Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome back in our number three Clay Travis buck Sexton Show.
Appreciate all of you hanging out with us as we
are rolling through breaking down all of the news of
the day. And we are joined now by our friend
Eric Trump. He's got a brand new book out today.
It's called Under Siege. It is burning up the best
seller ranks. I think I saw it posted that it
(00:21):
is the number one release on Amazon today, which is
a super impressive accomplishment already, and we'll get into the
book in a minute. Eric, We appreciate you coming on
with us having said that we'll get to the book,
but are you still kind of processing how incredible what
yesterday was like in the Middle East and your dad
(00:41):
having the thirty six hours that he had, where even
as we started off the show, MSNBC, CNN, Heck, Colbert
and Kimmel came out and said, hey, he did something
really impressive. You know when MSNBC, CNN and the late
night hosts are praising you that your dad must have
really accomplished some thing. What was that like for you
to watch?
Speaker 2 (01:03):
Well, guys, a year ago he was literally serving French
fries in McDonald's and now he's just served the least,
you know, peace. Literally, it was exactly a year ago
yesterday he was doing the French frib routine and riding
around in a garbage truck. And you know, he just
solves Middle East for peace. And I think the most
impressive part to me. Listen, you look at it. Almost
at every conflict around the world, whether it's you know,
World War one, World War two, Vietnam, Korea, right, you
(01:25):
had kind of a winner, and you had a losure
of those wars as as predetermined. And here it actually
feels like everybody won, right. I mean, you have you
have people on both sides of the conflict coming out
and thanking him and thanking him profusely for ending the madness,
ending the death and destruction. And then you have an
entire world that's kind of coalesced around this victory. And
I just think that's a really beautiful thing and one
(01:45):
of those things that only he could could pull off.
And and uh, I'm proud. I'm proud of him as
the sun I mean listening, you know, we're gonna talk
about the siege at some point, you know today, But
you know, everything that we've we've gone through, everything that
they tried to do to destroy us. Guys, it all
became worth it for me yesterday, right. I mean there
are times when you couldn't quite you know, it couldn't
(02:06):
couldn't quite get there.
Speaker 3 (02:07):
Right?
Speaker 2 (02:07):
Was it worth it? Was it not? It was brutal.
They tried to destroy your life. And then you see
a man up there with the entire world respecting America.
You know, the death and destruction and evilness has ended.
Conflicts all over the world are ending. You know, pieces
being brought. You know, some son will go back to
their mother tonight who would have otherwise not gone back.
(02:29):
She would have been finding out that that person was
dead had it not been for his actions. And I
think that makes this all worth it.
Speaker 1 (02:36):
The book is under siege, My families fight to save
our nation. Where with Eric Trump now talking about it,
and Eric, I have a long time law enforcement friend who,
as you, he's a big Trump supporter. And as the
whole situation was playing out, the effort to use unprecedented
law fair not just against your dad, as you have
(02:58):
pointed out before, against the Trump Board, organization, against Trump
family members, against all of you, really anyone named Trump
became a target. As you're going through that he kept saying,
a normal and by this I just mean an every
day and everyday person would be broken by one federal indictment, meaning,
oh my gosh, how will I ever be able to
(03:19):
fight this? And and well, you know what is going
to do my reputation? Your dad and your family were
going through four nonsense criminal indictments and some of the
civil stuff that you were having to deal with, including
from Letitia James, which we were just discussing her situation.
What was that like day in and day out? Did
it just feel surreal? Did it feel like your dad
(03:40):
was prepared for it and was able to be a
happy warrior through the whole thing? I mean, bring us
into that.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Yeah, well, listen, you know, honestly I was. I was
a tip of the spear with that whole thing. Right,
my father had certain constitutional protections that kept a lot
of the subpoenas away from him, right, and so guess
what they did. You know, it's thirty three years old.
He sat me down. He goes, honey, I want you
run the company. I want you to. You're you're the guy.
You love real estate, you love building, you love everything
we do. You've built so many of our projects you
run everything. You run our teams. I want you to
(04:07):
carry this forward because obviously I'm going to watch it
inton DC. And I said, no problem. And guys, I
thought I was gonna have this great time, you know again,
building hotels, running great organization. I never thought that ninety
nine percent of my time for a period of four years,
really a period of eight years, was going to be,
you know, dealing with subpoenas. I became the most subpoenid
person in American history simply because I was the conduit
to everything that he had ever built. Because I was
(04:28):
the guy running the organization that had you know, Trump
on the front door. And so they came after us mercilessly.
And thank god, we had two things. We had a
loud voice, and we had enough zeros on the back
of our name that we could literally spend I mean, guys,
I've said this playing time. We've spent about four million,
four hundred million dollars fighting off the lunatics. And this
is the dirty dossier's this is the made up rush
(04:49):
of collusion. I was the guy that got the call
from the FBI saying I hear you have secret servers
in the basement of Trump Tower, communicating directly with the Kremlin.
We didn't have servers in the basement of Trump Tower.
It was all a lot. It was all made up
by Hillary Clinton. It was all made up by Barack Obama.
We didn't have damn servers. But they wanted to put
us under siege, right. They needed a reason, you know,
(05:09):
they wanted their October surprise obviously to get you know,
Hillary three more votes. But then when she failed so
miserably against you know, a bunch of ragtag individuals who
didn't know a damn thing about politics, i e. Our family,
she needed a reason to justify her loss. Hence the
reason they made this up. And they wanted to have this. Oh,
you know, the shadow loom over my father the entire time.
(05:31):
They wanted the shadow government to try and take him
down at every single step of the way. And then
they leaked his tax returns. I mean, not only did
they leak my father's tax returns, every tax return he had,
this is the irs. They leaked all my tax returns,
They leaked Don's tax returns, the entire family.
Speaker 1 (05:45):
You know.
Speaker 2 (05:45):
Then they leaked all the tax returns of all the employees,
all our corporate employees.
Speaker 4 (05:49):
You know.
Speaker 2 (05:50):
Then they silenced us. They took us off on Facebook
and Twitter and Instagram. Then they gag ordered us. A
lot of times. You'd see me speaking on the front
steps of the you know, of the courthouses around the country.
Why because some of those cases I wasn't gag ordered in,
but my father was, and so I had to be
the person to go out and talk about, you know,
the judge's daughter who you know, apparently worked for the
you know, Democratic Party and is one of the biggest
(06:12):
you know, digital media people in New York State, while
her father is presiding over a trial against my father, right,
and then they take him off the ballot of Maine,
they take him out the ballot of Colorado. They do
everything they can, they do. They call up every bank
and they try and get us deep platform de banked.
I mean, guys, this was a non stop siege against
our family. But it wasn't just against our family. It
(06:32):
was against the Republican Party, it was against you guys,
it was against everybody, everybody who wanted free speech. They tried,
they tried to hold all of us down. They tried
to take away our voice. They wanted to destroy the
greatest political movement you know, ever made, And it's it's
really amazing that we can be sitting here exactly one
year later, one year after those court trials and everything else,
having been vindicated in all of them, seeing what's happening
(06:55):
to Letitia, seeing Letitia's case get thrown out literally five
zero by the appellate court, seeing Middle East piecing, you know,
inflation go down to nothing, energy prices go down to nothing.
You know, I mean, what like what vindication this is
after everything that we've been through.
Speaker 1 (07:13):
And I just wanted to ask as a follow up, Eric,
it's amazing to me to see what your dad has
gone through and just observing him in public. Also, we've
play and I've been fortunate to spend a fair amount
of time with him in interviews and you know one
or you know, in a person a person face to
face setting your dad. I have never seen him look
(07:34):
scared once. And this is somebody who was shot in
the ear and somebody else tried to shoot soon after.
And that is it almost seems superhuman to a lot
of us observing and I truly mean.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
That he is superhuman. But the guys, this guy I've
known my entire life, I mean he's always been this
energizer bunny, you know, on steroids, wearing a red tie,
right and a dark suit. That's always been my father.
Everything that, everything that he's ever wanted to do, is
always you know, he's always charged, and it's his only focus.
He becomes people don't realize. He becomes very myopically focused
on whatever he wants to do. If it's building the
(08:06):
greatest building, he becomes myopically focused on. If it's building
a great course, he becomes myopically focused on his real
estate career. If it was the Apprentice, he becomes myoptically
focused on it. Well, he did the same thing with politics.
I mean, he just did this this turn and just
dedicated his entire life to politics and winning a race.
He became myopically focused on it and never I mean,
(08:27):
I can't tell you how many people have lost money
betting against Donald Trump. You know, don't don't bet against
the guy, because he's gonna beat you every single time.
And you know, he became myoptically focused. When he came
to the Middle East.
Speaker 5 (08:36):
Peace.
Speaker 2 (08:36):
I mean, that's the one thing that he always wanted
to achieve, and that was probably the greatest achievement of all,
it's something that everybody was laughing at. This will never happen.
These societies hate each other, they've been warring for thousands
of years. They'll never come together. And he goes, no,
I want, I want peace in the Middle East. I
want the Abraham Accords. I want I want people to
be kind of, you know, prosperous. But he does not
back down, he does not mince words. He's politically incorrect,
(08:57):
and frankly, it's what people adore about him. I mean,
you'd watch those primary debates guys in twenty you know,
in twenty sixteen, twenty seventeen, you know, and and all
those all those soundbites were rehearsed, right, I mean, you know,
Hillary Clinton well is very lucky that Donald Trump isn't
running the legal system of the United States.
Speaker 1 (09:15):
Right.
Speaker 2 (09:15):
He's throwing out these ingers, yeah, because you'd be in
jail for the rest of your life, right, And he's
doing it off the cuff, and and people like somebody
who was finally real, somebody who wasn't PC, somebody who
was willing to go out there and fight like hell,
and somebody who was willing to work hard because you
just don't have that in politics. I mean, most of
the politicians are lazy, their canned, they're they're scripted, they're
they're inauthentic, and and and they lose. They lose Americans.
(09:38):
And that's why, you know, there was never any excitement
in politics before my father came into the race. No
one was excited about Jet Bush. No one gave a
damn about Jeb Bush. And now you watch these rallies
where thirty thousand and fifty thousand people show up to
these rallies. People are excited. And by the way, a
lot of those people are young kids who are you know,
engaged in kind of the democratic process for the first time.
It's it's a beautiful thing to witness.
Speaker 1 (10:00):
We're talking to Eric Trump. The book is under Siege,
My Family's Fight to save our Nation. It's available everywhere. Eric,
you just talked about your dad and his unique sensibilities
when it comes to politics. You're a builder, You're a
business person, So is Jared Kushner, so is Steve Witkoff.
Obviously your dad. How much do you think being a
(10:21):
business guy made it possible to get a deal as
opposed to a straight politics guy in the Middle East.
I love this because deal makers look at solutions or
situations and just try to get to yes, whereas it
feels like a lot of politicians get bogged down in
things that don't matter. How much do you think business
(10:42):
and deal making really was the foundation of what Jared,
what Steve and what your dad were able to do.
And how much do you see that in your own
world from a business perspective as looking at politics as
a series of deals as opposed to getting bogged down
in sometimes these intractable issues.
Speaker 2 (11:00):
By the way, it's a great question. I'm not sure
if I've ever gotten asked, but it's one hundred percent
being a deal maker. I mean, listen, Obama ran on
what hope?
Speaker 6 (11:09):
Right?
Speaker 2 (11:09):
I like hope. Hope doesn't get you anywhere in business?
You know what I hope gets you? Hope gets you bankrupt.
Speaker 4 (11:14):
You don't.
Speaker 2 (11:14):
You don't hope for something. You you go out and
you effectuate change, right, And and that's what Jared did
so great, that's what wa cough. I mean Steve wickcoff
imloss his friends. I love him to death, but I
mean these you know, and and guys like me, right,
I'm out of business if we don't, you know, if
we don't get results, you don't get things across the
finish line, you are out of business, right like that,
(11:35):
That's what business is about, and making the deal right,
getting things accomplished, getting things done. Whereas black Obama was
about hope. Hope isn't a strategy. You know, results are
a strategy. And that's what my father demands. He demands results.
Everything he does, every word he says, is about getting
a result right, you know, and and that's a calculated result.
(11:56):
Everything he does, every press conference, every meeting, every every
call he makes, every time he pushes his cabinet, everything
he does, every person that he appoints, it's about getting results.
And that's what motivates my father, and that's what motivates
people in the business world. And so I think that's
why all of a sudden you had this kind of
you know, ragtag group of people once again, you know,
(12:17):
who didn't know anything about politics, you know it might
not have even known that much about Middle East piece,
but was able to go in there, build relationships, negotiate well,
get everybody to a table, and actually effectuate change versus
you know, these career bureaucrats who talk about how much
they know about foreign policy, and yet they're incapable of
getting anything done. I mean, how many more times do
(12:38):
you do you have to hear if you remember in
twenty sixteen, twenty seventeen, well, Donald Trump does not know
anything about foreign policy. It's like, yeah, they didn't know
anything about foreign policy either, you know. And guess what,
it's a really smart guy who could figure it out
in about three and a half seconds, bring people to
the table and actually get something accomplished. And you know,
it always makes me so happy when I see him
(12:58):
just run circles around these people who claimed to know
something about foreign policy, yet they haven't progressed a ball
in the last you know, three decades.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
Well, it's been amazing to see and especially to watch
a lot of your dad's critics eat a hefty dose
dose of humble pie because of the huge win in
the Middle East. So congrats to you, Congrats to your
family and to the President. I have one last one
for you, Eric. You and I are rough with the
same age plays a little bit older, but we we
grew up with the same movies, you and I, Eric,
(13:27):
and your book is under siege, my Famili's fight to
save our nation, which is already number one. Everyone should
go get a copy of it. Does this Stephen Sagal,
by the way, a vocal Trump supporter, Does Stephen Sagals
Under Siege make your top ten action movies All time list? Oh?
Speaker 2 (13:44):
Yeah, by one hundred percent? Right, I mean, Steven's always
like a legend for us, right as you know, as
was John Claude bandam as you remember very well. I mean,
my father is my father. And I used to watch
Larry blood Sport every single weekend. I mean, we love,
we love that movie.
Speaker 1 (13:57):
Week we watched that too. You know Stephen Miller his
favorite movie. He told us that on the show number
one all time.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
Well, fuck you remember the Kumte and everything? Right, we
love that under Siege? I mean, how can you not?
You know? You you add you had you know Gary
Busey of all things. Gary Busey ended up being on
the Apprentice with us for for years. Steven Sagall, he was,
you know, tossing people around the the Missouri remember the Battleship,
and you know it was it was, it was a
great movie. But no, never, never did I think that
would come into a little you know, fashion in my life.
(14:23):
I mean, I listen anybody roughly our age. I'm forty one.
Anybody roughly our agents scene under siege. But they literally, guys,
they put us under siege. You know, they tried to
destroy us. They they tried to do everything they could
to cut us off, to silence our voice, to to
bankrupt us, to deprive us, to to weaponize the media,
to weaponize the government, to weaponize the dj to weaponize
(14:44):
every right, to make up dirty ossier's, to impeach him,
to go after you know, I mean his Supreme Court justices,
his inner circle, his family, to try and screw up
his marriage, to scry and try and screw up his
his family, to try and steal his businesses from him.
That is the death nision of a siege. And the
good news is and then, by the way, and they
did that to all of America, right. They tried to
(15:04):
go after you know, Americans and mainly conservatives visa VI,
the I R. S. They went after their churches, they
went after their religious institutions, They went after their children.
They taught them revision is history. They tried to you know,
confuse their gender identities. This is the siege that they
put this country through. And we won the siege. Guys,
we want every aspect of it based on the fact
(15:25):
that we have the most resounding victory in American political history,
winning the popular vote, winning every swing state, having every
state in the country attacked to the right, and so, guys,
they put us all under siege, and we won the
greatest political movement in the history of this country one
And so you know, the book, as ugly as some
of the topics are in there, you know actually is
(15:47):
beautiful because you can beat the mainstream media, and you
can beat the weaponization of government, and we can win
as a collective of Americans who love this country and
love God, and love our constitution and love our flag.
And that's exactly what we did together.
Speaker 1 (16:01):
Amen, Book Under Siege. Encourage you guys to go check
it out. Appreciate the time Eric look forward acrossing paths
down the road.
Speaker 2 (16:08):
Guys, thanks so much for having me.
Speaker 1 (16:10):
Look, we've had a phenomenal news out of Israel all
week long. You just heard us talking about it with
Eric Trump. You've heard us talking about it all week.
It's been incredible to be able to chase and to
see lasting piece a great thing. In same spirit, it's
worth mentioning our longtime partners and what they've been able
to do the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews. For
(16:30):
over forty years, the Fellowship has brought Christians and Jews
together to solve big problems facing the Jewish people in
places like Israel, but also the former Soviet Union, feeding
the hungry, helping those without means. Day after day, IFCJ
teams are on the ground hand delivering boxes of nutritious
food to feed and comfort the poor, particularly the elderly,
(16:52):
including the last of the Holocaust survivors alive in Israel.
I've seen for myself the work the IFCJ does on
the ground tremendous. It's an absolute gift, and it's because
of the work and the kind generosity of so many
of you out there. Put your faith into action by
taking part in the ifcj's mission. To find out how
(17:13):
visit IFCJ dot org. That's IFCJ dot org.
Speaker 7 (17:19):
Clay Travison, Buck Sexton, Mike drops that never sounded so good.
Find them on the free iHeartRadio app or wherever you
get your podcast.
Speaker 1 (17:30):
Welcome back in everybody. We have a quick turn here
because we want to spend some extra time with our
friend Eric Trump and talk about his book under Siege
when his family's been through. Incredible story, happy ending to
that story. Certainly up to this point, the huge success
of the Trump Movement, of Trump Organization and Trump family.
But we're going to get into some fun talkbacks here
in a second. The campers of America have spoken, and
(17:54):
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Cozy Earth. Welcome back in Clay Travis Buck Sexy Show. Okay,
(19:00):
let's have some fun. A lot of serious topics, things
going amazing all over the country. I hope you have
a moment every morning when you wake up or at
night when you go to bed, where you have it
just a thought of gratitude and you say thanks for
all of the awesomeness going on. But it's probably going
to shock you. But there are some people out there
(19:21):
that do not agree with everything that we say on
the program, and in fact, let's start to run through
some of those with a lot of great talkbacks. Let's
see Jack and Phoenix FF. He's listening on news Talk
five point fifty k f y. I Bucky's got a
question for you.
Speaker 6 (19:38):
I just want to let fuck know that, Hey, if
you o Jesse Kelly a dinner at Red Lobster, then
I don't think you're going to have to be in
danger of any seventy five dollars shots coming down like
Clay got stuck with. Okay, Hey, you guys have a
great day, you have a great show. Thanks.
Speaker 1 (19:56):
What is the most dream that Jesse could order at
Red Lobster? Do you have any idea bout it? What
do you think? I bet Jesse could put away those
like my ties that are, you know, two feet high
off the table with the little umbrellas or whatever. He'd
probably drink some of those at Red Lobster. What is
the That is a fun question. What is the most
(20:18):
expensive bottle that Red Lobster has on the shelf? What
could Jesse drive up the cost with? I bet the
most expensive drink on the Red Lobster menu is fourteen
ninety nine. That's my bet. Fourteen that's a hot That's
a lot to me to spend on a drink, some
sort of mixed drink. I bet there's a fifteen dollars
(20:38):
mixed drink. I think that's the highest he could go
and the nicest tequille. I think there might be some
hose Cuervo silver going on. I think that's about it. Yeah,
the let's see here we go. JJ. We got a
lot of responses to my suggestion that you should never
sleep on the ground. There's always motels or places available.
We've we've ascended, we sent did as a species from
(21:01):
needing to sleep on the ground. Well, this is a
little bit different, Central Florida. He's listening on w fla
or Orlando affiliate. This is kind of high end. I think.
I think he's trying to brag as if he's been
roughing it.
Speaker 3 (21:15):
But listen, I'm listening to your show camping on my
pontoon boat. I have a tent set up on the
deck and I'm in a lake pretty much in the
middle of nowhere in central Florida.
Speaker 1 (21:27):
Okay, we appreciate everybody who listens everywhere. That's not really
roughing it.
Speaker 6 (21:32):
Now.
Speaker 1 (21:32):
I was gonna say, when you're on the boat, because
the boats got bathroom, hot and cold, running water, refrigeration,
and by the way, somebody could get me out on
the boat tent situation. As long as we had a
gator watch going on there because Orlando is Gatortown, my friend,
there's a lot of gators in that water. I also
not a fan of sleeping on boats, just gonna go
(21:54):
out there like I did the the Disney Cruise. I
don't like being anywhere I can't leave, So I'm okay
with boats if I can see land where I'm like, hey,
I could swim in, or I don't want to go
anywhere I can't leave, So in the middle of the wilderness,
if I can't leave, I'm not in favor of it.
We got on the Disney Curtly. Some of my some
(22:15):
of the worst experiences of my life involved being on
boats with seasickness, I mean truly worst experiences of my life.
And one that always sticks out is in we did
a a class trip in the eighth grade. I remember
this to uh Mystic Seaport in Connecticut, right, I think
(22:36):
that it sounds like a super high end class trip.
We went to like Mammoth Cave. No, no, no, no,
this was not this was this is like going to
the aquarium clay. This is not super okay, this is
like pretty Because I live in New York City, so
Mystic is like a hour and a half drive or something.
It's not that far, but I just remember we did
whale watching. We did a whale maybe it was the
Cape Cod trip. I can't remember, but we did a
(22:57):
whale watching trip at the school and I'm remember being
out on this boat and it wasn't just us, there
were other people that paid a will watch and everybody
on this boat basically because it was cold, choppy, everybody
started to get seasick and it was like a six
hour tour. Forget a three hour tour like Gilligan. This
was a six hour tour and everybody was tossing cookies.
(23:18):
It was nightmare, nightmare fuel the world. I don't want
I don't want to ever be on a boat where
I can't see land. I'm okay if like I just
I mean, look, we're signing Wimpier and wimpeer with the
passing segment here. I appreciate the fact that at some
point in time my ancestors got on a boat and
they were on it for months. They did enough boating
(23:38):
without being able to see the land. For me, for
my entire life, I did this cruise and buck, I
wish you could have seen my face. We were supposed to.
It was we had we had the Disney cruise. We
had like a six year old, a three year old,
and basically like a baby. And they may have been
a little bit older, but they were young, all five
of us in the same tiny little cabin, and we
(23:59):
were supposed to stop in Jamaica. The only reason to
go on a cruise is so you can get off
the boat. All right. I'm not one of those people
who enjoys being on the boat. Okay, so you go
to the island, you dock, and you get to leave
the boat. And they came on and they said, hey,
tough news. It's too choppy, Caesar, too choppy for us
to port in Jamaica. We can't go back to land
(24:21):
for three days. I would have gotten on a helicopter
and gone to any land at that point in time.
I wish you could have seen my face. I don't
ever want to be stuck on a boat. If I
can see the land, then worst case scenario, I can
jump in. We all know I'm a great swimmer and
I'll be fine. I'll be able to get to the land.
But much like Alcatraz, I don't. And I lived on
an island I lived in the Caribbean for two years,
(24:43):
so I have no problem being on an island, even
a small island like Gilligan's Island. It's I just I
like the earth. I like the soil beneath my feet.
We see this with me, this with the same as
Jeff from Texas KK on the Talk pack.
Speaker 8 (25:01):
Hey, Clay and Buck, this is Jeff from Humble, Texas.
I spent ten years in the Army Infantry. Back in
the eighties and nineties, I camped everywhere. Now I consider
camping is when my hotel stops room service at eleven
PM instead of two. AM love you guys, take care.
Speaker 1 (25:18):
Man, man, we love you too. Let me say I
co sign that. I'm like, if the room service is
not twenty four hours, what are we even doing here?
What kind of place is this? I kind of I
like room service. One of my big fears is choking
to death. I get nervous when I have food and
no one else is around. Am I the only person
who thinks this?
Speaker 3 (25:37):
Like?
Speaker 1 (25:37):
If you're in the room, you never thought? What if
I choke to death?
Speaker 3 (25:40):
Like?
Speaker 1 (25:40):
What if? No?
Speaker 4 (25:41):
No?
Speaker 1 (25:42):
I trust? I trust?
Speaker 3 (25:43):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (25:45):
The worst way to go? I think there are lots
of that awful ways to go would be you just
go to Red Lobster and you just take a bite
of a delectable shrimp and next thing you know, it's
caught in your throat and you die. Like people, that
happens like one hundred times times a year. People just
choke to death, not all at Red Lobster, it could
be Applebee's and that's the end. And it just feels
(26:08):
like that's the worst way to go imaginable because you're
otherwise healthy if you had just simply not taken a
bad bite. Choking on it is not the worst. It's
the worst way to go. It is the worst way
to get the worst way. What is worse than choking
on food, Clay, There's a million things that are worse
than choking on food. It is the worst way to
(26:29):
go because otherwise, if you had just bitten your food better,
you would still be alive. Instead you choke to death
on food. You might be like twenty five years old,
in the prime of your life, and you're just dropping
dead at Logan's Roadhouse because you couldn't swallow correctly. It
is the worst way to go. What else people get
eaten by Komodo dragons, Clay. Yeah, there are worse ways
(26:51):
to go. Kimodo dragon, though, is a violent animal, and
you shouldn't have been in the price. You shouldn't have
been risking things near the Kmodo dragon. But the dragon
kills you. Buck. Your own inability to swallow kills you
when you die on choking on your food. It's the
worst way to go. I I this is a crazy
(27:12):
take from clad. This is I'm one hundred percent right.
By the way, We've got some good emails. You can
tell me if I'm wrong, but you're all wrong if
you disagree like buck is. This is from tom My dad.
Greetings from Alice Beach, one of the fabulous places in
the country. My dad fought in World War two European theater.
When my two brothers and sister would say, Dad, please
(27:33):
please take us camping, his reply, I slept on the
ground in North Africa, all throughout Italy and in de
France and Germany, so you would never have to as
a young history nut, I had no comeback. That is
your dad, I mean, thank you for his service. That
is a great freaking response. Susannah. It is amazing to
(27:55):
me that we spend our lives working our ass off. Ope,
I actually hit the wrong button there. What happened there?
It is we have working our ass off to have
a beautiful, comfortable home, but then spend thousands of dollars
on equipment to cook and sleep outside as if we
were pioneers or members of the core of discovery. I'm
one of those silly people. I've come to terms with
(28:16):
that cognitive dissonance and thoroughly enjoy hiking and sleeping in
the wilderness. I'm surprised that we've had so few people
come actually come at her. I you know what I
love to do. I love to find a place that's
reasonably level ground and doesn't have that many rocks that
are going to stick into my back over the course
(28:37):
of the night. And then I'm gonna put down one
of those thin, those thin mats that you blow into,
and no matter how hard you're blowing into it, it feels
like it takes forever for this thing to fill up
with air clay. And you have this thin little thing,
and you're gonna lie in your sleeping bag on this
thin little thing on the ground and tell yourself that
this is comfort. I will be laughing at you. Off
(28:58):
wrapped in my cozy earth shit, eat and enjoy my life.
By the way, be cozy earth sheets are amazing. I
and you should be on a bed, not on the ground.
They're saying now that thousands of people choke to death
every year. Thousands. Yes, of course you think it's thousands.
I said hundreds. It's very My argument even better. This
(29:19):
is the worst way to die, choking to death when
you're just eating a normal meal. This is very common
for babiesitter is actually one of the things that people
will ask I. Well through the is well CEPR for kids.
Sorry I'm not c not CPR, I meant heimlich. Can
you do a Heimlich maneuver for kids? For choking? It's
very common, So yeah, clay choking is the young kids
(29:44):
thing is even worse. This is I think it's the
worst way. I would rather be eaten by a great
white shark than choke to death at red lobster. This
is your worst take ever, and I think I think
everyone agrees with me. This might actually be your worth
your worst take because the shark I'm not gonna win
a fight with. When you lose a fight with your fork,
it's a It's the worst way to go Clay, You're
(30:05):
essentially a giant sea monster biting off your leg, bleeding
to death over the course of minutes while it circles
you in the water. And you know that is that
is way worse than choking on a chickenender. The shark
is designed to kill you. Your meal is not designed to
kill you. You've lost a battle with something you didn't even
know you were fighting against. I don't don't you know,
(30:26):
I don't even know. It's like losing a fight to
a midget as opposed to losing a fight to like
a UFC fighter. I would expect that the UFC fighter
would choke me out. If the midget choked me out
and I died, then I would be like, this is
a big upset. I shouldn't have gotten killed by a midget. No,
little people, there we go, Yes, sir, thank you, that's
the preferred nomenclature, Sir, the preferred We're gonna take you
(30:50):
more of your calls and talk facts to close this out.
You can tell Clay this is probably his worst takeover.
I think this is number one all time worst take
that Clay has ever had on the program. That oaking
is the worst choking on food is the worst way
to die. And a normal meal. You're just and then
you're dead. You're like, hey, what if it's not the
last supper, it's different. I mean, it's just like, hey,
(31:11):
the choice you made was I'm gonna have another onion
ring and then you die. That is the worst way
to go. You could have just not had the onion ring.
A lot of people people, you know people, it's like slipping.
People fall off of roofs. Be very careful everybody all
the time because they think they can do the roofing
stuff themself. Understand the risk that you have taken on
(31:31):
the roof when you're just putting a fork into your mouth.
You don't think this is it. This is the last
act of my life. I'm right on this. I if
you get a single person who agrees with you on this,
I will, I will. I'll be shocked by the way
Trump has weighed in on Alyssa Farah and the Maga hat.
We might have time for that, we come back. He
used to work. He knows her, He knows her. She
(31:52):
used to work in the House communications. I used to
see her whenever I'd go to the White House. White
House Communications director for Trump all right, look, guys, which
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Speaker 7 (33:12):
Cheep up with the biggest political comeback in world history
on the Team forty seven podcast play and Boock Highlight
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Speaker 1 (33:20):
The week Sundays at noon Eastern.
Speaker 7 (33:22):
Find it on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get
your podcasts.
Speaker 1 (33:26):
Welcome back in Clay Travis buck Sexton show, I'm right,
Bucks Wrong. Worst way to go is choking. Another one
worst way to go might be abandoning President Trump right
before he won a landslide victory, then going on your radio,
going on your television show and saying, hey, if he
gets the hostages back, I'll wear a Maga hat and
then refusing to do so. Well, that's Alyssa Fara Griffin
(33:51):
who is now on the View, and she used to
work in the Trump white House and President Trump was
asked communications director, Yeah, you had a pretty senior role
in the Trump white House. He was asked about her
promise to wear the hat and her refusal to do
so on the View. This has just happened in the
Oval Office Cut thirty two. President Trump.
Speaker 6 (34:09):
Well, she used to work for me, So she used
to work here.
Speaker 4 (34:11):
I'll tell you about her, listener, she worked here. She
gave me the most beautiful letter.
Speaker 5 (34:16):
When the administration, the time came up, the election was rigged,
I left.
Speaker 4 (34:21):
She gave me the most beautiful letter you've ever seen.
I was a great president. What a great job. Some
of the letters been quoted. This is a listen. Well,
I never thought it was very outstanding. I figured she
would not make it, and she didn't have a big
role here either.
Speaker 6 (34:36):
And then we.
Speaker 5 (34:36):
Had January sixth, and she left after.
Speaker 4 (34:41):
That or before that, but she gave me the most
beautiful letters. And then even months after she.
Speaker 5 (34:47):
Left, and while we weren't here no longer, she sent
to another letters, low end letter, beautiful letter. And then
she got hired by the View and they gave her
a couple of bucks and she changed her view very quickly.
Speaker 4 (35:00):
I never thought she'd make it. I never thought she
had what it took in any way, you know what
that means. But she's on the View. But it just
shows what a fraud de Ville is. Because this woman
gave me letters and statements. She said I was the
greatest president.
Speaker 1 (35:14):
In her lifetime.
Speaker 4 (35:14):
Now she's not that all, so I didn't consider it
a great compliment.
Speaker 1 (35:19):
He's hilarious. Can I say something though about this. I
think I think that Trump should offer to various media figures.
He should offer a like media amnesty, where you know what,
you know what if you're willing to say I'm sorry
I was wrong, will naga please let me back into
the tent. I bet there are people who would take
(35:39):
it now, and some people may not like this idea,
but I'm just saying it would be kind of funny
to watch if Trump was like, let's well, I'll always
flip an enemy to an ally. I will open a
one time this first year of my administration media amnesty
for the anti trumpers out there, and see who decides
to show. By the way, I'm not sure Joe Scarbro
(36:00):
wouldn't be one of them. I will say this, by
the way, I'm right about the worst way to die.
And before we go, just let me think. Let me
hit you with this. I'm sure we're gonna have tons
of reactions to this. Imagine you are one day in heaven.
We hope everybody listening ends up in heaven one day
and you are sitting around and everybody's having a conversation,
as I would imagine people in heaven often do. And
(36:21):
you're sitting around. Somebody says, hey, how did you go.
Somebody's like cancer, cancer got me. You're like, man, yeah,
you can see that. Somebody else like heart attack. And
then somebody else is like, great white. Everybody's like, man,
tell me about that. Where were you? What happened? And
then another guy pipes up and he was like, my
sixteenth coconut shrimp at Red Lobster, which.
Speaker 4 (36:41):
One do you?
Speaker 1 (36:42):
Oh, that's the worst way you could possibly go. Cancer,
heart attack, great white coconut shrimping downstairs. I do not
understand this line of arguing because you did it. The
four defeated you.