Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome in Monday edition Clay Travis Buck Sexton Show thirty
six days until the election. Next week will be exactly
five weeks out. We will also be crossing the Rubicon Bucks,
so to speak, where we'll be able to say next
month is the official election. It is here. There is
(00:23):
a lot going on. I was with Donald Trump on
Saturday night at the Georgia Alabama football game. Met a
lot of our listeners all over the place from Georgia
and Alabama. Heck of a scene, Buck, The stadium went
absolutely bonkers for Donald Trump. It's good to be out
(00:45):
in the public. I know it was Alabama, but the
enthusiasm that I saw everywhere for Trump surrounding this game
with him attending there again, Georgia is a battleground state.
It emphasized and reimmphasize for me that he is going
to win the state of Georgia, and all of you
out there listening in the state of Georgia need to
(01:07):
make sure you are going out, you were voting, and
you were going to make that happen. We'll talk a
little bit about that. The continued attacks that Israel is
putting on Hesbola in the Middle East, but we have
to start with a story that is unfortunately not receiving
anywhere near the attention that it should be, and that
is the absolute devastation that has occurred in East Tennessee,
(01:31):
Western North Carolina, the mountainous region of South Carolina. For
those of you that are not familiar with that area
of the country, I know we have a lot of
you who usually listen. We may have some of you
listening to us on the radio, and uh, because you
don't have any other battery powered radios can be so important.
(01:52):
I'm going to talk to Buck because his sister in
law is in the middle of all of this. I'm
going to ask for you eight hundred two eight two
two eight eight two if you are in that impacted region,
if you're in East Tennessee, Western North Carolina, the mountainous
areas of South Carolina, where many people are still stranded,
(02:13):
where our federal government is completely failing and taking care
of these people. I'm gonna get Buck to tell you
his own family situation because I experienced a little bit
of it, and I'll talk about it as well. But
I want to play Joe Biden being asked about the
federal government's response to the impact of the hurricane fallout
(02:33):
in this region in the same weekend where we're giving
billions and billions of dollars more to Ukraine. This feels
very much like America. Last kind of thinking. Biden is
asked about what he can do for the people in
this region, all over the Appalachian area, and he said,
federal government's done everything that it can. It's disgraceful, it's disgusting,
(02:56):
it's indefensible. But I want you to hear it from
our commander in chief, God that you aren't. Yes, it's tragic.
Speaker 2 (03:04):
As a matter of fact, we're trying to get to
exact numbers FEMA advisors on the ground in Florida right now.
There's a distinction between the numbers that famous used and
the ones that used by by the locals. So it's
it really is amazing. You saw the photographs. It's stunning.
Speaker 3 (03:23):
It so many.
Speaker 4 (03:25):
It's such a wide area, you.
Speaker 2 (03:27):
Know, and we've we've getting them all the everything that
we have ram the ground ahead of time. So we're
working hard.
Speaker 3 (03:36):
Are there any more resources the federal governments have been
given them?
Speaker 2 (03:39):
No, we've given them. We have true plans a significant
amount of it, even though they didn't ask for it, hadn't.
Speaker 1 (03:45):
Asked for that. Okay, that is not what is on
the ground. That's why I want to open up the
phones and let people call in and tell us what
they are seeing. Buck, your sister in law is in
the Ashville area. I know your family has been dealing
with this directly. I'll tell you worried that I know,
But from your perspective, you've been using these rapid radios
to communicate. Just tell us what your own family is
(04:08):
dealing with right now and has seen.
Speaker 4 (04:11):
My sister in law, her husband and and their their
little baby boy.
Speaker 1 (04:16):
They had to shelter in place.
Speaker 4 (04:18):
They're in the Asheville area, kind of out outside Ashville
little ways, and I mean i've seen video. Look Friday night,
much of the night of E spent trying to calm
carry down. It wasn't until we figured out we could
use their rapid radios. We actually use those on Saturday
for a family to be able to communicate.
Speaker 1 (04:38):
So came in incredibly handy. I know the sound cell
phones are all down and many people still can't be contacted.
This is directly like you were using them.
Speaker 4 (04:47):
Yeah, they were, They're my So I made sure that
my father in law had one and Carrie's sister had one,
and they were able to communicate via rapid radios and
otherwise we were sitting around the cell service down power down. Look,
they were sheltering in place trees. I've seen video of
it and talk to them and we've been checking in
with them, And I'm just sharing this because I'm sure
(05:08):
a lot of people in the area had a similar situation.
First of all, I'm down here in Florida, and Florida
is everyone here knows you can hit by hurricanes, and
that doesn't mean that the devastation is any less, but
you're prepared and you have some idea. No one was
talking about this hitting really what Appalachia you could say,
I mean hitting this corner of well, it was really Georgia,
(05:31):
the greater Atlanta area, North Carolina, eastern Tennessee, and just
dumping so much water. So as Carrie's sister and family
were sheltering in place, trees just started going down everywhere.
And when you see the video of this, you have
to remember there's one thing which happened to them, which
is a tree came down in the house and actually
(05:51):
smashed through the roof and got down.
Speaker 1 (05:53):
They now have a.
Speaker 4 (05:55):
Kind of a skylight almost in the kitchen that's not
supposed to be there.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
I mean it's open air. He just went right through.
Speaker 4 (06:01):
So they're talking about a large, heavy tree and they
were home when that happened. You can imagine, oh, I'm good,
I'm safe. I'm here during the hurricane, and then a
tree goes through the kitchen. Okay, so that was very unsettling.
They they do have a basement. They were able to
get to the basement. But what they also realize is
as the trees are all going down, now you can't
get out. You've got power lines coming down, you have
no power, you have no communications.
Speaker 1 (06:23):
Other than the rapid radios.
Speaker 4 (06:25):
They also the amount of damage from mud slides and
and you know, people think of a floodwater, but really
it turns into this like wave of and you can
see the videos of this just this like sludge slash.
It's almost like a slow moving avalanche of just muck,
and it destroys their whole Town's lake Lore, which is
(06:49):
where Dirty Dancing was filmed.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
I've actually spent time there. It's near Ashville.
Speaker 4 (06:53):
So if you know the movie Dirty Dancing, that hole
you know where they're swimming, and the resort that they
are in that's actually in North Carolina, in the Ashville area.
And there's a little downtown that the downtown's gone. I mean,
there are whole towns and we're just beginning to find
out the devastation of this, but there are whole towns
Clay that no longer exist. I mean, not massive cities,
(07:14):
but there are you know, little town centers in this area,
and there's I think everyoneer says, I don't think Governor
Roy Cooper of North Carolina is up to the task
at all.
Speaker 1 (07:26):
I don't.
Speaker 4 (07:26):
I think he got caught completely unaware. I think that
the Biden Harris administration is not going to feel as
urgent to deal with this as they might otherwise because
of the demographics of the air it's largely read Asheville
is actually very Democrat, but the surrounding area is very red.
Eastern Tennessee is very red. Yes, and this is where
(07:47):
there's there's nothing. I mean, you need people to be
able to clear these roads, turn on the electricity, get
the cell towers operational, get food to people, get medicine
to people, you know, get generators in place. Rohnda Santis
has been what's phenomenal at this when they had a
big hurricane, what was it over a year ago, and
you know this time around, Florida's always prepared. We'll see
(08:07):
how they can handle this. In North Carolina. We'll have
Marsha Blackburn joining talk about it from the Tennessee perspective.
Speaker 1 (08:13):
Look, this caught me by surprise. I was on the
road Friday and I got a text message from one
of the assistant football coaches of East Tennessee State University
who said they were trying to drive to the Citadel
in Charleston to go play a football game, and every
(08:33):
one of the roads was flooded and they were trapped
on their team bus and they were going to have
to sleep overnight on the team buses because there was
such chaos all over that area. You can imagine East Tennessee.
You're trying to drive through much of this buck I
forty I know many of you out there because I
(08:54):
forty traversus the entire country have been on this interstate.
There are pictures and I couldn't believe it. There are
pictures of the interstate where huge portions of the interstate
have just collapsed into basic mud slides. I mean, we're
not talking about there are a lot of places that
are still underwater to your point, small towns completely wiped
(09:16):
out by this flooding and these mudslides and everything else.
But we're talking about a major United States interstate that
is probably going to be inoperable for months. In terms
of people being able to drive from the state of
Tennessee where I am, into North Carolina, through the mountains
and through those areas beautiful, incredible people, You're not going
(09:37):
to be able to get there at all.
Speaker 4 (09:39):
You're going to hear a lot of running cover for Biden,
because running cover for Biden right now is running cover
for Kamala about how you shouldn't make hurricanes a political issue.
Where this is, you know, we should all come together
first of all, as we know, Democrats have always made
any disaster and opportunity for them to run whatever political
(10:00):
playbook that they want. And this is where I think
it is not just a fair game. I think it
is necessary to point out that we have a president
who is not really in charge, doesn't really know where
he is, has to take naps throughout the day, is
completely incapable of delegating and leading an effective response on this,
(10:22):
and so the response is going to be slow and
the media is not going to want to cover it
because right now they know, first of all, North Carolina
is a state that is in play, and they know
that this should be a massive federal response. You see
Ron Dea Santis mobilized air National Guard assets out of
Florida right away, right away, doing air drops, rescue operations,
(10:45):
getting people's supplies. And you know, from the Biden team
so far, what have we seen Kamala with a staged
photo on a plane where she has headphones not plugged
into anything and a blank piece of paper in front
of her like she's really doing the work.
Speaker 1 (11:00):
Yeah, and again, I want to open up phone lines
because some of you may actually need real help and
I want you to be able to tell us what's
going on in your communities. I also understand many phone
lines are down, many of you may not be able
to have any ability to get in touch with anyone.
That is a major issue. It sounds like there are
going to be many, many casualties from this storm that
(11:23):
we still don't know about. I know there was a
Tennessee hospital that basically was underwater that they had to
air evacuate the patients from Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia,
the mountainous region of Georgia. This is an area filled
with salt of the earth, people that look out for
(11:43):
each other. I've spent a lot of time there. It's
obviously I live in the state that's impacted here, and
the federal government has completely failed in its ability to
help these people. And the picture of Kamala with no
nothing written on a piece of paper in front of
her and the ear pieces in without it being connected
(12:07):
to a phone buck it evoked if you remember the
Hurricane Katrina response, George W. Bush was savaged for saying
he flew over the area in Air Force one and
kind of looked down. Kabala and Biden haven't even been
able or willing to fly over the region. They have
shown zero concern. And it's now this happened on Friday, Thursday,
(12:29):
and Friday, we're now talking about Monday.
Speaker 4 (12:32):
You have a tremendous amount of military assets in North Carolina,
and people are pointing out, you know, forty billion here,
sixty billion there for Ukraine. It's like we're not even
supposed to notice this. Okay, we have military assets in
North Carolina and surrounding states, but particularly in North Carolina.
Are they using the command and control and logistics and
(12:52):
an air cap You can't drive to a lot of
these places, right There's no roadways to go on, so
air wing really matters a lot, and particularly rotary right,
vertical takeoff, vertical landing. Where's Biden giving a speech talking
about what's going on here? I mean, we really just
is he awake? Is he at the beach? We don't
even know. Kamala is a joke. I mean, this is
they're gonna lose the election. Just put that aside for
(13:15):
a second. But Kamala is a preposterous political figure and
everyone can see that. Who's not delusional. But right now
we actually need somebody who knows what they're doing. I
don't think that people in charge know what they're doing
at all. We're gonna take some of your calls. We've
got a lot of people calling in from those affected regions.
We want to hear what you are seeing and what
you believe the people in your community need. Will take
some of your calls all throughout the course of the program.
(13:36):
As Buck mentioned, we're going to be joined by Senator
Marshall Blackburn at two thirty from Tennessee. Who can tell
us what the latest is on the ground so far
as she sees it, and whether the federal government is
responding as they should be. In the meantime, speaking of
places that have been in chaos for a long time,
good news Israel believes it's eliminated around thirty top hesble
(13:58):
of leaders over the last several weeks, including the leader
Hassan Noceraala and an Israeli airstrike in be Root that
happened on Friday, we talked about it on this program.
We thought it was likely a few places.
Speaker 1 (14:09):
In the world more perilous day to day than the
Middle East, and our friends in Israel filled the brunt
of it. That's why the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews,
that's the IFCJ, is leading the way and helping to
provide as many as Raelei citizens as possible with food
and medicine. Provisions are especially helpful for those displaced due
to war. For more than forty years. The IFCJ has
(14:30):
been on the ground in Israel within hours of the attacks.
We need to help them, and the IFCJ has been
doing that and in support for our friends in Israel. Hundreds,
if not thousands, of churches here in America will honor
them in the days leading up to the one year
anniversary of October seventh, That is the day when Hamas
(14:50):
came in and killed over a thousand Jewish people, the
deadliest day for people who are Jewish since the Holocaust.
Your generous donation today will not only provide a flag
symbolizing your support in churchyards across America, it will also
support the Fellowship's ongoing of emergency efforts in Israel. Visit
SUPPORTIFCJ dot org. That's SUPPORTIFCJ dot org. You ain't imagining it.
(15:16):
The world has gone insane. We claim your sanity with
Clay and Fun.
Speaker 5 (15:21):
Find them on the free iHeartRadio app or wherever you
get your podcasts.
Speaker 4 (15:26):
Let's drill down into the election and the campaigns. Election
is going to be held? What thirty something days from today? Now, Clay,
how far out are we? I kid, keep track?
Speaker 1 (15:37):
I think it's thirty six. People want to count differently.
Tomorrow will be thirty five days. So you either count today,
in which case it's thirty six, or you don't count today,
in which case you say thirty five, five weeks from tomorrow.
Speaker 4 (15:50):
Five weeks from tomorrow. Okay, this election is already upon us.
I mean, you've got early ballots mailed out, You've got
people who are soon going to be voting, and this
whole thing is going to be underway, and it's going
to be quite a night election that it's gonna be
very interesting. I'm very confident, but I don't want to
get over confident here. Here's why I'm seeing though. I
(16:13):
think with each passing day, Kamala Harris's weakness has become
more apparent to everyone. I think, Clay, that there is
a recognition that one of the few things that it's
tough to overcome in politics these days, in our modern
media environment, is when you become a subject of real mockery.
(16:34):
And there's a lot of mockery out there about Kamala Harris,
what she's like in interviews, how she's hiding from real interviews.
This is starting to look more and more like a
joke to people who don't find it very funny. And
I think that's being translated into some of the poll
numbers that you are seeing now. I know there's always
(16:56):
competing polls, there's always different. The fact of the matter
is Trump is in a better position now than he
was in in the Key States in either of the
last two elections. So that's a good thing. But you
also have things like this. Audio quality here is not great.
So I'll tell you what he's saying, but I did
want you to hear it this cut seventeen. Technically Biden
is still the president, and here he is. He's being
(17:19):
asked about Israeli airstrikes in Yemen, and this is what
he says, plays any comment on the strikes and Yemen.
Speaker 1 (17:27):
Mister President, got.
Speaker 6 (17:30):
Sem strike.
Speaker 7 (17:33):
You like?
Speaker 4 (17:34):
I think you'll sell stoke, Yes, Clay, they will settle
the strike at a collective bargaining agreement in Yemen. Now
I understand maybe he just heard strike. There's some loud
noise there, but it goes into a broader observation, not
even a narrative that Joe Biden is too old for this.
(17:55):
The twenty fifth Amendment is really something that exists for
a case like Joe Biden's where somebody has become incapable
medically infirm ina unable to do the job of being president.
But if they were to let Kamala Harris take over
it's interesting, Claiyon. I had thought initially, and this has
(18:16):
been a change in my perception of this race that's happened.
I had thought, well, they've got to let Kamala ascend, right,
because better to run as the incumbent. But really what's
happened is two things. One, Joe doesn't want to give
it up. There's that he wants to finish out his term,
and that was part of the deal. I'm sure when
they were pushing him out. Fine, you can finish your term.
(18:38):
But also, Kamala can't run with the Biden record, especially
on immigration and the migrants, and expect to win. So
you have a vice president who can't take over for
the president because the president has done such a bad
job and the vice president doesn't want to be attached
to it. But she occasionally wants to take some credit
(18:59):
for some things that happened over the last four years.
She wants to pick and choose, and I think everyone's
just becoming more I want to say everyone. People that
are observing, who are not already all in the tank
for Kamala Harris, they're seeing this and it's just too obvious, right,
The con is too blatant that she's running away from
her record that she's then that she was part of
(19:21):
the propping up of Biden this whole time as well,
which is something I think hasn't been addressed nearly enough.
I know we have the VP debate tomorrow, you and
I will watch it. I do not think it will
matter at all. I think it'll be somewhat. I'm using
to watch jade Van's school Tim Walls, but I think
Walls has become also a character who is essentially a
(19:42):
laughline now for a lot of people. He has not
taken seriously, not just by right wing partisans, but by
people who can see reality.
Speaker 1 (19:53):
Look, I struggle with the idea that Kamala Harris is
capable of being elected. But Buck, after the first hour
of all the calls that we're taking Joe Biden's commander
in chief, you just heard on this show, and I
bet we'll continue to have calls throughout. People from North Carolina, Tennessee,
(20:18):
and Georgia all call in and say their communities are
devastated and they aren't seeing any help anywhere from the
federal government yet. Buck. This was Thursday and Friday when
this happened. It's now Monday, Kamala Harris posted a photo
of herself with a blank page in front of her
and earbuds in that were not connected to her phone,
(20:41):
saying that she is working hard on the issue. They're panicked.
They put her on a plane because she was raising
money in California. They're now trying to fly her all
the way back across the country. Donald Trump is right
now on the ground in Georgia with supplies for the
people of Georgia and planning to go to North Carolina.
(21:03):
As I read, he's just concerned and wants to make
sure that he doesn't land and make things more difficult
because of the security apparatus that surrounds him wherever he goes.
How is it possible that Trump, without any of the
resources of the federal government is already on the ground
using his plane to help bring things to people in
(21:25):
Georgia and trying to go to North Carolina and Tennessee,
and Joe Biden with the full might of the federal government,
Kamala Harris as well, are unable to acknowledge what's going on.
And I just think this is so important and I
want to hammer it home because you won't hear it
from most of the media. Imagine how the United how
the press would have covered it if Donald Trump had
(21:48):
spent the weekend on the beach in a lounge chair
while North Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, South Carolin, and parts of
Virginia were being destroyed by a devastating storm. And when
he was asked whether the federal government was doing anything
as Joe Biden was, he said, we're doing everything. They
(22:12):
would savage him. Now, the reality here is, and I
hate to have to say this, but because these are
predominantly Republican areas, and you're right Asheville is in the
mountains of North Carolina, a left wing city, but by
and large, most of these Appalachian communities are very red
(22:32):
voting areas. I hate to even have to think this,
but Buck, do you think the response would be different
if these were deep blue areas from Joe Biden and
Kamala Harris? I do The President and vice president should
be responding to all Americans regardless. Instead, we got Biden
bragging about how much money he's sending to Ukraine, and
(22:54):
we got callers saying they're no federal resources helping them
at all. This is America last, and it infuriates me.
And to your point, I think it's a really good one.
There are tons of military resources, lots of helicopters. These
are areas that are very populated with federal resources that
could be mobilized, and it's just not happening.
Speaker 4 (23:16):
I can't understand how anyone could justify who, you know,
the federal government and the apparatus of the Biden White House,
how could they justify doing anything other than the absolute
maximum right now and mobilizing all the resources. Remember it's Monday.
This happened Friday, right, This didn't just happen last night.
(23:37):
It's not like we're just kind of a fog of war.
Oh my gosh. You know, there's been there's been some
real time that has passed here where you would think
the federal government. I mean, first of all, I think FEMA,
from what from what I gather, is very poorly run
and is a huge waste of resources at a lot
of the time.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
I mean, I'm sure it does some good things.
Speaker 4 (23:59):
Look, if you give somebody enough money and they can
spend enough money on things, there's going to be something.
You know, even the Clinton Foundation did a little bit
of charity, right, I mean, there's gonna be some benefit
that comes from it. The question is is it efficient,
is it fast? How well does it work given the
dollars and the resources that you're spending on it. I
think FEMA is well. FEMA very clearly has a record
(24:21):
of dramatically underperforming. And I think that this Biden Harris
administration is full of ideologues. DEI hires people that don't
really think that the mission is what matters, but that
the narrative that they see on MSNBC and the New
York Times editorial page is what matters. And that stuff
(24:42):
is a problem when things really matter, right when you
when you have a natural disaster like this, when you
have a foreign enemy invading and I'm not talking about
like the migrant invasion necessarily, although that's a whole other thing,
but a military invasion, you need an executive branch that
moves quickly and has chain of command and has a
(25:03):
honestly a vision for how to get to the other
side of this. I just don't think that that's there
at all. I don't see any if I had to ask,
what are the pockets of competency in the Biden White
House right now? If you look at Biden's cabinet. You know,
who are the people that you could say, you know
(25:23):
what I think? What Tony Blincoln the State Department, The
guy is a joke. Secretary of Energy Clay Jennifer Granholm.
I was in the Bill Mahershaw with her. She is
an imbecile.
Speaker 1 (25:34):
Okay.
Speaker 4 (25:35):
There are people who are cabinet at level officials in
this Biden administration who are just total clowns, and they
do not have the ability to act quickly and efficiently
and intelligently when it counts. Why would that change in
the moments that you are actually paying attention to measuring this?
(25:55):
Do you know what I'm saying? Like, of course they're
not going to be good at this. You know, of
course Wis Rond de Santis is going to mobilize air
National Guard assets in Florida to help out neighboring states
because Rond DeSantis moves quickly and is smart and knows
how to operate in a situation like this. And I'm
sure there are going to be others who step up
into their thing. Is there anything that makes anyone believe
(26:17):
that Kamala and Biden and ils like, who's really in
charge of the country?
Speaker 3 (26:21):
Right?
Speaker 4 (26:21):
Now, Clay, you know who's a more powerful figure, Kamala
or Biden. Biden is scrambled eggs and Kamala is out
there campaigning and hiding at the same time. It's quite
a situation. I just I look at this and it
crystallizes for me. And I asked this question. I don't
think we got a single call. I understand people who
(26:41):
are voting because they don't like Trump. I don't agree
with you, but I understand people voting because they don't
like Trump. What has Kamala done in her four years
nearly in office that you believe is deserving of a promotion.
Speaker 1 (26:56):
I haven't heard anybody answer that question. I mean, simple question.
Right wherever you work, what usually you have to be
good at your prior job to get promoted to a
new job.
Speaker 4 (27:07):
I mean, I'll say this, and I knew this was
the case, and it was back in the Obama administration.
And I believe some of the seals who were on
the who were on the Blackhawk heading back after the
bin Laden raid. You know, when when could you point
to when Obama was up for reelection a moment of
executive I know conservatives don't want to hear this and
we get angry, Oh it was the seals and he
didn't actually do anything. You're the president, you get credit
(27:30):
for it. Okay, we all have our big boy pants on.
When something really impressive happens that involves the federal government,
you're the president, you get the credit. Same thing with
the blame. Obama made that call, he got reelected and
smoked Mitt Romney. What I bring it up, because what
is the decision? I mean, give me anything and that
was really the only thing I could think of for Obama.
Speaker 1 (27:51):
Put that aside.
Speaker 4 (27:52):
But give me anything that Biden has done or that
he has taken credit for that one of his top
advisors has done. Where you go, wow, that that was
the powerful move. That was the right move to do
that one. That was a tough call, and he made
the gutsy call, and he gets the credit for Clay.
I don't think it exists, correct. I think Biden has
probably the worst record of judgment. Biden was opposed to
(28:14):
have been lodden rayed by the way. Biden has the
worst record of judgment of any commander in chief in
our lifetime. You could point to things Bill Clinton did,
hego that was a good move, that was smart. You
could point to things that you know. I mean, obviously
we could say Trump. I mean, there's a whole range
of presidents you say, even if I don't like the policies,
when there was a decision to be made, he got
(28:34):
this one right. I don't think Biden's gotten any big
decisions right. And I don't think he's shown any competency either,
other than letting the left run their progressive lunatic playbook
and think how hard that is.
Speaker 1 (28:46):
There are a lot of fifty to fifty calls when
you're president, should you do it or should you not?
Biden is out. But what has Kabalad gotten right? What
can you point to in her entire vice presidency and say,
you know what, she nailed that one? You just gave it.
An example, Barack Obama ordered the raid that killed Osama
(29:09):
bin Laden. He was one hundred percent right. I believe
we got back with zero casualties. That is the essence
of a commander in chief decision. You analyze all the
risk of rewards. You think you got the guy, and
by the way they dumped his body at sea, did
it you know, give him a burial? Didn't allow him
to be turned into a martyr. He even used, which
I thought was really funny, we don't need to spike
(29:30):
the football, which I thought was a very funny line
to describe why they didn't bring the body back, and
like share photos and every.
Speaker 4 (29:37):
And again, people don't like anything you say it's good
about a Democrat. Some Republicans are gonna get annoyed. If
Obama had sent that raid in and both of those
Blackhawks had gotten blown out of the sky and we
lost all those seals, then it came out that this
was supposed to be Obama's big mump. Probably it might
have cost him the presidency. Correct he would it would
have been that Jimmy Carter vibes would have been unstoppable.
But it went the other way. Point here with Biden
(29:59):
Kamala is here we are. It's basically October before the election. Okay,
we're twenty four hours from it being October, and there's
an opportunity here for if we had competent governance, we
should be sitting here saying, look, I don't like them, Clay.
I disagree with Kamala's obsession with abortion, and I disagree
with Biden's you know, vaccine mandate, lunisy whatever, man, they
(30:23):
really know how to get it done.
Speaker 3 (30:24):
You know.
Speaker 4 (30:24):
It's like it's like when you go into like an
anarchist coffee shop. You know, you go in there and
they've got like the anarchist reading books and they've got
all the you know, they've got like Tom Hesse Coates
on the wall and all these different but they make
good coffee.
Speaker 1 (30:38):
You know.
Speaker 4 (30:39):
Sometimes you sit there you go, look, I don't like
their politics in this anarchist coffee shop, but they make
good coffee. This is where competency Trump's political narrative, and
they can't do it cause there you don't have competency.
Speaker 1 (30:52):
We're gonna take some more of your calls. This is
feeling like Biden and Kamala's Katrina and Sad. I hate
to say that, but we're going to continue to take
your calls. Try to help where we can with the
incompetence that's going on in the response to this hurricane.
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Speaker 1 (32:28):
Welcome back in Clay Travis Buck Sexton Show. We are
rolling through. We're taking your calls from affected region Hurricane Helene.
We've been talking about it quite a lot. At two
point thirty, it's in about a half hour from now,
we'll be talking with Senator Matt Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee,
Tennessee East Tennessee in particular, very impacted Western North Carolina,
(32:49):
northern Georgia, Southern Virginia, northern South Carolina, the Appalachian region,
many different communities dealing with an incredibly difficult time since
the storm rolled through on Thursday Friday, very limited federal support.
So we are going to be talking about all this.
(33:12):
As we went to break by the way, we were
talking with the trucker I forty is shut down, and
he was telling us that they I remember this, they
had a rock slide that shut down I forty for
many months. And what I remember then, and I want
to hear from him, is that the route you had
to go was just I mean, it's so difficult to
(33:34):
travel in these mountainous areas, but big trucks. It took
forever to try to get around the part of I
forty that was shut down. With the potential strike happening
on the East coast, with the dock workers with now
interstates impacted again, one on top of the other. It
seems like a bad situation. But sir, you're on the
road right now. I think, Mike the truck driver, you're
(33:56):
telling us what you are seeing on I forty. What
is the impact so far as you can tell, not
to mention on people just trying to travel, but on
the trucking industry in particular when it comes to moving goods.
Speaker 6 (34:08):
Well, I'm not seeing a whole lot right now. I
mean I came, I came across through Atlanta yesterday and
threw headed toward Augusta, ended into South Carolina, and there
were a lot of trees down. I mean there were thousands,
literally thousands of trees down. It was slowing traffic down
(34:29):
because of some debris. People look, you know, people you
know sight seeing put it that way. But I just
wanted to remind you also, I twenty six. That road
basically runs from eighty one just north of Asheville down
(34:51):
through Asheville or whatever and stuff, Hendersonville and then actually
it ends in Charleston, South Carolina. But that road is
impacted also. I think they've got that one shut down too.
Speaker 1 (35:02):
So we got two major interstates that impact transit massively.
In addition to the storms that have hit and the
potential of an East Coast strike with the dock workers,
this has the potential to be pretty bad. I would
imagine you would think.
Speaker 6 (35:20):
That rock slide. Basically the way we got around it
back then over here and stuff is we just took
twenty six up to eighty one, just a little bit
south of Bristol and then come down eighty one is
what we did toward Knoxville. But eighty one, twenty six
wasn't impacted by that slide. Twenty six is impacted by
this one. So if you're running forty, basically, say you
(35:42):
pick up in Greensboro, North Carolina, or a rally, you're
gonna basically you're gonna take it over to Winston Salem,
get on US Highway fifty two, take that up toward
Mount Airy, and then get on I seventy seven north
and then take that up to eighty one and then
come south down eighty one through Bristol down to Knoxville.
That's the way that's going to be the most direct
draft to get around it. I'm gonna add a bunch
(36:04):
of miles on and stuff like that, but they got
those roads close through the mountains right now, you can't
get through there.
Speaker 1 (36:09):
Thank you for the call and thank you for the update. Buck.
Over the weekend I mentioned this. I was at the
Georgia Alabama game. Incredibly positive response for Donald Trump. As
he came into the Georgia Alabama game. I did an
interview with him in a suite overlooking the field. He
had a bunch to say. He wanted to tell all
of you that he can't wait to talk to you again.
(36:32):
We're gonna be with him at mar A Lago on
this show. He wanted me to say that he loves
the show, loves Buck, and then he looks forward to
hanging out with all of us, and he appreciates how
many positive things he hears when he comes on the show.
So we had that conversation off air, but I wanted
to play a couple of the cuts his responses, in
(36:53):
particular with the news that came out last week about
thirteen thousand murderers who've entered the country convicted or sixteen
thousand rapists over four hundred thousand convicted criminals. I asked
him about that the border met that Kamala has created
alongside of Biden, cut to over four hundred thousand criminals,
thirteen thousand murderers, fifteen thousand rapists. You know who hasn't
(37:18):
covered it? New York Times, CBS.
Speaker 8 (37:21):
Washington Post, All the people who criticized you were even
us stunned by how big those numbers were.
Speaker 9 (37:26):
Well, I knew they were big, but nobody thought they
could be four hundred and thirty five thousand criminals, thirteen
th ninety nine murderers, and nobody's ever had anything. And
they're released into our country. Nobody knows who they are.
They weren't checked, they weren't veted. You would have done that,
but they they aren't vetted or checked or anything else.
And it's so sad to see. And you know what,
(37:46):
this is a disqualifier for her. It's just a disqualifier
for Harris. You know when you say Harris, nobody knows
who she is. It's so But this is a total
disqualifier for a Kamala.
Speaker 1 (38:01):
Okay, that's a big deal. Buck. We also have a
couple of other things here that I thought were significant.
Tim Walls. They're really fighting. And this is one reason
Trump wanted to talk to football fans at a football game.
A lot of you out there football fans and Democrats
are trying to peel away football fans by arguing, Oh,
Tim Walls, he's taken back football. He went to the
(38:22):
Minnesota Michigan game and I asked Trump, Hey, what do
you think about democrats are arguing that football fans now
are Democrats. Tuesday, JD.
Speaker 8 (38:33):
Van's gonna take on Tim Walls and the vice presidential debate.
Speaker 1 (38:37):
I don't know if you saw it, but Tim.
Speaker 8 (38:39):
Walls said Democrats have taken back football from Republicans this stadium.
I saw him put you on the JumboTron. I would
dispute that pretty aggressively. How do you think JD's gonna do?
And what do you think about the argument from Tim
Walls that Democrats are the ones who are football fans?
Speaker 9 (38:57):
Well, first of all, I don't know if you saw it,
but he was at Michigan today. He got booed out
of the stadium. And if you saw the hand that
we got, it was a little bit different. Wouldn't you say, no,
he's uh this guy? That was a big mistake. I
think it was a big mistake. Don't see what happens
on November fifth. I think it's going to be the
most important day in the history of our country. That's
going to be the biggest selection we've ever had. Because
(39:18):
our country's going bad. They have you know, I used
to say, they are destroyed. They've destroyed our country and
we're going to bring it back.
Speaker 1 (39:27):
Okay, so Trump, you can watch that. That'll be up
at clayanbuck dot com. Talk to him for a few
minutes here Buck. Trump was great, he's talking to football fans.
I also want to reiterate, as so many people in
so many different parts of the country are dealing with
this storm. It's why voting early can make sense.
Speaker 3 (39:47):
Right.
Speaker 1 (39:47):
You just don't know what's going to happen in your life.
You could have a sick kid, you could have a
bad storm, your power could get knocked out. There are
so many uncertainties between now in November fifth that tomorrow,
starting in October, many of you are going to have
the ability to vote. We keep saying it on this program.
I understand certainly how many of you love to go
(40:10):
vote on election day. It feels particularly American, but there's
so much chaos that could happen between now and then.
I feel like getting out and getting your vote done
early makes an awful lot of sense, and so we're
just going to keep hammering this, Clay.
Speaker 4 (40:27):
I think that we're at the point where the narratives
are are playing for everyone to see of what you
get for both sides here and and what the advantages
are of four more years of Biden. You know, I
don't think we have this, but CNBC. I think it
was Gina Raymondo and on CNBC, you know, from Biden administration,
(40:50):
and one of their guys, who's a markets guy, was
just like, look the Trump you guys talked this crazy
stuff about how terrible Trump will be for the economy.
Trump was president and the kind was great, yeah, and
your whole thing about.
Speaker 1 (41:02):
Oh but what about the high end employment?
Speaker 4 (41:03):
In twenty twenty, there was a global pandemic. Libs completely
lost their minds, freaked out, and you know, they basically
acted like you were murdering Grandma if you left your
house for six months. And to act like that is
in some way indicative of what the Trump economy is
is insane.
Speaker 1 (41:20):
I mean, it's.
Speaker 4 (41:21):
Effectively a natural disaster or one magnified by the emotional
instability of the Democrats on an exponential scale. But this,
this whole idea that we don't know. Oh, no, Trump,
what happens?
Speaker 3 (41:33):
You know?
Speaker 4 (41:33):
The New York Times just did its endorsement of Kamala Harrison.
Trump is the least fit president you know ever, And
you sit here you say, I don't know. I mean
it's really good. No wars, no new wars, great economy.
Speaker 1 (41:45):
We know.
Speaker 4 (41:45):
Yeah, the border wasn't perfect, but when we figured out
what they were doing to scam the border, Trump fixed it.
And that's what we want. We want somebody who win.
There's a problem, they step up and they make the
problem either go away or at least make it much.
Speaker 1 (41:57):
Less of a problem. Kamala Harris, Joe Biden. I mean
it's funny too.
Speaker 4 (42:01):
Who's really even been in charge the last four years?
They can't tell you. Certainly Kamala Harris doesn't want to
think that it's her because it's been so bad. And
you say, why is it bad? Okay? Ten million migrants
coming into the country, who include what is it like,
fifteen thousand murderers. Yes, that's as far as I'm concerned.
Speaker 1 (42:22):
That's it. I don't need.
Speaker 4 (42:23):
I need nothing else. I need no other data. I
know you brought this up to Trump directly that is
the absolute, just destructive avalanche of idiocy on the policy
side to allow this to happen. And then you add
into this you go, okay, well, you know, inflation's super high.
(42:44):
You know who's being hurt by inflation, People that are
the most dependent on wages, that don't have the least
financial room to handle an economic shock that they talk
about the middle class. They've been brutalizing the middle class
because they're socialists. Ultimately, that's what the Democrats really are
at their core, and they want to just spend more
and more money and take more money from those who
are productive and distribute more money to their buddies and
(43:06):
their political constituencies. They want to turn us into Canada.
And even Canada is realizing, oh god, we've got a
problem with this stuff.
Speaker 1 (43:13):
And you say, why do we want more of that?
Speaker 6 (43:16):
Exactly?
Speaker 4 (43:17):
You know, Roe v Waite has gone Okay, So Democrat
states have abortion all nine months of a pregnancy or
close to it. Republican states have some restrictions. You know,
if you hate it so much being in a red state,
moved to a blue state, if that's the most important
thing to you, But don't tear down the whole country
because you're an abortion lunatic. I mean, you really break
this down into its core elements. What are we even
talking about here, Kamala Harris, this isn't She's an unseerious
(43:40):
person promoted by unseerious individuals all across the media and
the Democrat Party.
Speaker 1 (43:47):
Let me play this for you, buck, because we're talking
about the disaster in so many different states. Biden is
back in the White House after being away for his
beach vacation, hanging out, chilling on the beach as so
many people in so many different parts arts of the
Appalachian region struggled to get back on their feet and survive,
and unfortunately a lot of them did not survive an
(44:07):
awful flood. He was asked why both he and Kamala
Harris were not on the scene managing everything. Here's what
he had to say and.
Speaker 2 (44:17):
The hurricane to President and Vice President Harris Sharon Washington,
commanding this this week, I was commissioned. I was on
the Finnel for at least two hours yesterday in the
day before or whatever.
Speaker 1 (44:29):
I commend it called a telephone.
Speaker 3 (44:31):
It's all my security.
Speaker 1 (44:33):
It's called a telephone. Biden getting snappy with his uh
with the question, but Buck, I mean he's on multiple
he was on the beach all day chilling. I just
I mean, the beach look is not a good one.
He's quiet, quitting. In many ways, this is embarrassing. Again,
I think the who's the commander in chief?
Speaker 4 (44:55):
Can you imagine any job you've ever had? Okay, you've
had a bunch of jobs. I've had a bunch of jobs.
Speaker 1 (45:00):
If you're like, whoa, whoa, Oh, you think the company?
You think there is a five or alarm fire.
Speaker 4 (45:04):
I put in two hours of real serious work yesterday.
I mean, like, can you imagine making that argument? Hi,
excuse me, yesterday I put it in a twenty four
hour day, two hours of really focusing on the issue.
My little brother was as an investment banker. Clay, Like,
eighteen hours is just called a Tuesday. I mean two
hours for the president.
Speaker 1 (45:26):
You got to be kidding me, I know, and especially
when all this chaos is going on to just say
I was on the phone for two hours. It is
kind of embarrassing that we're in this situation at all,
that our quote unquote commander in chief is unable to
fulfill the most basic aspects of his job. And again
I don't want to be alarmist, but I'm concerned if
(45:48):
this strike happens tomorrow on the East Coast, that we're
going to be dealing with major supply chain crises at
the same time that we've got, as we just heard
it from one of our one of our truck drivers
out there two different major interstate corridors that are basically
shut down because of this storm. I mean, we're layering
(46:08):
one major problem on top of another, and that often
exacerbates both. And do you feel comfortable that Transportation Secretary
Pete Buddhaje Edge is going to be on top of this?
Do you feel like Kamal is up to the challenge.
We know Biden's not. I just think this is going
to be problem. This is Biden and kamalas Katrina, but
(46:30):
with potentially layering on an East Coast port stoppage as well,
It's not good, not good at all.
Speaker 4 (46:38):
You know, the left continues their relentless objection to life,
to the pro life movement. I was just talking about it.
This is a mania for them. You know, if we
decided that we were going to talk about how we
prevent World War three with China, there would be left
wing zelos to say, well, what's our abortion policy going
to be? It's really all they care about when you
(46:59):
see the way the pro abortion movement operates, and the
fate of an aborted baby is so grim they never
even get a chance at life. But there is a
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Speaker 5 (47:55):
Learn, laugh, and join us on the weekend on our
Sunday Hay with Clay and Buck podcast, Fight It on
the iHeart ATAM or wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 1 (48:05):
Welcome back in Clay Travis bock Sexton Show. Appreciate all
of you hanging out with us. We are joined now.
We've been talking about the awful results of Hurricane Helene
in Tennessee, North Carolina, Georgia, South Carolina, parts of Virginia.
We're joined now by Senator Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee. She
has toured East Tennessee and seen some of the damage,
(48:26):
and that's where we want to start with you. Senator,
appreciate the time. What did you see? How bad is it?
And is the federal government doing in your mind everything
that it should be to help people?
Speaker 3 (48:40):
Yes, I tell you my heart breaks for all of
these families and Clake. I have never seen devastation like this,
and the Governor and I were out on Saturday surveilling
this damage. And when those floodwaters have come through, its
raging water. It has completely just washed away firehouses, in schools,
(49:08):
and we have the hospital that was flooded. We have
houses that are gone, we have companies that are gone,
and When I say gone, I mean everything is gone.
Fire trucks have gone down the river and it is
a raging water. And I was just talking with one
of the state senators and they were talking about still
(49:30):
trying to find people. There are a lot of people
that have not been located. I was working with a
company owner this morning. They're still missing five people. They
know there are two that are deceased. I was talking
with someone in banking. They can't open the bank, they
(49:51):
don't have electricity to be able to open. Ent your
service stations, filling stations, can't go to the gas pump
unless you're paying cash. This is what people are dealing
with in the aftermath of this disaster. And Governor Lee
got the that disaster declaration request into the White House
(50:14):
Friday afternoon, and I worked with him, My team worked,
We got Senator Haghervey and the rest of the congressional delegation,
and simultaneously our letter of support for the request went
to the White House, and by nine point thirty that night,
everything was done, and we had FEMA positioning and moving
(50:37):
in to help people there in Upper East Tennessee. And
if any of your listeners know of someone who's needing help.
We have put a resource page on our website at
Blackburn dot Senate dot gov, forward slash helene and all
of the information contacting TEAMA, FEMA, the request for help,
(51:02):
everything is there.
Speaker 4 (51:05):
What are the most urgent needs right now that FEMA
is going to be trying to address along with all
the state resources Center of Blackburn that you laid out.
I assume is it road closure and getting just food
and water to people? I mean, what does the road
map of what efficient relatively speaking, efficient assistance to people
(51:26):
that are in a desperate situation here?
Speaker 1 (51:28):
What does it look like?
Speaker 3 (51:29):
Yes? And part of what it looks like is this
rescue effort and trying to find people. And TBI Tennessee
Bureau of Investigation set up a one eight hundred number.
We got that done Saturday night and it is one
eight hundred TB I find FI in D, TB I
(51:54):
FI in D and people can place the name if
they're looking for someone that is still missing. And then,
as you said, food and water that is a very
urgent need that people have and getting that food and
water into places. There are some places that are isolated
(52:17):
and the food and water is having to go in
by helicopter. You have other areas where up in Kock
and Unicoy County, Carter County, your restaurants can't open because
they don't have water, they don't have power, and some
of the water plants are shut down. So having that
(52:38):
water is just vital. And I talked with someone this
morning and they were facilitating a big shipment of water
and food that is going to go up into Cock County.
This afternoon.
Speaker 1 (52:55):
We're talking to Senator Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee. She's been
in East Tennessee, one of the many areas impacted dramatically
by Hurricane Helene. Center Blackburn, politics typically shouldn't apply in
a situation like this. People are hurting, They need help,
whether they're Democrats, Republicans, independents. Donald Trump is on the
ground in Georgia. He brought supplies. He says he wants
(53:17):
to go to North Carolina. So far, Joe Biden and
Kamala Harris have to a large extent been absent. How
do you think they are performing as the commander in
chief and the vice president so far? Would you like
to see more from.
Speaker 3 (53:29):
Them when something like this happens, you're always wanting more help.
The White House. It did reach out to me this
morning to make certain that FEMA was there. FEMA came
immediately as soon as that disaster releaf was signed. And
(53:51):
I will say this this morning, I spoke to our
emergency management, this factors and your nine to one one operators.
Our first responders have been phenomenal. When this happened so
quickly on Friday afternoon, it was just it was so fast,
(54:18):
and it's like with the hospital everything. The water rose
so quickly they could not get people out of the hospital,
so they had to go to the roof. And then
the water was so swift they could not bring in boats,
so they had to bring in the helicopters to get
them out. So everything happened so quickly. Those first responders
(54:43):
were the ones that jumped in immediately, and then they
were followed in very short order by TEMA and then
by FEMA and the National Guard in Tennessee. General Ross
and the National Guard have done an unbelievable job. And
(55:03):
I do have to give a shout out to Governor Youngkin.
He was able to send some helicopters in to help
get people off the roof of the hospital, and that
was very much appreciated.
Speaker 4 (55:17):
Speaking of Senator Marshall Blackburn of Tennessee, Senator Blackburn, you know,
we spent a lot of today on the show on
the relief efforts after the disaster of Hurricane Helen. There
is still not just an election underway, but we're coming
down here to the very final stretch. And I believe
you were. Were you with President Trump recently in Michigan
(55:38):
on the campaign trail? I think you've done some travel
with him, Go.
Speaker 3 (55:42):
Ahead, Yes, I was Friday. I was with him in
Michigan and he did a rally with the auto work
or not aroundy a town hall with the auto workers.
And it was such a great afternoon being able to
visit with those auto workers, hearing their questions, hearing the
(56:04):
president answer their questions. It was exciting. It was about
five thousand people and they were pumped up and ready
to go, and I can guarantee you they are going
to be getting their friends out to early vote. And
what was so interesting I had at one point I
asked people in the audience, I said, raise your hand
(56:25):
if you're an auto worker, and it was hundreds and
hundreds of hands that went up, and there were a
lot of UAW members that were in that audience, and
they are voting for Donald Trump.
Speaker 1 (56:41):
You and I Senator Blackburn are going to be doing
an event next week in Jackson, Tennessee. I've told you
I'm certainly voting for you. I'm voting on October sixteenth,
which I believe is the first day that you can
vote early in the state of Tennessee. You just mentioned
the number of auto workers that you worked with. We're
going to hammer this every day all the way through
(57:01):
the election, but I want people to hear it from you.
Why is it so important to vote early.
Speaker 3 (57:07):
It is important to vote early because you never know
what is going to happen on election day. Think about
what happened in Nevada in twenty twenty two. People waited
to vote on election day and then they had They
had a blizzard in the north, they had floods in
the south, and a US seat was lost by fewer
(57:31):
than four votes per precinct. And this is why it
is vitally important for people to make a plan and
vote early and get out there. October sixteenth is when
that vote opens in Tennessee, as you said, and I'm
going to be right there with you I'm going to
be voting early, and I'm encouraging everyone not only for
(57:52):
themselves but for their friends go vote early.
Speaker 1 (57:56):
No doubt. Senator Marshall Blackburn, one more time for people
out there, I believe you said if they need help,
your website is tell them that website address again, as
people are dealing with East Tennessee, in particular with awfulness
with the hurricane. Helen.
Speaker 3 (58:12):
Yes, it is Blackburn dot Senate dot gov forward slash Helene.
Speaker 1 (58:19):
Thank you so much, Senator, We appreciate it. Let's know
how we can help going forward.
Speaker 3 (58:24):
Will do.
Speaker 1 (58:24):
Thank you at Senator Marsha Blackburn. She is on the
ballot in Tennessee, part of what we believe will be
a Republican majority. But people need to get out and
vote early, like I'm gonna do like she's gonna do. Buck,
You and I were together down in South Florida with
pepper launchers, which was really really fun. Saber and you
(58:45):
know what, Saber doesn't just have these safety pepper launchers
that are non lethal. They've got everything imaginable. We did
a video I'm gonna put it up shortly of all
the different types of pepper spray they have all the
home alarms. Saber is a family owned business that will
make your family safer. If you got a daughter, maybe
(59:08):
she's going off to college, and you want to get
some pepper pepper spray that she can put on her keychain.
If you got a wife, you got you got kids,
maybe you want it for yourself. But I was mentioning
this so many of you like I do. I've got
two teenagers. And if you have teenagers in your house,
you know they are constantly coming in and out of
the house at all hours. Maybe they got friends over,
(59:29):
Maybe they got boyfriends or girlfriends sneaking in the house.
Maybe you got guns, and I know a lot of
you do, but you don't necessarily want to use a
lethal option because you're afraid maybe that person sneaking in
the house or sneaking out the window. Maybe it's your kid,
maybe it's your teenager, maybe it's your grandkids. Pepper. I'm
telling you this saber launcher you will absolutely love it.
(59:50):
Buck and I tried these out. Feels like a handgun
but is non lethal. But boy, you get it anywhere
near someone, they are turning tail and they are getting
out of there in a will get all in their
eyes will get them stopped instantaneously, seven different rounds, more
than any competitor. Seven rounds. You pop these things off
(01:00:11):
and you get it close to somebody, you're gonna guarantee
that you're safe. It's extra a peace of mind, non lethal,
but able to protect you. Check it out saberradio dot Com. Again,
protect your family. They got all sorts of pepper sprays,
but you need to check out and make sure that
you don't miss. The Saber Pepper Projectile Launcher Again. It
(01:00:34):
feels just like a handgun, but it's non lethal. Seven
different rounds chambered, forty more shots than other brands out
there for superior non lethal home defense. You compare this
with a gun, because I know a lot of you
have guns. It's the non lethal protection. Saberradio dot Com.
You can also check out videos of Buck and Me
(01:00:54):
both shooting this thing saberradio dot Com. You can also
call eight four four eight two four safe. That's s
A b R E Radio dot Com. Saber radio dot.
Speaker 5 (01:01:07):
Com News and politics, but also a little comic relief.
Speaker 1 (01:01:12):
Clay Travis and Buck Sextim.
Speaker 5 (01:01:15):
Find them on the free iHeartRadio app or wherever you
get your podcast.
Speaker 1 (01:01:19):
It's a busy Monday here on Clay and Buck.
Speaker 4 (01:01:22):
A lot going on, a lot of big news, a
lot coming up, as you know, tomorrow vice presidential debate.
Speaker 1 (01:01:28):
So they'll be that. We'll discuss that a bit.
Speaker 4 (01:01:31):
Maybe we'll have JD Vance Paul, and he's a little
busy these days, but he might make some time for
his buddies, Clay and Buck, one of whom knew before
JD Vance evenknew that he was going to be vice president.
Speaker 1 (01:01:41):
I'm just saying JD even admitted that you got a stake.
Never mind people for making a prediction months and months
ago that JD was gonna which is super Actually, well
he was not a favorite. You could have made a
lot of money on that bet.
Speaker 4 (01:01:53):
I think we can tell everybody, tell everybody that, I mean,
it was a stake on offer. I did end up
going with gluten free soft shell crab in season at
the nice restaurant we were in, so that was my choice.
Speaker 1 (01:02:05):
But it was quite delicious.
Speaker 4 (01:02:06):
There was no musical act to a company it though,
so anyway, but we'll have a JD Vance joining.
Speaker 1 (01:02:11):
Oh, speaking of food.
Speaker 4 (01:02:13):
Crockett Coffee, my friends, you have the organic roast up,
you have the light roast up.
Speaker 1 (01:02:19):
These are requests that you have made. Say, look I
like a coffee a lot, Could you.
Speaker 4 (01:02:23):
Do a light roast? Could you do an organic roast?
If you're like every little coffee officionado, connoisseur, a little
bit of coffee snob, the organic roast maybe for you,
that's really is really especial. I think we would say
down here in Miami is very moy delicioso.
Speaker 1 (01:02:39):
I think you really like it.
Speaker 4 (01:02:40):
That's about as much Spanish as I speak, but it's
quite excellent. Good to Crocketcoffee dot com. Please subscribe because
the subscribers are constant communication with us, and you get deals,
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(01:03:03):
You are building this company by drinking our delicious coffee,
which I don't have in the cool mug right now, but.
Speaker 1 (01:03:09):
I brew it and then I make it cold. I
have it in my University of Tennessee mug here. I
drink it every day during the program. It's fantastic Crocket
Coffee dot Com. Yeah, no, absolutely, So we've got the
VP de Eate coming up tomorrow.
Speaker 4 (01:03:24):
We've got uh what else is on the horizon rount Well,
obviously we'll following up on the big story of the
hurricane aftermath with Helene. And we've got oh are we
gonna see starlink where we have?
Speaker 1 (01:03:38):
We have, We've got audio Trump is on the ground
in Georgia. We still have not seen Kamala or Biden,
frankly doing much of anything associated with this storm in
terms of physical on the ground presence. Trump brought his
own supplies to Georgia. Andy said he's reached out to
Elon Musk to try to get Starlink turned on for
anyone in these regions that that may need to be
(01:04:01):
able to connect to the Internet. Given so much of
the power structure is down, satellite internet to phones would
seem to be a big asset. Here's Trump talking about that.
Speaker 7 (01:04:11):
Spoke to Elon.
Speaker 1 (01:04:12):
I'm getting him.
Speaker 7 (01:04:14):
We want to get star Link hooked up because they
have no communication whatsoever, and Elon will always come through
and we know that, and so we're working on that
getting them hooked up. They asked me whether or not
that would be possible. We're going to try and get
the star link in there as soon as possible because
they have no communication and throughout the region.
Speaker 1 (01:04:33):
Our hearts are.
Speaker 7 (01:04:34):
With you and we are going to be with you
as long as you need.
Speaker 1 (01:04:40):
Okay, Buck Trump on the ground, I have to say
I saw Trump on the ground Saturday. He's raring for
a fight. I mean he is ready. He's in prime form.
With thirty five days to go, ish all of you
need to get out and vote. You need to fight
the battle as hard as you possibly can, because this
guy is unrelenting in his quest to ensure that Kamala
(01:05:03):
Harris does not win this race.
Speaker 4 (01:05:05):
The forces of evil put a bullet through Trump's year
and then try to ambush him again later on. As
we know, two assassination attempts. And we've never seen Trump
more focused more on mission and on task than at
CMC is right now.
Speaker 1 (01:05:23):
And we're going to be with him before this election ends.
We're going to be down at mar A Lago for
a day. We're not sure the day exactly, but he
was with us. He wanted me to tell you that
he can't wait to talk to all of you directly again,
and that he desperately needs your help to ensure that
Kamala Harris doesn't win. Vote early, find friends and family,
get them out to the polls. As you see in
(01:05:44):
what just happened in North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, South Carolina,
and Georgia, anything can happen at any point. You don't
know what the weather's going to be on election day.
As soon as you can get your votes banked, let's
make sure Donald Trump wins in thirty six days. He's
from now.
Speaker 3 (01:06:02):
It's