Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Third hour, Clay and Buck kicks off now, and as
we discuss, we'll get to Dan Kane.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
He's got an exciting new movie, Little Angels. We'll talk
about it.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
But Trump and Elon just went live from the White House.
Let's join them in progress.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
He's really not leaving. He's going to be back and forth.
Speaker 4 (00:15):
I think I have a feeling it's his baby, and
I think he's going to be doing a lot of things.
But Elon's service to America has been without comparison in
modern History's already running one of the most innovative car
companies in the world. That you look at his factories
and compare them with some of the old factories we have, and.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
It's a big difference.
Speaker 4 (00:34):
In the most successful space company, and I guess in
history you would have to say, the largest free speech
platform on the Internet, et cetera. Yet Elon willingly, with
all of the success, he willingly accepted the outrageous abuse
and slander and lies and attacks because he does love
our country. I know that very much. He loves our country.
(00:57):
Comes from another country, country that's going through trials and tribulations,
I would say, but he's all about the USA and Americans.
Speaker 3 (01:07):
Oh, I'm a great debt of gratitude.
Speaker 4 (01:10):
So I just want to thank Elon for his time
as a special government employee. Can you imagine they call
him an employee, but it's a special government employee, and
for coming and helping us, and he really has changed
the mindset of.
Speaker 3 (01:24):
A lot of people.
Speaker 4 (01:25):
A lot of people thought, you know, maybe we'll cut
one percent or two percent or three percent. Then they said, well,
we can cut a lot more than that, and we're
going to do it very surgically. We're going to continue
on the march. We're making America great again. When I
was in Saudi Arabia and we were in, as you know,
three really great countries, predominantly the three Qatar was great,
(01:51):
Uae was great.
Speaker 3 (01:52):
Saudi Arabia incredible. What is like such an.
Speaker 4 (01:56):
Incredible experience to be in those three countries. But the
Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia, and I must tell you
the leaders, the great leaders of the other two that
we just mentioned, they all said the same thing that
the United States is the hottest country.
Speaker 3 (02:11):
Right now anywhere in the world.
Speaker 4 (02:13):
And six months ago we thought it was dead. It
was like a dead country, and it would have been
a dead country. We didn't have the right result of
November fifth, it would have been a horrible all.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
Right, So there we have it.
Speaker 1 (02:23):
This is really just to send off for Elon Affters,
which is what we thought special government service, and I
think Elan did a great job. We're joined now by
actor Dean Kine. You remember him from Back of the Day,
a superman but still doing great projects out there. His
new movie out next week is Little Angels. We'll get
to that in a moment, but Dean, I just wanted
to because I know you also are a guy who
(02:43):
follows politics. You're a conservative commentator in your own right.
What do you think about Elon's tenure in the government.
You're hopeful for how this goes in the future.
Speaker 5 (02:51):
Oh yeah, extremely hopeful and super happy about what he
did to expose a lot of waste, fraud and abuse
and to modernize systems. I mean, I've been around those
government computers. I know you've seen a government computer or
two in your day, sir, And.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
Just to step they're still operating on DAWs systems. In
some places you have to blow on the floppy disc
to get it to work.
Speaker 2 (03:13):
It's insane. It shouldn't be.
Speaker 5 (03:14):
It shouldn't be that way, and so I think we're
going to modernize a lot of that and I think
his his impact will be studied for a long time.
I think it's a sort of an inflection point, at
tipping point. And I am super grateful and thankful to
Elon Musk for the service to this nation.
Speaker 2 (03:30):
It's been unbelievable.
Speaker 1 (03:31):
Yeah, isn't it amazing as well though that there was
such such opposition to him that people were even suggesting
that his companies, I mean, we go back now it
all write and it all seems well. Of course, people
were saying they're lighting Tesla's on fire. He's destroyed his brand.
The markets have spoken, it's like, well, now Tesla has
gone through the roof and Elon's going back to his
(03:53):
amazing companies. And he exposed ways for outern abuse and
it looks like Lex Luthor has been defeated.
Speaker 2 (04:00):
Absolutely true.
Speaker 5 (04:01):
I mean they opposed him there for trying to point
out waste, fraud and abuse in our government. The most
insane thing I've ever seen. And he is phenomenal. And
during all this time where they were firebombing Tesla's, knew
that stuff. I did my little part, and my son
did his part. We both got new teslas to support him,
because at first I didn't realize how good those cars were,
(04:22):
and I was against the EV mandate. Don't tell me
what I have to do. But then all of a sudden,
you know, they started firebombing his companies in his tesla,
and I was like, this is insane. Let me take
a look at the tesla. I sort of did it
as a lark, and then I got in that thing
and it's insane. So it's the fastest car. I've ever been.
In love it, love his look forward. I mean, he
(04:42):
is a groundbreaking man, and like I said, I think
we're going to look back forever in history and go
thank you, mister Mosque.
Speaker 1 (04:49):
I agree with that, by the way, and I think
that everyone should be thankful that we had somebody with
his skill set. If he couldn't do it, nobody could
do it. I really mean that, you know, I agree,
this was a job for somebody of his ability, his
specific abilities, you know, which is different than the way
the linear thinking of everybody in Washington. Yeah, of course,
Well for them, it's just well, this is how the
(05:10):
machine operates, and the machine is so big, we can
never change it, right, He's almost this machine doesn't work,
which you would think would be.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
A big deal. You'd say, hold on a second, I
think the machine's supposed to work. No, no, no, no.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
If you're in DC long enough, Dean, the machine is
is defined by dysfunction.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
That's the way its supposed to be. And it's too
big and it's awful.
Speaker 1 (05:27):
So let's let's transition here into more of the entertainment
side of things in your work. First up, I do
want to give you a chance to tell everybody at the
movie coming out next week, Little Angels.
Speaker 2 (05:37):
Yes, what do they need to know?
Speaker 5 (05:38):
Okay, so Little Angels go to Little angelsmovie dot com
and then press theaters and demand it be in your area.
If it's not in your area. It's a very family
friendly film, but it deals with sports because I'm a
sports guy through and through and through. I played every
sport under the sun growing up and college. I was
a three sport guy. And then I went to the
(05:59):
NFL for the flow Bills for a short time before
I got injured. Then I had to just go find
something else to do. So I decided to take a
lesser role, be an actor and play Superman. So it
was a great thing. So this movie, I wrote it,
I produced it, I directed it, I did everything. If
you don't like it, it's my fault one hundred percent.
Speaker 2 (06:16):
But it deals.
Speaker 5 (06:17):
I mean, you have a six month old or something
like that, right, so your kid won't watch.
Speaker 1 (06:20):
Six weeks or six weeks. He's just a little chunk man.
He's just starting to smile.
Speaker 3 (06:25):
Now.
Speaker 5 (06:25):
Yeah, that's congratulations. Best thing in the entire world. I'm
a single father. My son's twenty almost twenty five years old.
He's my best friend. He's my favorite human being. So
you got your little your little minime there. Congratulations. If
he has anywhere near the thickness of your hair, he's
gonna be just fine.
Speaker 1 (06:42):
You know what, Can I just say this deed we
think he does, except he's a redhead, so he's gonna
he's good. We got to My dog's name is Ginger.
I don't know how this is gonna work out, but
my son's got red hair. For sure, he's going to
be ginger.
Speaker 5 (06:52):
The second Yeah, wow, well done. My son had blonde
hair and I'm and it's gotten darker. But yeah, you
never know what you're going to get in that genetic lottery.
You never know what's going to happen. But as far
as family entertainment, Coach Little Angels is all about that.
Speaker 2 (07:05):
But it's also about.
Speaker 5 (07:06):
You know, I learned so much playing football in sports,
and you learned that you can't do it by yourself.
You learn that you got to be part of a team.
You have to learn how to deal with losing you,
how to deal with people picking on you, judging you.
It's all life lessons and I learned more playing football
than I could ever explain, and I try to get
a lot of those life lessons through in this film.
(07:27):
And the kids are great, and you really fall in
love with the girls. It's a story of a college
football coach who, like a Nick Saban, wins the national
championship again, very cocky and cockshure and full of himself,
and then he gets in trouble for saying something stupid
about a woman kicker on his own team, and he
ends up having to go coach under thirteen year old
(07:48):
girls soccer. And he doesn't like kids and he doesn't
like soccer, so he has to adjust his world to
do this. It's a bit like Mighty Ducks and if
it has one iota of the success of.
Speaker 2 (08:00):
Mighty Ducks, then I'll be a happy man. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (08:02):
Well, I mean my producer Mark, who's who's on on
on vacation right now, on leave right now? Who's one
of our guys in the show. I've worked them for
many years. I believe Mighty Ducks is his favorite movie
of all time.
Speaker 5 (08:13):
It's it's an underdog story. It's a story of coming
together as a team. So he's got good taste. Hopefully
he'll switch.
Speaker 2 (08:19):
Over and like Little Angels more.
Speaker 1 (08:20):
Well, I was gonna say, I gotta get him to
watch Little Angels and give the full review.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
Speaking of reviews, you know this is getting.
Speaker 1 (08:27):
A little too chummy on this interview. I want to
I want to create a little a little heat, mister
Dean Kaine. All right, you're on the hot seat now,
summand let's might be pulling out a little kryptonite.
Speaker 5 (08:37):
My friend, My kryptonite is women. Unless you're pulling out
a beautiful lady. Whoa, I'm in good shape. This is
just got freudy. This is what my dad said.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
Let's let's let's let's.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
Look at the movie review for a so okay, miss
mission impossible, dead Reckoning. Okay, and let me just say this,
I am a overall a Tom Cruise maybe you know,
the most successful actor financially of all time.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
I love it. I mean Top Gun is an absolute epic.
I love it.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
I love Top Gun, Matt. I'm not anti Tom Cruise
at all. And I think the first Mission Impossible movie
is a lot of fun. I haven't really seen some
other ones, so I jumped in on the twenty twenty
three movie, which is now on I think Amazon Primes
where I was watching it because my wife is gone.
I got a little time, so now I can watch
the movies. I think she like, probably wouldn't like, you know,
so yeah, so that's the thing, Like I like, I
binge the movies, anything sci fi. You know, she's not
(09:28):
in any of that. But I was like, I'll try
this Dead Reckoning Mission Impossible, Dead Reckoning. I think it
is just trash. It's the new one in the theaters.
Speaker 2 (09:36):
No no, no second, it's the one that's you can
watch at home.
Speaker 3 (09:39):
Now.
Speaker 1 (09:39):
I don't go to theaters. You know, it's too a
lot of people. Don't people talk. I get too frustrated,
but you know, I like to be in my home
I'm I'm the grump, the curmudgeon. Clays like the more
out out in the world people person. I'm very uh,
I can be a little introverted. But here we go
Mission Impossible, Dead Reckoning. I think it's trash. Everyone jumps
on me. I don't even know this. Clay apparently loved
(10:01):
this movie, and in fact, he loves it so much
that he weighed in from his vacation with a talkback.
You guys have it ready to go, and here's what
he says about this mission of bossle movie.
Speaker 6 (10:11):
Play it, Hey, everybody, I'm here at Universal Studios, AKA
a place where people who like to have fun go
to have even more fun. It's Buck's miserable place, much
like his review of the first Mission Impossible, Part one,
which he said was unwatchable. Excuse me. The greatest movie
(10:34):
star of all time is confronted by the greatest obstacle
of his career and entity of Ai intent on destruction
of the world, and only Tom Cruise can save us
from being destroyed. That's why everybody loved it. The greatest
actor of all time against the greatest obstacle of his career.
(10:56):
Tons of pratt falls, suspense, and incredible act and you
could only hate it if you hate fun. I'm going
to get on a roller coaster like all good, red
blooded Americans, and when I get off, I'll probably say
thank you America for Tom Cruise.
Speaker 1 (11:14):
I'm just gonna say this, Dan before I have you
weigh in, before Superman picks a side here, Okay, which
is what's going on? I just wish they had hired
like a scriptwriter who knew how to write a movie.
Speaker 2 (11:25):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (11:25):
I just wish that there was something that made sense.
You don't have to agree one hundred percent with either
side who's more right on this one? And I promise
even if you agree with Clay, we'll have you back
on the show. I appreciate that. Well, Clay sounds overly
enthusiastic about it, let's put it that way, And so
I would probably fall somewhere in the middle. I like
Tom Cruise a lot. I like him as a person.
(11:47):
I know him.
Speaker 5 (11:49):
He is the hardest worker that I've seen ever in
this business. He works crazy hard. He's a perfectionist, but
sometimes when you're making a movie, you can't be perfect.
Speaker 1 (12:00):
So this is this is first the first time I'm
gonna let it go that Superman just split the baby. Fine, whatever,
your Superman. You're supposed to save the day, you're not
supposed to fly down the middle. But okay, I'm gonna
let it go. Because you know Tom Cruise. I find
that really interesting.
Speaker 2 (12:11):
What's he like?
Speaker 5 (12:12):
He's intense, He's as intense as he is when he's acting.
But he's got a great, smiley friendly side to him too.
He's uh. I mean, I don't know him super well,
but you met him, you've interact with him. I mean
I played bass thing with him.
Speaker 1 (12:25):
You could argue he's isn't he like five seven?
Speaker 3 (12:28):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (12:28):
What I would do is I would drive the lane,
draw everybody in and literally shield them off with my
body and this sort of hand.
Speaker 2 (12:35):
You can he pop the j Is he pretty good
from the perimeter? I like his movies? Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, okay,
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (12:45):
I'd rather have Michael B. Jordan take that shot, or
especially Michael Jordan. Well, Michael, either one of them particularly good.
Speaker 1 (12:52):
Interesting, No, because I respect Tom Cruise's body of work tremendously,
and I do think he's made a lot of great
It's not like George Clooney, who I just think is
wildly rated. I'm not even gonna try to get you
in trouble with that. Although he's a communist, so making
could have been, but I don't. I'm I think Cloney
like you think about his actual roles and in the movies, Yeah,
Ocean's eleven, they could have replaced them with fifteen people
and no, they could have replaced them with eleven other
(13:13):
people would even play ever of me, I would have
been okay with I think in Kan would have been
way better than Yes, eleven personally. And you don't hate
America is also I love the America. Good point. Yeah,
so so that's a that's a really strong vote in
your favor. But yeah, I just thought with Tom Cruise,
here's the thing, Dean, I need your help because we're
we're in a vibe shift now, as the kids say,
(13:33):
we're in a vibe shift now where conservative everything is
on the march more in the culture than it has been.
Are you seeing that for independent filmmaking? And or can
you and I sit down and I will write a
badass pro American script. I'm not saying I'm an actor
script and you could star and we'll do some some
(13:55):
cool you know, we'll do like mission impossible for right wingers.
Speaker 2 (13:58):
Yes, let's do listen with your knowledge. Oh my gosh. Yeah,
it would be too close to reality probably, But but
I but I give you the green light. I would
love that.
Speaker 5 (14:08):
I would love to do a film like that that
is pro America because I am supremely pro America.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
I travel the world, I get to go everywhere. I've
this is this is my thing? Is that is that?
Speaker 1 (14:17):
You know, there's not enough content that we're America. So
many of these movies it's like, oh, we have a
superhero or oh we have like a super spy, but
actually the real enemy is internal And I'm like, no,
that's actually not always the case. Okay, Sometimes it's like
Crimson Jihad and they want to detonate a nuke in
the Florida Keys like back in the day. Sometimes it's
is the is the shift though? Is it easier now?
(14:37):
I mean really, first of all, thank you to vote
of confidence and maybe you and I'll be talking about this, yes,
but but but is there a shift now where you
can get conservative and I don't even forget traditional Americana
style movies made now? Or is it closer to being
that at least. I know it's not there yet, But
is it moving there or is that just still unfortunately
(14:59):
too far to make it happen.
Speaker 5 (15:01):
I think it's too far for Hollywood, but I think
there are so many independent people, independent filmmakers, who are
pushing it that way. And I think the audiences are
way more receptive because of the inauthenticity of this last administration.
They're seeing the ridiculous lies and the things that were
put out during the past four years, and it's all
being exposed now, slowly but surely. And then you see
(15:22):
this pro Americana push going through, and I think the
I think the culture is going to change tremendously within
the next couple of years. So we got to get
our movie out soon. Buck, You've got to get right
and starting tomorrow, because I do think there is time.
Speaker 1 (15:35):
I'm not writing a book anymore, so I gotta just
start writing a screenplay. Lets go you me, Kevin Sorbo Mel.
We got to have a dinner, be like a meeting
of the of the four families. We'll get this thing
in motion.
Speaker 2 (15:46):
Great meeting.
Speaker 5 (15:47):
I'll do it anytime you tell me when. I know
those guys both very well. So let's let's go.
Speaker 1 (15:52):
Like, I like where your heads at? Tell me this, sir,
where can people go for Little Angels again?
Speaker 5 (15:56):
Little Angelsmovie dot Com? And then you hit theaters and
it'll show where it's playing in your area. And if
it's not in your area, demand it and we'll put
it over there if I have anything to say about it.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
Dean Kin the Superman for people who love America. Thank
you so much, sir. Good to have you appreciate. Thank you, sir.
I have another Father's Day gift idea for you, and
it's from Rapid radios. Their walkie talkies, our next level technology.
Not to mention a great throwback to childhood when you
used to play with those more simple walkie talkies. Think
of rapid radios as those, but kind of on steroids.
(16:30):
They got new technology and they work in a way
that you could have only dreamed of when you had
a handheld radio as a kid. Fun to use, super handy,
voice quality is excellent. Because rapid radios work on a
nationwide LTE network, one hundred percent private, no monthly fees
or subscriptions, you can rely on them to keep in
touch with your family or in this case, to allow
Dad to stay in touch with everyone. Rapid radios combines
(16:53):
the simplicity of walkie talkies with today's technology for peace
of mind. I also think they're really important to have
as part of your preparation plan. Yeah, you gotta have
like potable water, You maybe got some storable food. You
got you know, lights, you got things, you got to
you know, a hand torch. What do you call it?
A flashlight? You got things, you got a torch one
of my British. But you got all those things together.
I think also having rapid radios on hand is really
(17:14):
good because it can give you communication option anywhere.
Speaker 2 (17:18):
You can speak.
Speaker 1 (17:19):
If you have family in Omaha and you're in Utah
and you got rapid radios, those radios are working, you're talking.
So go to rapid radios dot com. Save up to
sixty percent off, get free ups shipping from Michigan, and
use code radio for an extra five percent off. By
the way, they're working even if you get hit with
like a natural disaster or something. So what I mean,
Rapid radios dot com save up to sixty percent off,
(17:40):
get free ups shipping from Michigan, use Code Radio for
an extra five percent off. So again, rapid radios dot com,
Code Radio, or we're gonna come back in in a
second with Elon and Trump's press conference some of those highlights.
But I want you to be able to protect yourself
(18:02):
and your family with the right tools to do that
with products from Saber. They're the number one pepper spray
brand trusted by law enforcement. Saber spelled, Sabre websites, saberradio
dot com. Plan I have their products in our homes
and look, I got a lot of guns, but I
also like having non lethal options for hose escalation. And
my wife prefers to defend herself with non lethal that's
(18:23):
just the way she's comfortable. And thanks to Saber, she
feels comfortable. She's good to go. It's got their pepper spray,
got their pepper launcher. Sabers a family owned business. They've
been around for fifty years. Their products are reliable and
easy to use. Check out the pepper gel projectile and
the pepper spray launcher from Saber. Incredible products they'll keep
you and your family safe. Go to Saber radio dot com.
(18:45):
That's sab r radio dot com. You'll save fifteen percent
there or call eight four four eight two four Safe
Welcome back in here to play and and we have
some of the latest here fun because we're live. I
(19:06):
was actually just telling somebody your friend this morning over coffee.
He's like, during the show, how do you choose your content?
And I said, well, there's it's it's a bunch of things.
Actually there's there's Clay and me and our producers who
are New York based, all texting and sending clips and talking,
and that is like at twenty four to seven. I mean,
(19:27):
I try not to text them past nine o'clock, but
I'll email. You know, they get emails of show ideas
that I have or segments I want to do at
like two o'clock in the morning sometimes so I can't sleep.
So same thing with Clay. So we're always sending in
stuff and producer rally. You know, you never have to
answer any emails right until the next day.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
Just want to make sure.
Speaker 1 (19:45):
Sorry, sometimes those emails coming late anyway, That's why I email,
I call in anybody.
Speaker 2 (19:50):
I just did the emails. But we do this.
Speaker 1 (19:53):
It's a constantly evolving You almost say that you know
the living constitution, which I know we don't like, we
don't agree with that, almost like a living entity.
Speaker 2 (20:01):
The radio show.
Speaker 1 (20:02):
It's constantly evolving, and part of it is hearing from
all of you as we do the show. It's telling
somebody this morning. He said, So, wait, you'll be talking
on air to a few million people, and which is
what we're doing here, and you'll be talking to a
few million people. But if somebody writes a funny tweet
and you see it, you'll talk about it on air
in real time. Yes, And he goes, wait, and people
(20:22):
will send in it, they'll call. He knows about the
calling because that's obviously been a hallmark of talk radio
for a long time. And I said, yeah, we also
have this talkback thing. So he says, somebody can send
you basically a real time voicemail. You'll hear it, and
then they'll hear themselves and it'll be played for three
million people's and they just do this with their phone. Yeah,
and that'll change.
Speaker 2 (20:41):
The whole You know that.
Speaker 1 (20:42):
We'll talk about that on the show. So I thought
that was interesting. I'd never really explained to somebody before
how that worked. And he thought it was was fascinating,
cause you really do that.
Speaker 2 (20:50):
It is.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
Yeah, I can just tweet it you and if it's
funny I'm like, if it's funny or insightful, yes, I
will say it on the air, or we'll reference it
on the air, or if you do. AI showing Clay
and Buck trying to swim from Alcatraz for example, which
seemed to like dominate the Clay and Buck internet world
for about twenty four hours.
Speaker 2 (21:10):
I think Clay would make it. I think Clay would
make it, you know, I do.
Speaker 1 (21:14):
I have faith in my buddy that from Alcatraz to
the shore he could do it. I think I could
do it too. I may need to doggy paddle a bit.
Speaker 2 (21:22):
You know.
Speaker 1 (21:22):
I'm not saying that I'm not going to Riley Gains
this thing and look elegant and quick through the water.
Speaker 2 (21:27):
But I think I could do it.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
You know, I'm not as buoyant as I used to be,
one of the downs one of the only downsides. Not
as buoyant. I was a little more flotation ready six
months ago. But you know, other than that, I think
I could make it. All Right, let's get into Trump
and Elon and this conversation there, because there's what they said,
which we'll play at some of the highlights. There's also,
of course, the press getting some opportunities to push on
(21:51):
some questions and put that out there.
Speaker 2 (21:53):
So I wanted to bring you this because this was.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
Just happening now and certainly worth our time to dial
this in. Here is this is Trump giving examples. I
think it's an important, important review, Trump giving examples of
the kind of wasteful nonsense that the government was doing.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
Play thirty.
Speaker 4 (22:15):
Just as an example, DOGE canceled one hundred and one
million dollars for DEI contracts at the Department of Education.
One hundred and one million dollars, and that was just
a small section of the Department of Education. Fifty nine
million dollars for illegal alien hotel rooms in New York
City and the landlord never made the kind of money
(22:36):
that he made in the last.
Speaker 3 (22:38):
Short period of time.
Speaker 4 (22:39):
Fifty nine million dollars to a hotel in New York City.
Forty five million dollars for diversity, equity and Inclusion scholarships
in Burma. In Burma, does anyone know about Burma? Twenty
million dollars for Arab Sesame Street in the Middle East.
Nobody knows what that's all about. Nobody's been able to
find it. Eight million dollars from making mice transgender.
Speaker 2 (23:04):
I didn't know about. I've forgot about that one.
Speaker 1 (23:06):
I feel like we might have talked eight million dollars
for making mice transgender.
Speaker 2 (23:11):
That's eight million dollars a lot of money.
Speaker 1 (23:14):
If I told you at eight million dollars to start
a foundation or a charity, or do you say wow, Okay,
I can hire staff and get a facility and do
some stuff. Eight million dollars for transgender mice. I know
that's in the federal government budgeting A that's less than
a rounding error, right, And that says more about federal
government budgeting than it does about anything else. We're spending
(23:36):
way too much money. We're wasting way too much money,
that's clear. But the stories here are important because stories
are what stay with people. Numbers can all get mixed together.
Is it eight million, is it eight billion?
Speaker 2 (23:49):
Is it? You know? Who knows?
Speaker 1 (23:52):
But wait, they were spending money to trans mice. The
government was doing that. We were setting up scholarships for
people in Burma. So think about that. There are Americans
who are struggling to put their child into college, lots.
Speaker 2 (24:07):
Of them, and even those who can afford to do it.
Speaker 1 (24:09):
It's painful, it's a lot of money, right, and yet
your tax dollars are setting up scholarships for people in Burma.
What is the compelling national security interest of scholarships in Burma?
What is the compelling Because remember this is all supposed
to it's not a global charity. That is not the
purpose of USAID. It is supposed to be to advance
(24:30):
American interests. What is the purpose of the transgender puppet
show in Guatemala or wherever it was, I forget, I
think it was Guatemala. Well, the purpose was that the
people who had government funds don't care and just want
to push their own ideology and that's it. They think
it's their own private slush fund to do with as
they please in these institutions of government. Well, hopefully that
(24:52):
comes to it, and that goes to the ethos of DOGE.
It's not just Elon being there. It is setting this
up in a way that there is now going forward,
this space that is filled by people whose job it
is to figure this out, show.
Speaker 2 (25:13):
Waste foreign abuse. You know, maybe it's more like a.
Speaker 1 (25:18):
Like a four deployed action cell situation, meaning that there
are times when we need it and you bring it together.
There are times where you don't and it's closed down,
And wouldn't.
Speaker 2 (25:27):
That be within the spirit of Dose two.
Speaker 1 (25:29):
It's not supposed to be some forever bureaucracy. They set
it up. It's like a crisis cell in government, right,
you set it up. We got to do this, done
a bunch of things, and continues on. Here's Elon saying
exactly that that's cut thirty one. Dose is just getting started.
Speaker 2 (25:46):
Everybody.
Speaker 7 (25:48):
This is not the end of Dose, but really the beginning.
My time as a special covenant point necessarily had to end.
It was a limited time things one hundred and thirty
four days that believe whish as in a few days,
So that's you know, the time of it. But the
dog team will only grow stronger at a time. The
Doge influence willowly grow stronger. It's I'm liking it to
(26:08):
a sort of person Buddhism. It's like a way of life.
So I get iscremeating throughout the government. And I'm confident
that over time we'll see at trillion dollars of savings
and of reduction in a trillion dollars of waste of food.
Speaker 1 (26:22):
Production, trullion dollars of waste in fraud reduction. If this
is seen through now, the recisions package has to go
to Congress and the team check. The Biden administration did
spend millions of dollars on transgender animal experiments. Real thing,
real thing. Those of you who are in towns and cities,
(26:42):
we're like, you know, we could use some money to
you know, I don't know, fix the water pipes that
deliver our drinking water or whatever it is, right, we
could use money for any number of things. I don't
think transgender mice was high on your agenda. Correct me
if I'm wrong, but I don't think transgender mice was
something that you were like, you know, I'm so glad
this tax day that a portion of the American people's
(27:03):
tax dollars will go toward the trans mice agenda.
Speaker 2 (27:08):
I don't think that happens. You can call me crazy.
Speaker 1 (27:12):
So Elon is saying that this is going to continue
on and that the essence of Doge, or as I say,
the ethos of Doge, is the thing that needs to
keep going because this cannot continue as it is. We
have seen what it means when the government just expands
(27:33):
like the blob, and it's not good. It's not good
for our rights, not good for our pocketbooks, not good
for liberty, and that has to start to turn around.
The receding of this will take or I guess the recession.
Speaker 2 (27:47):
Whatever.
Speaker 1 (27:47):
The way that this will begin to recede there we
go is that we continue to push and stay focused.
It will take time. This is why I give the
Trump administration in general on some of these issues, whether
it's we're talking about the FBI before we're talking about
this issue, I give them some leeway here when it
(28:08):
comes to the schedule, when it comes to the timing,
because they're doing.
Speaker 2 (28:11):
The things they said they would do.
Speaker 1 (28:13):
Trump is doing those things, and that alone is feels revolutionary.
And I think we're a little spoiled. I'm just gonna
say this. I think we're a.
Speaker 2 (28:23):
Little bit like the some of us are a little
bit like the spoiled kids, where we said, you know,
I want an ice cream cone.
Speaker 1 (28:28):
I want an ice cream cone, and we gave them
on right away, and now we go, I want another
ice cream cone. With the border, because Trump solved the
border so quickly and it was so successful, and it's just,
you know, that's a big issue and to totally transform
that and to really for.
Speaker 2 (28:45):
Now, at least take that off the table.
Speaker 1 (28:47):
I know, interior enforcement deportations, that's another piece of that pie.
But to take the southern border offline as an issue
because you solved it, not because you're ignoring it or
you're saying it's better than it is, I think that
that's raised expectations to an impossible level for some people.
Speaker 2 (29:03):
Well, we do you know Trump fix that? Why hasn't
he fixed the debt?
Speaker 1 (29:05):
Well, hold on a second, it's thirty six trillion dollars
a lot of money.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
It's gonna take a little time.
Speaker 1 (29:12):
And and it's about also, let's be honest, it's about
the education of the American populace on these issues. The
more we know about this as a group, now I
get it. There's the communist, there's a lunatic Democrats. They're
never gonna You can't teach him, they can't learn. Fine,
but if we have enough people who know and enough
people who want to fix the problem, then it becomes possible.
(29:35):
And so that's where I think there's a lot of
power in what Doge has done, because this stuff is
so absurd that it gathers, It gathers eyeballs, gains attention,
and that's really important.
Speaker 2 (29:49):
As I said, stories are what stay with people.
Speaker 1 (29:52):
Numbers get jumbled, stories stay and the stories that Doge
has told are.
Speaker 2 (29:59):
Very very important. And then where or something else that
came up.
Speaker 1 (30:05):
Which I think could be a bigger thing in time,
a little bit separate from the Do's issue, but came
up at the Dose press conference. So Peter Deucy of
Fox News, I five Peter doing great work. Peter Deucy
of Fox News asked Trump about whether doctor Jill Biden
maybe she can take a break from her time doing
heart surgery in the r doctor Jill Biden testifying about
(30:31):
the usage of Biden's auto pen while he's president Play
thirty two.
Speaker 3 (30:36):
Do you think that doctor.
Speaker 6 (30:37):
Jill Biden should also have to come in and testify
about what she did or didn't do.
Speaker 2 (30:44):
Well.
Speaker 8 (30:45):
I hate the concept that it's the wife of a
man who was going through a lot of problems, and
everybody that dealt with him understood that, and I guess
it came out during.
Speaker 3 (30:55):
The debate loud and clear.
Speaker 8 (30:57):
That was the big That was the biggest thingnal of all.
They have to do what's right the country. There was
a lot of dishonesty in the election, as you know,
twenty twenty that's been now caught. People understand it was
a rigged election. And when you go further out, when you.
Speaker 4 (31:14):
See the autopen, I mean, I think the autopen is
going to become one of the great scandals of all time.
Speaker 1 (31:21):
Now, a couple of things there some big takeaways there. Now,
Trump is very calm, cool, collected, and you know, his
tone is very even here.
Speaker 2 (31:29):
Think about this though.
Speaker 1 (31:29):
First of all, you're reminded Trump is not a vindictive guy,
and he has that basic sense of like male honor
where he goes, look, it's the guy's wife, you know,
I don't you know, you can tell he does not
relish this prospect because he knows and that this is
a guy they tried to throw in prison, This is
(31:50):
a guy that got shot through the ear. This is
a guy who has been through it a million ways
and then some. But he still has that sense of
a real man doesn't want to get in between a
man and his you know, wife with this kind of
thing a testimony, the dementia and everything like. That's not
there's something that bothers Trump about that. Still, I think
that just just shows you the guy that he is.
(32:11):
He's not anyone.
Speaker 2 (32:12):
He's not a mean guy. He's not a mean guy.
I'll tell you something.
Speaker 1 (32:15):
I think Biden, and not even talking about the dementia,
I think Biden was a mean guy. I think he's
a nasty, vindictive person. Really, I think all the oh
I'm grinning and shaking hands, that was all malarkey.
Speaker 2 (32:26):
Not a nice guy. Not a nice guy. And you
see this with his family. Look at Trump's kids. I
think the kids tell you a lot, folks.
Speaker 1 (32:33):
I know, I'm only been a dad six weeks and
I you know, it's like my favorite thing in the world.
Speaker 2 (32:38):
But the kids tell you all. Look at Trump's kids.
Kids are all amazing. I know, all of them. They're
all great kids.
Speaker 1 (32:44):
I mean kids are you know, they're like my age,
they're in their forties now. But they're all good, solid people.
They're not perfect, no one's perfect, but they're good. But
they're in fact, I'm pretty impressive across the board. Legitimately,
you look at Biden, you go look at this guy.
Speaker 2 (32:58):
This guse is a mess. This son has grew up
in THESEUS a crack addict. You can't.
Speaker 1 (33:03):
I mean, this was completely overlooked Okay, okay, I know
I'm going down that pathway more than I want.
Speaker 2 (33:09):
We're running out of time.
Speaker 1 (33:09):
I wish I had Well, I do have three more
hours ago on Monday, so we can return to this.
But yeah, other thing, he says, this could be the
biggest scandal, the dementia hiding by the media and the
Democrat Party.
Speaker 2 (33:21):
That may not be the biggest part of the scandal.
Speaker 1 (33:23):
It might actually be the auto pen usage that happened
as a result of that. That's what Trump just said.
We're gonna keep an eye on this. This is a
is a big deal, big deal, all right. Owning gold
is for me, the right move. I've owned gold, as
you know, for a long time. I'm a gold guy.
I believe in it. I'm a big history guy too,
(33:45):
so I've also known hmm, gold been valuable for a
long time. Has there been any kind of advanced economy
in the history of the human race, any civilization really
where they're like, hey, get that gold out of my face.
That has no no gold the ultimate store of value.
I think Trump's doing great things. I think this economy's
(34:07):
going to good places. But I also want you to
be prepared for the uncertainties of our financial future and
to diversify. So I'm talking about a portion of your
saving something you're very comfortable with, or transitioning an existing
IRA or four oh one k into gold and using
our friends at Birch Gold Group as the people that
can help you accomplish this. I bought some gold from
(34:28):
Birch Gold Group recently. It is in my safe gold coins,
gold bars. I've got them there and I build up
my reserves over time. Now obviously still have cash, still
have savings, still believe in you know the stock market
I was talking before. Don't don't sell your four to
one k entirely because of the dip or whatever. No, no, no,
this is about diversifying intelligently with a portion of the
(34:49):
money you've worked hard for into gold, give you a
bit a peace of mind, and give you the upside
potential of owning gold, which just look at it. Price
of gold has seen great appreciation last year, up four
percent four zero forty percent, and it just keeps People say, oh, well,
gold's high right now. Yeah, look at what it's done
the last ten years. It keeps going higher because it
(35:09):
makes sense, doesn't it. They're printing and printing and printing money.
What can you do to offset this gold? Birch Gold
group is who I trust. Text my name Buck do
ninety eight ninety eight ninety eight. Birch Gold will send
you a free infoKit on gold. No obligation, only useful information.
Tens of thousands of happy customers. Just go check them out.
Go look at the Better Business Bureau ratings on Birch Gold.
(35:31):
This is who we work with, This is who we trust.
Text my name Buck buck to ninety eight ninety eight
ninety eight or go online to Birchgold dot com slash buck.
We are closing up shop today on Clay and Buck.
We've got a quick turnaround here. Just want to let
(35:52):
you know great stuff in the podcast feeds for the
weekend the Clay and Buck podcast network.
Speaker 2 (35:56):
This is what you should be listening.
Speaker 1 (35:57):
To if you are cleaning up the yard, or you're
doing a little bit of work in the in the
attic or the kitchen, or you're going to the store.
Clan Buck podcast network is there for you. If you
missed any part of the show, of course listen. But
also I did a deep dive into how North Korea
is infiltrating people's computers in America and it's crazy.
Speaker 2 (36:15):
It's an amazing story. It will be up here shortly.
Speaker 1 (36:18):
That's the clan Buck Feed. Former Navy sealed Dave Brutherford,
Carol mark Witz, Tutor Dixon, our friend Ryan gro Dusky. Guys,
let's get Ryan on the show next week. You haven't
talked to Ryan in a while. Ryan or Dusky. We've
got great podcasts in the clan Buck podcast network, so
make sure you check check out what we got there.
Clay's on vacation. He's having a great time. We're texting
all the time. He's with the kids and his lovely wife.
(36:40):
So to be just me Monday through Thursday next week.
Have a great weekend.