Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome everybody.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Tuesday edition off the Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show
kicks off right now thanks to the guy who high
five to me on the way out of the gym today.
Clay says he listens every day, loves the show. I
wish I could have stayed longer, but I was like,
I gotta go do the show.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
So it was a.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Close one had to run home, but I got here
and we have a lot to get into today. President
Trump announcing eighty thousand documents on the assassination of JFT
will be released, and he has asked that the files
not be redacted. I can't imagine how there would be
any justification to continue a redaction at this point, but
(00:40):
we shall see what is released. Eighty remember eighty thousand pages.
So anybody who within minutes of this thing of the
document drop says I know who killed JFK. Just grain
of salt, like, let's see what's actually in this thing.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
I know.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
I'm not going to take out my wampwomp button quite
yet on it. We'll see, but I am in wait
and see mode for sure. President Trump has announced that
Hunter and Ashley Biden will no longer have Secret Service protection.
They had Clay eighteen and thirteen agents. Assignments are crazy, respectively.
(01:15):
Hunter Biden had eighteen Secret Service agents. Eighteen Secret Service agents.
Like this is outrageous, outrageous. I mean this, you know,
if you're the president. The way they usually do this
is they start to fade it out. I mean presidents,
I guess former presidents. I think once you get past
two terms, you really don't need a Secret Service detail anymore.
(01:38):
I'm a little bit of a maybe a radical on
this whole thing. I think people just need to like
get a grip. It's okay. You know, no one cares
that you were president three presidents ago that much. You know,
like don't don't go to Moscow on vacation and you'll
be fine. So anyway I find this, I think we've
gotten way too much of a praetorian realits.
Speaker 1 (01:57):
It was eighteen That is crazy.
Speaker 2 (02:01):
I mean that that is this guy was traveling with
a platoon of Secret Service agents in case what I mean,
think about and think about what they probably saw too.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
Don't even get me started. Well, also to your point,
it's not I mean he lived in Malibu. I mean,
do we think that he was in perpetual danger from
all of the super libs in Malibu, like that they
were going to do something to him.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
No, this is this is just so that you can
have a you can have a taxpayer funded chauffeur and
and security. And you know, I want to know what
all these guys were doing all the time. It's the
whole thing is completely outrageous.
Speaker 1 (02:38):
And and this.
Speaker 2 (02:38):
This thing, you know, we allow presidents to determine really
what the presidents get, and these guys have way too much.
Speaker 1 (02:46):
It's it's it's crazy.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
The former presidents, some of them have just I think,
like Nixon said, I don't even really I want to
get my own. You know, I wouldn't want I mean,
I doesn't feel to me like it would be very
much fun to have security with you.
Speaker 1 (03:01):
I mean, we've had to have security for some events. Obviously,
when somebody wanted to kill me, we had security. So
we have security off and on. I'm not knocking the idea,
but it isn't A eighteen agents is for someone who
has ever had security is a absolutely insane number. And I remember,
(03:22):
if I recall, maybe we'll talk to Miranda Devine about
this tomorrow because she really kind of broke this story
on the New York Post. But Buck, it also was
the case that I believe that Secret Service was renting
a high end mansion next door to him to use
as the base to be able to protect Hunter when
(03:42):
he was living in the Sugar Daddy's house in Malibu. Yeah,
the whole thing is outrageous. Man.
Speaker 2 (03:47):
This is completely unjustifiable, and I think that it's the
right move.
Speaker 1 (03:51):
Look, presidents, you know, they.
Speaker 2 (03:54):
Need to be protected, especially this president, need to be
protected with whatever is required. But you know, if you
were just the most recent president, Okay, but your family,
Ashley Biden, give me, give me a break, all right.
You know you got to live with a certain degree
of just life is uncertain. I'm sorry, Like, you can't
go around twenty Secret Service agents the rest of my life, please,
(04:15):
all right. So anyway, that's something we can talk a
little more about. Cease fire between Israel and hamas is
over Israeli jets have been striking Gaza, and the Israelis
are just saying they're not waiting for they're not waiting
for hostages anymore. Enough is enough that judge who ordered
the planes to turn around with the trend de Aragua
members on it is really digging in and getting crazier
(04:39):
and crazier, which which we will make some sense of today.
And yes, oh and then we have what's going on
right now? Why don't we jump into this one because
I think it ties into everything. Trump has been on
the phone this morning with Vladimir Putin, and remember Klay
last week, the conversation was, Oh, it's too early, and
there's so much many conditions, and really downplaying that Trump
(05:03):
was even likely or is even possible he could get
any kind of a breakthrough if this results, if this
call results in a ceasefire, and we should know pretty imminently.
I think if at least a ceasefire has been preliminarily
agreed to, does the media cover it as a breakthrough
or do they cover it as well?
Speaker 1 (05:20):
We won't really know. Yeah, I look, the ceasefire in
general is now ended in the Middle East, right, so
ceasefires are not perpetual, never ending ceasefire realities. But I
do feel like if they start the ceasefire in Ukraine
(05:43):
with Russia, tell me if you agree with this, at
least during Trump's remaining term in office, Vladimir Putin will
not invade Ukraine anymore? Do you feel good about that,
like if you had to predict based on what we
saw in the first turn when he didn't invade, And
whatever you feel about this, I do believe that Trump
(06:06):
and Putin have a somewhat decent relationship that actually is
brought together by the total why that Russia won Trump
the twenty sixteen election. Trump knows that's not true, Putin
knows that's not true. We and by the way, the
United States, I'm curious if you would agree with this,
(06:27):
Buck probably spends more money trying to influence foreign elections
than any country in the world. So the idea that
we're gonna be like grabbing our pearls and falling on
to a fainting couch that other countries would in some
way seek favor in our own elections when we are,
I believe, probably the biggest manipulator of international elections of
(06:52):
any country in the world. But they didn't have any
massive impact. The whole Russia collusion story was a lie.
The money that Russia spent on Facebook ads was a
pinprick of what was spent, like one hundred and k
of billions of dollars that were spent hardly anyone saw them.
They were poorly designed. My point on this is, I
(07:15):
think the Trump Putin relationship is actually closer because of
the lies that they both went through there. I don't
feel like if we get a ceasefire, Putin will violate it.
Am I crazy in your mind? As a former CIA
analyst put your CIA analyst hat on here, how would
you assess the likelihood?
Speaker 2 (07:34):
I think you have to add to that that these
are two men who recognizing each other historic figures and
alpha dogs, so to speak. I think that that's that
shouldn't be underestimated. That there is some degree of respect
between these two. I don't know if it would be affection,
(07:54):
but it's respect, you know. I'm not sure they like
each other, but they definitely look at each other as
two guys who, like I said, they're historic, they are
men of the moment. And yes, I think that if
there is a ceasefire that is agreed to. I think
that Putin knows that making Trump look silly is a
dangerous thing to do, meaning that there would be real
(08:16):
consequences for Russia that he does not want. And I
think that he that Putin recognizes that is true. Now
that was not true in the same way obviously under
Biden when he invaded on Biden's watch and did all
this stuff. So we are in a better situation. I
think that you know, they'll be there'll be some negotiating
(08:39):
that happens here. This is not going to be everyone
comes out of this phone call today high fiving and
the war is over, and you know, Russian, Russian and
Ukrainian soldiers are going to be kissing ladies out in
the street and in jubilation. That's not going to happen, unfortunately.
But I think that you might get to, you know,
a couple of points have to be agreed to, and
then there'll be a ceasefire for thirty days and then
(09:00):
we'll see and the ceasefire is going to be a
rolling process. Look, the same thing has been true with
the Israeli ceasefire which just ended. The Israeli said, okay,
we'll do a ceasefire, and we have these conditions and
this is what we expect. And Hamas, because it's a
psychopathic terrorist organization, violates the conditions, won't give back the hostages,
so then fighting resumes. You may see something similar with
(09:23):
Russia and Ukraine. But to your point overall I think
is true, which is you're not going to have Trump
say I think we've got a ceasefire for thirty days,
and then ten days into it, Vladimir Putin is pulling
some nonsense, you know, firing missiles into Kiev and acting
like he can get away with whatever he wants, because
(09:44):
there will be consequences when Trump is the commander in chief, financial,
maybe diplomatic, maybe maybe other stuff. But Trump's not going
to allow that to go unpunished.
Speaker 1 (09:54):
Yeah, I think you're right. And look, I am g
and curious how the media will cover it. I saw
I was reading over the weekend. Buck. I don't know
if you saw it. They do this grid Iron dinner
where everybody in the media comes and they and they
make their usual jokes. And your boy, Governor Wes Moore
(10:17):
of Maryland got up and made all these jokes about
Russia and Trump and how Trump is putin stooge, and
everybody was just rolling over laughing. And it feels to
me such an antiquated joke to be making. But I
would almost guarantee for you that whatever the peace agreement
(10:38):
or ceasefire is reached between Ukraine and Russia, that it
will somehow be used as evidence that Trump is the
Manchurian candidate for Vladimir Putin. And I say that because
they don't seem to be able to come up with
any other new lines of attack. Is that kind of interesting?
(10:58):
Like Trump is in off right now? And leave aside
the fact that the Democrat Party has lit itself on fire.
Lowest approval ratings going all the way back for NBC
and CNN as long as they've been doing those polls
right literally have never been lower. But the thing that
maybe surprises me the most is they buck They can't
even come up with any new lines of attack. They
(11:20):
tried the oh, it's president Elon and everybody was like, yeah,
that's not really working right because you told us he's
a dictator. So is he a dictator or is he
actually just the stooge of someone else? Like they're actually
mixing messages. They can't even figure out what their attack
angle is on Trump right now.
Speaker 2 (11:41):
It is deep in the recesses of the Democrat mind
right now.
Speaker 1 (11:47):
But I really do believe.
Speaker 2 (11:48):
That there is a widespread, quiet panic that they will
never address and they will never accept. But it's in
the back of their minds, and it's saying, maybe you
were just wrong about this top to bottom. Maybe you
were just wrong about this guy in every respect, and
he's actually going to be great for the country, and
(12:10):
you did everything possible to ruin and destroy him, and
he just kept on coming and it's going to benefit
not just his voters but America.
Speaker 1 (12:20):
These you know.
Speaker 2 (12:20):
People we saw this with COVID. People would rather look
like morons than accept that they were really wrong on
something they were very dug in on. And you're even
seeing some of these people, I think you're right, Buck. Privately,
they're having light bulbs go off and they're thinking, what
(12:41):
if I was actually on the wrong side of history, right,
because remember how long they hit us with that all
through you're enabling, you're platforming, you're on the wrong side
of history.
Speaker 1 (12:51):
I don't hear wrong side of history arguments really anymore.
Speaker 2 (12:54):
Let's we can just take stock of this for a minute,
they said, And it was a widespread arrative across the
entire Democrat Party from the top down from Kamala to
who is the guy who was their vice president, Tim Walls,
all these people they said he was a fascist and
that he was Hitler like that he was America's Hitler.
(13:16):
Here we are, it's not even two months in. He's
bringing an asteris. He's let an astronauts come back from
outer space while Biden left them up there stranded for
political reasons. He secured the border, which every country should
be allowed to do. When every Democrat said they wanted
to do, they were lying. He's trying to get rid
of government waste, fraud and abuse. He's trying to end
a horrific meat grinder of a war that has got
(13:38):
hundreds of thousands of casualties and no end in sight.
Speaker 1 (13:42):
Does any of this.
Speaker 2 (13:43):
Sound like Hitler stuff? Like where's the scary fascist stuff? Yeah,
he's got the richest man in the world working for
free to try to stop waste and fraud. So the
price of eggs will come down. And wow, guess what
the price of eggs is already coming down.
Speaker 1 (13:57):
Clay. Remember when two weeks ago it was why has
and he brought the price of eggs down. I'm literally
looking right now from our friend Libs of TikTok Buck.
Price of eggs since he entered office has collapsed by
fifty percent. I mean their attack angles. According to her
January twenty first, twenty twenty five. And I will let
me be clear, because I always get egg emails. People
(14:19):
are like, it costs this at my store. Of like, okay,
I'm not an expert at what you paid for eggs
this morning? All right, But according to Hya at Libs
of TikTok, six dollars fifty five cents was the average
cost of a dozen eggs when Trump entered office on
January twenty first, they now cost three dollars in twenty
(14:40):
two cents. That's half right, just and I apologie if
you paid four to sixty this morning. I don't need
you to email me about what the Safeway cost in
your hometown. I'm just telling you nationwide, that's the average.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
Now you know what they're gonna have to explain to
us on Morning Joe, though, you know who is really
opposed to eggs costing too much?
Speaker 1 (14:59):
Hitler? Just like Hitler bringing the price of eggs down. Hitler.
I always love you. Know when we were at mar
Lago with Trump and he insisted that we get milkshakes
because mar Milon will make the best milk.
Speaker 2 (15:13):
Classic, classic classic Hitler move, just total Hitler move.
Speaker 3 (15:17):
You know.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
We're getting everyone milkshakes high fives for everybody, just like
Hitler would have done.
Speaker 1 (15:23):
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Travis and Buck sext to them.
Speaker 4 (16:44):
Find them on the free iHeartRadio app or wherever you
get your podcasts.
Speaker 1 (16:49):
Welcome back in Clay Travis Buck Sexton show. To forestall
all of your emails about egg prices. Send them to
my good friend Dana Perino instead, because this is her
talking about egg prices being down on Fox News this morning.
Speaker 5 (17:04):
Listen, egg price is dropping in the US for a
third straight week. They're down to three forty five per
dozen as of yesterday. Now price is serves up above
eight dollars last month, but they've steadily declined since the
calendar flipped from February to March.
Speaker 1 (17:18):
All right, egg people there, I don't want to get
your email about what you had to spend for egg prices. Instead,
you send them to Data Perino. This is on her.
I love Data by the way, she and Bill Hemmer
do a great job on their show. But it is funny. Buck.
I'm sure you get this stuff too. Every time we
say something like nationwide, this is what's good, I will
inevitably get somebody and they'll be like, Hey, in Kenosha,
(17:40):
Wisconsin this morning, or in Scottsdale, Arizona, or in Fort Lauderdale,
whatever you paid for your eggs, you're getting gouged. If
it's anything different than what Data Perino just said. And
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Speaker 2 (18:55):
Occasionally you see a butt kicking on cable news that
involves so much knowledge. It is so erudite, so exceptional,
that you feel like everybody was done a favor by this.
The anchor who gets completely crushed by the guests who
(19:17):
knows a lot more, the audience, including audience that does
not like the conservative guest, because at least they're learning something,
and all of us get to just cheer and clap
and laugh about how the whole thing went down. Stephen Miller,
we should put this up on clayanbuck dot com. In
a nine minute long segment that was essentially about whether
(19:39):
this judge who decided that he would tell planes in
the air that they had to turn around, think about
the authority, Think about the power that this judge thinks
that he has.
Speaker 1 (19:53):
The plans have already left.
Speaker 2 (19:55):
I am ordering those planes to turn around and come
back to the United States.
Speaker 1 (20:01):
One.
Speaker 2 (20:02):
There are hundreds of federal district district judges across the country,
hundreds of them. One of them can just be like,
I disagree with this move by the president. He has
to bring the planes home. Oh okay. Stephen Miller had
an exchange with one of the is a casey Hunt?
Speaker 1 (20:20):
Is that right?
Speaker 2 (20:21):
I think I don't even know who's on case Yeah, Tomato, Tomato, right,
so I'm not sure. But he had an exchange with
a CNN anchor. We wanted to hear some parts of this.
We broke it up for you. It's nine minutes long.
The whole thing's up at Clay and Buck. But Stephen
Miller was taking no prisoners on this one one of
his best. He's had many good moments on TV, but
one of his very best. The school bus was parked
(20:44):
out front and school is in session. Play play clip one.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
This judge violated the law, He.
Speaker 3 (20:50):
Violated the we have in this country. Because that does
seem to these same district court judges didn't do a
damn fit stop Joe Biden from flooding this nation with
millions of the aliens. Do these district court judges didn't
issue any injunctions to save the lives of Joscelyn hungry.
Speaker 1 (21:09):
Or any feral courts. That's that what you're saying.
Speaker 3 (21:11):
What I'm saying is that what you said, there's a
separation of powers. The judiciary exercises student and.
Speaker 1 (21:21):
You are here to see will do You're here to
speak for I want you to answer that one simple question.
Speaker 3 (21:27):
Ready, here we go. Under a proper reading of the constitution,
district court judges provide relief to individual plaintiffs seeking relief.
District court judges do not have the authority as a
general matter to enjoin the functioning of the executive branch,
but their authority is at its lowest point when the
president is exercising his powers as commander in chief. And
(21:48):
I asked you a question you never answered it. Can
I judge enjoined troop movements overseas? Can a district court
judge and joint treat movements overseas? Yes, sir, I am
not going to get into the Just say no and
then you'll know that I'm right.
Speaker 1 (22:01):
I like that. I'm gonna steal that one for the
next time I get into an argument with my wife.
I don't know if Steven uses that one with his
lovely wife Katie. Just say no, so that you'll know
that I'm right is probably not a marital argument tactic
that works well, but it's phenomenal television. Buck. I mean,
that was just a whipping.
Speaker 2 (22:22):
Here's here's what is at the core of the and
again it's it's nine minutes, which were not We can't
play the whole thing on air, but you can go
to Clayanbuck dot com. We'll have it up there for
if you want to see it in one place. It's
worth watching if you can. It's nine minutes and and
what's at there's a lot of things that are an issue,
but really at the core of the whole thing, Clay
is these judges. First of all, we talk about the
number because you can tell this is how partisan leftists,
(22:45):
some of whom are judges, have decided that they're going
to oppose Trump. They're just going to stop him from
doing things that as president he has the right in
the authority to do. They're just gonna say no, you
can't do that, and they'll eventually get overturned by the
Supreme Court. And they know that they're just gonna keep
trying to stop him if if he if a judge
is allowed to tell the president when he has used
(23:07):
executive authority to expel non citizens from the United States.
You have to turn the plane around. Can a judge
say you can't bomb the Houfi's and Yemen? You have
to turn those missiles around or you have to turn
those planes around, Like where does it stop and start?
Speaker 1 (23:24):
I think that's why Stephen Miller's argument is so persuadi persuasive. Also,
I'm gonna circle back to that in a sect Buck,
But this is I think emblematic of why Trump two
point zero is so much more successful than Trump one
point zero was. Trump got his fighters, and he put
his team together and they are a dream team of
(23:46):
advisors of an incredibly high intellect. How many IQ points
do you think the difference between Steven Miller and that
CNN anchor was Buck twenty? I mean, this.
Speaker 2 (23:57):
Is there's a miss there's a mismatch here. There is
a mismatch, be sure.
Speaker 1 (24:00):
And there is a high level of intellectual theft that
did not exist on the same level for Trump one
point zero. And I think when you hear the Trump
team make their arguments and you see how well they
can slap down the counter arguments, it is incredible how
much difference there is and not only intelligence, but also
(24:23):
comprehension of the issues. Now, let me circle back, because
I think this is an important part of the larger
story here. What Stephen Miller is pointing out is that
federal district court judges do not have the authority to
micro manage the power of the executive branch. Trump clearly,
(24:44):
and even the CNN anchor didn't argue, Trump clearly has
the ability to, as you pointed out, order strikes against
the huties or to decide that he wants to in
some way move around brigades inside of Europe or in
the United States. There isn't an ability of a federal
district court judge to challenge it. And Democrats are so
(25:06):
desperate to restrain Trump that what you really have and
this is why the Supreme Court needs to look at
this is a distinction between the Supreme Court reviewing and
the judiciary reviewing the acts of the executive to determine
whether or not they are constitutional in a big picture
sense and micro managing on a day to day basis
(25:30):
the individual actions that the executive orders and what they're
trying to do. And this is what I sat was
pointing out yesterday arguing about birthright citizenship is the province
of the judiciary. That's a big picture thing. Trump said,
executive authority. Hey, I'm interpreting the fourteenth Amendment this way.
Courts are going to have their take. I actually think
(25:51):
that's going to be a challenge for Trump, even at
the Supreme Court. But Trump has the clear ability to
make decisions as it aims to border security, which is
the same thing that Biden was allowed to do, unfortunately
to the detriment of the country. And so Stephen Miller
is just destroying this argument that this left wing CNN
(26:14):
host is trying to make it. You know, this buck
from television. There's probably some frantic producer in her ear
trying to give her this. See.
Speaker 2 (26:22):
Yeah, they're trying to bail her out. And this also, though,
I think, goes to what the administration learned from the
first term to this term, and that is the process
is the punishment. Delay is the game, and they can't
allow that to happen. A big part of people will
say this, and they don't like when I point this out,
but then they always admit that I'm right. Like I'll
(26:44):
hear people in the right of vote for Trump say, well,
you know, Russia collusion.
Speaker 1 (26:47):
It didn't work.
Speaker 2 (26:49):
I mean it didn't get all the way, but it
certainly slowed down and jammed up and messed up the
administration in twenty seventeen to have to deal with all
the nonsense and the media and the lawyers and the
depositions and everything else. Here's Stephen Miller saying, we see
the game here. If every person that Trump is going
(27:09):
to deport who is an illegal gets a federal judge
saying no, you can't do that. You know this, then
the whole thing just collapses. This is cut to play it.
Speaker 3 (27:17):
How are you going to expel illegal alien invaders from
our country who are raping little girls, who are murdering
little girls?
Speaker 1 (27:25):
If each and.
Speaker 3 (27:25):
Every deportation has to be a judicated and a district
court judge, and that means you have no country. It
means you have no sovereignty. It means you have no future.
It is fundamentally incompatible to have a country and have
individual expulsions adjudicated by a single dist court judge.
Speaker 5 (27:39):
I'm just trying to figure out out the system, do you,
Because what does.
Speaker 1 (27:44):
The Trump administration believe?
Speaker 3 (27:45):
Because we do have separation of powers in this country,
I hear.
Speaker 5 (27:48):
What you're saying.
Speaker 3 (27:49):
Yes, judiciary are interfearing Stevens. Let the executive function is
the separation of power.
Speaker 1 (27:56):
That is the seed.
Speaker 5 (27:57):
You ignore the judge's order here because you thought you could.
Speaker 3 (28:02):
So the judges order and the actions take him by
the Departments of the Defense, Justice, and Homeland Security are
not in conflict. And the Department just has been clear
that they are not in conflict.
Speaker 2 (28:12):
See the whole thing here with the CNN anger to
be clear, is they want the administration to say, well,
they're just ignoring judges, and then that becomes oh.
Speaker 1 (28:20):
My gosh, you know, constitutional crisis and.
Speaker 2 (28:23):
All the rest of it. But in reality, the judge's
order was insane. Okay, yes, plane, plane in flight, turn
the plane around, steven He even went in up to
point this out. He's like, do they know what route
the plane is on? This is a national security issue.
It's got a bunch of trend to Aragua terrorists on it.
You're just going to change the route?
Speaker 1 (28:42):
Do you know? You know who's meeting the plane on
the other side? What you know?
Speaker 2 (28:46):
The whole thing it is, it is insane that this
judge did this. But if you go and you look
at him. He's got a super anti Trump lunatic wife.
He was involved with the Russia collusion fives and nonsense.
He's an anti Trump hashtag resistant psycho. It's like a
member of uh, what's that group, the Lincoln Project or whatever?
If that's the Lincoln Project has a judge and it's
(29:07):
this guy. Yeah, and look, this is the angle. I
told you that this is the angle they're going to
try to take yesterday. They're very clearly going to try
to avoid arguing against what Trump did in terms of
the deportation and instead, Buck they're going to argue he's
a dictator. He's defying court orders.
Speaker 1 (29:29):
Right. They're not going to talk about whether the court
order was legitimate. They're not going to talk about what
the court order actually did or would have required, which
is bringing felons back into the country. They're going to
talk about the fact that he defied an order. And
I'll tell you what they're also going to do. And
we told you this was coming, but prepare yourself. Trump
(29:50):
is not going to be flawless on the deportations. I'm
just telling all of you this. He's not going to
be flawless. They're gonna get the wrong guy. They're gonna
it's it's possible to be one hundred percent accurate. And
what they're gonna do is they're gonna find that anecdote,
that guy who was misidentified, and they're going to turn
him into a national symbol of Trump's authoritarianism. And this
(30:15):
is why anecdotal stories buck are often unfair, because the
anecdote should be representative of the larger story. People connect
on a story basis. When an anecdote is the outlier,
which is what happened with BLM, most people will have
great relationships and interactions with police. One thing goes bad,
and this is indicative of how every black person in
(30:37):
America is taught, is treated, and so it's fundamentally unfair.
It's propaganda.
Speaker 2 (30:42):
This is what they're trying to do right now with
this Mackmood Khalil guy. What they're saying is what they're
trying to do right now now. Machmood Khalil is for
a lot of us not sympathetic at all. So that's
the only difference. But they they've tried to rally around
this guy and say that he is the first example
of Trump's you know, over reach and authoritarianism and all
the rest of it. You know, yeah, I mean, try
(31:04):
try not to have some pro homast you hating miniac
as your as your standard bearer, and things will probably
better off for the Democrats. But we'll see, once again
with trenda ragwall, you have Democrats going to the mat
to defend really the worst of the worst, the worst
of the worst. And that's the other part of this too, Clay, Like,
we're arguing about this on the on the legal grounds
and the constitutional grounds. For a lot of people, it's just,
(31:27):
you know, I just don't want these these scumbag gang
members who aren't even allowed to be in the country
in the first place, to be here anymore. And whoever
gets rid of them, I like that, get them out
of the country. You know, Trump understands that aspect of
this too. There's no there's no normal person who's like,
you know what, we really need more trying to irragua
hitman in America. That would be good. Let's have more
(31:49):
of that. So yeah, he's he's forcing them to, uh
to to take some very unpopular stands. But Democrats again,
run up a scoreboard. Everybody got to keep running up
the scoreboard. That's what Trump's doing. I don't know if
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Speaker 4 (32:54):
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. Welcome back in Clay
Turerabbits Buck Sexton Show. Appreciate all of you hanging out
with us. We'll talk a little bit about this more
when we come back to the top of the next hour.
(33:15):
The talk between Trump and Putin has ended, went on
for over an hour, much to discuss surrounding that, as
well as the end of the ceasefire in the Middle
East and what that likely means going forward. But the
egg people, the egg people are out there, Buck, and
(33:35):
everybody is telling us what they had to pay for
their eggs.
Speaker 1 (33:39):
Including Mark in Portland, Oregon. Thank you Mark for letting
us all know. Let's listen to Mark.
Speaker 6 (33:46):
No, you're gonna hear it, Bucking Clay, I went to
safely last night with ten bucks in my pocket at
the bottom level bottom self, one dozen eggs.
Speaker 1 (33:57):
Six nine nine. Are you kidding me?
Speaker 6 (34:01):
That's chicken coop robbery and it's damn near criminal.
Speaker 1 (34:06):
That's to stop I just any time we mentioned the
cost of any good like I'll say, for instance, the
price of a gallon of gas under three dollars, right,
I immediate. It's unbelievable how many of you feel compelled
to me to let me know exactly what you paid
for a gallon of gas. And I understand, like New York, California,
(34:30):
way more the average costs nationwide, We're in all fifty states,
I believe is like two eighty five right now. And
I am deluged right now with emails from people talking
about what they paid for eggs. I mean, is it
is incredible how many people feel compelled but positive inflation
lowest level in four years in general, and egg prices
are truly coming back down.
Speaker 2 (34:51):
So Clay, here's here's where this really goes. And I
think this is an opportunity for growth for you in
a whole range of ways. You know, my in laws
have a chicken coop. Oh yeah, but it produces produces amazing
and delectable eggs. And I've even talked to them. I've said, hey,
why don't you guys maybe consider getting ducks, because I
(35:12):
hear duck eggs even more delicious. It is my understanding
that your new home in Nashville has ample land. So
perhaps you just tell Laura, honey, we just need a
chicken coop and we're going to be rolling in dough.
Speaker 1 (35:26):
I first of all, can only imagine my neighbors finding
out that they've moved into a neighborhood and Klay Travis
lives there, and that could be either good or bad
depending on who the neighbors are. And the next step
is and he's also built a chicken coop so that
he can save money on eggs. I do know that
the chicken coops and the egg thing is a big deal.
(35:47):
A lot of people have done this and it's not uncommon,
but I do not believe that. Look, the boys are
not great with cats and dogs. I don't think taking
care of a chicken coop, meaning my son's, would be
very very good. And I would guarantee you my wife
would immediately presume that she is going to be in
charge of the chicken coop, and she doesn't want that.
Speaker 2 (36:08):
Well, with the chicken coop, there comes some there comes
some costs. You got to take care of them and
the rooster man. Those roosters can be mean and they
wake you up in the morning too. That's the other
thing they do, the whole cocka doodle do thing. They
do that early in the morning, and you don't necessarily
want that, but I know a lot of you out
there have chicken coops. If I had land here in Miami,
I would probably do it, so but we don't.
Speaker 6 (36:30):
What.
Speaker 1 (36:30):
By the way, as we go to break new trailer
out for Happy Gilmore Too, I guarantee you that I
will love this movie and you will hate it. I
just putting it out there.
Speaker 2 (36:42):
Oh absolutely, I don't even I haven't even seen the trailer,
but I can tell you Happy Gillmore Too.
Speaker 1 (36:46):
Clay will love it, I will hate it.
Speaker 6 (36:49):
I'll