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June 11, 2024 34 mins
Bill O'Reilly here, letting you know that independent news is important.

Like Clay and Buck, I have my own flagship program, the No Spin News, featuring honest analysis and bold commentary that you won't get anywhere else. We help you navigate through the propaganda and lies. We offer the No Spin News broadcast in podcast form and invite you to follow the BillOReilly.com podcast feed. In this special presentation of the No Spin News, we take a look at the destructive efforts to destroy the truth and the media's role. We examine Joe Biden's border flip flop and what it means for Americans. We also take a look at the Hunter Biden trial. https://podfollow.com/1126543994

Follow Clay & Buck on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/clayandbuck

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, Bill O'Reilly here. Today I'm taking over Clay and
Bucks podcast feed with an episode of my No Spin
News program. I actually have a great history with Clay
and Buck. There are a couple of knuckleheads that have
learned from the best that would be me. So if
you listen to Clayan Buck, I think you might enjoy

(00:21):
the No Spin News as well, and you can listen
to an episode right here beginning right now. Enjoy and
be sure to check out my No Spin News anywhere
you listen to podcasts. Bill O'Reilly here, Welcome to the

(00:49):
No Spin News. One headline. There are going to be
polls in the next two or three weeks. They won't
matter because the debate is the pretty much starting point
for all relevant presidential race polling. That's on June twenty seventh.
As you may know, after the debate, the polls and

(01:10):
take on a little bit more credibility. Right now, there's
a lot of swirl going on about the Trump case
in New York, But once people get a look at
side by side candidates, then I think the polling will
be much more relevant. The conventions this summer aren't going
to matter at all. Republicans in Wisconsin in July, Democrat

(01:33):
Chicago August not going to matter unless there's violence in
Chicago by the anti Israeli protesters, and I could happen.
Because they're looking to put on a show. They might
show up in Milwaukee with the Republicans, but I don't
think so. I think they're going to go for the
big platform Chicago. But that would be the only thing

(01:55):
of note in the convention, so it's a foregone conclusion.
We figured that Trump will name his VP before the convention.
He has to almost do that, and then with that
news out, not much left. So the Talking Points memo
this evening is about how the Internet has changing for

(02:18):
the worst the way the presidential campaigns are run. Let's
call it the destruction of truth. So on May twenty nine,
Facebook a troll trol l And that is a word
that comes from Norway. Okay, you can look it up.
The history of trolls are very interesting that they call

(02:41):
people who go on the Internet and cause trouble troll.
So this guy goes on there on Facebook and he
posts quote, my cousin is a juror and says Trump
is getting convicted. Thank you, folks for all your hard
work well. Nine days later, the judge in the case,

(03:03):
Juan Merchand, notified the prosecution and the defense of that post.
It took nine days, but Merchon said, look, I gotta
tell everybody what happened. It's what been chon say quote
your counsel today. The court became aware, remember nine days later,

(03:25):
of a comment that was posted on Unified Court System's
public Facebook page to now bring to your attention. Okay,
right after that, on what was the date here, June seventh, Okay,
just a few days ago, the anti Biden media went wild.

(03:47):
You'll remember the pro Biden media didn't say much, a
little on see it end, but not so much. But
the anti Biden media took it and ran with it.
Problem was, the posting was a fake. There was no cousin,
there was no alert, none of that. It was a

(04:08):
deep fake. Now that happens so many times, and therefore
millions and millions of people. I would submit to you
that even at this point a lot of people who
heard about that still don't know it was a fake
because they just they're not tuned in that closely. Okay,

(04:32):
So I could harpoon a lot of people here, but
I'm not going to do that because it just doesn't
get us anywhere. But one guy put the situation into context. See,
that's all I ask. I'm going to tell you what
we did with it after the soundbody, I play you.

(04:54):
But all I ask is that you provide some context
to what you're reporting off the net rule of tape.
If it is true, and that's a big if.

Speaker 2 (05:04):
But if it is true, it is grounds to vacate
the conviction and order a new trial. I think you
know what this judge needs to do is appoint an independent,
impartial officer of the court to conduct an investigation that
may include se painting Facebook to identify who this person.

Speaker 1 (05:26):
Is who posted it. So that's an honest commentary, all right,
he's skeptical up top, Jared, he said, it's a big if.
No problem, no problem with that at all. Okay, if
you contextualize what you're saying now, I uncover it. Okay,
if you were watching the No Spin news, I knew

(05:47):
from the jump this didn't sound right. Now I'm bragging again. Okay.
My experience as a journalist, I have what they call
or report is gut I know, and stuff is bogus,
And you know, I know, which is why you're here
tonight well listening to me and on TV and radio.

(06:08):
So we just ignored it, but we were aware that
the story was being carried on the American media. Now,
if I feel that somebody is being blatantly dishonest, then
I go after that person. But this was just an

(06:30):
example of how many media people in this country do
not do their jobs. Well. It's as simple as that.
You gotta check all this. You can't be lifting stuff
off the Internet and reporting it. Can't. I can't even

(06:50):
lift stuff off the Associated Press or Router's news services anymore.
I gotta check everything. Forget about the newspaper papers, forget
about it. I very rarely knew use that maybe once
in a while the Wall Street Journal editorial page, because
they usually back up what they say. But it's really

(07:13):
hard to be an honest journalist in this country today.
So the reason I'm doing this tonight is because the
deception factor is huge, and you add it to the
political campaigns, both of them, and just throw propaganda after
propaganda after propaganda. This bogus stuff about Trump demeaning US

(07:37):
trips buried in Europe that didn't happen. I investigated it.
It never happened, okay, and yet the Democrats run with
that all day long, always going to be dictator on
day one, he said, So it's just a lie. He
said he was going to overturn executive orders. Har horror,

(07:59):
hor So that might I'm a dictator on day one.
That's what he said. That was the context, not I'm
going to be a dictator on day one. But these
people don't care. But worst of all, their companies don't
hold them accountable. Man, when I was coming up, I
made a mistake. I took something that I couldn't back
up that was really serious. I could get fired. I

(08:21):
saw people get fired doing that. And that's a memo.
All right. Joe Biden's schedule today has a Juneteenth concert.
It should be pretty exciting. Another tough day at the office.
Hunter Biden trial update. So Hunter Biden did not take
the stand. I didn't think he was going to take

(08:41):
the stand. Because if you go there on the stand,
just like Donald Trump and his business records, beef, the
prosecutor can throw everything in the world at you. Some
of the majections you'll be but mostly you know, and
what do you want to do that? And if you
stayed a falsehood or mistate something that's perjury. Okay, So

(09:06):
Hunter didn't and everybody rested, and now the jury will
come in fairly quickly. I'm not going to predict this.
I thought that Trump thing would be hung jury, as
I told you, and I was wrong. So I don't
know with these Delaware people. I do know it's a
low level beef, okay, but it should be enforced. You

(09:27):
can't be a drug addict buying a gun. I mean,
all of these anti gun people screaming about we shouldn't
have any guns, A lot of them are on Hunter
Biden's side. Isn't that ironic? Leave Biden alone? But we
know any guns, but Hunter can have one, even though
it's a crackhead. But the biggest theme takeaway of this trial,

(09:48):
and I'm going to write my message of the day
on it tomorrow, is that the defense of Hunter Biden
is playing the addiction excuse. Give them a has because
he was a drug addict, okay, and he didn't know
he was a drug addict. He had a disease. I
don't buy that. You know, Hunter Biden did evil things.

(10:11):
He introduced people to crack hotein and they got addicted
to it. He introduced them to it court testimony. Okay,
that's evil. He did horrible things, and now he said, oh,
I was a drug addict, so I should be excused
for all of them. No. No, And then his parents

(10:34):
are out there, the President and Jill Bio, we're so
proud of him for kicking it. Okay, all right, if
somebody kicks an addiction, that's a positive. Maybe you could
be proud of them. If I were a dad and
my kids were addicted, I would be proud of them
for getting out of it. But that's not the headline.

(10:55):
The headline is if you get involved with this stuff,
you're gonna hurt people. So don't get involved with it.
And if you hurt people, you have to be held
accountable if you're addicted or not. Period. That's my take
on that. All right. Donald Trump is doing a probation.

(11:15):
This is just a standard New York thing, virtually talking
to prodation people, lay lay out all the stuff. He
sends things July eleventh. I don't expect him to be
confined in any way. If he is, then the Supreme
Court will jump right in. Trump is also talking to

(11:36):
the Southern Baptist convention to a group there. You know,
he needs the evangelical vote. Interesting Trump's situation over the
weekend with George Stephanopolis, who is the highest paid ABC
news person, Here's what is Stephanopolis said.

Speaker 3 (11:56):
Go, it's going to be a challenge for those who
are doing the debate in June. I mean, I think
it's it's journalistic malpractice to.

Speaker 1 (12:08):
Do a live interview with.

Speaker 3 (12:11):
President Trump on television. You know, one of the former
president's techniques is also simply to keep on changing the subject.
I think that's something that has always been perilous, you know,
a challenge for interviewers. But the same thing will happen
in the debate.

Speaker 1 (12:30):
Yeah, and Biden, I'll do it too, Georgie. And journalistic
malpractice to do an interview with Trump live on television.
I've done dozens of them. I never had a problem, ever,
not one problem ever. He dodged. I brought him back. Hey,
you didn't answer the question. Bring him back. Now when
you're presidenting, it be a little bit more respectful because

(12:52):
of the office. But before he was president, just Google O'Riley.
Trump interviews wasn't hard, okay, is what I do to everybody?
Not hard? Not journalistic malpractice for somebody like you, George,
who's rooting for Joe Biden. Oh, you know Trumps. He's

(13:13):
gonna you know, he's not going to answer the questions.
He's going to change this other What do you think
Biden's not going to change the subject? Come on, geez,
all right. More than half of Biden's support to say
the main reason they will vote for Joe is because
they hate Trumps. According to a CBS poll just out

(13:34):
the question, what is the main reason you would vote
for Biden over Trump? Among likely voters? Mainly because I
like Biden twenty seven percent, Mainly because Joe Biden is
a Democrat, so that's a party vote nineteen percent, mainly
to oppose Trump fifty four percent. WHOA. And I know

(13:56):
I know a lot of those people, not perly, but
I know people in that category, and I go, look,
don't vote, because if you've Overbiden an he wins, you're
going to get hurt. You and your family going to
get hurt big time, much more so than I'm Trump wins.
So don't vote. If you can't pull a lever for
the dawn, don't vote for president. Vote down ticket, all right?

(14:21):
The border latest. This is murkhy here. So on June fourth,
present order, President Biden, as you know, issued an executive order,
and it's a confusing order. It puts all this work
on the border patrol. People can't do it. I'm not
going to go over it again. But since that time,

(14:41):
the border patrol says that arrests and not really arrests,
they stop them. Most of these migrants actually go up
to the border patrol lad and say I want asylum,
and then twenty four hours later they're in the country
doing what they want. Pay for it by us, the
tax payer. That's how it usually works. But it's down
twenty percent. Okay, I don't know why I'm trying to

(15:04):
get the numbers here, but they're very hard to get.
The border pagel can't do all this paperwork. Who's as
simple as that. But there are still thousands and thousands
of migrants crossing the border every day, thousands all right now.
The ACLU says it's going to file a lawsuit against
Biden's executive order because, quote from the ACOU, it would

(15:30):
rush vulnerable people through already fast tracked deportation proceedings, sending
people in need of protection to their deaths. Wow, but
the ACU has not filed yet. Don't know why they
were jumping on it. Joining us now from Miami is

(15:52):
a top flight immigration lawyer. His name is Antonio Ravella,
the third. He is the third. Okay, I hope here
dad and grandfather weren't lawyers. That would be too much
to bear. I have some questions about this, because you
know the world very well. Number one, what is your vision?

(16:16):
Say you're in charge. I'm putting Antonio Ravella in charge
of the southern border. Who gets in? Who doesn't get in?

Speaker 4 (16:27):
Well? Bill? The problem is this, and I've been criticizing
this from day one. What's happening is.

Speaker 5 (16:33):
That people are coming through, they are being processed.

Speaker 4 (16:38):
They're being processed to make sure that they're not criminals
in their home countries, to make sure that they haven't
taken terrorism routes to come here, that they're not terrorists.
The problem is that when they show up the border
or any court of entry, or they're even stopped by
a Customs Border professional officer between borders, they're basically processed

(16:59):
and let into states.

Speaker 5 (17:01):
What should be happening? And my wife asked me this
the other night. She goes, do you want everybody coming in?
And I said, well, you know, it's it's not a
bad situation for immigration lawyers to have everybody coming in.
But what they're supposed to be doing at the border,
if you don't have a proper visa to enter, is
you have to be processed for what's called credible fear.

(17:22):
That means that when you express I fear going back
to my country, they have to have an asylum officer
do a lengthy credible fear interview so that it is
determined whether or not they truly have a credible fear
of persecution in their home country.

Speaker 1 (17:38):
Right, And the way the team were possible for the
border patrol to do on a daily basis, you cannot
do it, as you know now at Miami International. If
somebody flies in from Poor to Prince and doesn't have
the proper credentials, you might be able to do that,
but you can't do it on a three fould border.

(18:02):
And while they are looking for credible fear and all
of that, they release these people because they don't have
the facilities to hold them at the border. As a result,
under Biden, there has been more than ten million foreign
nationals release into this country. It's it's okay. Now, what

(18:22):
is wrong with what Trump did say? Okay, we'll check
you out. But while we're checking you out, you stay
in Mexico. What's wrong with that?

Speaker 4 (18:36):
I think that's it might happen again.

Speaker 1 (18:40):
What is wrong with the return weight in Mexico policy?

Speaker 5 (18:45):
What it's the same thing that is wrong with what
UK's doing with the sound seekers, sending them to Rwanda.

Speaker 4 (18:51):
You are touching foot, you're landing in the United States.
You're within our borders.

Speaker 5 (18:56):
And the law says that once you're here, you can
ask for a sylum first, its credible fear. As far
as the resources are concerned, Customs of Border Protection, they
don't conduct the credial fear interview. They need more asylum
officers to sit down with everybody there.

Speaker 1 (19:10):
It's crazy. There is not possible. They don't have. But
you still haven't told me. Sure you, we will check
out your asylum requests, but meantime you wait in Mexico.
You still haven't told me why that's wrong? That cut
it down to Trump's last year to eight hundred thousand

(19:35):
from four or five million that we have now a year.
Come on, counselor look you're either you're either trying to
protect the country or you're not. And as you know,
some of these migrants have caused death and destruction on

(19:56):
our soil. Why should they wait here for the case
to be adjudicated. That's a get into the USA free card.

Speaker 5 (20:05):
You know, it is because they're here. And as far
as having them wait to Mexico, that is that, that
is a factor that is used, and it is it
causes a deterrent to a lot of people.

Speaker 4 (20:17):
But once again, the law states of when.

Speaker 1 (20:18):
You're you know, the law does not a state where
the asylum seeker has to go. The law does not say,
once your for asylum, you have to stay in the United.

Speaker 4 (20:29):
States to Mexico either. It doesn't say they should be
said to Mexico either.

Speaker 1 (20:32):
No, it doesn't say anything about So the president is
a right by executive order, just as Biden did. Trump
had the right. Law. Does it say you stay here,
you get a bus to get to New York or Miami.
It's not. The law doesn't say that. It says will
process your request. Meantime, We're not going to let you
run around this country. All right. You haven't been you

(20:56):
haven't convinced me that the remain in Mexico policy is
a detriment at all, and I believe it. It is
a positive for this country now, ac.

Speaker 4 (21:05):
For everybody, though, I'm sorry repeat.

Speaker 1 (21:10):
Well, look, it's a positive for most Americans if you
believe the polls, because they don't want this, and I'm
going to give a poll right after our interview. Sixty
two percent of Americans want to round up all migrants
and ship them out, according to CBS on Sunday. That's
a release poll on Sunday. So there you go, now, ACLU.

(21:33):
So it looks to me like they're just trying to
find something to keep the open border going. Am I wrong?

Speaker 5 (21:44):
No, BAICU is most likely going to argue that they
shouldn't limit what's called CBP one applicants that's on the
app where they make an appointment to present themselves at
the border. They're going to say that you shouldn't limit
it to with twenty five hundred people over a period.

Speaker 4 (22:02):
Of fourteen days.

Speaker 5 (22:04):
Now, the other issue that I wanted to mention earlier,
what worries me is that people are being let in
without being processed for credible fear.

Speaker 4 (22:14):
We are going to create an.

Speaker 5 (22:16):
Underclass of millions and millions of more people that are
in this country without being able to seek any kind
of benefits. So the easy part for a lot of
people is coming into the country. The hard part is
how are they going to seek benefits? And what are
the benefits they can seek? Asylum or possibly getting married.
And I meet with clients every day and I tell

(22:38):
them the easy part for you was entering the United States.

Speaker 4 (22:42):
The hard part now is how can you get a benefit?
And asylum is very very difficult to get.

Speaker 5 (22:49):
So if they were processed the ways that's are supposed
to be processed through credible fear, then we would have
this issue.

Speaker 4 (22:56):
The other issue with the remain.

Speaker 5 (22:58):
In Mexico program, those are people that incredible fear was
found and now they have to appear before judge.

Speaker 4 (23:04):
So now they wait in Mexico.

Speaker 5 (23:05):
For that process, right, But the people coming now are
not being processed for that.

Speaker 1 (23:09):
They're not being process and that's that's what the open
border Biden policy is. Let them in and I'll tell
you what's gonna happen. And by the way, I appreciate
you coming on. And if I had an immigration problem
where we're trying to get somebody, I would hire you.
I just want everybody to know that. Okay, but this
thing is a mess, and the underclass that you just

(23:32):
talked about already exists, exists where I live in New York.
It's already here. Okay.

Speaker 4 (23:40):
It's gonna get bigger and bigger, and.

Speaker 1 (23:42):
It's gonna get bigger and bigger and more and more
social programs. And the states don't have the money. New
York City doesn't have the money. And this is another
detriment to the open border. Last word, twenty seconds go.

Speaker 4 (24:00):
Supporters being mismanaged.

Speaker 5 (24:01):
If the laws followed correctly, like I said, everybody being
processed for credible fear. If they do it, fears not found,
then they're not admitted.

Speaker 4 (24:12):
They're not even placed in the remains.

Speaker 1 (24:15):
Do you agree with me? You stay in Mexico, no
credible fear, which takes forever to figure out, then you
go back. All right, counsel, We really appreciate it, Thank
you very much. As I mentioned to the council, sixty
two percent, according to CBS poll, say we wanted to
port all undocumented immigrants currently living in USA, all of them.

(24:38):
Thirty eight percent pose that. Well, that shook up very
liberal Margaret Brennan, CBS correspondent who's on face the nation go.

Speaker 6 (24:49):
It doesn't seem practical in some sense to round up children.
And then we know that the courts have questioned whether
local authorities would have the ability to do and federal
authorities don't have the resources. So what exactly do people
think they're supporting.

Speaker 5 (25:06):
Well, when you measure public sentiment on this, or really
just about any policy, you're getting a sense of direction.

Speaker 1 (25:13):
Right. People don't know exactly what should happen. They just
don't want this. And I wrote a Message of the day.
It's on Bill O'Reilly dot com. I hope you read
that every morning about Europe. That's why McCrone and Germany
and all these people are losing power because the working
people in Europe are saying, we don't want any more

(25:36):
of this mass migration that happened over the weekend. I
don't do a lot of foreign reporting here, but that
message is worth checking out for you, Okay. Clarence Thomas
boy all right. He is probably the most conservative judge
on the court age seventy five. I don't know him.

(26:01):
He has taken in four million dollars in gifts over
his twenty year career on the court. All right, And
the latest is his friend Harlan Crow, big real estate
guy in Dallas, paid for him to go and his
wife to go to Bali and then other stuff in
this and that. All right, this is not good. I

(26:24):
don't care who you are. And the second most guy
who took gifts was the late Justice Scalia. He took
one hundred and seventy six thousand dollars in gifts in
twenty years. Compare that to Thomas taken four million. Spring
Cord needs to write new guidelines for itself and put

(26:45):
those public, and then more new disclosure and all that.
Every year you got to disclose what you take data.
We can't have this now. I don't think Tom is
going to be prosecuted or booted or anything like that.
I don't think he violated anything, but they need new directions.
There can't be taken all that stuff. Smart life. Okay,

(27:12):
So the sedentary life of Americans catches up with you
about age sixty six zero. A lot of my friends
are if you're active and you're out and you're a
regular exercise routine, you're much healthier now. I can't stop hereditary,
can't stop sudden illness can't. But on a general basis,

(27:35):
the more you move it, the better you're going to feel,
and the fewer diseases you're going to encounter. This is general.
So walking is the best. I mean, if you want
to join the gym, join the gym. I can't. I mean,
I can't be sweating on somebody over there. But I
walk every other day and I do a good clip. Okay,

(27:59):
I move it. But a lot of people they don't
do that. So here's how you start, and this is
a smart life, all right. The first day, you just
walk for five minutes, just five minutes. Got to stretch
a little, you know, go outside, and if it's too hot,
if you're in Vegas or Phoenix, down in Texas, Florida,

(28:22):
you gotta get a treadmill. Okay, so you stay in
the air conditioning. You don't want to go out and
the heat and get killed. But five minutes. And then
the next day maybe seven minutes. You don't remember, it's
every other day, and you work up to thirty minutes
of walking, and you get the dopey headphones on. You
listen to disco tunes or whatever you listen to, okay,

(28:46):
and or a podcast you can listen to a podcast
on a headphones now, so you got diversions. It's not
that boring. What I do is I walk up hills,
all right. So I try to thirty minutes. Sometimes it's twenty,
but I'm doing the hill thing and you can feel,
you can feel your heart pumping, you can feel your

(29:07):
breath shortening, and you just stretch it out. If you
can get it to thirty minutes in a month, you
start it five and you just work it up and
you do it every other day, that will improve your
quality of life big time, big time. All right, So
that's a smart life. This day in history. June tenth,

(29:29):
sixteen ninety two, Bridget Bishop hanged by the neck until
dead in Salem, Massachusetts. She was written about extensively in
my book Killing the Witches. Still doing very well. Bridget
was sixty years old, totally innocent of anything. It's a
little eccentric. The woman was eccentric, living in Salem village.

(29:51):
And the kids said she's a witch, and all of
a sudden, she's a tree on her from a tree,
all right. The first witch executed three hundred and thirty
two years ago today. All told that we could find
I'm sure there were more, but the two witch places

(30:13):
were Connecticut. No central government back then, couldn't get records
out of there. In Massachusetts, where they did have a
central government, you did have records. Thirty human beings were
executed here as witches. Listen to Europe. Germany six eight
hundred eighty seven people executed as witches, Switzerland nearly six thousand,

(30:38):
France sixteen hundred, Scotland one hundred and ninety, Hungary almost
five hundred, England three sixty seven, Belgium three seven eight,
Norway two eighty, Finland one point fifteen, Italy sixty Netherlands
forty six total people tried and executed in Europe during
that witch madness sixteen thousand, one hundred and fifty two. Now,

(31:05):
they weren't all hanged. A lot of them were burned,
which is the most horrendous thing ever. I open killing
the witches with the Scotland execution, burning the woman at
the state. It's unbelievable what happened, and the reason it

(31:28):
happened was the King of England wanted the woman's vast
land holdings easy way to get our out of the way, right,
so the witch thing began three hundred thirty two years ago. Today.
All right, male segment, and we have a final thought

(31:49):
about two more books. And I'm giving you some books
to read for the summer that you learn and they're
fun to read as well, which is you know, my
book Killing the Witches. You're gonna learn all a lot
and it's fun to read. And we'll be back with
a final thought in a moment. Okay, final thought. I'm
kind of selfish about promoting my books, I think, but

(32:10):
you like them. I have two other books that i've recently.
I'm not through both of them yet, but they're got.
First is Unvanquished, the until story of Lincoln's Special Forces.
The Man on Pharmoses Range of Shadow War, The Forge
American Special Operations is civil war thing, very very well
written by Patrick O'Donnell. So everyone is light of Battle Eisenhower,

(32:33):
D Day and the birth of the American superpower that
would be us Michael Paradise and with D Day and
all that, this is a real inside baseball book about
how D Day and our power, the United States power,
really came to be under Dwight Eisenhower, the Supreme Commander.

(32:55):
You know, and you do if you're read killing Patten.
That Eisenhower and never fought in a battle. He was
never a field commander, and that drove Patten crazy because
Patten was the best field commander. But Eisenhower was extremely
talented organizer and could bring people together and execute very

(33:19):
complicated strategies. He even did that when he was President
of the United States on his eight years. As you
read in my upcoming book Confronting the Presidents, Dwight Eisenhower
was a good president in nineteen fifties, very well organized,
and he did a lot of good things. And he
brought the same template from the military into and by

(33:41):
the way, you can pre order Confronting the Presidents. I
got to hear. This is the advance copy i'm making.
There's some mistakes in it. I'm making corrections now, but
you're going to love this book. I'm gonna like it.
Thank you very much for watching and listening to the
No Spin Moves.

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