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September 21, 2022 37 mins
More hideous crime stories from across the nation. Don Lemon dunked on royally on reparations. Clay and Buck take a call on Merrick Garland. C&B joined by New York Post columnist Karol Markowicz, fierce defender of the victims of liberalism. The View's Asunción Hostin roasted for racist criticism of Nikki Haley's name.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Clay and Buck show hour to going strong as always.
Thanks for hanging out with us, We're doing very much
appreciate it. We have a whole bunch of things to
get you. And I just realized we've got great guests
joining us during the show in just a little bit.
Our friend Carol Markowitz, who is the fierce mom defender

(00:21):
of children from masking and vaxing, and she is one
of my one of my favorites from here in New
York City during the pandemic, who was saying, this is crazy,
stop the madness. Talk to her about about that. Also
the crime issue. I really think more people need to
be seeing this story. We won't get into it too

(00:44):
much in detail now, but Clay, I know you and
I've talked about an offline this This lovely young woman
sitting in her car, car riddled with bullets and baton
Rouge senior at LS Louisiana, Senior at LSU just just
murder murdered and the car was shot many, many, many times.
The police are completely at a loss for what could

(01:07):
what could have been going on here. Locals are reportedly
saying they think it was a gang initiation, which certainly
seems plausible and law enforcement. Look, law enforcement in Louisiana
in general right now is understaffed, undermanned, underresourced, and undersupported
politically with I mean, New Orleans is the highest we

(01:30):
just talked to this highest murder rate in the nation,
which is it's just terrible. I mean, it's it's terrible
when any places has fallen into that category. But I
I mean, I know you feel the same way, Clay,
New Orleans is an amazing place. It's a beautiful, historically,
super rich, culturally amazing city. I mean, even as a

(01:51):
New Yorker, I just think New Orleans is such a
cool place. And the fact that it's had the crime situation. Anyway,
we'll talk Carol about about some of that here at
a moment. Then in the final hour of the program,
Clay Brian Morgan Stern will be with us. He is
the former White House Deputy Press Secretary, so he was
the deputy under our friend Kaylee mckinety at the White

(02:12):
House under Trump. Brian's a very sharp guy and he's
got some stuff to tell everybody about what Fauci was
saying in the White House behind closed doors. This will
not come as a shock to this audience. But Fauci's
a huge fraud. He even mocked the stupidity of some
of the policies that he would then go out and

(02:34):
tell people make sense and everything. He is an egomaniac.
He is the world's most evil, narcissistic smurf. I mean,
all of that is true. Brian will give us a
little bit of a peek behind White House closed doors
on that one. But you and I both with the
history fights. They think they can control the past and
therefore control the president, and rather control the narrative of

(02:56):
the past and use it to dictate the politics of
this moment. Huge example this is obviously the sixteen nineteen
project to come up with what is essentially a new
founding and framework of this country rooted in, you know,
the evils and depression of America, and the only way
to deal with this today is to put the people
in charge now who believe in the narrative of America

(03:19):
as a fundamentally rotten, evil, awful place. You see also
the polling, by the way, about Democrats that I'm trying
to remember what the exact less than half of Democrats
are proud to be America. I mean, and The other
scary part was in the wake of Ukraine. If you
remember buck, what percentage of Democrats would actually stay and

(03:40):
defend the country if it was invaded. Over half of
Democrats would leave. This is a stunning poll result. Again,
if America were invaded, would you stay and fight or flee?
Over half of Democrats would flee. And the reason for
this era of Democrats is because they believe America is

(04:03):
a rotten, awful place. Now, most of these people have
never actually gone anywhere else, right, This is one of
the advantages if we had some sort of peace Corps
requirement or even service requirement in this country for eighteen
and nineteen year olds, if you had to go to
some third world countries and see what it's actually like there,
then you might come back to America and say, hey,

(04:24):
you know, it ain't perfect, but we're getting an awful lot. Right. Unfortunately,
most of these people have no clue what the rest
of the world is like at all, and so they
sit around on their phones denigrating America with no understanding
or comprehension of larger world affairs. My advice always to
younger young people, as somebody who got sent for work

(04:46):
to a number of places that were conflict zones I
mean two war zones and other places where they're active
insurgencies and major counter terrorism operations underway because of Al
Qaeda in these different jihadist entities. And I spent my
twenties basically in that world dealing with that. You go
to other places and you come back to America and

(05:07):
you want to kiss the ground that this country was
built on. You you love, which is why so many
people that also come back and have done military service
also have just a feeling for this country is incredible.
I mean it really and they went to fight because
they know it's incredible, and they come back and I
think I have a recognition. I mean, talk to any

(05:29):
VET who spend a lot of time in a rock
or Afghanistan. You come back to America, You're just like,
this place is phenomenal. And we bring all this up
because you know, and also we can hold in our
heads two thoughts at the same time. America is the
greatest country that has ever existed. It's also got some
problems that we should address, and the Libs want to
destroy it. I mean, these are two things or two
areas where you can think about at the same time.

(05:51):
But but fighting over history is not It's not just
an intellectual exercise. It's important and making sure that we
have a history that is in the proper context and
people understand who did what and when and how we
got to this place we're currently in. Someone who has
not read I can assure you anything substantial about the

(06:12):
history of America is mister Don Lemon the New Morning
big promotion. You hear this big promotion promotion to the
Morning Show over at CNN. He was talking to the
royal commentator Hillary Fordwich. She on your speed, Don. By
the way, Clay, do you and you and Hillary chat
about the rollary and I text all the time at
the latest drama Buck, I was clicking to see what

(06:33):
the lip readers were saying about all the different royal interactions.
During the ceremony for Queen Elizabeth, I got something. I
got to admit. I mean, I told her I was
going to because I looked at her less than I said,
you know, at two, Carrie, she all in your's like,
She's like, look, I gotta agree with Cray, with Clay,
the royal intrigue is fascinating. I was like, no, tivillion

(06:54):
people watch the funeral yesterday, which is basically on her
like more people, I think watch the funeral than watch
the Oscars to kind of put in context. And the
people talk about the Oscars a lot. And this was
the tenth day that I'll even be honest with you,
this thing didn't seem like it was ever going to end.
And so yeah, Carrie's like most you know, yeah, apparently

(07:18):
she's on team play on this one. She's like, I
think it's fascinating, the intrigue, the drama of the pageantry
and anyway, right, bring it, bring it right into my house.
I can't believe it. But anyway, the royal commentator Hillary
fordwitch Um when Don Lemon said that the Brits effectively
should pay reparations, here is her, I think on it.

(07:39):
Part of well, we have two pieces of let's start
playing the whole thing. Start with the goat all of
this wealth and you hear about it comes to England,
it's facing rising costs of living, a living crisis and
a sterity, budget cuts and so on. And then you
have those who are asking for reparations for colonialism and
they're wondering, you know, one hundred billion dollars twenty four

(08:00):
billion dollars here and there, five hundred million there. Some
people want to be paid back, and members of the
public are wondering, why are we suffering when you are
you know, you have all of this vast Well, those
are legitimate concerns, now, I know you, You and I
are both like prize fighters who want to get in
the ring on this right away, because there's so much there,
like who gets the money, what's enough money, who pays

(08:22):
for it? What if you know, you know, like you
have two ethnicities, you know you have one parent from
the UK, We're gonna have a blood what analysis? Also,
how about the fact that lots of people are immigrants
who arrived who might be black post slavery, Right, so
you are, let's say you're a Nigerian immigrant who's only

(08:43):
been here for twenty years, why would you get reparations
for American related interest? And the large picture here which
no one ever discusses. And I hope we can start
to inject this into the discourse at least as every
time this comes up. America only had slavery the United
States of America for eighty years, Okay, we from seventeen

(09:06):
eighty three to eighteen sixty three, only eighty years. But
this is the British response. Have their own history with
this and what she said in response to Don Lemon,
the Royal commentator dropping some truth bombs here. I think
you're right about reparations in terms of if people want it,
though what they need to do is you always need

(09:27):
to go back to the beginning of a supply chain.
Where was the beginning of the supply chain that was
in Africa and when that crossed the entire wall when
the slavery was taking place. Which was the first nation
in the world that abolished slavery, the first nation in
the world to bolish it. It was started by William Wilberforce.
Was the British in Great Britain they abolished slavery. The
African kings were rounding up their own people. They had

(09:49):
them on cages, waiting in the beaches. No one was
running into Africa to get them. And I think you're
totally right. If reparations need to be paid, we need
to go right back to the beginning of that supply
chain and say who was wounding up their own people
and having them handcuffing pages. That's where they should stop.
I mean, that's It's a fascinating and important point she

(10:09):
makes here about how that you know, there's also it's
often not talked about, but there were there were minorities
that what we think of as minority today who owned slaves.
Oh yeah, if you know there were actually the slave trade,
the transatlantic slave trade, and also the the role that

(10:30):
Latin America played in it is something that that gets
very little little time and coverage in the media, for sure.
But Clay, I mean, just okay, so we're gonna start
doing this like we have a llegen Like, Okay, the Brits,
so they made be sponsible for percentage the X percentage.
Well where does this come in though with? Because she
also wanted to talk about the thousands of Brits who
died on the high seas to end slavery. So so

(10:51):
I want to know, I mean, it's it's something I've
asked before. So if I had ancestors who died fighting
in the Civil War, in this Civil War, do I
get like credit for that or how do we actually
do this? How do we deal with the fact that
what I mean, you would know you're this, you're the
Civil War buff total casualties in the Civil war were

(11:13):
I mean deaths in the hundreds of thousands. Six hundred
thousand I believe is the number of Union soldiers who
died I think I'm correcting this off top of my
head during the Civil War. One of them was one
of my ancestors. I had, you know, northern and southern
ancestors who fought on both sides of that war. So yeah, so,
so how do we gage what is the price in

(11:35):
blood that was paid to end slavery in the American
Civil War? And then how does that affect reparations? And
I'm just wondering, you know, because she brings up, for example,
with the Brits, thousands of men never made it home
to their families to fight to end slavery on the
high seas. That was the only that was their role
in the British Navy, and they died in that pursuit.

(11:57):
So are they are they exempted from these reparations? And
also so who do the reparations go to? Exactly? Yeah, No,
the reparation's argument is ridiculous. Six hundred and twenty thousand
total dead across Union and Confederate soldiers, so around three
hundred and sixty thousand Union deaths reported, two hundred and

(12:17):
fifty eight thousand Confederate deaths reported, So three hundred and
sixty thousand Northern soldiers died. Many people listening to us
right now would have an ancestor who died in the
Civil War. I did, certainly fighting on the side of
the North. Should there not be you know, well, but
ancestors died. Ancestors died, and huge numbers on both sides
of that conflict. And so you say that was our

(12:39):
nation paid a massive price in blood, by far the
most casualties we have ever suffered in any conflict. Okay,
so how does that get factored? This is why eventually
this is just it's very clear. This is about power.
This is about who gets to determine who gets what
now today, and it's certainly not about justice because what

(13:00):
does that even look like? It's one percent true? And
I just love don Lemon getting dunked on there because
at the end he was like, oh, that's interesting, Like
he didn't he didn't even have a response to her
historical knowledge. And what I appreciate her bringing up is
no one ever mentions the fact that the people in

(13:20):
Africa were initially enslaved by other African kings and then
were sold to the people who engaged in the slave trade.
But the slavery started in Africa, and no one ever
wants to talk about that responsibility at all in the
overall global slave marketplace. And do we get I'm just wanting,

(13:42):
do we get any extra credit for those of us
who had ancestors who fought to prevent the world from
being enslaved by the Nazis? You know, it seems like
kind of a big deal. I think that's kind of
a big deal too, you know, so do we get
do we get credit for that? Or is it just no,
it's all okay, yeah, I think everyone seeing here you
can you get like a little different checkboxes along the
way to find out how much responsibility you actually have.

(14:03):
And this is the other part of it too. I
mean I wonder for people who who have, you know,
a mixed ethnic heritage, So do they get the check
but then they have to send the check back? Or
how does how does that work if you're doing reparations
from the British Empire from five hundred years ago? You
know what I mean, it doesn't make It's totally absurdly illogical.

(14:24):
And also it doesn't even consider that the entire rationale
for affirmative action, which has now existed for seventy some
odd years in this country, almost was predicated on what
redress for past grievance, which is a form of reparations
that has been ongoing for generations now in this country,
and by the way, needs to end. My friends. When

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two three three four mls, Consumer access dot org. Speaking
truth and having fun. Clay Travis and Buck Sexton, Welcome

(16:13):
back in Clay Travis buck Sexton Show. Appreciate all of
you hanging out with us. We roll through the Wednesday
edition of the program and has always want to encourage
you to go subscribe to the podcast. Make sure you
don't miss a moment. Let's take a couple of calls
here right now. Let's see Superior Washington. You think so

(16:35):
superior Wisconsin. I apologize you think that this is a
huge Christmas President to Marrek Garland. Yeah, Paul, thanks for
calling in. Yeah, you know it is what better way,
what better out for Garland to say, Look, look guys,
this is has nothing to do with Marlago, has nothing
to do with January sixth. This was an independent state

(16:59):
ag investigating crimes. They get it to us. We were
compelled to follow up on it. So here's your indictments.
Don't blame us. It is interesting. I just I don't
know that criminal fraud cases over real estate holdings is

(17:19):
really going out. Maybe it doesn't matter. Maybe it doesn't
matter what the charges are against Trump because they're so
fired up buck about the identity. It's evil. It just
ever knows. There's always these things where, you know, I mean,
I remember my grandparents dealing with this back in the day,
where like the town assessor said that, you know, said
that your your farm or your house is worth X,

(17:40):
and you saying it's not worth that. I can't get
a value of real estate holdings. There's a lot of
gray area there, and so people usually don't go to
prison for it. Yeah, no doubt. I mean, for anybody
out there who's tried to get a mortgage REFI for instance,
sometimes you get a bad, you know, version of what
your house is worth because you got an idiot coming
out of doesn't know the marketplace. Other times you get

(18:01):
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Travis and Buck Sexton on the front Lines Truth. Welcome

(19:08):
back to Clay, Travis and Buck Sexton Show. COVID is over.
Oh no, wait, Biden said it's over, But now they're
telling us it's not over. His handlers just distracted by
all the cars, you know, the Troy shining cars at
the car show. That's that's what they were telling us.
Who runs the country nobody really knows, doesn't matter a
bunch of libs. But as COVID actually overwell it is,

(19:33):
and it's not. It's actually the answer. It's over to rational,
reasonable people. But there are still restrictions out there. They
just fired eight hundred and fifty teachers of New York
City for not getting a COVID shot that the private
sector no longer has to worry about starting I think November.
Who can make sense of all this? Oh? I know
our friend Carol Markowitz from the New York Post where

(19:55):
she's an opinion columnist. She's got a peace out continuing
COVID craziness shows it was never about the science, Carol, No,
it was not. Tell everybody how we know this now
more than ever? Hi, guys, you know how many of
these pieces have I written and have been on to discuss,
and yet we're still in this insanity in so many

(20:15):
of these places. It's September twenty twenty two, and yesterday
New York City lifted its private vaccine mandate, the vaccine
mandate that was for private companies, and the rest of
the country is like, wait, they had a vaccine mandate
for private companies. It's such a baffling and backwards way
of living, and it's so disappoints me that more New

(20:38):
Yorkers don't speak up about it. Carol, do you you're
in Florida now, and obviously the news today about Trump
and the criminal civil charges, but the fact that there's
still criminal allegations pending in everything else, Desantist is going
to win comfortably in forty eight days reelection in Florida.
The most Floridians that you talk to want the Scantist

(21:01):
to run for president or do they want him to
stay as governor. So it's interesting because I think that
Celbridians have a completely different consideration. It's not so much
the Trump de Santist thing down, here's the can we
lose our governor? So it's like in the rest of
the country, I feel like the conservative question is which

(21:21):
of these two guys do we want? Whereas in Florida
it's like, wait, we really don't want to lose our governor,
even though everybody kind of think he would make an
amazing presidential candidate. So ultimately, yeah, I think people like
him and want him entire office. I think they're concerned
about what happens to their state. It's a really kind
of perilous time, they feel, and it can go either way.

(21:43):
Like the state has been trending red, and it's been
pretty deep red in the last few years, but you know,
anything could happen. De sant Is only won by a
very small marginal last time, so a lot of affection
for the governor I would stay down Here. We're speaking
to Carol Mark, Whit's New York Post columnist. Carol, crime
is one of the big issues that Democrats know. They

(22:04):
got a real problem with the public because the crime
numbers are terrible. And when you look at this as
as an increase, you know, people say, oh, it was
worse than the nineties. Yeah, well that was thirty years ago.
So when you look at a not just a thirty
or forty fifty percent increase, Some places have had shootings
homicides increase one hundred percent, one hundred and fifty percent.

(22:26):
But but you share this story, I'd know it was
written I think by somebody else about the park Slope panthers.
Can you just tell everybody a little bit about about
the park because you used to live in park Slope
in New York City? What do people need to know
about this? This neighborhood watch group that apparently couldn't get
past whether to call people crazy or neurodivergent when they

(22:48):
were throwing bottles of old ladies. So park Slope is
an insane place. And but for a long time it
was a really beautiful, very very safe place to be.
And the growing up in New York City, the park
Slope was a dream, especially for somebody growing up in Brooklyn.
It was actually the dream. But what's happened in the

(23:09):
last few years is it's gone from liberal to leftist
and it has really lost the plot. This story, by
Susie Weiss on Barry White's Common Sense page was about
a group that had formed because a homeless person had
killed somebody's dog, and that finally moved to park Slopers
to say, we have to start taking this crime thing

(23:32):
more seriously. It's finally here. It's happening now. And I
know a side note to this in twenty twenty, when
people were saying, oh, crime is getting bad, all the
people in Park Slope were saying, that's very racist to say, actually,
and we shouldn't be talking about crime getting bad because
you know, and so it wasn't really affecting them, but
now it is, and this group formed and it's a

(23:53):
hilarious story. It really made my day. It was so
funny and so well written. I don't know that it
was supposed to be funny, this is, but it was
amazing and how these teenagers came up to them and
said that they should be checking their privilege. And of
course these teenagers live in parks Flope, grew up in Parkslope,
are the most privileged people possible, etc. Highly recommend the story, So, Carol.

(24:16):
In twenty twenty one, suburban moms said we've had enough
and they went and they got Glen Yunkin elected in
Virginia and nearly flipped New Jersey. I mean, that's how
much of a red wave we saw in that first
year after the Biden administration. What do you think we're

(24:37):
going to see in forty eight days. How are those
suburban moms going to react? How much did abortion change
the political calculus in your mind in terms of those
suburban mom decisions. And the reason why I'm pointing out
suburban moms in particular is there's lots of people who know,
we know how they're going to vote. That was the
sort of the impetus, the charge that changed things in

(24:57):
twenty one. How are these moms going to vote? In
your mind in twenty two. I still think that that
demographic is fired up and really wants to go to
the ballot box and punish the people who had kept
schools closed for as long as they did, kept their
kids masks for as long as they did, kept them
in the vaccine mandates for as long as they did.
I think that that demographic block is still very significant.

(25:20):
The problem is that I don't see Republican candidates speaking
to that block in the same way that Glenyonkin did.
Glen Yonkin made himself the education guy, and that is
so powerful. It's not just these issues that we're dealing
with right now. Education on so many different levels has
just collapsed in cities all across the country, and I

(25:41):
think that that candidates that can speak to these concerns,
collapsing standards, merit removal, of merit based anything. All of
this is very important to parents, and I just don't
see the same kind of Republican contact to these people.
I think a lot of these people are still fired
up on their own, but it would be best if

(26:04):
the Republican Party could maybe craft some messaging around this,
target this demographic specifically, because I think that they want
to vote, they want to be courted, and the Publican
Party should do that, you know, Carol. Also on the
issue of transgender indoctrination and now even surgery for youth,
I do think that Republicans. Look, I just think this
is a critical moral issue. Is I think this is

(26:24):
about truly defending children and saving them from making life
destroying decisions. Because there's a this is fashionable on the
left now, a lot of this stuff has become just
it's fashionable to push this and tell kids and you know,
change your pronouns and change your name, and have you
have your breast cut off if you're female, all this
stuff that's going on. And one thing that I just

(26:46):
find is, on the one hand, you know, we'll see
let's say, like a drag queen story hour with children there,
and or drag show with children there, and the Left
will say, oh, it's bigg at it, it's why, you know,
why are you pointing this out? This isn't And then
a few weeks later there's another one, and then there's
how hard is it for them to not do this?
I mean, it really does seem like, whether it's pornographic

(27:09):
books in schools for children or highly inappropriate sexualized shows
for children, the left doesn't want to give this up. Yeah,
I fully agree. And the fact that they are having
these kids keep secrets from their parents, I think that
would be such a powerful line for parents to understand
that it's not just that your kid is using a

(27:30):
different pronoun in school, it's that they're encouraged to keep
that a secret from you. And I like, I've said
this before, but you know, when in New York City,
my tea, you know, preteen daughter had so many kids
in her class declare themselves trans. It really was like
a contagion, and it was only happening among girls, and
it was happening at like, at such a clip that

(27:52):
it couldn't possibly be like, there just aren't this many
trans people in the world, let alone in one, you know,
one sixth grade class. So I think that parents have
to be kind of more aware of what's happening in
their schools and what their rights are. And again, this
could be something that the Republican Party speaks to these
parents about, which I don't think that they're doing that great.
I think that they could say, like, you know, we

(28:14):
all want to be sympathetic to kids who feel, you know,
the wrong, that they're born in the wrong gender or whatever.
But the way that we handle this isn't to let,
you know, secrets be kept from parents at school, or
to let them have hormones or any of this. And
I think that there's a great way to make parents
understand what the problem is. Carol Bucks been making fun

(28:35):
of me for ten days now because I care about
the British royal family and pay a lot of attention
to all the drama and everything else, and you know,
ten million people watch the funeral. And he confessed that
his fiance is also in my camp and agrees that
all the palace intrigue is fantastic. Are you team Buck
and that no one should care in America about the
royal family or Team Clay and that maybe you agree

(28:55):
with that, but you also desperately pay attention to all
of the drama. No, I don't pay attention all of
the drama. But the New York Post is obviously pretty
into the whole, you know, royal royal family thing. It's
a major topic at the Post. So I read the
post coverage. You know, I didn't watch any of the funeral.
I lived in Scotland, which should maybe say that I,

(29:16):
you know, would be more interested in the royal family.
But nobody is less interested in the Royal family than
Scottish people. So I got to move to Scotland. Apparently
Edinburgh is an amazing town. Where did you live in
Scotland in the north um, in a small town called Forests?
Oh wow, Yeah, well, I'm putting you down in camp
and team Clay on the Royal Thanks Carol Mark, what's

(29:42):
New York Post? Go reader stuff? She's brilliant, Carol, Thank you,
Thank you guys. Thanks all right, friends? Do you remember
the TV show them? A Glocklin Report was an old
school example of how Americans argued about which policies to
pursue to improve the great country that we love. No
one argued about the value of freedom in America or
how great the country was. Everyone just knew that was

(30:03):
a given. But today you put a show like that
on TV and the debate would turn into whether we
should love America or be ashamed of it. The reason
for this is simple. For too many years, too many
of our schools have been neglecting to teach young Americans
about America's great heritage of liberty, presenting them instead with
a dishonest narrative of America as fundamentally unjust. Hillsdale College

(30:24):
is weighing in four America by offering free online courses
such as The Great American Story, A Land of Hope,
and Constitution one oh one en Roland one of these
free courses. They're amazing from Hillsdale and even better, encourage
your friends and family to sign up to begin your
free Hillsdale College course today at Clay and Buck fo

(30:45):
Hillsdale dot com. That's Clay and Buck fo Hillsdale dot com.
Chiefing It Real, Chiefing It Honest, Clay, Travis and Buck Sexton.
Welcome back in Clay Turravis Buck Sexton Show, Louis Tea's

(31:09):
the View. They're back from their summer break. Appreciate all
of you hanging out with us. Encourage you to go
subscribe to the podcast make sure you don't miss a
single moment thanks to Carol Marko. It's from the New
York Post, who just joined us the view. I guess
they take off like a long summer vacation. They're back
for the fall television season, and it took no time
at all for them to getting broiled yet again in

(31:32):
further evidence of how insanely stupid these people are on
the show. This time it was Sunny Houston who was
going after Alyssa Farah, who is the new conservative member
of the panel. She's going after Nicky Haley. Yeah. I
think I think Alyssa was saying something positive about Nicky

(31:53):
Haley and then it turned into an attack on Nicky Haley.
I think we have the audio. Let's play it. Nicky
Haley probably effective name. There's some there's some of us
that can be chameleons and decide not to embrace our
ethnicity so that we can pass a different team. Yeah.
I don't want to the one to say Americans can't

(32:14):
pronounce Austin's shown because of the Okay, okay, this is
amazing because there's a little cross talk there. Who we
just so there you have Sonny Houston calling out Nicki Haley,
basically calling her like a fake. She says she's or
you know, chameleon. She changes with with whatever she needs,
Nicki Haley and I Kki. Nikki is her middle name

(32:38):
on her birth certificate. But the even funnier part of
this is that Sonny Houston's name and it kind of
came out there is so she is jade to her
name to be easier to pronounce while criticizing someone else,
and Nicky Haley fired back, sharing this clip. Thanks for
your concern at Sonny. It's racist of you to judge

(33:02):
my name. Nicki is an Indian name and is on
my birth certificate and I'm proud of that. What's sad
is the left's hypocrisy towards conservative minorities. By the way,
last I checked, Sonny, isn't your birth name? Boom? That
was Nicky Haley on Twitter responding to h to the

(33:23):
commin Sonny is is a nickname? It's not even I mean,
that's she just came up. That's like what she decided
a son sion. She says, now is Sonny um. But
you know a lot of people, I mean, wait, aren't
you isn't your you? Go by I go by my
middle name. You go by my middle name, right, Yeah,
I've always been I'm Richard. Clay Travis is my full name.
I was. You know, you don't look like a Richard.
I was named after my two grandfathers, and my mom

(33:46):
always thought or decided Clay Richard did not sound as
good as Richard. Clay Travis's not that uncommon. I've got
three first names, but it's not that uncommon for people
in the South in particular to go by their middle name.
But yeah, so I am, I've always been Clay. I also,
I know, I get a heat. People give you heat
on the internet stuff all the time. Oh you're from

(34:06):
New York City. Why is your name buck? Well, because
my grandfather is from South Dakota and my grandmother is
from Virginia and they like the name or you know,
there's there's a family history of the usage of the
name Buck. There you go and New York City. Not

(34:27):
a lot of buck running around New York City. But
we also not a lot of people who are, like you,
born and raised their whole lives in New York City. Yeah,
that there's a lot of us. We just you know,
we're out of a lot of people move here, so
everyone assumes that everyone's a transplant to New York City.
But which you do get, you know, you get a
lot of a lot of people you grew up legitimately

(34:47):
in Manhattan. A lot of people move out when they
have kids, right, they move out to the suburbs, Long Island,
they move out to Westchester, all those places, Like I just,
I mean, think about it this way. It's the largest
public school system in the entire true, So I mean
there's obviously a ton of kids here. But for whatever reason,
people have this perception that at the eight point five
million people, everyone just like arrived from someone from Well,

(35:08):
it's a sex in the city impression, right, Like everybody
just comes in there to hang out and have a
job in their twenties and run around having good time.
You know, It's funny. It's just I was just talking
to friend of mine recently about how we both agree
that sex in the City was so toxic for a
generation of young women. Yes, oh, and I oh, yes,
I think it was great for a generation of young men.

(35:31):
Well that's a very different approach. Yeah, I've got three boys,
I don't have a daughter, So I look around and say, man,
You used to have to work so hard to get
girls back in the day, and now you got to
get you know, get on a dating app and next
thing you know, you got twenty girls begging for you
to take them out. Sex in the City was like
a how not to guide for young women to be
happy in New York City, I can tell you that much.

(35:52):
It also created, I think, a massive imbalance where there's
far more young successful women of that generation in New
York City than there are men. Right, Like, I think
that it's not only that, it's um like the men
who are in so much better. This is where we need,
we need JP, we need Jordan Peterson, the dominance hierarchy.
You know, we're gonna start talking about it's like, no,

(36:14):
why are you going to be providing for a family
when the woman's provide. No. Look at this man, really,
you know, that's a pretty great at that's a pretty
great Jordan Peterson. Well, you know, thank you, sir, is
a man of many talents over here. Um, yeah, I
just I I look around and I think, man, I'm
not sure it's ever been a better time than the

(36:35):
feminists are all like, oh, women are so free, And
then look at Adam Levine. This guy, he's married to
a Victoria's Secret supermodel and the guy can't stay out
of the DMS. I mean, you know that's just not
just the DMS. The guy's all over the place. Does
that even know? If I'm talking about five you won't
follow the royal family, but you know about Adam Levine's

(36:57):
marital strife and he's at the half of the Daily Mail.
I know exactly what you're talking about. If you're a
famous dude and you are married, I don't even know
why you would send a DM at all to a team.
That's a messy situation to be in. Cleet Travis and

(37:18):
Buck Sexton on the front lines of truth.

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