Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to today's edition of the Clay Travis and Buck
Sexton Show podcast O.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
Welcome in Clay Travis Buck Sexton Show. I appreciate all
of you hanging out with us. I just keep smiling, Buck.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
I know many of you out there all over the
country and around the world feel the same way that
I do. I just find myself unable to put down
my phone as the fallout from Trump's massive nationwide victory
three hundred and twelve electoral votes continues to absolutely drive
(00:36):
everyone on the left utterly insane. And there are so
many great clips that we have pulled for you today
where we can basically tap dance through the refuse of
these individuals broken brains, and I think you guys are
going to very much enjoy it.
Speaker 1 (00:53):
I can't.
Speaker 2 (00:53):
I watched the woman bragging about buying champagne that we
played yesterday. Buck, I bet I've watched that video five times.
I can't. I can't stop watching it. Every time I
watch it, it gets better and better. We may need
to play that again today for people who might have
missed it yesterday.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
I just love being able to send it to friends
and bring them a few minutes of untrammeled, you know,
pure joy.
Speaker 2 (01:17):
It's funny because I actually think she's so utterly perfectly
representative of a Kamala voter. And there's funny. I don't
even know if you saw this. Buck, Tulane women's basketball
coach some of this stuff, wore a Kamala Harris T shirt,
which I honestly did not know exist, on the sideline
(01:38):
for her women's basketball coaching debut and lost.
Speaker 1 (01:43):
She wore the T shirt on Thursday.
Speaker 3 (01:44):
I'm like, these people's brains are just so broken that
they can't comprehend how bad they lost, because I think
they really thought that they were going to win a
landslide election and that Trump was going to be soundly
and completely defeated.
Speaker 2 (02:01):
And they don't even know how to respond. And I
I saw this, and what's I want to make sure
I get this guy's name right. I don't even know
if you've seen this yet, Buck, but on MSNBC Morning Joe,
you may have seen it this morning as you watched
Morning Joe, which I.
Speaker 3 (02:16):
Am talking about my friend mister jurordardisdardis. I'm not sure
what this guy. I'm looking it up because I've never
even heard of him before, Yes columnist, a non jurordardists, Durordardists.
Speaker 1 (02:29):
There we go.
Speaker 2 (02:30):
Okay, So they're having a discussion about how they've lost
young men massively, and they're talking about the impact of
all these different shows on young men, and he suggests
that what they really need to really kind of punch
back is a feminist version of Joe just kidding, even
(02:51):
say it straight, a feminist version of Joe Rogan to
reach young men. And and basically the argument Buck and
I gotta be care here some aphrase it. Basically, the
argument is we need to have shows where we prove
to everyone that we are even more of pussy willows
than they thought we were already pussy willows before.
Speaker 1 (03:12):
But listen to this guy.
Speaker 3 (03:13):
The way to get young men back in the Democrat
camp is a feminist version of This is what they're
This is This guy's dead serious.
Speaker 2 (03:21):
He's like, I've looked at all the election results. We
need a feminist version of Joe Rogan. This is his answer.
This is what it sounds like on MSNBC if you're
missing it.
Speaker 4 (03:29):
What they have done in their online media ecosystem is
build a radicalization engine. Literally, the way militant groups do
around the world that takes people from relatively low level
annoyances with the world. Why Aregg's so expensive? Why is
my kid learning this new thing in American history in
school that I didn't learn, and then moves them through
(03:50):
YouTube videos, through podcasts, moves them from that annoyance all
the way, slowly, slowly, slowly to a full blown fascist politics.
It's an elaborate, multi billion dollar infrastructure, and there is
nothing like it on the pro democracy side. When a
man is just lost and lonely and not yet radicalized,
we don't have the equivalent of Joe Rogan and Jordan
(04:12):
Peterson to move that man in a feminist direction.
Speaker 3 (04:16):
I can't believe this is real. I watched this clip
this morning and I just couldn't stop laughing. First of all,
the guy's voice is even better without the image on television,
because he sounds like the perfect NPR guy. That anyone
who is under thirty and a man is just going
to be like this is insufferably annoying and boring.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
But the idea that you could just feminize Joe Rogan
and everything would be great is so perfect.
Speaker 5 (04:41):
It's really what they need is a pronoun, announcing a pronoun,
announcing fellow, who's gonna come forward.
Speaker 6 (04:50):
I'm just gonna tell everybody.
Speaker 2 (04:52):
That's a really good Jordan Peterson. I was on the
Daily Wires election night show sitting next to Jordan Peterson.
I met Jordan Peterson like five or six times. Jordan
Peterson has no idea who I am, which is really
very funny.
Speaker 1 (05:03):
Buck.
Speaker 7 (05:04):
It's like, are you a man? Well, let's get into that.
Let's ask that question for a minute. You know, maybe
you want to announce pronouns and cry a lot in
your pillow because Kamala lost.
Speaker 3 (05:17):
He is such an unthreatening man. Jordan Peterson super brilliant, right,
super brilliant. But the idea that people are like, oh,
this is what a Nazi sounds like is utterly insane.
Speaker 1 (05:28):
And I've seen this with my own.
Speaker 2 (05:30):
Boys, Buck, because it is true what he says, which
is mainstream media that is MSNBC and CNN do not
speak to young men at all. And they do because
I got three young men in my house. They do
go on YouTube and they find things. But I kind
of love it because, first of all, my middle son
is Buck, the ultimate bro. I mean, just like the
(05:56):
other day, he ordered something from TikTok. He's now on
TikTok and he got a package at the house. You'll
love this. And the package comes in and I'm like,
what did you order on TikTok And he's like, I've
got to get my forearms stronger, and so.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
He has ordered.
Speaker 2 (06:11):
Do you remember when you were in like high school,
like the bro maybe the Ultimate bro, like had the
kidding your arm strength.
Speaker 3 (06:17):
The back of I had. I had guns and Ammo
magazine in high school. I had Maxim magazine in high school. Yeah,
I may or may not have bought those electrodes that
give you a six pack. Spoiler alert, they do not
give you a six pack I want. I mean, he's
funny about it. He's got a really good sense of humor.
But I said, what do you like.
Speaker 2 (06:35):
He's like, Well, when I'm in class and they're talking,
I can take notes with one hand and with the
other hand, I'm just gonna get really strong forearms so
I'm better at catching passes on the football. I'm telling
you that this is his logic, and I just I
can't stop laughing. But what they get out of the
YouTube thing Buck is actually I think it's like stop whining.
(06:57):
This is what they're being told. This is what it's
so fun. Wine less, work harder, do more push ups.
This is what the male influencers on YouTube and TikTok
and everything else are teaching them. And I'm like, that's
kind of perfect advice, honestly for young men.
Speaker 1 (07:15):
Wine less, work harder, do push ups?
Speaker 3 (07:17):
Is I mean that really has appealed to them. I'm
gonna tell you something, Clay, the you're seeing I think
a massive change in the way the media going forward
is going to try to present some of these issues,
this whole anti masculine stuff. I'm not saying they're going
(07:38):
to abandon it, but they're going to become much more slick,
and they've become too bold, too obvious, too stupid on
these issues. And the people that are now coming out,
who are they think they're playing to their audience and
they are by saying, you know, you know, we just
need to have male feminist Jordan Peterson's and male feminist
(07:59):
Joe Rogan's, which is hilarious because also what would that mean.
I mean, you think Joe Rogan's gonna come out and say,
you know, yeah, like I don't think that men are
stronger than women. You know, this whole thing is absurd,
Like their argument falls down right away. But I think
that they recognize this is a long term political liability.
(08:19):
And some of the voices that we've gotten used to
hearing who say very dumb things about all of this,
I think they're going to fade a bit or they're
going to change their tune on it, because this is
just they've taken too much of a shell Aki and
they know now that it's open season on these issues.
And because of X for example, McLay think about they
(08:40):
would not have allowed people to be mocked leading into
this election the way that they have been mocked. They
used to throttle their I mean, people don't even realize
how specific Twitter had an army of people, you know
what they were doing. We talked about them as left
wing activists. They were always putting their thumb on the
scale for what they believe. That's what their job actually was.
Eighty percent of people from Twitter that Elon fired. We're
(09:03):
making sure that you saw less of my tweets, less
of Clay's tweets, and less of you know, all of
our fellow conservatives and they're gone now. Also really important
like we're mocking this guy talking about how there needs
to be a feminist version of Joe Rogan.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
Men. This is important, and I don't hear a lot
of people saying it.
Speaker 3 (09:22):
Men being strong doesn't mean women have to be weak.
Both men and women can be strong. Buck, you and
I both have super smart, opinionated wives. Most strong men
that I know don't want a weak woman to be
a partner with because you just don't want to like
not be challenged. Right, Like, it's like men we're not
(09:44):
in opposition. Does that make sense? Like it's it's crazy
to me this conceit that if men are strong it
means women have to be weak. That's actually not true
at all.
Speaker 6 (09:51):
I mean, just like Clay, there's a dominance hierarchy and
you just you embrace it and you understand that you
know you better let you well be strong.
Speaker 2 (10:01):
But this might be your best impression, honestly. I mean,
I think there are people who are just tuning in
right now that think that Jordan Peterson is co hosting
with me today. That is that is really good. It
is funny to me, Buck and I like Jordan Peterson.
He's super smart. Obviously did it with the guy he's
a great dude.
Speaker 3 (10:19):
But I am telling you I've met him six times
and he has no idea who I am. I mean,
I've set on shows with him, We've had him on
this show, like, no earthly idea who I am, which
I actually respect.
Speaker 6 (10:30):
He sat down next to me at dinner and he's like, Oh,
it's nice to sit next to Tucker Carson. Again.
Speaker 2 (10:38):
I respect that he had no clue who I was,
despite the fact that we met five or six times.
But every time I meet him, the idea that they
have tried to turn him, him, of all people, into
some like dark vampire like character that is rating the
souls of American men is just one of the craziest
(11:01):
things of all the time that I've ever heard.
Speaker 3 (11:02):
We also, we have a feminist Jordan Peterson Pickham, Tim Walls,
Mark Cuban, Like we have people that try to walk
this walk of speaking to guys but doing it as
a male feminist, and there is an inherent contradiction here.
Speaker 6 (11:22):
It does not work.
Speaker 3 (11:24):
This notion that there is a feminist Joe Rogan that
is just waiting to be created is absurd.
Speaker 6 (11:29):
It's as absurd as men can get pregnant.
Speaker 3 (11:31):
Because you're talking about to counter the reason Joe Rogan
appeals is because he is a bro who talks to
dudes in a way that dudes talk about things that
they like. And you know, there's a connection there with
his with his male line. But a lot of women
listom too, But there's a connects with the male audience, right,
the notion that you can undo that and have the
(11:53):
same kind of audience in effect, you know what I'm saying.
It's it's why they're losing and lose so bad because
their solution to a problem, which they at least acknowledge
based on the election results, actually leads to a bigger problem.
And ultimately we've got some more clips from them too.
(12:16):
I think they are just in complete denial about what
the real world is. And Buck, this is what I've
said for a long time. College football fans saved America.
I really do believe that's true.
Speaker 2 (12:28):
But you pointed out, like I trust college football fans
more than non because ultimately, college football fans, I believe
are the heartbeat of American normalcy in the country and
the idea that Tim Walls walking around in a camo
hat with his exaggerated gesticulating hand gestures and awkward, weird
(12:48):
body movements and everything else.
Speaker 3 (12:50):
People were going to be like, Oh, that's my guy.
I really connected with him.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
Again.
Speaker 2 (12:56):
I think it goes to they did recognize that Kamala
had a problem with men. The problem is they have
no one who actually understands men. And Tim Walls is
the kind of guy you would pick if a woman
were picking a guy to try to appeal to men's
that's him.
Speaker 1 (13:12):
That's so that's where you end up.
Speaker 3 (13:15):
I'm just gonna tell you we have so much fun
today because, first of all, I saw a bunch of
friends last night down here in Florida. We're all talking
about people who are in this realm. You know some
of them, you know, Carol Markowitz and others, and at
Lisa Booth and we were talking of Dave Rubin about
how this administration is going to be coming together and
it is looking so good. So we're gonna spend a
(13:35):
lot of time on that. But we are still in
Victory week. It is a Friday. It is a great
time to be an American. And I'm these meltdowns and
these cry fests that these libs are having, Clay.
Speaker 6 (13:45):
We're not going to be able to enjoy this. In
two weeks, folks, we're going to be focused on saving
the country and policy.
Speaker 3 (13:50):
So I'm just saying today we'll get to some real stuff,
but we're gonna have some fun with the silliness because
they're having while we are having Celebrate America Week, Democrats
are having crime a river and drink a lot of.
Speaker 1 (14:04):
Soy milk week.
Speaker 3 (14:04):
And it's very sad for them, but very fun for us.
So expect expect more of this to be coming your way.
You know where I'm going to morrow, everybody the gun range,
going out there, going to be testing my skills this
time around when I'm shooting steel and trying to hit
them all down. Whatever it is, seven shots in a row.
I'm not going to just with on the last one.
Some of you saw that video I posted. I'm going
to get it dialed in, and you know why, the
(14:26):
Mantis X system. I've got it here. When I'm done
with the show today, I'm going to go safe spot
in my house, make sure my weapon is clear and safe,
set up my Mantis X and then train with it.
And then when I get off to the range tomorrow,
my trigger pull is going to be better. My side
alignment's going to be steadier, and I'm going to be
making those groups happen much tighter than if I just
(14:46):
went out there and like, oh I remember how to shoot.
Mantis x is amazing this way. And actually when you'd
use it and you go to the range, and then
if just to try to compare, you go to the
range after not using it the day before, you're just
going to see a difference. Mantisx dot com Dry fire
training for your pistol, for your long gun used by
people the military, I mean, the big two A community guys.
(15:08):
You'll see some of them, you know, on YouTube. They'll
talk about this training system too. It's just so effective
and it's really fun. You get better all the time
with it. Twenty minutes is all it takes for first
time users to see real obvious improvement. Go to mantis
x dot com to improve your shooting accuracy m A
n tis x dot com. I know, I said we're
(15:35):
gonna have a lot of fun today, and we are, and.
Speaker 6 (15:39):
We'll talk about the dominance hierarchy some more.
Speaker 3 (15:42):
But I gotta I gotta start sending Jordan so they'd
be like, hey, what do you think, Jordan? You know,
I haven't hung out with you that much, but are we?
Speaker 8 (15:49):
Are?
Speaker 6 (15:49):
We getting close here? It's like your bloody well, better
ask me, But I'll say this.
Speaker 3 (15:56):
We're gonna have a lot of fun and we have
some of these clips the meltdowns and everything else. But
we are going to talk to Julie Kellying the third
hour about the situation of J six defendants. And there's
so many things to feel, you know, there's the feeling
good clay about what's not.
Speaker 6 (16:13):
Going to happen now because of this election.
Speaker 3 (16:16):
It's like finding out you don't have to have open
heart surgery or like a serious you know, knee operation
or something that's very good. And then there's also the
really great stuff that I think is going to come
out of this. And I really believe that the J
six defendants, some of whom should have never even been
charged with anything. Okay, trespassing is not a thing that
(16:38):
the federal government goes after people for. But even the
ones that did break some laws, and we do believe
in rule of law, were treated so harshly and so unfairly.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
You know.
Speaker 6 (16:48):
It's like, yeah, okay, you.
Speaker 3 (16:50):
Know, if somebody brought if somebody stole something, that's bad.
You don't send them to prison for twenty years for that, right.
I mean, I'm just coming up with a random crime.
I didn't even really steal things. The point is, I
think a lot of commutations and even more pardons are coming.
Real relief on the way for people who are political prisoners. Amen,
And it should happen. And this is where I think
(17:12):
Trump could be super smart. I would go ahead and
part in basically all January sixth defendants and convicted everybody else.
Speaker 1 (17:19):
They're all out.
Speaker 2 (17:21):
I might also simultaneously, and this is going to get
some people riled up. Pardon Eric Adams, who I think
is being targeted because of his not robust support of
the Biden administration for relatively small things getting an upgrade
on Turkish airlines?
Speaker 1 (17:36):
Are you kidding me? And Hunter Biden?
Speaker 2 (17:39):
And if you throw all that together and you say
it's time to turn the page on the past, use
a little Kabbala line, I think it would actually show
a great deal of unity. And I think it would
be super smart of Trump to do that. By the way,
price picks buck.
Speaker 3 (17:54):
Unfortunately, three out of four hit last night, and our three.
Speaker 1 (17:58):
Hits so easy.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
We just needed Derrick Henry to run for a few
more yards. Great game last night, by the way, especially
if you're a Baltimore Ravens fan.
Speaker 3 (18:08):
Sorry Bengals. Thirty five thirty four, they go to Lamar
and Jamar who came through for us. Lamar and Jamar
came through for US. Joe Burrow came through for US.
Easy win for those three. We just needed about twenty
more yards rushing from Derrick Henry, who actually is the
best running back in the NFL.
Speaker 1 (18:24):
But it didn't happen.
Speaker 2 (18:26):
However, you got fifty dollars if you signed up, and
we'll have more picks for you next Thursday. All you
have to do is go to prizepicks dot com. Use
my name Clay. That's prizepicks dot com. My name Clay.
Speaker 3 (18:36):
You get fifty dollars when you play five dollars. You
can play in Florida, you can play in Texas, you
can play in California, Georgia, thirty plus states.
Speaker 1 (18:46):
Have some fun.
Speaker 2 (18:47):
Prizepicks dot com code Clay. Sign up today prize picks
dot com Code Clay. But you may think this is crazy,
and certainly I've said things that are crazy in the
opinion of some listeners before.
Speaker 1 (19:09):
Remember when John F.
Speaker 2 (19:10):
Kennedy gave his inaugural I believe it was in the
inaugural address in nineteen sixty he said, We're going to
put a man on the moon before the end of
the decade, and a lot of people said that was crazy,
and I guess it would have been nineteen sixty one,
and then in nineteen sixty nine we put a man
on the moon. Given Trump's connection to Elon Musk and
(19:31):
you and I were just talking about off the air,
Trump has talked with is Olenski, and reports are that
Elon Musk was involved in that conversation as well. What
about Trump announcing in his inaugural address that his goal
is to put a man on Mars before the end
of the decade. I think that would be an incredibly
(19:56):
stirring challenge. It would tie in very much with Elon Musk.
Speaker 3 (20:02):
I think it's feasible, and look, I am not a
rocket scientist or knowledgeable that much about it, other than
having read what others have said. I think it is
feasible that we could put a man or woman on
the surface of Mars by the end of the decade.
And I think it would be amazing if we made
(20:25):
that sort of a aspirational desire to try to further
humanity in that way, and I think it ties in
very well with Elon Musk's connection to Trump. And look,
I don't have a problem with people setting incredibly aspirational goals.
Speaker 1 (20:43):
And not achieving them.
Speaker 2 (20:45):
I would rather attempt it than sit back and not
have grand aspirations. You know, if you went back in time, Buck,
there was an innate sense of incredible American optimism when
John F.
Speaker 1 (20:57):
Kennedy was inaugurated.
Speaker 2 (20:59):
Are we incredibly optimistic about doing that hasn't been done before?
I think if you had said to I know Biden
said like, we're gonna cure cancer by the Okay, I
get it. I don't think that's a fea. I appreciate
the goal. I don't think it's really feasible, But putting
a man on mars, I do think is feasible before
the end of the decade. And I think it would
(21:22):
create a great deal of national unity. Because if you
went back in time and told people who watched you
and I were not born. But if you told people
in nineteen sixty nine, hey, in twenty twenty four, we'd
just be talking about going back to the Moon. I
think it would have been really disappointing that we had
not progressed further.
Speaker 1 (21:39):
I think that's a big.
Speaker 3 (21:40):
Part of the excitement of what this new Trump administration
is is going to bring audacious goals, you know. I
think that's something that they'll be able to go after
with people like Elon Musk and you know RFK junior
people I know, especially in the alternative health world, people
(22:01):
that have been willing to question things like you know,
the COVID madness, very enthusiastic about RFK in his lane,
in his lane, I think he.
Speaker 1 (22:09):
Could be very very useful.
Speaker 3 (22:12):
And and then you look at you know, Vivek, and
you look at jd Vance and these He's just got
a team of alpha's and a team of winners around him.
He's got a chief chief of staff Susie Wiles just announced.
So also the whole Mark Cuban like, does.
Speaker 6 (22:28):
He have any strong, intelligent women around him?
Speaker 3 (22:30):
Well, he's got a female White House chief of staff
already been announced there.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
Well yeah, first ever, first ever.
Speaker 3 (22:37):
Uh so, yeah, I think that there are some things
that they can they'll be trying to do, you know,
make America incredibly prosperous, but also the the Elon has
essentially created a commercial space industry where none existed. We
need to go after this. I mean, this is the
the implications of this. I know Elon is doing that
doesn't even tell him. But the administration and policy the
(22:59):
implications for this are enormous. You mentioned trying to get
people to Mars. Also dealing with you know, one of
the biggest crises. We talked about the debt crisis. But
there is a true national health crisis in this country.
Not trying to sound like some you know, infomercial that
wants to sell you, guys the ab thing that you
electrocute yourself with or whatever, but there is a health crisis.
You know what I'm talking about. The electrodes. It's got
(23:21):
the electrodes on it.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
If you if you that worked, by the way, there's
a lot of dudes out there that would be super ripped.
Speaker 1 (23:27):
Yeah, it does not, unfortunately work.
Speaker 3 (23:29):
It's like diet, exercise, genetics, a lot of very hard
long term things for us expect. But I will say this,
the the health issues in this country are massive. The
border issue and securing our borders is absolutely massive. And
taking that on and I think there's a recognition Clay
that they have to go after.
Speaker 1 (23:49):
These things right away. Yes, because there's.
Speaker 3 (23:53):
First eighteen months you got you gotta do it. The
Trump administration has eighteen months to change America and change
the world, really true. And after that it's gonna get
bogged down and mid term and then presidential and it's
Trump's last term and lame duck and all this stuff
he's got. They've got eighteen months change world. But when
you have people like Vance and Musk and Ramaswami and
(24:16):
RFK Junior, you smart young Tulsi Gacia people, you know,
all of these and there are other billionaires in thrown.
I'm sure if you know David Sachs, you know wants
to help in some way.
Speaker 6 (24:28):
You know, he could be very useful.
Speaker 3 (24:29):
You have people that recognize this incredible vehicle that is
the United States government, Treasury people all together, and there's
I think a room for really phenomenal stuff to be done.
Not gonna solve every problem. You know, you're still gonna
stub your toe and you get out of bed in
the morning. Sometimes I get it, We're not living in
a fantasy. This isn't the audacity of hope.
Speaker 1 (24:51):
Or whatever.
Speaker 6 (24:52):
This isn't oh, we're all just gonna sing songs together.
Speaker 3 (24:55):
This is big goals that are achievable with people who
can achieve them and Donald Trump leading the parade. So
a couple of breaking news stories out there since we
came on the air. Jack Smith has moved to vacate
all of the cases against Trump in the federal courts.
I know that we said this would happen, but the
(25:18):
fact that he gets elected and immediately the Department of
Justice is like, oh, yeah, so much for all those
federal charges that we were trying to bring to put
him in prison for the rest of his life is
such a staggering admission to me of how crazily political.
Speaker 1 (25:36):
This all was.
Speaker 2 (25:39):
And I think we need now and I know Jim
Jordan is going to do this. We need an investigation
of the investigateurs. And we're going to talk with Julie
Kelly at two o'clock on this show in a couple
of hours in the final hour of the week about
the absolute latest year, pardoning the jan six political prisoners.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
All that.
Speaker 3 (25:59):
Also, the Department of Justice has announced that Iran, through
a Revolutionary Guard member, had been trying to assassinate Donald
Trump before the election.
Speaker 1 (26:12):
They just unsealed that indictment.
Speaker 3 (26:15):
And this is a huge aspect of a story out
there about Iran because they knew and know that as
soon as Trump gets into office, all of this appeasement
of Iran that has allowed the Middle East to become
so incredibly dangerous for so many people out there is
(26:38):
going to end.
Speaker 2 (26:39):
And so they tried to kill him in advance. So again,
this is a major issue, but two major breaking stories
that have happened, and I just I hope we can
keep this guy safe.
Speaker 3 (26:55):
But thank the Lord that we made it through the
election buck because they would do whatever it could they
could to kill him. The forces of evil, the forces
of darkness go after the most consequential among us, as
we all know, and so I think that the bad
guys in a whole range of ways recognize that Donald
(27:19):
Trump means business and big things are coming. So I'm
very enthusiastic about it. I'm really very.
Speaker 2 (27:26):
Hopeful, no doubt, and I think that's consequential as well,
which is why we're going to continue to take your
calls and react as we move throughout the course of
the show. But I'll tell you still jazzed about everything
that happened in the election. If I hear a leaf
blower tomorrow morning at seven am, guess what, it's still
(27:47):
going to really bother me because you have to be
civilized human beings with all the leaves out and about
at least wait till nine am on the weekend. But
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Speaker 1 (28:30):
That's one word.
Speaker 3 (28:32):
Leaffilter dot com, l e a f filter dot com
slash Clayanbuck. You know what a great way is to
celebrate this fantastic week in America is having switch up
your coffee your coffee drinking.
Speaker 5 (28:52):
You're like, well, I like to drink this communists, will
you know? And Jordan Peterson's like, no, drink Crocket.
Speaker 1 (28:59):
I'm just kidding. I don't think I could say that.
Jordan Peterson says that, but you know what I mean.
Speaker 3 (29:02):
Drink Crockett Coffee. Drink Crocket Coffee. Go to Crocketcoffee dot com.
It's absolutely fantastic. I think you'll love it. Subscribe check
it out for us there Crocketcoffee dot com. And also
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(29:24):
percent of the profits goes to Tault, the Towers Foundation.
Speaker 1 (29:27):
And there we have it.
Speaker 3 (29:28):
Clay, I wanted to get to can we do some
more of the of the sadness?
Speaker 1 (29:33):
The sadness? Let us do it? I love these.
Speaker 3 (29:35):
Here we go, Sonny Houston. This is cut twenty two,
Sonny Hostin. Instead of any maybe we did something wrong,
she's here to just shake her head at America. She
is so disappointed in America and wants to know what's
wrong with all of you?
Speaker 6 (29:50):
Play it?
Speaker 9 (29:51):
What is wrong with America?
Speaker 10 (29:53):
I think what is wrong with our country that the
Republican Party would choose as a candidate and support a
candidate who is an insurrectionist, who is an election denier,
who is someone who is twice impeached, thirty four time
convicted felons, someone who has been.
Speaker 6 (30:12):
Seen alled sexual with comma.
Speaker 9 (30:15):
By twenty six women found liabel for sexual abuse. What
is wrong with this country that they would choose a
message of divisiveness, of xenophobia, of racism, of misogyny over
a message of inclusiveness.
Speaker 1 (30:34):
You know, keep it going.
Speaker 6 (30:36):
I love it.
Speaker 3 (30:37):
Keep complaining, keep whining, keep telling everybody that it's their
fault that they didn't want to vote for Kamala.
Speaker 6 (30:43):
I mean, it's not even a good candidate. We all
know it.
Speaker 1 (30:46):
I So I love media.
Speaker 2 (30:50):
You know, Block might not be shocked by this, but
I wonder, in a genuine sense, what is the game
plan for media now? You see an let itself on fire,
MSNBC let itself on fire in the first Trump term.
And we talked about this beforehand, because you and I
(31:11):
saw the Trump win coming and we said, will Democrats
have the ability to look in the mirror and say
it's us. Our message stunk. We talked down to people.
The things we said about Trump were untrue. We've got
a great clip to play for people, which I give
credit to him, Charlemagne, who has a really successful show.
(31:32):
Part of iHeart large Black audience is saying what you
and I have said for months. If Trump's really Hitler,
why when he almost gets killed do you call him
and express your condolences? Do we have that clip right here?
Speaker 3 (31:46):
I mean, I think I think it's even even more
we have the clip, but just it's even more. He
just won, And now they're not that now that quote
Hitler has won the election, you're not worried anymore.
Speaker 6 (31:56):
You're not calling him Hitler.
Speaker 2 (31:58):
No, and both Biden and Kamala came out and said
it's important to have a peaceful transfer of power. If
Hitler actually won, you should be like, we're going to
ride it in the streets. There's no way we can
allow this guy to take power. You're telling on yourself
as you did after the assassination. If you really thought
Trump was Hitler, you should have come out and said, damn,
I'm sorry, missed right.
Speaker 1 (32:20):
They don't believe the arguments that they are.
Speaker 2 (32:22):
Making because as soon as Trump wins, they're like, oh, well,
we'll get them next time. Another election coming, You're like,
wait a minute. The problem is with this Buck, they
have radicalized a huge portion of their party. You can
see these people all over the internet convinced that Donald
Trump is going to basically kill them. And when you
(32:47):
radicalize people like that, they're emotionally unstable. They engage in
emotionally unstable acts. I mean, the Democrat Party is largely
run by emotionally unstable single women. And I'm sorry for
everybody out there, including a lot of you who were
young women. Is there any group in America more susceptible
(33:10):
to emotional manipulation than young women?
Speaker 1 (33:13):
I would suggest the answer is no.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
And if you wonder why the Democrat Party is so illogical,
it's because they won single women, Buck, I think by
thirty plus points. It's basically their base.
Speaker 6 (33:25):
See what the left really needs is a feminist Klay Travis.
Speaker 1 (33:31):
You are single for way longer than me.
Speaker 3 (33:34):
I'm telling I have three boys who are teenagers, and
teenage boys are knuckleheads.
Speaker 1 (33:38):
Young women and every woman out.
Speaker 2 (33:40):
There listening to me right now, let me start by
saying this, every man out there the dumbest and you
all agree with me if you're a man, the dumbest
people on the planet, and I bet you'll sign off
on this. Two Buck, are fourteen to eighteen to nineteen
year old boys who all think that they're the smartest,
baddest ass people on the planet. They are morons. They
(34:01):
are complete. I'm telling you every man who has ever
been fourteen to nineteen year old is not nodding along
with me. And I always say there's never a woman
whose final two words is.
Speaker 1 (34:10):
Watch this right. Young men are morons. I'm telling y'all.
You all know it.
Speaker 3 (34:17):
If you'll live through your young adult years, you all
come back to see it.
Speaker 1 (34:20):
But women, women in their.
Speaker 3 (34:25):
Teenage years and their early twenties are emotionally able to
be manipulated more so than anybody in the country. And
I actually feel bad for them because you can see
them on social media.
Speaker 1 (34:39):
Buck.
Speaker 2 (34:39):
A lot of these women have bought into the idea
that Donald Trump's gonna grab them by the hair and
drag them out of their homes if they're pregnant, that
police officers are gonna pull them over. They legitimately believe
that they're going into the Handmaid's Tale. They bought these
arguments that Kamala and Biden don't actually believe at all.
Speaker 3 (34:59):
Well, this is where again we can go back to
the Breakfast Club and mister the God speaking about this issue,
where he says, they clearly don't believe it, and let's
play it so you can hear it.
Speaker 1 (35:12):
Don't y'all find a strange that, Naddy, He's won.
Speaker 8 (35:14):
They're not calling them the Third Democracy, they're not calling
them a fashion I mean, damn.
Speaker 6 (35:19):
On Monday, They're.
Speaker 1 (35:21):
On Monday. They was just calling them that.
Speaker 8 (35:23):
I would think that, you know, if you really believe that,
then somebody's speech would be about how America epped up
and how things are about to be really bad. It
just makes you wonder how much of it did they
really believe?
Speaker 1 (35:34):
How much of it was just policies? I'm telling.
Speaker 3 (35:38):
Right, I mean the they didn't believe it, and he
knows it, and we told everybody, and more and more
people buck this is the lesson. More and more people
are will are seeing how often they are being lied
to and manipulated by these media organizations, which is destroying
the underlying audience of the media organizations in real time.
(35:59):
And he got a great clip I want to play
at some point of Jim Vanda Hay, I believe that's
how you pronounce his name, who runs Axios, which I
actually enjoy reading, talking about how legacy media is basically dead.
And that's why I'm fascinated buck to see whether they
look in the mirror and recognize their culpability here or
do they further light themselves on fire, hastening their demise
(36:23):
even more rapidly. It's an interesting moment for them, I think,
in the media, and also Democrats.
Speaker 6 (36:29):
Also an MSNBC host who says she deleted her.
Speaker 3 (36:32):
Ex account, but turns out she didn't, but she was
so sad about the election she had to delete it.
Crying on late night comedy shows over Trump's win. We
are going joy riding in the wreckage of lib souls
in the next hour.
Speaker 1 (36:48):
You'll want to be here for