior non commissioned officers or military leaders in my family
at all. I was just a kid from western Pennsylvania
(05:46):
that was righteously pissed off in the wake of the
worst terrorist attack in our nation's history. And last night,
during the debate, and again we'll get into the debate
here in a little bit with Savage Rich. Last night,
Kamala Harris said that the January sixth protest was worse
(06:08):
than nine to eleven. And she did that on the
eve of September eleventh. In any other election cycle, one
would think that would be disqualifying. As I was on
the road this morning taking my son to school. And
(06:32):
as you get older, and as your kids grow, and
as you encounter challenges and raising your kids, you know,
being a father, being a mother, and being a grandparent,
I'm sure as an experience in and of itself, but
life teaches you little things along the way. As I
mentioned earlier in the week, kids don't come with a handbook,
(06:52):
you know, And you look at nine to eleven in
these terrorist attacks and how it galvanized the generation to
serve this country. People went to war in Afghanistan first,
then Iraq. I've mentioned many times on this show exactly
how I feel about this endless state of war America
finds ourselves in look back over the last twenty year
(07:15):
war in Iraq, war in Afghanistan. What do we have
to show for it? Do I think it was worth it?
Absolutely not, having lost thirty of my friends fighting in
the war in Afghanistan because my battalion we would deploy
to Afghanistan, come home, deploy to Afghanistan, come home, deployed
it and so lost a lot of my buddies over there,
thirty of them. And I talked to Commander Melanie, my wife,
(07:37):
about this all the time, and I say to her
sometimes it's hard to it seems surreal even to me
that I've lost so many people that I love dearly
in support of a war in Afghanistan where we have
nothing to show for it now. And don't get me
wrong for a second, you know how I feel about
these wars. But don't get me wrong, I'm very proud
(07:59):
of my so nervis there. I'm very proud of my soldiers,
my men, my troops who fought for one another, bled
the ground red in Afghanistan. But I look at September
eleventh through the eyes of somebody who with the benefit
of hindsight, with the benefit of somebody who fought and
bled in those wars, who led men during the war
(08:23):
in Afghanistan, and now somebody who's in the political arena,
having run for office twice and seeing the fallout from
the terrible policy decisions, foreign policy decisions made by Democrats
and Republicans that left us with nothing to show for
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, but tens of thousands
(08:45):
of Americans wounded, hundreds of thousands of Americans suffering from
the invisible wounds of war. Come back from war. War
changes you, and then probably millions of American families who
are also struggling to deal with what it's like to
come home from war. And that's why I get personally
offended when these moron mouth breathing Democrat and Republican politicians
(09:08):
are so frivolous with America's sons and daughters in that. Hey, well,
let's just send American troops to Ukraine. Keep the beast there. Oh,
you know what, let's just send a destroyer group. Let's
just send a carrier group to the Middle East. It'll
be fine. Oh, who gives a shit that Russia has
nuclear weapons. I'm sure it'll be fine. We're America, after all, America.
Sons and daughters are our most precious natural resource, and
(09:30):
our politicians need to start freaking acting like it. And
the reason why I think nine to eleven. I started
off the conversation by saying that it hasn't gotten easier
with time for me. And what I mean by that,
I was taking my youngest to school. And I've got
five kids, in case you don't know, I've got a
(09:52):
senior who is seventeen and driving, I've got a fifteen
year old. I've got two thirteen year olds and eleven
year old. And I'm driving the eleven year old to
school today and we're listening to some morning show and
you know, at the time that the first plane crashed
into the World Trade Center, you know, we're on the
road taking my son to his bus stop, and they
(10:12):
start playing a compilation a compilation of soundbites that happened
on the morning of September eleventh, and just news anchors,
radio personalities just reacting to the horror of what was happening.
And then they started splicing in. You know, nine one
one calls firefighters on the radio and you could tell
that they're out of breath because they're storming up the steps.
(10:34):
And then the phone calls of family members who were
either trapped in the towers or trapped on an airplane,
knowing that they weren't going to make it. And to
this day, I struggle a lot with hearing that because
it just pisses me off so much, and knowing the
foreign policy decisions that followed nine to eleven, it's just
(10:57):
much more personal for me now because back then it
was like you know, and I'm sure my parents who
are listening to this probably felt a lot of the
same things that I do now. And boy, life comes
full circle in very strange ways. Yes, I know, mom
and Dad, but now you think about things differently when
you have kids. And I shuddered to think what will
happen when this country experiences and I hope it never happens,
(11:20):
but another September eleventh type experience where now my children
will have to be wrapped up in whatever our foreign
policy response is. But as I'm driving my son to school,
my son, who is eleven, is just listening to these
sound bites of the sounds of the day on September
eleventh in the morning, and he's just got he's just
(11:40):
wide eyed, he's just completely captured by it. And he
turns to me with these wide eyes and he's like, Dad,
you lived through all of this. You saw this happen.
And I said, yeah, how I saw it. That's why
I joined the military. I was inspired by the first
responders who ran into those flames that day. I thought, like,
(12:01):
how can I sit here or not and do nothing
while these people, you know, they're storming up the steps
of flaming buildings and many of them aren't even coming
out to hug, you know, hug their loved one. Ever again,
they didn't come out alive. And he was shocked by that.
He was just like you could tell he was just
enthralled by it. And I guess the reason why it's
(12:22):
difficult for me and it's still so emotionally resonant for me,
is because the benefit of hindsight looking back and seeing
that we really have nothing to show for. Yeah, we
got bin Laden, but what else do we get for?
Nine to eleven really changed the world in so many
profound ways. Minute set me on a path that I
never thought i'd walk right, join the military, go to Afghanistan,
(12:48):
fight it wounded, come home, broke and broke, and have
to rebuild my life. It really was an unbelievable time,
and I just I just want to make sure that
we give some time it just to like reflect, thought, prayer,
if that's your thing, whatever. Just think about the lives
that the American lives that we lost that day, you know,
(13:10):
say a prayer for them. Think about their families who
are now living with a permanent void in their life
because of someone that they lost that day. Think of
the American America sons and daughters who rose up to
volunteer to fight, knowing that they were going to go
to war, yet volunteered anyway. Think about them, Think about
their families, you know, think about those who never came home.
(13:32):
Because we can never ever forget September eleventh. We just can't.
Twenty three years later. Okay, let me take a quick
break and these uncertain times, rising crime in America's neighborhoods
endangers the safety of loved ones. Nearly fifty years ago,
with just two hundred and twenty eight dollars their entire savings,
(13:52):
Saber's founders set out to make the world safer today.
Saber is the number one eight in the USA pepper
spray brand, trusted by law enforcement and families across America.
As a family owned business, they understand the importance of
protecting your loved ones, introducing the Saber pepper Projectile Launcher,
(14:16):
a less lethal, fast loading, non recoil solution delivering powerful
stopping power up to one hundred and seventy five feet.
The real advantage even if you miss it, creates a
six foot pepper cloud causing intense sensory irritation which can
overwhelm anyone in its path, giving you and your family
(14:38):
the opportunity to protect yourselves and your home. But Saber
doesn't stop there. In addition to their pepper spray in
pepper gel, Saber offers stun guns for personal protection, bear
and Mountain Lion spray for outdoor adventures. They also provide
essential home security items like door security bars and door
(15:01):
and window alarms for securing your entry ways. Protect yourself
and your family with Sabers full range of defense sprays,
home security tools, and exclusive launcher bundles. Visit Saberradio dot com,
s a b R Radio dot com or call eight
(15:21):
four four eight two four safe today. That's eight four
four eight two four Safe. I got to get my
buddy Savage, Rich Barrison, who is the director of Big
Data Poll and the host of Inside the Numbers. Rich,
before we get into all of the stuff about the
(15:42):
debate and the politics of where the race is now,
I got to ask you, as somebody who also served
this country, where were you on nine to eleven? Tell
us your story if you don't mind.
Speaker 2 (15:54):
I was living.
Speaker 3 (15:56):
I mean, first of all, I lived in a neighborhood
where many people. Yeah, I'm a little bit laggy, and
I apologize about that, but uh, yeah, I lived in
a neighborhood where a lot of people. Sean worked on
either Wall Street or one of my friends, you know,
his dad was a wall streeter.
Speaker 2 (16:14):
My wife's cousin was a wall streeter.
Speaker 3 (16:16):
Then I had a a friend who his father was
a union electrician. So we had neighborhoods that were directly
impacted by it. I was look, I was at work
when it happened.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
You could see.
Speaker 2 (16:28):
If you were in that part of Jersey. Yeah, it
was atrocious. You know, most people at first thought it
was like.
Speaker 3 (16:35):
Some kind of an attack, Like a lot of people
didn't know who is Sama bin Laanen was. But you
know that being said, Man, I'm listening to you, and
I'm thinking about you know what we get out of this? Sean,
all of us who decided, you know what, we're gonna
go and serve, we're gonna we're gonna go hit back.
Speaker 2 (16:50):
What did we get out of this?
Speaker 3 (16:51):
I would argue, we're in such a dramatically worse position, uh, everywhere,
everything from financial to freedom wise. I mean for generations
who are younger than us, they don't know what it's
like to live free. They don't know what it's like
to get on an airplane without having to go through
the TSA and deal with all of that crap. America
(17:14):
was a freer place. They weren't going through your metadata,
they weren't listening to every phone call that came through
the fear that they exploited using the Patriot Act. We're
in a worse place when it comes to trust in
the government. But pre nine to eleven, people trusted the government.
That's why they gave them that power. Sean, you know,
I mean, I can't so much more that I could
(17:36):
go on and on about.
Speaker 2 (17:37):
And you know people weren't.
Speaker 3 (17:39):
I mean, I would say the government they did all this,
expanded the Department of Homeland Security, we got TSA, we
got we got the ramping up of a secret surveillance
court that abuses its authority. We have agencies that are
only supposed to operate foreign you know, operating right here
at home and targeting US citizens. And they spent all
(18:01):
that money on that shit. But they weren't expecting us
to come back alive.
Speaker 2 (18:05):
I mean that's true. Let's get real. They did nothing
for the VA.
Speaker 3 (18:08):
It was in absolute shambles when everybody got home. I
have my best friend here since I moved to North
Carolina just killed himself a few weeks ago. And I
know you have friends that you've lost to this. They
were not at all prepared to deal with us. It's
the most disgusting, disgraceful betrayal that I could possibly imagine
(18:31):
happening to a generation of young men and women who decided,
you know what, I'm gonna step.
Speaker 2 (18:37):
Them up, you know, and you know the help with
George Bush. He's the worst president of our lifetime.
Speaker 1 (18:46):
It's still, you know, rich that betrayal is still happening today.
Not to get off because I would definitely we got
to talk about the debate here. But you know, I
talked to a very close friend of mine who worked
at a high level on policy, I mean talking cabinet
level type position under multiple Republican presidents, and he said,
the Biden administration has completely destroyed the VA. This is
(19:10):
the guy that broke the broke the story that the
VA was dolling out payments and given medical care to
illegal aliens crossing the border. He couldn't believe it, but
he broke the story. This is also the guy that
is telling me today on the phone that the Biden
administration has got a the mission to act and removed
veteran's choice from their healthcare. And it's also which is
(19:31):
this is going to sound crazy, but I trust this
guy with my life. Like the VA also has like
a death panels essentially where they're making medical decisions for
veter not going to get medical care because it is
probably just cheaper if you just pass away. It's just horrible.
It's just evil, and this type of shouldn't happen in America.
Speaker 2 (19:50):
And you got out.
Speaker 3 (19:51):
I mean, I don't know about you, but my personal
because of course, I mean, many of us have something
we get from the VA. Mine was an open shutcase.
They fought me for fifteen years. I had to you know,
I mean, it was just totally outrageous.
Speaker 2 (20:06):
Only when Trump gets in office, I finally get approved.
I only have healthcare right now because you know, Obambacare,
because I'm a veteran. It boxes me out of the marketplace.
I personally cannot buy private insurance for myself. It's socks,
and so I'm stuck with the VA. And the only
reason I have what I have now is because of
(20:27):
Donald Trump and his community Care.
Speaker 3 (20:29):
The reformations that he put in with the VA that
gave you community care, which you know, which is if
you can't get the VA to react here, they got
to pay for private care.
Speaker 2 (20:38):
The problem is it's worse than an HMO.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
Now.
Speaker 2 (20:41):
It was fine when Trump was in office. Now it's
worse than an h MODE. If there are doctors that
you have to see routinely, like monthly, every three months,
every six months.
Speaker 3 (20:50):
They are constantly making you put in a new request.
We need another referral, we need another referral, we need
another reffra.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
It's outrageous.
Speaker 2 (20:57):
It's a primary care doctor.
Speaker 3 (20:59):
I'm paying for these expenses out of my pocket, like
eight months out of the year and then the rest
of the year waiting to get it reimbursed.
Speaker 2 (21:07):
Since I moved and I've been here.
Speaker 3 (21:09):
What now, we're going on our fourth year, I haven't
gotten a damn dime, not a dime. I've had to
pay for prescriptions, doctor visits, you know whatever, man shots.
I mean, you name it, out of my own pocket.
Speaker 2 (21:22):
It sucks.
Speaker 1 (21:23):
It's ridiculous, man, I'm sorry I have to go through that.
I mean, it shouldn't happen in America. Okay, Rich Let's
transition talking to Savage Rich barris Let's transition to debate.
I'll give you my take. I haven't talked to anybody
about it on the show yet. Like I think that
it was not Trump's best night. I also, I also
(21:44):
do not think and I'll tell you why here in
a second, I also do not think that Kamala did
what she needed to do to move the needle in
this race in a substantive, outcome determinative way. And the
reason for that is I've got lots of reasons for this.
But what Trump needed to do was embody change that
(22:07):
he you know, who cares about the top line numbers
of polls. And I know you're probably like, well, I do,
I know, and I know I do too.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
More about insight?
Speaker 1 (22:17):
Did there? I do see what you did there? Well
played sir, Well, So I'm just talking about the environment.
You know. My point is has always been the narrative
for this campaign for Trump is writing itself. And what
I mean by that is that people are feeling the
heat where it matters most of them. That's in their
(22:37):
bank account, that's in their pocketbook. You're they're being crushed
by inflation. You know, every town is a border town.
Like what's reflected in polling is like something like the
top three issues economy, inflation, the immigration somewhere among the
top three. So in many ways, people feel that now
in a very personal way. And all Trump has to
do is just talk about it, you know, talk about
(23:00):
the people. So he needed to be that agent of change.
Kamala needed to show the American people last night, how
she was going to be different from Biden and all
the fluff. You know, she look man, she talks like
a politician, right, and and this is this is the thing.
Speaker 2 (23:17):
I think she has never really been anything else.
Speaker 1 (23:20):
Yeah, she talks like a politician. She's got these like nice,
polished gre words that really like she talks and it
sounds nice. But she didn't really say anything, right, And
she just lied up there quite a bit. But she
she couldn't answer the question, the very basic question of
our Americans better off today than they were four years ago.
She could not answer the question rich and I think
(23:43):
therefore she wasn't able to prosecute the case of the
American people of why she's going to be different than
Biden and also what she did the whole time. Now, Yes,
Trump took debate in some ways that were probably not helpful.
One example was the rally size. Melanie and I are
why the debate. She looks at me, I look at her,
(24:03):
and we both start laughing because we knew. We knew
that Trump was debate on the rally side thing. We
knew it, we knew he was gonna do it, and
sure enough he did. We were like, no, but he
took debate anyway. But my point is all she did
was a she attacked Donald Trump, and she personally insulted him.
She tried to demean him, she tried to emasculate him.
(24:26):
And I look, man, my perspective on this is that
there are not a lot of undecided voters left in
this country. I mean, I just think, like, if if
you are an independent watching that debate last night, Trump
said nothing on that stage that the independence or the
American people have not heard before. Kamala, on the other hand,
(24:52):
did a lot of unpleasant things. And man, those facial expressions. Yeah,
I'm telling you, bro, this is she's going like this, Bro,
She's going like this rich She's like like who does this?
Like who stands there? And like she's like making these faces.
But it's telling you, yeah, I'm not it's not gonna
(25:12):
play well. And I just think that the story of
the debate, obviously everyone's talking about it are the moderators.
And yeah, there are people out there saying it's a
loser's game to complain about the moderators. That feels like
Trump lost, But like, I don't think that's Like I
disagree because the American people, they sense it right. More
people are paying attention now than ever than they ever
(25:34):
have before. The American people are coming off a situation
where the media lied to them, clearly lied to them
about the state of Biden's cognitive yes man, yeah, And
so they see that the moderators were insanely biased. And
I think the story of the debate moving forward, Rich
is gonna be less about substance of Kamala, less about Trump,
(25:54):
and more about just how much the moderator sucked. Much
like the refs watching a play call in a playoff
game that that gave the game to the other team,
the story of the game becomes the blown call, not
the actual game itself. And that's where I'm at here.
And that's why I think that the that the these
focus groups Rich, That's why I think that the focus
groups like are breaking Trump strangely enough. So you, on
(26:18):
the other hand, so that I talked a lot, and
normally when I have you on, I don't like to
do that. I just like to listen to you.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
That was good for once, right, Hey, is that Laura
over there?
Speaker 1 (26:32):
It is?
Speaker 2 (26:32):
I told you he's gonna get on camera.
Speaker 1 (26:34):
Woman, get on camera. She won't do it.
Speaker 2 (26:37):
I've tried.
Speaker 1 (26:38):
Or you had a little glitzy wrist, you had jewelry
on the wrist and.
Speaker 2 (26:41):
Every seaton your little fingernail.
Speaker 1 (26:42):
This is like you know what this is like. This
is like if you watched Inspector Gadget as a kid,
like doctor Claw with just a hand. This is not there.
We always wanted to see doctor Claw's face. Now we
can't see Laura's. This is this is ridiculous. You're Wilson.
Speaker 4 (27:02):
Is that Wilson, right, Wilson, Yeah, Wilson, Yeah, yeah, yeah,
of course recently died not I think, right, So Jane
Cyril Jones died the other day.
Speaker 1 (27:13):
Yeah, don't come at me with any more downers. All right,
we need to know, you know, listen, so tell me
what you thought. Tell me, because listen, listen, let me.
Let's lay this up for the audience. You were very,
very very fired up last night during that debate, and
you and I were texting. You were very upset.
Speaker 3 (27:31):
So, I mean, listen, I don't know why anyone asked
you your opinion if they're just not going to take
the damn advice anyway. So, like you know, it really
bothers me when people and donors and campaign people like oh,
and then it's like they're surprised when what I say
comes to fruition.
Speaker 2 (27:51):
It just nothing can be more frustrating.
Speaker 3 (27:54):
First of all, let me just preface everything I'm about
to say with what I've been prefacing everything.
Speaker 2 (27:58):
But today he did not need to do this debate.
He had the momentum.
Speaker 3 (28:03):
Again and he didn't need to do it. He could
have won the debate without even debating, and simply saying
something along the lines of I already debated the legitimate
democratic nominee. I will not lend leed a credibility to
an illegitimate process and lend credibility to a process that
disenfranchised nearly fifteen million voters who voted for the legitimate
(28:26):
nominee and sitting President Joe Biden.
Speaker 2 (28:29):
She is a usurper and that is it.
Speaker 3 (28:32):
And I am not going to partake in the disruption
and destruction of our democracy, end of story. I will
defend the fifteen million people whose votes Democrats wiped their
asses with and plugged down the toilet, and that would
have been a home run. I guarantee you even some
of those people who voted for Minden would have been like, damn,
(28:52):
he's right, you know, like nobody's brought it up.
Speaker 2 (28:55):
The media sure has not even brought it up.
Speaker 3 (28:57):
It would have told those people in the middle that
Trump is a bigger man who cares about bigger things
than debating rally sizes, which is what they wanted him
to do, and he did. So let's make something very
clear right now. I'm gonna break a lot of Trump
Trump her hearts out there. Donald Trump is not the
great debater that you think he is. He's entertaining as hell,
but he is not a great debater, all right. He
(29:19):
goes up there, I could get under his skin in
a second and make him flip his shit, all right.
He is not a composed great debater, and he they
got him to do exactly what they wanted him to,
all right. That being said, he certainly was still better
than like good bide in Trump debate one, the first one.
Speaker 1 (29:37):
Yeah, that's so glad that you brought that up.
Speaker 2 (29:40):
Certainly better.
Speaker 3 (29:41):
It was not that kind of a train wreck, Sean,
all right, but he shouldn't have been there to begin with.
Speaker 2 (29:45):
Let's be real.
Speaker 3 (29:47):
Secondly, you are one hundred percent correct that she needed
a much bigger night than this.
Speaker 2 (29:52):
Let's cut the crap. She's down in her own polling
Democrats who know you know who really are in the know.
Speaker 3 (29:58):
The show is for you foaks at home all right
in the real behind closed doors, in the real world.
Democrats began to panic like crazy about a week and
a half ago because her response bias fuel lead began
to evaporate quickly. Minnesota went from ten points to five.
She's down in not only her own poll in Michigan,
(30:19):
but in the two native posters who media and everyone
go to every year, Glenn Garrev Group and Epic MRA.
And by the way, neither Polster ever had Trump up
in Michigan in either sixteen or twenty.
Speaker 2 (30:34):
So that was the that was the state of the
race going into this thing.
Speaker 3 (30:37):
So I don't understand why he just didn't lay out
what I just said and what I said to layout
and move on. So here we are now fast forward.
I understand you know what you said about the media.
I just don't like people who lament it after the
fact and then don't say anything or speak up before
you make a mistake like Trump's campaign made. All right,
(30:59):
So like I'm I'm all alone going don't debate her.
This is buld, This is a trap.
Speaker 1 (31:03):
Don't do it.
Speaker 3 (31:04):
It's David mrr, the head of NBC, the head of
ABC is personal friends with Kamala Harris. She's married because
they introduced her husband, I mean her to her husband
like it's an incestuous relationship. These are totally corrupt people,
and you are falling for it. It doesn't matter how
well he may think he did. They were looking for
(31:24):
a jut what they got last night so they can
push a BS narrative, which will then they can use
to exploit the response bias and the polls and put
out their Harris plus two to five's and everything else
for the next six weeks, which we're all gonna have
to tolerate now.
Speaker 2 (31:38):
But here's the kicker. With all that being said, I'm
a little bit surprised because I'm starting to dig into
the numbers.
Speaker 3 (31:46):
And give it a couple of days, so everything we
really know for sure. You know, you have the Ruders'
focus group that is a small sample size. Ours really
is not, and we're still working on it, but there aren't.
If Ruters isn't alone, there have been many other focus
group from media outlets to personal consultants and they're all
hearing the same thing.
Speaker 2 (32:05):
It's the headline in the New York Times right now. Yeah,
belwegh pundits, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (32:11):
Und say Harris one debate, undecided weren't so sure. Let
me read the routers you have here, some undecided voters
not convinced by Harris after debat.
Speaker 3 (32:22):
Two to one, and that that's funny because their samples
so small. But their sample looks like our sample, which
we will show everybody on Friday, and so the numbers
and our sample is not small, all right. We had
several hundred people who were undecided from the last poll
that we conducted, and we asked them, are you going
to watch the debate? Eighty eight percent about just under said.
Speaker 2 (32:41):
They were going to watch it. I don't believe it
and didn't believe it.
Speaker 3 (32:44):
We'll see if they actually did, all right, But we
asked them if they did, if they were undecided leaning
and they were going to watch the debate, we said, hey,
can we contact you the day after the debate and
ask you a few questions. And we're getting these results now,
and by the time of the show this afternoon, I'd
already see that our focus like whatever you want to
call it post debate focus poll is looking a lot
(33:05):
like Reuters.
Speaker 2 (33:06):
This is what I want to read. Two things, one
from mine, one from Reuters. If you don't mind, all right,
don't find no go go ahead Reuters.
Speaker 3 (33:12):
And I didn't get a permission to release a name,
but I'll read what's going on, all right.
Speaker 2 (33:17):
But Reuters obviously did. Robert Wheeler forty eight.
Speaker 3 (33:20):
A security firm executive in Nevada, was leaning toward Harris. So,
in other words, in the poll, when they say I'm
undecided and then you push them and you lean them, like.
Speaker 2 (33:29):
I talk about it in your show all the time.
If you had to decide who would you vote for
if the election was today and you had no choice
and you had to make up your mind, who are
you going to vote for? This guy?
Speaker 3 (33:40):
When Push came to show, said I'm voting for Harris.
But now he says, if the election was hel tomorrow,
he's voting for Trump.
Speaker 2 (33:47):
Here's why.
Speaker 1 (33:48):
Quote.
Speaker 3 (33:49):
I felt like the whole debate was Kamala Harris telling
me why not to vote for Donald Trump instead of
why she's the right handidate.
Speaker 2 (33:56):
Okay, this is we're hearing this everywhere.
Speaker 3 (33:58):
Listen to this Okay, fifty fifty three year old voter
from California, all right, isn't independent but leans to the left.
Speaker 2 (34:07):
There's Roman, Daddy's on the show. Why does Laura allow
this child to come barreling in when we.
Speaker 1 (34:14):
Would love to hear Roman's thoughts on the debate.
Speaker 2 (34:17):
You know he's gonna you don't want savage Roman because when.
Speaker 3 (34:21):
He's on Nickelodeon, I tell him the deal, bro, all right,
this woman is not somebody to look up to.
Speaker 2 (34:27):
All right, and my daughter did the same thing with her.
I do know if you turned out to be like her,
Daddy's going to be very disappointed. I want you to
get where you are in life, where you get in
life based on the sweaty your brow and the and
your your own ambition, your hard work, and because you
earned it and because you kept your character and you
deserve it, not because you're her. And you know, will
(34:48):
he tate floating around? The funny thing about the funny
thing about when they go up and say, hey, is
he are you his daughter?
Speaker 1 (34:55):
We played it yesterday.
Speaker 2 (34:56):
He's banging him at that moment, all right, and he's married.
It's disgusting. Look at the damn contrast but she's willing
to bang an old fat man. Come on, man, you're
not gonna make You're not gonna my daughter is not
gonna look up to your ass. No, thank you. All right,
So listen to this fifty three year old California woman,
(35:17):
all right, and she's says she's an independent, but like
what she normally, Hey, she normally votes Democrat, although she
admitted that she has voted for Republicans in the past.
But get this, squishy rhinos, you know, squishy rhinos.
Speaker 3 (35:33):
She doesn't like Trump and she doesn't like Maga. All right,
and this is what she said, Actually, I thought Trump
was great. This was the best I've ever seen him
in a debate. And then she goes on a layout
about how she wanted Kamala Harris to convince her to
vote for her. Convince me that you are not gonna
be as bad as Joe Biden, who she voted for.
(35:55):
And now she's saying, I hate to say it, but
if the election.
Speaker 2 (35:58):
Is tomorrow, I have to vote for Donald Trump.
Speaker 1 (36:02):
This is like, I'm like, what the hell is going on?
You know, like rich a couple things. I do think
it's the environment, man. I think people like I played
a clip from a swing voter independent voter from Wisconsin
who was straight up saying the same thing two days
ago or yesterday on the show, where he's saying, do
I think Trump's a good person? Absolutely not. I don't
(36:24):
like him. I don't like him at all. But life
was better under Trump. I think this election comes down
to that. Now. I want to offer a counterpoint and
maybe perhaps challenge you a little bit by the way.
I you know, I think it's I don't disagree with
the perspective of saying, hey, look, I'm standing up for
these fifteen million people who you just en franchised. This
(36:44):
process is illegitimate, and I won't give credence to it.
I actually love that. I love it. That's what he
should have done. But Trump would this is this is
what Trump would say. Trump and I'm not speaking for him.
I'm just saying this is his philosophy within his campaign.
He's told his people I would debate anyone, anytime, and
I know going into it that the media is going
(37:07):
to be hostile and I don't care. And he would
say and so this is So, this is where I'm
at on this. So Trump beat a Bush and a
Clinton in sixteen, surprise the world. He definitely won in
twenty twenty, but he was so dangerous to the system
that they cheated him out of it. He's debated, you know, many, many,
many times, his debate with Joe Biden. Uh, you know,
(37:30):
because your philosophy on that debate was that he should
not do it right and I agreed with you back then, right,
And now he goes into the debate and he completely
ends Biden's career, and that's why they shank him and
pull them and select Kamala. And if he would if
we would have, if you maken our advice, that would
have never happened.
Speaker 3 (37:49):
But he'd be in a better political position right now
if he would have taken our advice. He was crushing
Joe Biden before the debate. John, This is like a misnomer.
He was kicking Joe Biden's ass.
Speaker 2 (37:58):
Before the debate.
Speaker 3 (37:59):
Well, because the Maris group had Trump plus one for
the you know, or Biden plus three when everyone else
from Harvard Harris to us to Emerson. I mean at
this point we got them lead him by three to
seven points. I mean, it was an Ic'm coming on
your show saying that people don't Republicans don't lead like this.
In national presidential polling, you'd still be facing Biden. He
(38:20):
would still there would have been no way for them
to knife him and get him out of the race.
And the listen, in a normal election context, he should
do better against Harris than he would against Biden, as
all the pre the dropout polling suggested he would, because
Biden's got the Scranton Joe appeal, and you know where
he's gonna do better than Harris is gonna get killed
(38:41):
in Lakawana, Lasern like she's gonna get killed there. But
you know, but and Joe Biden would have done better.
But what I'm saying is they have at least developed
a way forward where maybe Biden and no path, but
she has a singular path if there bs narrative, propaganda,
nonsense works and this debate allowed them, gave them that
(39:06):
what you know, that narrative to move forward with. And
whether or not these voters are telling us this is
not going to stop them from pushing that narrative and
that stuff does have power, and they walked into this.
I would and I really before I forget I got
to say this, everyone said Hillary Clinton won all.
Speaker 2 (39:24):
The debates as well, all the polls, the pundits all right,
the truth is and then one of our polling, I
believe it was the debate when he was back up
against the wall post Billy Bush. I believe it was
that pole. I'd have to go back and look.
Speaker 3 (39:39):
But actually we found that like by an eight point
march and Trump won the debate, which was weird, and
all the all the media polls were like fifty five
thirty five, and I'm like, okay, I got something different.
Speaker 2 (39:51):
But even when we found that the Clinton won the debate,
it didn't like people are telling you who they think
they won, but it doesn't necess sarily mean they're going
to vote for that person. That's something I need, Like
you know, people.
Speaker 1 (40:04):
Out said, I agree completely.
Speaker 2 (40:05):
Those facial expressions, my friend, we're so bad.
Speaker 3 (40:10):
We communicate more with our body and our facial express
through non verbal communication that we do with verbal communication.
Those faces turned off the male undecided voter forever, I'm
telling you forever.
Speaker 2 (40:26):
And not coming back.
Speaker 1 (40:27):
That's the largest group of undecided voters right now. And
I think that's meveraging them men.
Speaker 3 (40:33):
And that's and the funny thing is with the women,
she needed to give these women. It's she needed to
meet what we have always called the presidential bar, like
people expect you to, and the debate is a great
way to show people you meet the presidential bar, and
you can have confidence in me that I could do
this job.
Speaker 2 (40:49):
In twenty sixteen, it was Trump. Everyone kind of knew
Hillary Clinton. We it's a piece of crap. But she's
confident in government and can do the job.
Speaker 1 (40:57):
I don't.
Speaker 2 (40:58):
I don't have to worry whether or not Hillary's common
in or not.
Speaker 1 (41:00):
Right, That's what I agree. I couldn't agree more.
Speaker 3 (41:04):
Needed to meet a bar and so like he always was,
in a stronger position. People wanted to vote for him,
even though many didn't like him. They wanted to because
they were like what they liked what he was saying,
but they didn't know if he was like fit enough
to do it, confident enough to do it, temperament enough
to do it.
Speaker 2 (41:19):
When he would do those debates, especially the third.
Speaker 3 (41:21):
One, is he knocked it out of the park and
that was that was it for her and seal their fate.
Speaker 2 (41:26):
I'm telling you uh this.
Speaker 3 (41:29):
But there's no other word. Like Laura keeps saying, you
got a curb, your language here. You can't keep saying this,
but it's hard for me to convey what I mean
without saying it. Nobody likes a bit, Sean, Nobody likes
a bitch. Men don't like a bitch. Even women don't
like a bitch.
Speaker 1 (41:47):
She was a bitch.
Speaker 2 (41:49):
Can we get real for a second. Listen those faces?
Look it matters, you know, like I'm not trying to
be you're you are the only polster in the business.
Speaker 1 (42:00):
They would ever say.
Speaker 2 (42:02):
Everyone's afraid of saying it. They're like all a bunch
of cowards, like grab your balls and say what everyone
is on everybody's mind. And you know what matters. Nobody
likes that kind. Nobody wants that as their president. Nobody
wants that. Nobody does this. Oh my god. It was like,
I mean, she's like haunting on the playground, Kamali, You
(42:23):
daunting somebody in the playground.
Speaker 3 (42:25):
And the worst thing about it is if you know,
and a lot of most voters don't you know, and
she better get down on her knees and not that,
Praise God. Other voters don't know because people who know
about her know that that's the place she is when
she's worked.
Speaker 2 (42:39):
When people who work for her. Talk to anybody who
worked for Kamala Harris. When she's mocking you, she does
this stuff. She's trying to taunt you and demean you.
That's who she is.
Speaker 1 (42:48):
And she showed that.
Speaker 2 (42:49):
She showed who she.
Speaker 3 (42:51):
Is on television last night, and I think I know
what happened.
Speaker 2 (42:54):
They told her, you can't cackle. The cackling laugh is
what she does, you know, no cackle, the no ca
no cackling, Kamala like because that stuff is not going
well with men, especially men, but it's like nobody really
likes it.
Speaker 3 (43:10):
And she does that when she hears something she disagrees
with or she wants to mock some she'll cackle and
dismiss it, you know, be dismissive. I bet you any
amount of money they told her no cackling, and those
faces is what was the product of her not knowing
what to do when she doesn't cackle.
Speaker 2 (43:27):
You know, I'm serious, Sean. We all have our little quirks,
you know.
Speaker 1 (43:31):
Listen, tell me about it. I'm like way overdue for
a break. Oh sorry, I would. I want to talk
more about the hours flying by. I don't know where
the time's going. Stay right, there be back in a
little bit with Savage Rich Barris. Okay, right back here
with Savage Rich Barris, director of Director of Big Data,
(43:52):
Pole and Easy Rich Savage and and also crazy crazy Rich.
So I want to go through some Trump highlights, because debates, you.
Speaker 2 (44:03):
Know, I don't wait to take this a lot.
Speaker 1 (44:05):
No, go ahead, go ahead, well wait till it.
Speaker 2 (44:08):
Clip, wait to the clip.
Speaker 1 (44:10):
Listen. There are a lot of conservative doomers out there
after this debate.
Speaker 2 (44:14):
Not just necessary, I listen.
Speaker 1 (44:17):
Yeah, I just think that I think that debates. You
made a great point. Just be like, just because you
think somebody wins a debate is not necessarily the person
that you're going to be voting for. And Trump had
all of the memorable moments in the debate, every single one. Yes,
yes he was distracted on the crowd side stuff, but
(44:37):
he still talked about the economy, He talked about immigration,
He talked about the fact that Kamala doesn't have a plan.
Could he have prosecuted the case against Kamala better? Yes?
Could he have better? Could he have exposed, truly exposed
just how insanely radical she is. I think he could
have done a lot better on that. Sure, And I
(44:59):
think that what I am what the biggest missed opportunity
for me? And look, I'm not I am not piling
on Trump at all. I'm saying that this man went
three to one. It was a tall order from the
very beginning, like it was a hot bowl environment. He
did the best he could with what he had. But
I think that not tying Kamala to Biden's cognitive decline
(45:27):
huge mistakes.
Speaker 3 (45:29):
What what did Tony tell him was her biggest vulnerabilities?
Speaker 2 (45:35):
I was left wondering last night.
Speaker 3 (45:37):
I'm sorry, and I'm not here to make any friends. Clearly,
I'm here to tell my people who follow me the truth.
And somebody must not have done correct pulling or did
And by the way, they're running around telling everybody.
Speaker 1 (45:50):
He didn't use any of her stuff.
Speaker 2 (45:51):
We told him this.
Speaker 3 (45:53):
Okay, that's what every consultant or polster says when they
give their client bad advice. How do you not know
that her two biggest vulnerabilities are basically one that she
was involved in the cover up of Joe Biden's finality
and that two they don't know how she's going to
be any different than Joe Biden, including with immigration of course,
(46:15):
and cost of living being the two biggest concerns.
Speaker 1 (46:18):
I mean, it's just like I wish you had said
you cut and pasted Biden's policies from his way.
Speaker 2 (46:22):
It's literally source code. It's literally the source code for
Biden's website.
Speaker 1 (46:26):
Folks.
Speaker 2 (46:27):
All right, that's how bad.
Speaker 3 (46:30):
It's a copy, it's a mimic of Joe Biden's stuff.
And then she verbally mimics Donald Trump in the hopes
that nobody will notice that she's not maga.
Speaker 2 (46:38):
I mean, it's just insane. But how do you not
drive that home?
Speaker 3 (46:43):
There were multiple times where he missed huge layups and
he could have put the nails in her coff in
three v one or not. And by the way, I
will say this because I have to compliment and give
credit where credit's due. If you go back and rewatch
the debate at Fresh Eyes any ears, folks, he was
handily winning that debate for the first fifteen to twenty minutes.
Speaker 2 (47:03):
It wasn't a v three v one at first.
Speaker 3 (47:05):
When he knocked it out of the park on abortion,
they flipped their shit and went three v one.
Speaker 2 (47:10):
That's what happened.
Speaker 3 (47:11):
He killed it because they could They can't pin Trump down.
Trump isn't like other Republicans like Ron DeSantis, Ted Cruz, right,
he didn't try to like make himself unelectable in a
national election so he could win the Iowa caucusus A
right like. He has played the abortion issue so masterfully,
and not just this year, since he came on the scene,
(47:33):
since he came down the escalator. That man has had
his pulse on how Americans feel about the abortion issue,
their knee jerk reaction, want to support rights and not restrictions,
although they don't like the heinous nature of the abortion industry.
Speaker 2 (47:48):
And he's played it and we done wrote it right, Sean.
Speaker 3 (47:51):
And once he they failed to get him on that,
that was it.
Speaker 2 (47:56):
That's when they went three v one.
Speaker 3 (47:58):
That's when David Murra started interrupting him and helping Harris
and uh, you know, with just absolutely ridiculous waste of everybody's.
Speaker 1 (48:05):
Time, ridiculous fact checks that were wrong. You're wrong, You're
just blatantly wrong. I mean, like I'm telling you straight up,
I live not too far away from Springfield, Ohio. Those
Haitians are definitely eating people's pets. And I'm telling you
I've heard it from people like people laughing like these morons,
(48:25):
like these moron like like these press people like, uh
all the the city manager said, it's not happening. Oh well,
shit the city manager. I guess if you ask any
follow up questions, I mean, hey, don't worry about the
fact that there's you know, a group of Haitians driving
around in a van and snatching up cats in the neighborhood.
My god's the city manager who says everything's fine, Like
(48:48):
what what a what a bunch of mouth breathing morons.
I'm just I'm just telling you. And that's just one.
That's just one example. But my let me show you,
can I tell you can show you my favorite moment.
Absolutely this was This was my favorite moment. Absolutely listen
to this.
Speaker 5 (49:03):
They sent her to negotiate peace before this war started.
Three days later he went in and he started the
war because everything they said was weak and stupid. They
said the wrong things. That war should have never started.
She was the emissary. They sent her in to negotiate
with Zelenski and Putin, and she did and the war
(49:25):
started three days later.
Speaker 1 (49:28):
I just thought that, like, they send this lady into
negotiated peace and the war starts three days later.
Speaker 2 (49:35):
Fact check true. My favorite part is when he was
very powerful against Hillary Clinton went and he did prosecute
it correctly, and he showed a deference for the White
House in the office and he said, you know, she
sits there and talks about all these things she's gonna do.
She's been in office for four years.
Speaker 1 (49:52):
Yeah, I got that sound bite. I know that's the
most That was the in his closing statement, why haven't
you done it?
Speaker 2 (49:58):
But he shouldn't that front load this and he should
have hammered it all night long. Being I'm glad he
used it in his closing statement because it's the last
thing that people are going to take away when they
leave the debate, and they did, trust me. I am
hearing this from voters like crazy, and by the we're
not alone. Other focus groups are as well. Doctor Philhert
CNN or did MSM Reuter's heard it. I'm hearing it,
(50:19):
Patrick basher Murder. We're all hearing this.
Speaker 3 (50:22):
She failed to convince us how she was going to
get out from underneath finding shadow and do things differently.
And I'm starting to think of it as she's got
the gerald Ford problem. Gerald Ford ran against Jimmy Carter.
Speaker 2 (50:33):
And actually people like Gerald Ford.
Speaker 3 (50:35):
But the problem was he couldn't get out from Nixon shadow,
and he couldn't convince the nation that he was going
to do something different. And right at the end there,
what did he do. He pardoned Richard Nixon and everyone
knew he was going to do that. And I'm not
saying it was the wrong decision. It was the right decision,
of course, but it hurt him because people couldn't figure out,
you know how he would take the country in a
(50:56):
new direction and leave the past, the sixties and the
tumultuous sixty He's in the early seventies behind us, and
he couldn't make that case.
Speaker 2 (51:03):
And that's why they went for jim Jimmy Carter.
Speaker 1 (51:06):
Okay, let me show you another sign. But and then
don't want to get your reaction on this, all right?
Speaker 5 (51:10):
In Minnesota, she went out a minute, I'm talking now,
if you don't mind, please, does that sound familiar? She
went out, what.
Speaker 2 (51:23):
Kid, what are you gonna do?
Speaker 1 (51:27):
Meloie. I started laughing so hard when I said I
did not have I did not have Trump pulling the
I'm speaking on my twenty twenty four Bengo card. But
he did.
Speaker 3 (51:37):
But that's her of course, you know. And what's funny
about it. I played the South Park clip. Do you
guys remember the South Park clip on they had I'm speaking, Madam,
I'm speaking, I am mat Can I finish? Can I
finish again? That's Kamala Harris, all right. I mean she's
even Canadian more than she's American. So I mean it
fits perfectly that guy's Canadian on the South Park skid,
you know.
Speaker 2 (51:56):
But yeah, I actually think like he had.
Speaker 3 (51:58):
A risk of pulling what I always call Rick Lazio.
When Rick Lazio was running for Senate against Hillary Clinton
in two thousand. He actually it was a close race.
People think about it New York and think it's, you know,
very liberal, But it was close because Giuliani was the favorite.
He would have beaten Hillary Clinton if he ran for
US Senate. But Rick Lazio had it pretty close and
blew it when he walked across the stage and acted
(52:21):
like a man, you know, like he was talking to
another man, and they thought it was and she played
the victim, of course, and they made it out like
he was being too aggressive with a woman.
Speaker 2 (52:29):
And that was the end of Rick Lazio. So he
avoided that that was the closest. That's the moment I
believe was like the closest he came to stepping over,
but he didn't. He didn't, no catastrophic moment.
Speaker 1 (52:41):
So so you brought up South Park. Kamala seems to
have the economic understandings of like almost like the underpants gnomes.
You know, step one, steel underpants, step two three profit.
Speaker 2 (52:59):
Unbelievable.
Speaker 1 (53:00):
Well, all right, so listen, tell us about like the future,
like how is this going to affect the race moving forward?
Where do you see what race going from here? In
the last fifty or so days.
Speaker 2 (53:10):
We're gonna have to see, you know what the data
tells us over the period of a couple of days.
Speaker 3 (53:15):
It's still fresh here. Let's give it time for it
to sink in. But honestly, folks were fresh off the
Biden debate that was an emperor has no closed moment.
Before that, you'd have to go back to Ronald Reagan
versus Jimmy Carter. There you go again. Debates usually don't
change the trajectory of races. They honestly don't. And before
that you would have to go back to the very
first televised debate with Richard Nixon and JFK. If you
(53:39):
were watching on television, he thought JFK one. If you
were listening on the radio, you thought Nixon one. Debates
really don't have that impact. And anyone who's in academia
on my field who tells you otherwise is full of shit.
Speaker 1 (53:52):
All right, Savage Rich, tell us what you got going
on this weekend with the family. Tell us where we
can find you, how we can support you.
Speaker 2 (54:01):
Yeah, I mean, honestly, folks, the Public Polling Projects and
full grind. If that's if you want to support us,
that's the best way to do it. You can go
to locals people's pundin dot locals dot com and that
is you'll find it there, it's on a little sidebar,
and support our polls or big Data poll dot com.
And we're actually doing a national it's machine learning AI
(54:22):
national voter analysis that will give us an idea of
what we think the electorate will look like.
Speaker 1 (54:28):
We'll show you.
Speaker 3 (54:28):
Exactly overall every the whole population, what does it look like.
Speaker 2 (54:33):
And then what we think the electorate will look like.
Speaker 3 (54:36):
So that's pretty neat. That's in the pipeline. So is
the Public Polling Project.
Speaker 2 (54:39):
The Ross Belts up next hopefully, folks, so you know,
share it farm wide, contribute if you can.
Speaker 1 (54:44):
Man, you are, you are really doing some innovative stuff.
It seems like you're growing like gangbusters.
Speaker 2 (54:49):
I'm trying, brother, I'm trying. You know, someone's got to
keep them honest.
Speaker 1 (54:54):
Someone's got to That should be your tagline. Someone's got
to keep them honest.
Speaker 2 (54:58):
Used to be accuracy matters. But I'm have to change it,
you know, or data don't lie. People do never know.
Speaker 1 (55:04):
But that's a good one.
Speaker 2 (55:05):
That's a good one too. But I may have to
change it up here real soon because the whole thing's evolving.
Speaker 1 (55:11):
Get some new headshots, you know, maybe grow a beard.
Speaker 2 (55:17):
That's great, bro, We do have some. We got some
family pictures coming up actually pretty soon. We had to
bump them because of what everything that's with the election.
Have to push it probably until after, but it will
be nice. I'm looking forward to it.
Speaker 1 (55:28):
Well, I'm looking forward to having you back next week
as always. Rich, Thank you, Savage. Laura also who's there
in the background with her glitzy risk, thank you as well.
All right, Rich, Thanks brother, We'll see you next week, man,
Thank you soon. Man, all right, see you guys. That
is savage Rich Barriss, the best polster in the business. Okay, folks,
(55:50):
I hope that you feel a little better about the debate.
I don't think it's gonna move the needle. I think
Trump surprised nobody said he's said he didn't. He's been
saying the same damn thing since twenty sixteen. Kamala failed
to move the needle. She didn't convince America that she
was any different than Biden. So yees, she had some
(56:10):
polished words. Did Trump have a perfect debate performance?
Speaker 3 (56:14):
No?
Speaker 1 (56:14):
So my point, keep calm, carry on right campaign like
we're ten points down. Trump was three on one in
that debate, did the best that he could with what
he had. No doomers, There is no reason to be,
oh my gosh, oh what are we gonna do? To
hell with that double down? Focus on winning because we
(56:34):
are going to win this thing. We are going to
save our country. The task falls to us. So smash
that like button, smash that like button, that little green
thumb beneath the video. We have made the leaderboard. I
think we've made the leaderboard every single day this week.
I want to try to keep climbing it. It would
be great. At some point to get in the top thirty,
(56:56):
that would be awesome. So go ahead and smash that
like button. Make sure you continue to support the show
by telling your family and your friends to subscribe to
Battleground Live. And this show is free to you and
it always will be. And so it's your show. I'm
grateful to have you here, the best audience in the
world tomorrow night. Got a great show for you planned.
(57:18):
But keep the faith, no dooming. We've got this right,
We've got this stay focused election. We're here in the
home stretch. We've got to sprint to the finish now.
So God bless you all, God bless this amazing country
that we call home. Take care, goodnight, and I will
see you tomorrow. Battle crud, take care. God bless