Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome in. We are rolling with the Tuesday edition of
the program. We hope all of you had fantastic Labor
Day weekends. I did. I think Buck did as well.
I met a lot of you at the Alabama Florida
State game. Man. We've been doing this show for so long. Buck,
(00:21):
I remember when Alabama was actually good at football. I
actually do too, which tells you something. Florida State Seminoles
get the big win there. It was a lot of
fun meeting many of you. So I'm back on the
road for college football season a lot again. But we
begin now that we are officially into fall, even though
(00:42):
it doesn't feel like fall in most of the country.
Kids officially back in schools most places everywhere. And the
question becomes, what will the first fall of Trump two
point zero look like? And well, the answer or is
the resistance is going to be the same as it
(01:03):
was in the spring, in the summer, in the winter
of Trump two point zero, and that is federal district
court judges are going too wrongly decide the law and
just try to throw up roadblocks. And we'll get into
this a little bit, but it kind of surprises me
how seriously the media still treats all of these federal
(01:27):
court decisions. They come out and they say, oh, my goodness,
Trump doesn't have the authority to insert whatever issue is
currently being litigated. And then it goes to the circuit court,
and the Circuit Court generally says, yes, he does, and
so far the Supreme Court always says he does. So
(01:47):
you have a lot of left wing politicians that are
wearing judicial robes, and they have decided that they're going
to do everything they can to try to slow down
the momentum of Trump to point oh, and I just
don't really get that worked up about it at this
point in time. We told you that this is what's
going to occur you should expect for the next three
(02:10):
plus years. This is primarily what they're going to do.
And this is why, no matter how good of a
term Trump has, the things that need to be fixed
in this country are multi term, multi president in nature,
no matter how good Trump two point zero is. But
I do think we should address it as we usually do.
(02:32):
Some important notes here. One is that the judge who
came forward and found that Trump it was unlawful for
the president to deploy the National Guard in Los Angeles, Yeah,
we'll see about that. It also has already happened, so
there's really no sanctions or anything other than this is
a slapdown or meant to be a slapdown of Trump.
(02:52):
I think what got even more attention over the weekend
clay is and this is from one of the administration spokespersons,
Tricia McLaughlin, that there was an effort to take seventy
six unaccompanied Guatemalan children. Now understand, these are kids who
were brought into the country or in some cases found
(03:16):
at the border of this country, and this was happening
for a while. Part of the human trafficking that was
going on here where they were. The term they would
use is recycling kids. And this is what they were
saying at the border border patrol that kids were being
used as pawns by people to get into the country
because if you had a child with you and claim
the child was a family member or a dependent, you
(03:38):
could not be deported Clay. So it was this end
run onto US soil essentially. And so there are all
these kids and this was part of the scam, the
illegal immigrant scam is being run. It's not the kids fault. Obviously,
there are children seventy six of them. The administration was
trying to reunite, and this is from Stephen Miller, an
(03:59):
other White House officials with their parents in Guatemala, and
a judge, Judge Sparkle Suk Nannapp has blocked that flight
from the reunification of Guatemalan children with their families in
their actual country of nationality. Because Clay, anything Trump does.
(04:21):
Trump taking kids who don't have their parents and reuniting
them with their parents is bad. Because Democrats hate Trump,
they don't ever go beyond the actual realities or rather
they don't get into the actual realities of what he's done.
So that's going on, and just one other thing got
throw in the mix because we're going to talk also
about law enforcement peace. I don't want to take away
from the judge discussion, but fifty people shot over the
(04:44):
weekend in Chicago. Yeah, five zero people shot, eight fatally.
Speaker 2 (04:49):
Hmm.
Speaker 1 (04:50):
Maybe time to have that discussion too. But on the judges, Clay,
this is just the only real resistance there is to Trump.
We said this, and we're being proven right about it
more and more. It is a real question where was
resistance going to come from. We saw the protest resistance
at the inauguration, and we came on and we told
(05:11):
you we just kind of felt sorry for them. There's
just no energy there. There still is no energy there.
They can't even pay people to show up in protest
and big numbers, so the street protest as the resistance
to Trump two point zero is nonexistent politically. I want
to play this cut because Jasmine Crockett, from I believe
(05:33):
the Houston area of Texas, maybe the Dallas area of Texas,
is supposed to be one of the top Trump critics,
and I think you see in her when I play
this cut. There is no real resistance from the Democrat
Party because they are so bereft of ideas and the
ideas they do have or just flat out wrong and
(05:56):
rejected by huge majorities of the country. But I want
you to listen to this, and before I play it,
I want you to understand Jasmine Crockett's parents did everything
they could to get her the best possible education, as
well every parent should. They sent her to a private
school in Missouri that cost over thirty thousand dollars a year.
(06:20):
They sent her to Rhodes College in the Memphis area,
which is a great liberal arts school team. Look up
what the cost of Rhodes College is now. I believe
it costs over sixty thousand dollars a year with room
and board included. There, So over thirty thousand dollars a
year for her high school, over sixty thousand dollars a
(06:42):
year for her college. Yet this is how she has
She is well educated, she has gone to elite schools. Well,
she's expensively educated. There's a difference. But she understands and
knows basic grammar. And I want you to listen to this,
and she is pretending to be dumb and sounding like
(07:03):
she's never gone to any school of any measure because
she thinks that's what she needs to do to connect
with her constituents. It's an insult to her parents. It's
also an insult to all those constituents who don't actually
want to be talked to like this.
Speaker 3 (07:18):
Listen, but they are crazy because they always talk about
how Christian they is. Yeah, I don't know how many
them on that side. I'm getting divorced because they getting
caught up sleeping with their coworker staff as and tins
all the things. Yet you ain't gotta believe me. Just
go google you'll find some of it, I'm telling you,
(07:38):
and the wives is being messy and petty. They putting
it into divorce. I'm like, ohh that's gotta be true
because your lawyer would know that they gonna.
Speaker 1 (07:46):
Lose it, all right. I mean, this is embarrassing. There's
no way to say, Hey, this is someone who represents
seven hundred thousand people in the United States. This is
one of four hundred and thirty five members of Congress
to be talking like this in public, intentionally not be
(08:06):
able to speak basic grammar. It's embarrassing. Does it work
for her politically though? No, that's no. You don't think so. No,
it doesn't because I think she's she is, Well, it
depends on what her goal is. If she wants to
be good, That's That's what I'm getting at here, right,
What is she trying to accomplish with this? How is
she trying to position herself vis a the her voters,
(08:27):
and her national profile. Well, she can't ever do anything
other than represent one congressional district like this. You can't
get elected a statewide office in Texas talking like this.
You can't get elected President of the United States talking
about but she you can get the national media talking
about you, we can get a lot you can be
(08:47):
you know, look at the I think the AOC model
clay in so far as now politicians are and particularly
like the younger generation of left wing politicians, view themselves
as social media stars for and foremost is something to
keep in mind. See you're thinking about this like as
a statesman, shouldn't she? And with respect to her voters,
(09:07):
I think she's playing to the she's playing to the
internet constituency. She's playing. But even if she's playing to
the internet constituency, buck, I don't think there's a huge
demand for dumb. I don't. I don't think that black, white, Asian, Hispanic,
real large audiences are out there saying I want someone
who is pretending to be dumber than she is, because
(09:30):
I think a lot of people see through this. By
the way, Rhodes College over seventy thousand dollars a year
in room and board. This is where she went. She
knows how to use is and are correctly in sentences
like you know, I'm not saying she's a Rhodes scholar
or the most brilliant person on the planet. But when
(09:51):
you go to elite education, institutions, they will beat grammar
into your head. She knows how I think. I think
you're overestimating elite institutions and their ability to get anybody
to speak properly, or think properly, or or or even
do their own These days, they can't even get the
kids that write their own essays because of AI's. The
whole thing is falling apart.
Speaker 4 (10:12):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (10:12):
But even going back decades, I'm not sure that proper
grammar is necessarily something that that people would get, even
at eliting. Again, I always put a lead in quotes,
and you and I both have gone to elite educational institutions,
and there were dumbasses at my school. I don't know
what to tell you. There are guys who could barely
put two words together. So no black person who goes
to GW is able to where I went, is able
(10:36):
to go to the school and not be able to
correctly use is or are in a sentence like or,
I see, I think you're I think that you're she
is You're you're saying that she's just my opinion. I
think she's I think she's trying to she's trying to
code switch and trying to appeal to different constituencies in
(10:57):
different ways as part of her growing Clay. There is
a massive vacuum on the Democrats side right now, so
big that not even Pritzker can fill it. And there
are people out there, there are people out there who
recognize that now is the time Clay. Look at AOC,
look at it. You keep thinking that these Democrats have
to be held to standards of authenticity or honesty or
(11:21):
any AOC grew up in fancy Westchester, and yet she's
presented herself as you know, Okazio Cortes from the Bronx man,
like I've been on these mean streets, you know. And
she even sometimes would speak in a more a more
sort of urban dialect. AOC would quent Bu, which I
think was the most expensive school in the country. In Clay.
(11:43):
They love her. So I'm you know, you're you're you're
approaching this. I don't think you're seeing this like a leftist,
is what I'm trying to tell you. I think you've
got to look through the leftist lens. I think she's
building her profile. You can say that, you know, you
think it's absurd, of course, and I get that, But
I think that she views this as a code switching
and profile building at a time when Democrats are in
(12:03):
a vacuum for not just leadership, but for media attention.
I think this is look she may end up on
the view And there is an argument out here that
I think, building on your social media influencer argument, I
think that many people now who are in Congress are
auditioning for podcast and media jobs because they make one
(12:27):
hundred and seventy thousand dollars a year. So she may
have a future in media. But I want to put
this out there. I think this is true. Sorry, I mean,
but I Clay. There would have been a time when
I think that radio was a stepping stone to elected
office for podcasting, you know, audio, And now I think
that for a lot of people, elected office is a
(12:50):
stepping stone into audio, social media, profile, all that kind
of stuff. I think it has changed dramatically over the
last twenty years. I think the challenge is basically, when
you're apology Tishan, your only job is communication. And I
don't buy that communicating as if you are dumber than
you actually are. And here I'm giving credit to Jasmine Crockett.
(13:10):
I think that clearly she is pretending that she is
dumber than she is to try to speak to an audience.
I don't think being dumber though, she's not. She's she's
she's sort of she's uh, you know, she's maybe switching
into a different vernacular, a different dialect. But she's not
pretending to be dumb. She's she's pretending that this is
(13:31):
the way that she normally necessarily speaks and communicates, right
like when Hillary Clinton Clay would go down and be like,
oh eyes so tired, you know, walking Remember when Hillary
did her whole Southern thing. She's not pretending to be dumb.
She's pretending to meet Southern Now, all the Southerners listening,
including you, I think, are like that chance lady, But
she's trying to ingratiate herself with that approach to them.
(13:55):
I guess what I guess what I'm going to is.
I think ultimately what can next with people is authenticity,
And I think most people. Now, there is a small segment.
She could probably get elected a congresswoman from that district
over and over again and not matter in the larger
four hundred and thirty five person house. But I think
in a social media sphere, the only thing that matters
(14:18):
is authenticity, and authenticity requires that you be the person
you are, and when she is code switching, that resonates
like we should play a cut of her talking in
two different vernaculars. That doesn't work because you can put
them side by side and it exposes that you are dishonest.
(14:41):
I've said this for a long time. The conversations that
I have in public and the conversations that I have
in private, there's zero difference between them, and that is
why I think that works in media. Authenticity is all
that matters. I think she is basically not going to
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get your podcasts.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
All right, welcome back in here to Clay Anne Buck.
As we were discussing a judge hashtag resistance, judiciary strikes again.
So a judge big news today. That's not big news,
it's news. I would say it's big news because the
judges keep doing this over and over and a lot
of times they get overturned. But here is the media
reporting on this. I just want to let you know
they're so excited someone standing up to Trump, standing up
(16:23):
to Trump, preventing riots, disorder, chaos, and criminality. That's something
they celebrate in the lib media. Play one breaking this morning,
a federal judge rule the use of the National Guard
during Southern California's immigration enforcement protests is illegal, a blow
to the Trump administration's crime crackdown.
Speaker 6 (16:39):
A US district court ruling the Trump administration's deployment of
the National Guard to LA was unlawful.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
A judge just blocked the administration from deploying the National
Guard in California to fight crime, calling it illegal. Breaking news.
Speaker 6 (16:53):
A major court loss for the Trump administration. A federal
judge says President Trump's use of the National Guard in
Los Angeles illegal.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
We just have a breaking headline here.
Speaker 5 (17:02):
Trump's LA troop deployment violated federal law.
Speaker 6 (17:06):
Judge Charles Bryer in the Federal Court in California says,
using the military as a show of force in an
American city like Los Angeles this summer, that's illegal.
Speaker 1 (17:18):
I actually think he's good. They're going to be wrong
on this because National Guard for state of emergency is common.
This is not also crazy idea. This is the same
judge who already got slapped down in California. Is my
recollection who tried to say before that this was not permitted.
And to your point, Buck, this is Constitution law one
(17:39):
oh one, the supremacy Clause gives the president the ability
to call out the National Guard. It is his clear
constitutional authority. This is not even complicated. And this reminds
me a little bit of when Colorado said, oh, Trump
can't be on the ballot, and everybody was like, oh,
look how important this is, and then it got slapt down.
We'll talk got it more. Look, we want to give
(18:02):
respect to all the brave men and women out there
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(18:44):
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say Clay and Bucks, Slee, Travis and Buck Sexton on
the front lines of truth. All right, I am still
fired about this, but I do I think this is
this is important. I don't agree with Kami mom Donnie,
(19:06):
who is unfortunately going to probably be elected the next
mayor of New York City because everybody running against him
refuses to drop out of the race. And now we're
into September and he continues to create more space between
himself and everybody else. But I'm going to actually give
credit to mom Donnie here. He is an eloquent voice
(19:30):
for communism and socialism. Now, the New York Times says
he's not actually a socialist, even though he said that
he's a socialist. But if you listen to mom Donnie,
I understand how people who are persuadable. Right, you're twenty five,
you don't really understand how the world works. Your rent
(19:52):
is high. You look around and you say, yeah, the
rich people are making my life hard and difficult, and
we should take that money and we should redistribute it.
And why is grocery storey. Our grocery store prices so expensive.
We should go and make our own government grocery stores
and then we'll get everything cheap. Like these are things
(20:13):
that morons would say, uneducated people who do not understand
basic economics. But it's coming from a place of anger
and a place of discomfort. And he is trying to
sell in an eloquent, affable way, with a good smile
and a youthful of visage, a political system that is
(20:36):
actually destructive to most of the people supporting it. So
but I understand him, and I don't say that he
is a moron. I think that he has just got
a political philosophy that is actually destructive for the things
that he claims to care about. Okay, listen to this.
I want to play Jasmine Crockett Buck when she was
running for Congress in Texas. Listen to the way she
(21:00):
presented herself to the audience when she was initially running.
Speaker 2 (21:04):
Well, it's good to see you in the new year.
You know, no one could have told me that when
I went down to Austin now looks like a little
bit over a year ago, that I would be running
for Congress. That's not what my plan was but what
I've always decided is that I would step up when
there was a need.
Speaker 1 (21:24):
Okay, that's Jasmine Crockett just a couple of years ago
when she is running for Congress. This was Jasmine Crockett
this weekend.
Speaker 3 (21:31):
Maybe because these people they are crazy, because they always
talk about how Christian they is. Yeah, I don't know
how many am on that side. I getting divorced because
they getting caught up sleeping with their coworker staff.
Speaker 2 (21:41):
As and turns all the things.
Speaker 3 (21:44):
Yeah, you ain't gotta believe me.
Speaker 1 (21:45):
Just go Google.
Speaker 3 (21:46):
You'll find some of it. I'm telling you in the why.
Speaker 1 (21:48):
Okay, so we can cut her off, you can tell.
I mean, she sounds like a absolute moron and this
is embarrassing. So buck to your point, you think this
is actually beneficial branding wise for her, that she has
decided that Jasmine Crockett one point zero, which was a
somewhat eloquent person who is making the case for why
(22:11):
they should be a congresswoman, is actually better served Jasmine
Crockett two point zero. My suggestion is that she doesn't
have the ability to actually grow her base because the
inauthenticity of those two clips we just played side by
side shows to a lot of inner city black people. Hey,
(22:33):
this is fake, and also shows to a lot of
other people of other races. White black agent and Hispanic boy.
This is someone who is not presenting an authentic front
to us. Now, your point, which is actually I think scary,
is that inauthenticity in a social media age pays so
well and gets so much attention that she may benefit
(22:57):
from pretending because I think she is to be dumber
than she is. I don't I don't think her, I
don't think her constituents, and I don't think any I
don't think the Democrats view this as inauthentic. I think
they view it as you know, people will use the
term code switching sometimes for someone who's speaking one way
to one constituency and one way to another. But this
(23:17):
is something that the you know, people on the right
will say, look at this, and this is not, you know,
indicative of the way that she really speaks. But do
you hear the crowd. You can hear the crowd in
the background when she was I don't know how to
describe it, but you know, was speaking in a more
vernacular way. She went when she went Philly. Bonis that
crowd may like it. Here's what I know to be true.
(23:38):
No black parent wants to pay, no Hispanic parent, no
white parent, no, no parent of any race wants to
pay thirty thousand dollars a year for their kid to
go to private school and over sixty thousand dollars a
year for their kid to go to college. And then
have them talking like that. And so I think that
(23:58):
ultimately this she actually has a story that can be
told that is aspirational in nature, which is, hey, look
at what going to a lead at academic institutions can do.
You can grow up, you can become a congress person.
I think to your point, she has lost her way,
and there is a segment of the population that says
(24:21):
what you say, oh, this is popular on social media.
I think she's actually destroying her any future that she
had in politics with this. Ah. I think she's gotten
a lot more famous over the last year and thinks
that this is working for her. So she runs for
some fact that on the you know, the fact that
(24:41):
on the remember you look at someone like AOC she's
clay Is, she's a member of Congress. There's there's you know,
there's over four hundred of them, right, So why is
she so outsized in the national conversation. It's because she's
created a persona and she's created a vibe. You know,
she just created a whole thing. And I think Jasmine
Kronger she doesn't want to be just another member of Congress.
(25:03):
She wants a radio show with five hundred and sixty
some odd stations talking about her. And she's gotten her wish. Uh.
He just I just I just blew Clay's mind so
much that his headphones got blown out. I was laughing.
It is such a degree that my headphones fell off.
I do think that. Well, well, I'm actually curious. We've
got a lot of black listeners. How do you think
(25:25):
this plays with black voters that are out there listening
to us right now? How do you think I think
you got you gotta break this down, Clay Black. I mean,
we're gonna have a fair number of you. We're gonna
have black conservative and black independent voters listening, and maybe
a handful of black Democrat voters listening to us, But
it's going to be mostly black conservatives and some black
(25:47):
independent voter swing voters. Right. The question isn't how to
they view this? The question would be, how do you
think people that vote Democrat consistently every election who are black?
I don't think this place. I don't. I mean, who
is a black elected official that has ever had anything
(26:08):
other than a congressional seat that has sounded like this
on the public stage. I mean, Clay, you say you
don't think this place? Are you familiar with it? I
believe she's my congresswoman, Frederica Wilson. I have no idea
who she is. She she's best known. She kind of
wears a she wears like a cowboy hat all the time.
(26:29):
Do you know you don't know? If I don't, I
don't know who this I don't know who this person is.
Uh I look, I don't I think it can play
in an individual congressional she does. I google image her
real quick. Every image of her has a cowboy hat
on just what your congress person wears a cowboy hat
all the time in South Florida? Yes? Is she? I don't.
(26:51):
I bring this up because she is a person, Frederica Wilson.
She is a persona she is a brand, She is
a a a media entity, and she's been elected. Yeah,
I think she's Technically it's between her, And there's another
Is she a Democrat or Salazar? Are the two for
(27:13):
my area? And I think I've actually been like redistricted
recently or relatively recently, so so, but I'm pretty sure
she's my congresswoman. You've never heard of her. She wears
a cowboy hat all the time and she Now I
don't know where she's from originally, so maybe, but I'm
just saying she was. She is the if you say
Frederica will rather if you say, who's the congresswoman from
Florida with the cowboy hat on? Everybody knows in Florida
you're talking about? You know who she is? Clay You.
(27:35):
I mean, I see this picture. I reckon. I don't
know if she's a Democrat or a Republican. I have
no idea. Oh, she is definitely a Democrat, my friend,
she has said some of the craziest I think she was.
Was she how is? How are you in her district?
Like you got? I mean, aren't they redistricting Florida? How
is like you're in a really I would say, how
(27:57):
would you describe your neighborhood like in Miami Beach, like
a nice neighborhood? I wouldn't think that this would be
your congresswoman walking around in a cowboy hat all the time.
Oh no, I'm definitely it's funny. I am right at
like the dividing line of her because North Miami, which
is what she represents, Clay has a very very large
(28:18):
minority population. Yeah. So, and it kind of swoops down
into Miami Beach. The district swoops down into Miami Beach.
So I am, I'm looking at map right now. I
mean I heard people like buck, you should know this. Well,
they've changed it. I'm I'm like on the border. I
think I'm like on the borderline for this district. So
she may she either is my congresswoman or is very
(28:39):
close to it. But the point here is more she
has she gets elected all the time very comfortably. Okay,
but she's she has no career beyond the district, right,
And I thought, I guess what I'm saying is Jasmine
Crockett seemed to me to want to be the face
of the larger Democrat party when you put those two
videos sides. I don't think she thinks she's running for
president like that, but I mean, but she thinks that
(29:03):
her I think that she believes her persona is such
that she should be one of the leaders of the
Democrat Party. And I think the fact that they have
people speaking like that, I mean, I would love to
run against Jasmincrockett. I think I would beat Jasmin Crockett
in a race ninety ten in the United States, like
and I would just I would just run that ad
(29:25):
of her talking about running for Congress beside that ad.
And I think the vast majority of people out there
would say this is actually an I think a lot
of black people see this as an insult because you
aspire to go get like an education, and you want
to send your kid to the best schools, and then
they she comes back and she tries to pretend like
she is not educating. I think this is actually seen
(29:47):
as an insult inside of the black community by anybody
who's educated. Do you know how Trump has described my
congresswoman wacky that that's actually somewhat kind. I would say
that hat is really funny, like I would not have
expect I guess she brought the cowboy hat. Remember the
New York Times wrote about Beyonce and uh and they wrote,
(30:09):
and this is a real line. They said, Beyonce brought
the cowboy hat into popular discussion, and I was like,
you know, I think the cowboy hat maybe was popular
before Beyonce wore it. And this chick, to her credit,
she was wearing a cowboy hat long before Beyonce decided
to do a country album. She is. Some of her
(30:30):
best known quotes include the White House is full of
white supremacists and it is sickening. Yeah, this is your girl,
this is your congress person. Yes, yes, I would not
in this district if you had told me you had
like some you know, Cuban representative from the Miami sal
who she represents the other It's like Miami is cut
(30:52):
into two halves. There's the North and the South, and
Salazar is a Southern and I just which is all
downtown Miami? And yeah, and so I just me, so, yeah,
I have Frederick you, you with the black woman in
the cowboy hat as your congress person. I would I
would have bet a lot of you. As mya is. Again,
he has created and this is what you know, whether
(31:14):
it's whether it's AOC or Jasmin Krame. And look, there
are some guys on the right who I think have created,
you know, some Republican members of Congress. You think about
somebody like Senator Kennedy. What do people think of when
they think of Senator Kennedy that he's going to talk
about you know, some some he's gonna use some Southern
twelves like but but there's a lot of I'm trying
(31:37):
to think, uh, wisdom in the old Southern aphorisms that
John Kennedy would use. And I don't think people think
he's dumb. I mean, he's like a country lawyer who
is talking to a jury, and I don't think he's
talking to keep using this phrase dumb. I don't. I
think that this is very calculated. That's where that's where
we're and I don't think that it's viewed as as
(31:59):
I think conspewed as speaking to constituencies in different ways.
You could say it's pandering, you could say that you
did it. But I Clay Aoc pretended to be from
the roughest part of New York City. Okay, dude, she
pretended to be the South Bronx is the most dangerous,
violent part of New York year in and year out,
(32:19):
sometimes in eastern part of Brooklyn, but generally the South Bronx.
She's from Westchester, the worst thing that was happening in
her town was, like, you know, occasionally a couple of
like rogue cats would be on the loose in the
street and the fire department have to get them out
of a tree or something. So it's just it works
for her. Ah Yeah, but I do think AOC doesn't
(32:41):
sound this ridiculous. Ah, that's a good challenge. We have
alimp of AOC sounding as ridiculous, says Jasmine Crockett. Doesn't
the clip that we just goat. She's she's done a
little of the like yeah, like you know, we we
we out here on these mean streets. AOC does it too,
she does, but it's not as bad as that. It's
(33:03):
maybe I would love if somebody can find an AOC
sounding as ridiculous as Jasmine Crockett. We will play it
for you. I think she's been a little bit closer.
She comes across more like cutting this, cutting this, slicing
this thin here, the difference that it is. I just
think I just think there's no audience for this ultimately,
and I think it's why the Democrat Party is tanking.
(33:24):
I think what she doing audience audience because she has
really poor political uh uh instincts when it comes to
growing beyond the base of her congressional and yet somehow
we've talked about her for the like the first thirty
minutes of the show, because I think it's actually I
think it's actually emblematic of why the Democrat Party is failing,
(33:44):
that she is seen as one of the faces of
the party, and I just don't think there's an audience
for this. I really don't. Well, we're going to come
back in and talk about Chicago and crime and Trump
and all that coming up here because some very very
interesting voices Clay Morning Joe. Oh, I'm just gonna say
this to everybody. Morning Joe, your call, this is maybe
your best prediction of the show history, because I think
(34:07):
you're one hundred percent right on this morning. Joe is
positioning they're trying to win me back, and Joe Scarborough's
got big plans for himself. I'm telling you, as crazy
as it sounds, and even Clay doesn't think it's that crazy.
So we're going to get into this here, coming back
what they've been saying. All right, Look, President Trump wants
to see this country emerge as the leader globally and
artificial intelligence It's absolutely critical this administration, the White House
(34:28):
today wants to see our nation lead again in the
development of AI. It benefits each of us as consumers.
It also leads to a stronger military and propels our
industries forward at lightning speed. President Trump sees this as
a crucial technology tool for Americans. It's as simple as that.
And I'm not alone in my thinking either. I think
this administration is preparing an estimated trillion dollars plus investment,
(34:49):
bringing in multiple partners. It's what I refer to as
the Manhattan Project too, to take back our lead in
the AI arms race and potentially engage a handful of
US firms with billions in new contras. And this investment
boom could come as soon as October fifteenth. I break
it all down in a brand new interview, including the
companies that I believe could soar when this comes about.
Find this interview and all the details online on a
(35:11):
new website. We're taking this off air, so to speak.
The website is off Air twenty five dot com. Go
check it out, Go watch this presentation and sign up today.
Off Air twenty five dot com paid for by Paradigm Press.
Speaker 5 (35:26):
Patriots Radio hosts a couple of regular guys, Clay Travis
and Buck Sexton. Find them on the free iHeartRadio app
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 1 (35:37):
All right, welcome back into clam. But Ick got some calls.
Want to get to them, Sean and New York You're
up first, sir. Hey what's up? Sean? Hey, what's going on?
Speaker 4 (35:46):
You're definitely right book, he's playing to a crowd. The
one thing that people connected with Trump was the way
he spoke. He spoke like a lot of people and
had a soap. Now, I'm not saying with jack Rocket
is doing is gonna garner a lot of support. But
look at the Democrat Party and who the elitas are.
Look at the way Al Sharpton's look at the way
(36:09):
he's left mean nuts who are black speaking CNN and MSNBC.
They are definitely trying to gone it to a certain
crowd of people, and it weren't, unfortunately, with the black community.
Speaker 1 (36:20):
But Sean, sorry to cut you off, but you mentioned
Al Sharpton, you meet, you can mentioned Jesse Jackson, Reverends.
I've never heard them speak like Jasmine Crockett did in
the cliffs we played.
Speaker 4 (36:33):
Because you've never really listened to them. Clay, I'm a
black man.
Speaker 1 (36:36):
Maybe maybe that's the truth. So you're saying that there
would be a Sean saying, as a black man play
that he thinks that this is gonna work for the constituency.
Sue Speaker, God forbid,