Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome in Clay Travis buck Sexton Show. Appreciate all of
you hanging out with us. As we are rolling through
the Monday edition of the program. Many different stories afoot
that we will dive into during the course of today's program.
After a weekend where crime continues to plummet in Washington,
(00:22):
d C. And where sanity continues to prevail across most
of the landscape of this nation, Trump saying that he
may go into Chicago, Baltimore and other cities with high
violent crime rates, including getting into a war of words
(00:43):
with the governor of Maryland, Wesmore. We are talking also
about DC in particular, having gone now, I believe it
is either eleven or twelve days, depending on who is
bunting and where exactly. The definition of the beginning of
(01:04):
the mobilization in DC is going. Our friend at CNN,
Harry Enton says Democrat branding is about as popular as
the cracker barrel branding. We got Julane Maxwell audio American
flag burning a new executive order from Trump maybe one
of the first things that I've actually disagreed with him.
(01:25):
We'll see what Bucks take is on this as well.
And I'm getting attacked for my take on the Air
and Space Museum, which is probably not a sentence that
you expected would happen. All that and more, But we
began Trump in the Oval office, the president of South
Korea scheduled to visit with him. And this is what
Trump said just a few moments ago about the crime
(01:48):
situation in Washington, d C. This is cut three.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
Everybody before me is happy what I'm doing. Most of
you won't say that because you're radical left. The newspapers
is so honest. The press is totally dishonest. But that's
all right. We've got used to it, and we wanted
a landslide, so they obviously.
Speaker 3 (02:05):
Lost their power.
Speaker 2 (02:06):
I mean, it's impossible to imagine that when you get
ninety seven percent negative stories, purposely negative stories, even though
you've done ninety seven percent positive things, that they could
think you could win an election in a landslide, winning
all seven think of it, all seven swing stays, winning
by the popular vote by millions of votes. We had
(02:29):
a fantastic The best is your districts. Out of three
thousand districts, I guess we won three thousand, five hundred.
We won two thousand, seven hundred and fifty. And they
won five hundred, and that's said to me the best
of all.
Speaker 1 (02:46):
Okay, buck, It's becoming, i think, increasingly difficult to argue
that the surge of support for National Guard and DC
police and everything else is it having an impact. I
don't think it's totally arbitrary that we've gone eleven or
twelve days without a murder in the summer, something they
can't find a record of in DC going back decades. Obviously,
(03:08):
crime tends to skyrocket in the summer. Whether it's good,
people have more free time, kids are out of school.
All of that is when typical violence is at its
peak all over the nation. Kind of feels like Trump
may well have made his point in DC, and I
love the idea of going into Chicago, Baltimore, other cities
with high crime rates and trying to see, hey, can
(03:30):
we save some more lives.
Speaker 3 (03:33):
The street continues in DC, the harder it is for
those opposed to this to continue to oppose it without
looking like their pro murder, pro crime. There have been
a lot of people, I think, who in the media
have been chastened already by their response. They completely misunderstand
(03:53):
the mood of the American people. We went through this phase.
We went through the Soros DA BLM era, and we've
decided enough is enough. And by we, I mean a
solid majority of all of the American people. And that
is I think something that Democrats haven't figured out how
to handle politically. What do they do because to turn
(04:15):
around and face reality is to say that Republicans have
been right all along. To turn around and to accept
that the policies that we've been advocating for for years
not only would result in better numbers for crime, better streets,
better businesses, all that fewer dead people, something that everybody,
(04:39):
as we've discussed, should be able to get behind and
feel very pleased about. But I think Democrats continue to
have this problem, and it's they can't escape the radical left.
They can't escape the loud voices that were directing policy
and their party for years. And now here we are.
(05:00):
Here is Brandon Johnson, the mayor. You mentioned Chicago. How
that could be next? Here is the mayor of Chicago.
This is cut eight play it.
Speaker 4 (05:08):
What he is proposing it at this point would be
the most flagrant violation of our constitution in the twenty
first century. The city of Chicago does not need a
military occupation. That's not what we need. In fact, we've
been very clear about what we need. We need to
invest in people to ensure that we can build safe
and affordable communities.
Speaker 3 (05:30):
He's just promising more communism, and really more communism rooted
in race instead of class. Invest in people. Yeah, tax
the people who are productive and earn more, squander that
money on useless government programs that do nothing for really anybody.
And when it comes to crime, and more of the same.
And so you have to ask yourself, if you live
(05:50):
in a place like Chicago Clay that had six hundred
and twenty one murders in twenty twenty three, do you
want more of the same. That's what the mayor is offering.
Speaker 1 (05:59):
I think it's become increasingly difficult to defend the status quo.
And I give President Trump a lot of credit for
changing the narrative here, because it's been fairly easy for
presidents to go into the White House and just pretend
that Washington, DC is all fine and dandy around them,
even though the violent crime rate has been extraordinarily high.
(06:21):
And Trump has already weighed in on the mayor of Chicago. Remember,
maybe it's bumped up a bit since then. The mayor
of Chicago had a six percent approval rating in the
city of Chicago. I want to repeat that six is
in five plus one. I've never seen a mayoral approval
rating that low. Everyone hates this guy, I think for
(06:45):
the job he's done. If we put my name on
the do you think that Mayor Sexton is doing a
good job for I think enough people would just be
confused by the question that I would get more than
six percent by Chicago residents. I mean, it's almost impossible
to get six percent of people approving of a political
official that low, even with there being a ton of
(07:07):
people who've done awful jobs. Here is Trump on Brandon Johnson.
Remember Chicago actually managed to get worse. They had Lorie Whitefoot,
who was among the worst mayors in the history of
the COVID era, and they will double down with awful
They really did. She lost, She lost in the primary
to this guy. Here is here is President Trump discussing
(07:28):
that cut.
Speaker 2 (07:29):
For I watched as a very incompetent man from Chicago said, well,
what do they know? They only arrested nine people. I
said nine people. We didn't arrest nine people. We actually
arrested a total of well over one thousand people. We
took hundreds of guns away from young kids who were
throwing them around like it was candy. We apprehend the
scores of illegal aliens. We see dozens of illegal firearms.
(07:51):
There have been zero murders. It sounds sort of terrible
to say, it's embarrassing. I did this over the weekend.
I'm making a speech and I acted like I was
so proud as I said, We've had zero murders in
the last week, and some of these people are from
foreign countries. They said that doesn't sound so good, and
I said, well, it doesn't sound good, but Washington was
the most dangerous place in this country, and now you
(08:12):
know what, it's probably the safest place in our contract.
Speaker 1 (08:16):
I mean, it is pretty extraordinary, and I get it
data sets can be somewhat arbitrary, but I think it's
really hard as we sit at eleven or twelve days,
coming up on two weeks, coming through weekends when violence
tends to peak because people are out in the streets more,
I think it's really hard to argue that this lower
(08:38):
rate of violent crime is not directly connected to what
Trump has done every day, where the crime stays down.
It becomes harder as you get a larger data set.
Speaker 3 (08:48):
I also think we should look to our distance south
a little bit here and give credit where it is due.
The president of El Salvador, Buquelee ran the experiment in
the most stark obvious possible terms. Al Salvador was a
(09:08):
top five and in one year, I think it clave
was per capita number one, per capita number one or
number two, murder capital as a nation.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
Of the world.
Speaker 3 (09:17):
Yes, for you know, this doesn't include civil wars obviously,
or war right. This is criminal homicides inside of the
borders of a country that's still functioning as a country.
But it was pretty much the murder capital of the
world more or less. Now it's the safest country in
Latin America, the safest country in all of Latin America.
And he did this in a matter of years. What happened?
(09:38):
What was the miracle? He said, you know what, we
know who the bad people are, and we're just going
to stop allowing them to do bad things, and we're
going to punish them and we're going to take them
out of broader society full stop. And look what he did.
The biggest, from the worst to the best in all
of Latin America. And now we look at our American
cities and we see places. You know, we just talked
(09:59):
about Chicago. What did I say, six hundred murders in
twenty twenty, Yes, fifty more murders the New York City,
which has four times the people, so fifty percent more
homicides one fourth of the population. That's okay. The Chicago,
the Chicago political establishment thinks that that's an acceptable situation.
Speaker 1 (10:18):
My host Salvador, no doubt, my home state of Memphis,
the city here in my home state had more murders
than New York City. Think about how.
Speaker 3 (10:29):
Crazy, straight up right had had to head comparison to
head had to head In recent years, Memphis, Tennessee had
more murders than New York City.
Speaker 1 (10:38):
How is that acceptable? Again? I've said if I were governor,
I would follow the lead of Trump. I would send
in the state National Guard. I would make this end.
And I think what did I say when we started
this that it was an interesting test case. And we
talked about this buck We said, if it works, it's
going to prove that there just hasn't been the will
to drive down violent crime. And now that the violent
(11:00):
crime is going down, and you're using Washington, d C
as a test case. This is where I got attacked
for saying, hey, this is a really good opportunity to
see if it works, that if it does, it should spread.
And I never thought that I would get attacked in
the media for saying, hey, let's drive down the murder rate,
let's save more lives. I did. But Trump is actually
just saying I'm not going to stand for this. And
(11:22):
I do think it's connected to the two hundred and
fiftieth anniversary of Washington, d C. But more than that,
I think Trump wants d C to be a jewel
of America. I saw where he's going to ask for
more money to basically retrofit and rehabilitate many of the
great parks in d C to make it a true
diamond of American life. And so how d.
Speaker 3 (11:47):
D C as a place as a location, maybe not
so much in the summertime, is a beautiful place, and
there should be something aspirational when children from Oklahoma and
Washington State and you know, and Illinois and you name it,
southern California, when they go to d C on that
school trip, which I know so many of you everyone
(12:08):
should think, Wow, what an incredible jewel of a city
with so much history and gorgeous architecture and clean, safe streets.
This stuff matters. This stuff matters, And I think that
Trump is I love this. I think this is a
fantastic idea, and I hope that he continues. Clay, no doubt,
(12:30):
but boy, we had some fun. Did you see as
we go to break here?
Speaker 1 (12:33):
Did you see mom Donnie try to bench press one
hundred and thirty five pounds?
Speaker 3 (12:37):
I did?
Speaker 1 (12:38):
I did. We should talk about it. We'll have some
fun with that as well. In the meantime, Hoody rebels
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met with self defense by Israeli forces over the weekend,
but the attacks served to remind Israelis and their allies
pieces not at hand. With all the missile attacks and
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(13:00):
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(13:48):
You ain't imagining it.
Speaker 5 (13:50):
The world has gone insane. We claim your sanity with
Clay and Funding. Find them on the free iHeartRadio app
or wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 3 (14:00):
Welcome back into Clay and Buck. So we're talking about
Trump's cleanup of crime in DC. There's also some interesting
stuff happening in the realm of immigration and illegal immigration enforcement. Clay,
did you see that Kilmar Abrego Garcia. He was briefly released.
He showed up at a Baltimore field office for a
(14:23):
check in after his release, pending trial on human smuggling,
and now he is once again in custody. And Trump
officials had said that they would never allow him to
be free again in the United States. ICE has now
taken him back into custody, and there's a discussion as
to whether he will be deported to Costa Rica or Uganda.
(14:48):
I believe, and we even have his attorney, his attorney
for Abrego Garcia weighing in on this one and telling
everybody the problem with Uganda is he doesn't speak the language.
We'll address this in one second. You guys play that one.
Speaker 6 (15:05):
It is preposterous that they would send him to Africa,
to a country where he doesn't even speak the language,
a country would documented human rights violations when there are
so many other options.
Speaker 7 (15:16):
This family suffered enough, they need to stop trying to
separate them. Everything that they've done to mister Abrigo Garcia,
they've done it for one reason, which is that he
had the temerity to exercise his constitutional rights. So the
government's decided to use the immigration system to punish him
by sending him to Uganda.
Speaker 3 (15:34):
Oka Abrego Garcia on trial for human trafficking MS thirteen alleged.
MS thirteen member. But he's like a civil rights hero
over time. Sure the language of Uganda. Anyone want to
take guests with the official language of ugandas it is English.
Oh wow, it is English. So interestingly enough, here's a
(15:55):
guy who is described as Maryland Man in all these
news reports, Kerlin Man Abrego Garcia, who seems to speak English,
and the problem with sending him to Uganda as a foreigner,
as a foreigner foreign national is their worry that he
won't be able to speak English. That's confusing. Most of
politics is communication. The fact that you and communication generally
(16:20):
in politics means you make arguments better than the other side,
and you explain why you favor the perspectives and positions
of your own side. I still am in disbelief that
they picked this guy to be the face of the
resistance to the Trump deportation wife beating human smuggler, who
is not in any way a ideal face of the
(16:44):
entire Trump two point zero deportation universe. Also the fact
that we are in a position where Democrats are essentially
having to argue lower violent crime is a bad thing,
which is what Trump's goal is. In Chicago or Baltimore
or Washington, DC. He's just gotten them buck to paint
(17:06):
themselves into a corner in such an untenable position they
can't argue anything that resounds in the favor for them
in the general public. There is almost no Trump outposition
because they're arguing for indefensible positions, and yet they continue
(17:27):
to do so, and they have no It seems the
only effort I've seen him to push back on the
sense of a lack of I don't know, testosteron the
Democrat Party has been Gavin Newsom putting memes up of
himself or having a staff do it. And then and
we should talk about this, mom, Donnie, the kami who
(17:48):
can't bench press one hundred and thirty five pounds one thirty.
Speaker 1 (17:52):
Five everybody, that's not good, not good.
Speaker 3 (17:56):
You know what keeps me up at night. Artificial super
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war machines, and a plan to dominate the world with
(18:17):
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All right, welcome back in here to Clay A and
Buck and President Trump in the Oval Office this morning.
(19:00):
Addressing a whole range of important things out there and here.
He is saying that the people in general are very
happy with what he has been doing with cleaning up
crime in d C. It is the radical left and
the media, which is the same thing in a lot
of cases that are having the problem with this. Do
(19:22):
we we didn't play three yet, did we, Claire? Or
did we?
Speaker 1 (19:24):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (19:25):
We did? I'm sorry we played three. I wanted to
then get to Trump on he said some funny things
here he is on PRITZKERR. He is he's not holding back.
This is the this is the governor of the state
of Illinois. Play six.
Speaker 2 (19:40):
You really want to be asked to go?
Speaker 5 (19:42):
You know?
Speaker 2 (19:43):
I hate to barge in on a city and then
be treated to horribly by corrupt politicians and bad politicians
like a guy like Pritzker. He had to spend more
time in the gym. Actually, this guy is a disaster.
A Gavinism is a disaster. When we went we saved
Los Angeles. You wouldn't have been able to have the
Olympics in Los Angeles. You're barely able to have it.
Speaker 4 (20:03):
Now.
Speaker 2 (20:03):
They did lose twenty five thousand houses to a fire.
They should have never occurred.
Speaker 3 (20:08):
He's just throwing body blows. Put aside the gym thing
for a second. He's throwing body blows all over the place.
Here at these Democrats who continue to push for these
policies that aren't working. I mean, I just I have
to wonder who thinks that the mayor of Chicago was
We talked about six percent, ninety four percent say no,
(20:28):
and yet this guy somehow got elected. It's exactly what
we said, what happened. Who thinks that Illinois is a
well governed state. It was a horridly governed state. And obviously,
Gavin Newsom in California, you know, it reminds me of,
as I've said, Clay, when the Communists took over and
formed the Soviet Union. You know, Russia was a large
country with a sophisticated intelligentsia and beautiful music and literature,
(20:54):
and so there was still some good stuff going on there,
but sure enough they destroyed it. That's kind of Gavin
news is like Lenin taking over Russia in the early days,
and you're just starting to see how badly he can
mess everything up.
Speaker 1 (21:08):
Well, the locust analogy, I think is such a good
one because you said last week, I think, hey, you know,
it's really Ronald Reagan and Republican leaders who put California
on the pathway to what they are today. And really
California is the ultimate state that has so many incredible
riches that people just need to get out of the
(21:29):
way and let individuals have a great deal of success.
And I am intrigued by the way Silicon Valley has
kind of moved from a reflexive left wing position to
one where at least the right is able to be
involved in conversations out there, and I think certainly Elon
Musk has been reflective of that. Peter Thiel, they're at
(21:50):
least a decent number of people who just want there
to be efficiency and decency in California. And Gavin Newsom,
to me, has been Have you been paying attention to
Gavin Newsom on social media? I mean, he surged as
the most likely nominee for Democrats in twenty twenty eight
by being effectively a Democrat version of Trump. He started
(22:12):
to pretend that he is Trump with some of his
social media postings. I don't think that's got long range vitality.
But one of the things that they are doing is
they're saying, well, Red States, Actually this is from Gavin
Newsom's account over the course of the weekend. Red States
are actually the ones with high rates of violent crime.
And he's been attacking different jurisdictions. It's all blue cities
(22:36):
in red states. I don't understand how this is a
line of attack that he thinks is going to be
effective at all.
Speaker 3 (22:42):
Well, and then when you drill into the numbers even more,
it's it's overwhelmingly black on black violence inside of Democrat
controlled precincts of Democrat controlled cities. That is the driver
of all of the violence that you can count at
the state level. But yeah, the state is not primarily responsible.
(23:03):
The red state, so to speak, is not prem you know,
the state of Louisiana is less much less involved in
the day to day of the crime rate. And say
New Orleans than the government or the you know, the
mayor and the police commissioner and the police force of
New Orleans and the prosecutors of New Orleans are uh.
And so whenever, whenever they make this argument, it's a
(23:24):
it's a bad argument. I just I suppose they hope
that people don't pay attention to how flawed it is,
because we do have, you know, federalism in this country,
and we do have state and local law enforcement and
the separations that occur there. But okay, you know, let's
let's take a look at and see why is it
(23:45):
that Democrats, even in places where they begin to bring
the crime down dramatically, which I think is going to
be happening if Trump Can continues on this path, why
won't they try to replicate that. Let's let's put aside
blue state red state. Let's just say, okay, let's flood
any city. Now, Illinois is a blue city. I mean,
rather a Chicago's a blue city in a blue state.
All right, Let's let's take New Orleans. Let's take Memphis.
Speaker 4 (24:08):
You know.
Speaker 3 (24:08):
And what's funny, Clay is because what you'll have then
is your governor, for example, Governor Lee. I'm sure if
Trump wants to put federal resources to work and wants
to work with the state of Tennessee to make Memphis
as safe as can be, Oh, that's great, it's in
it's in Illinois where you know that that makes it
even that. I think that makes it hit home even more.
(24:28):
In Illinois, you would have oh, no, Governor Pritzker, he
doesn't want federal assistant. And we just saw this in
Los Angeles where they had the you know, the illegal
alien riots going on and they were how dare you
put the National Guard on the streets? Oh you like
the disorder and chaos?
Speaker 1 (24:43):
Yeah, same thing in Baltimore with the feuding with Governor
Wes Moore of of Maryland. I again, I think you
look at these policies and what they would actually do
is show that Trump's policies are very popular people who
face actual violence. There was a video Fox News shared
(25:05):
of the protest in Washington, d C against the deployment
of the National Guard. Almost everyone in the crowd is
a middle aged white person. DC, as we talked about,
is only about thirty eight percent white. So as a group,
not being concerned with crime is a luxury of wealth,
it really is. And those people all still have neighborhood
(25:27):
watches and they have their own private security guards and
everything else. But by and large, when we go to Washington,
d C, when we lived there, Northwest d C is
the safest part of DC. It's where Georgetown is, where
George Washington University is, Catholic American University, all these different
parts of d C, and memorably in Georgetown, they didn't
(25:51):
want the subway because they didn't want criminal elements from
outside of d C to be able to easily get
to Georgetown. So the place is where the wealthier people
of Washington, d C live tend to be the safest,
but the place is where there's actual crime. I think
they would welcome in many ways in Baltimore, in Chicago,
(26:13):
certainly in Washington, d C. And crime and areas of
high violence if suddenly no one's getting killed, is that
a good thing? I mean, I'm sorry, Like generally limiting
murders seems like something we should be in favor of
as a country, and so if Trump could implement policies
that lowered the rate of murder, that should be a
(26:34):
really good thing.
Speaker 3 (26:36):
Well there's also, as I've pointed out, because now I
know everyone now who was for all the COVID stuff,
they just want to pretend like nothing nothing happened. And
this is like a nightmare that we all had collectively
as a country that we can pretend it wasn't pushed
on us by a bunch of emotionally unstable left wing
maniacs or the Democrat Party overall and the medical establishment
(26:57):
which was hijacked by people of the same politics. But Clay,
they were deploying National Guard to airports to deal with
a virus. Yes, just think about this for a second.
Were the National guardsmen who I know, were there with
rifles that had no no bullets in them? Were they
were they going to shoot the virus? What were they
going to do?
Speaker 2 (27:17):
What was the.
Speaker 3 (27:17):
Purpose of me arriving in New York City on an
airplane and having National guardsmen in the terminal. The purpose
was just to show you state force who's in charge.
This is power, and you know, this is what we're doing.
And it's just interesting me because that was really about compliance.
Well what about safety? You know, I think people are
(27:41):
less likely to carjack somebody if there are a bunch
of Americans in uniform with M sixteen standing on the
corner watching. I think that's less likely to happen. I
think you're more likely to say, you know, maybe I
won't do that. But you know, they think that scaring
the virus. It was really to scare us. As I said,
it was compliance trained. But deploying the National Guard for
(28:01):
COVID makes perfect sense to them. Deploying the National Guard
so that people aren't getting shot in the streets makes
no sense to them.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
And I also think the symbolism of this is potentially
impactful too, in terms of not only if you see
National Guard troops or you see a force that is
in that the goal is to bring peace and security
and stability to the nation's capital. Not only if you
see it, but if the back of your head you're thinking, oh,
(28:32):
there's way more police, there's way more National Guard. I
think psychologically, you may be less likely to commit a
crime because you think, oh, I'm more likely to be caught.
And I think this goes to the penalties that have
to be a raid against people who commit acts of
violence as well. And again, I just go back to
(28:54):
your home city of New York. Everybody listening to us
on WOR you know that there's still too much violence
in New York. There's still too much disorder, there's still
too much petty theft, all those things, right, we can
always do better. But if the nation had New York
City's crime rate, if the nation just had New York
City's crime rate, we would have about I was looking
(29:15):
at the numbers, about sixty percent fewer murders in the country.
Doesn't that seem like a pretty good thing. I'm not
saying we can eliminate all violentce but New York City
is a big, bustling metropolis filled with a lot of
people from a variety of different backgrounds, and yet they
have managed to drive down the overall murder rate to
(29:35):
around what two fifty to three hundred something like that
in a city about four it's been about four hundred
in recent years, like three eighty ish. I think, but yeah,
it's not twenty four it's not twenty three hundred, which
wasn't nineteen ninety. I mean, sixty percent decline in violent
crimes seems like a really good thing. We're around twenty
three than twenty two thousand murders nationwide. And again, you
(29:56):
and I like to talk about murders because we know
they happened. Whereas you might get your scooter stolen in
New York City and just never report it too soon. Never,
you might be a badass riding around on a scooter
and you get your scooter stolen, and you're just like,
there's no point in even reporting this.
Speaker 3 (30:11):
You know when I used to play when I was
when I was ripping through the streets of New York
on that scooter, and I would hit the little o
woul hit the little ding ding on the on the
you know what I'm saying. I mean, you know what
I never got there was streamers, you know, like on
a bicycle you get the streamers on the handles. I
didn't even have time because it got stolen from me.
But I was going to get some streamers.
Speaker 1 (30:31):
Sad, big sad, it is. It is, It is real,
But this is a quality of life.
Speaker 3 (30:35):
You know, somebody take all the videos of all the
videos that I like wish kind of existed. I wish
I could show you the video because I didn't even
do it full justice of me trying to give my
date a ride home on my east scooter after dinner
and it going putt putt putt two miles an hour.
That was That was one of my great moments. That
was a teenager.
Speaker 1 (30:56):
A teenager, I'm not kidding, zipped by me on a
scooter like the when you say scooter, it's like the
stand's it technically is like a like a yeah, I'm
almost like a talking about Festpa that actually would be
yeah cool, Like I have a scarfun and my name
is friend, you know, Vincenzo Chao Like no, no, no,
I'm actually talking about this little the little thing you
can fold up and put under your desk, which is
(31:18):
like an e scooter that you stand up and you know, yeah,
some guy, teenage boy in my neighborhood went zooming by
with two different girls on his scooter last night when
I was when I was he's probably i don't know,
fourteen or fifteen years old.
Speaker 3 (31:34):
That's what you call a baller.
Speaker 1 (31:35):
Clay.
Speaker 3 (31:35):
That's a guy who's got game.
Speaker 1 (31:37):
And his scooter was able to hold two different other
additional people, and I was thinking, that's the kind of
scooter Buck needed. We come back, we'll take some of
your calls. We roll through the Monday edition of the program.
But a lot of you out there getting ready for
back to school. My kids are already back in school.
Your kids either are in school or they're getting close.
(31:58):
And sometimes that means maybe kids don't eat well. Maybe
your kids don't particularly like the lunches at school, maybe
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Speaker 5 (33:27):
Play Travis and Buck Sexton telling it like it is.
Find them on the free iHeartRadio app or wherever you
get your podcast.
Speaker 1 (33:35):
Welcome back in Play Travis Buck Sexton Show. Appreciate all
of you hanging out with us as we are rolling
through the Monday edition of the program. Lots of fun
from all of us as as we are reveling in
President Trump's movements. I did want to play this for
(33:56):
you the DNC summer meeting. Have you heard this? The
Democrat National Committee meeting up for their end of summer meeting,
and they say off the top they have to have
a land acknowledgment and discuss the oppression that America has wrought.
This is cut thirty two and she's going to deliver
(34:18):
our land acknowledgment. Todave, Lindy, Buju.
Speaker 8 (34:21):
Lindy Samaicnidgita cause amcdotum uh saga dosjaba and shnabe quay.
Speaker 3 (34:27):
And now, good.
Speaker 8 (34:29):
Morning DNC members, friends and relatives. Let's talk about the
land for a second. The DNC acknowledges and honors the
Dakota Yata, the Dakota people who are the original stewards
of the lands and waters of Minneapolis. The Dakota cared
for the lands, lakes in the Wakatanka, the Great River,
the Mississippi River for thousands of years before colonization. This
(34:51):
land was not cleaned or traded. It's a part of
a history of broken treaties and promises.
Speaker 1 (34:57):
I mean, this is how they start their meeting. Buck,
this is you gotta be kidding me.
Speaker 3 (35:01):
Clay. First of all, she said, Lakota or duck Coota.
I couldn't even really does it matter Lakota, Dakota, Tomato Tomato.
So the the thing I do want to know is
how far back does she want to go? Because they
actually conquered and killed a lot of other tribes in
the area to take over. There's some interesting books, some
interesting histories you can read about this, how all these
(35:22):
tribes were actually effectively constant states of warfare before we arrived.
And the notion of that you get from like watching Pocahontas,
that everybody was in harmony with the hills, the valleys,
the animals. You know, there were no talking squirrels, nor
were their sparrows landing on the shoulders of the natives.
They were murdering each other in large numbers actually, So yeah,
(35:45):
mostly living in squalor and not particularly successful in fighting
all the time for the ability to hunt in the
best and most fertile lands. So this is what the
data actually reflects. But we'll come back because can you
imagine when they start a meeting like that, how poor
(36:07):
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(36:52):
We'll be back in a few minutes.