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November 6, 2024 • 97 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
On a scale of one to ten, How surprise are you
that we know as much as we know right now,
including the presidency. Like to me, I'm like at an eight.
I did not anticipate confidently be able to talk about
this today because I just didn't know. I didn't know
that we would have enough of a clear picture to
know what exactly happened.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
And that is not what happened. It was the opposite.

Speaker 1 (00:20):
They were feeling like things were looking that direction by
nine or ten o'clock. Now I stayed up until like
five in the morning. They didn't call the race, like
Trump kind of like said some words at like two
o'clock if I remember correctly, and my brain is all
kind of scattered about it. But after that, you know,
they didn't call the race until like when Wisconsin was called,

(00:43):
which is like four thirty in the morning. Our time
time slipped slipped by pretty fast. That result, and we'll
get to local results as well. That result right there,
that is an indication that you cannot lie to the
American people, and you can't set yourself up to look
like heroes and act like you're not responsible when you

(01:05):
absolutely have a hand in what was going on. This
is more than just Kamala Harris getting trounced by Donald Trump.
And this is more than just about Donald Trump, because
this isn't the kind of thing that, oh yeah, Donald
Trump all of a sudden miraculously got all these votes. No, No,
this was America from a bunch of different places, demographics,

(01:25):
in what we were considering swing states, which he won
pretty darn handily. We're still weren't waiting on Phoenix or Arizona.
The Phoenix area has been very slow to account. We
only have about sixty one percent of votes in Arizona,
and Nevada is about eighty five percent of votes. He
is up by four or five points in both of

(01:45):
those four points in Arizona, five points in Nevada. It's
looking overwhelmingly like he's going to win both of those states.
He has already won the Blue Wall and Georgia in
North Carolina. He is on his way to winning every
single swing state. How does that happen? It is a movement.
It is not just about a specific candidate. It is

(02:05):
about America saying you can't do what you've been doing
and get away with it. We don't want to be
over governed like we have been over governed for the
last four years. We don't want to pay prices at
the grocery store or the gas pump or our energy
costs for the next four years that have any resemblance
to what exactly we saw over the last four years.

(02:27):
On top of that, we want peace through strength. We
want somebody that's going to be strong in the way
that we're viewed around the world, and we want to
bring back the times where there weren't wars happening in
Europe and the Middle East. On top of that, we
want to secure that southern border. You can act like
this wasn't a problem for two and a half to
three years, and by the time you finally got around
to saying, yeah, this might be a problem, it was

(02:47):
too late. The chickens have come to roots to Bobby Bouche, which,
by the way, you know, I was thinking about Out
of Sandler comes out with three movies that are pretty similar,
kind of all right about the same you know, three
or four year span, Billy Madison, Happy Gilmore, and The Water.

Speaker 2 (03:02):
Boy, similar in their humor style.

Speaker 1 (03:05):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, Like he's he's kind of a
dumb guy, and you know, it's all slapsticky kind of
humor funny. Right, but he's got really hot chicks in
all three of them, very different hot chicks in all
three of them. Okay, you know what their names are.
And Billy Madison, it's Veronica Vaughn. In Happy Gilmore, it's
Virginia Vinnitt. And in The water Boy it's for Vicky Valancourt.

(03:28):
All three of them. They're an alliteration with a V.
All three of them.

Speaker 3 (03:32):
Right.

Speaker 4 (03:32):
He took the easy route with figuring out named for
those for sure with the same letter.

Speaker 1 (03:37):
Veronica Vaughn, Virginia Vinnitt, Vicky Valancourt. I'm on to you,
Adam Sandler. Those are all great movies, by the way.
Bottom line here, ladies and gentlemen, before I get two
off track and off the rails, and I'm going to
take your calls here momentarily. But this is, like Donald
Trump said, this is a mandate from the American people.
You can't keep talking to us like that. We are

(03:58):
done with the hateful rhetoric for people that are going
online and talking about Oh well America, let me down again.
Oh no, well did it? Obosh the electoral College? He's
winning the popular vote. What do you have to say
about that, Even if you eliminated the electoral college, he
was gonna win the popular vote. That was an inconceivable thing.

(04:18):
Even for me, there was no way he was winning
the popular vote. Especially I didn't think he was gonna
win all seven of the swing states in Iowa. You know,
I gave that Seltzer Pole airtime, and a lot of
people are like, this is what happens when you give
stupid things airtime.

Speaker 2 (04:32):
Memory You're right, you got me, you got me.

Speaker 1 (04:34):
I everybody in the national news was talking about it.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
There had to be like something there.

Speaker 1 (04:40):
Even if I thought he was gonna win Iowa and
it was gonna be like by a handful, it wasn't
a handful.

Speaker 2 (04:45):
He won Iowa.

Speaker 5 (04:46):
You know.

Speaker 1 (04:47):
He won Iowa by like fourteen That poll was plus
three for Harris.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
He wins by fourteen.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
How can the most accurate polster, not just in Iowa,
but one of the most accurate pollsters in the country
right before an election in a state like Iowa get
that wrung by seventeen points.

Speaker 2 (05:05):
That's insane.

Speaker 4 (05:07):
Gotta take a look at how the polling is done
and got to figure out what needs to be done
to make those more accurate.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
That was I mean that is that is tough. That's
a tough look. That is a career ender for the
Seltzer Pole. Like if you're the Moine Register, you gotta
be like I got. We don't care how accurate this
thing has been in the past. This is a bad,
bad look. Unreal stuff is two seventeen. I want to
hear from you. Call us four h two five five
eight to eleven ten. Four h two five five eight
to eleven ten. Let's talk about how you feel today

(05:35):
knowing what we know now On news Radio eleven ten.
Kfab Brian is on the line. Brian, Welcome to the
show today.

Speaker 6 (05:42):
Memory, Hey man, what a day can you imagine after
all the hours that you've put in on the radio,
So that's the next day you get to enjoy something
like this. I'll tell you what I am. I am
flying right now. I liken it to two different things.
It's like being in a nightmare that you have had
for four years and you find me. Your eyes open
up and you're like.

Speaker 5 (06:03):
Or else.

Speaker 6 (06:03):
If you're right under water and you see that, you
know somebody's trying to reach it and pull you out
of the water, and you finally get out of the
water and you're you're not drowning anymore. I feel fantastic.

Speaker 2 (06:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (06:13):
I think there's a very similar vibe of just there's relief,
but there's also a lot of joy that hey, you
know what, there is hope in this country.

Speaker 2 (06:24):
And man, it was a resounding wave.

Speaker 1 (06:26):
We were waiting for that wave two years ago in
the midterm election that never came. It came in a big,
big way this time around. And I think that's a
fair trade for Republicans now that they know that they
have at least the Senate and the White House and
potentially also the House. Wow, that is a real indictment
on what the American people think of the modern Democratic Party,

(06:47):
I think for sure. Brian, I appreciate you for listening
to the show. Yeah, you too. Let's go to Dirk. Dirk,
what's going on, man?

Speaker 7 (06:57):
Yeah, I just was listening to you talk.

Speaker 8 (07:00):
You know, missing a poll by seventeen points in all honesty,
who cares. I heard all the polls for the last
you know, six months, and not one of them changed
my mind. Trump could have been ahead by eighty points
or behind by eighty points, sure, and it wasn't what
it changed my voice one way.

Speaker 9 (07:18):
Or the other.

Speaker 1 (07:19):
Yeah, And Derek, just to be clear, I don't think
that polls are done. There was an argument that maybe
that specific poll was released in Iowa by a very
liberal newspaper like the Des Moines Register with the idea
of maybe trying to get more people out that felt like, oh,
who knows, maybe if I go vote Democrat, Iowa could
be a blue state. I just don't think that's how
a lot of it works. I think it really is

(07:40):
trying to be a snapshot for us to understand what
the trends are, and that's what I use them for,
not necessarily to change minds. But I get what you're
saying on that as well. There are a lot of
people that are convicted in what they believe, and as
they should in a person's poll or even a political
endorsement by a celebrity shouldn't have anything to do with
changing your mind on that. Although men he celebrities decided

(08:01):
to take sides in this one, there's no doubt that
the American people stood by their principles and their beliefs
and they made their voice heard in a big, big
way yesterday. It's incredible the wave that came. I appreciate
the call. Dark Brian. Number two is on the line, Brian,
Welcome back to the show. What's on your mind today?

Speaker 8 (08:21):
Well?

Speaker 10 (08:21):
Hi, yeah, I'm celebrating, looking forward to being able to
say I told you so. And what I wanted to
ask you do you really think he's going to lower
the prices of anything, even energy, when the oil industry
isn't going to let that happen, Or that he isn't
going to hand the world over to Putin and She
when everyone on his team is either a Russia apologist

(08:44):
or ENTHUSI asked, do you really think he's going to
make less crime, make it safer? Do you think Robert F.
Kennedy Jr. Is actually going to make us healthier with
his crazy plans? Those are questions, and I look forward
to saying I told you so.

Speaker 1 (09:00):
When you know, Hey, hey Brian, Brian, I understand there's
going to be a winning side and there's going to
be a losing sight. I understand where you're at on this, okay,
but this is a big enough, a big enough slide
here of Democratic support not just in the presidential race,
but also in the Senate seats that were up for grabs.

(09:23):
Also in a lot of the House races that we
have seen, he's going to win the popular vote at
some point. I understand what you're saying is like, and
that's where a lot of the Democrats are saying, Oh,
this guy he's gonna he's bamboozled you. He's gonna, you know,
do all these other things when he's been the president
for four years and Americans remembered that and that mandate.

Speaker 10 (09:41):
I've heard that, But you're still not answering my question.

Speaker 2 (09:43):
You didn't answer.

Speaker 1 (09:44):
You didn't ask a question. You said you were looking
forward to saying I told you so, all right, Well I.

Speaker 10 (09:48):
Got to tell you so. First, do you really think
he's going to lower the prices of anything, even energy?

Speaker 1 (09:53):
How would you even know, Brian? How does anybody know
exactly what's going to happen tomorrow. This guy has a
plan that he says he wants to institute. The plan
that was going on from the Democrats wasn't working. Americans
didn't like it. Americans wanted change. They made their voice
pretty clear last night, didn't they.

Speaker 10 (10:08):
He made a lot of promises he can't keep, and
it reminds me of the movie Idiocracy of course, it
was Yeah, who are people? You know believed whatever they're
heard in ads and didn't care to think too hard
and wanted a pro wrestler for president.

Speaker 1 (10:24):
And Brian and Brian, how does this differ at all
from what we were told by a side the Democrats
who literally just said Orange Man bad and that was
fifty percent of their entire messaging throughout this this entire cycle.
Orange man your recess, if the Orange Man is your guy.

Speaker 11 (10:38):
No.

Speaker 10 (10:38):
I talked about how text cuts and tariffs and de
valuing the dollar it would all fuel inflation and the deficits. Yeah,
they promises you bring those things down, will he?

Speaker 2 (10:50):
Where were those in the ads? Brian?

Speaker 1 (10:52):
They weren't in the ads. They were not in the ads.
They weren't in the She refused to go in long
form interviews. She refused to go talk to the enemy.
I just you're telling me all this stuff that you
know or you think you know is going to happen.
And I'm not going to tell you you're wrong, Brian,
because I don't know what's going to happen tomorrow either.
But when the American people in droves go and vote
a Republican ahead of a Democrat in the popular vote,

(11:13):
not just an electoral college gigantic victory like he's enjoying
right now, but he's going to win the popular vote.
You cannot tell me that Americans didn't think they needed
something different than the system that was happening right now.
They had an opportunity and they blew it, Brian. They
had four years to try to prove that they could
do this. They had two of those years with control
of both chambers in Congress as well, did nothing to

(11:36):
solve a lot of the problems that Americans think are important.
And here you are telling me the day after Americans
in full around the entire country made their voice heard.
You're telling me, well, I'm going to tell you all
that you messed up.

Speaker 10 (11:47):
Well, you can pull all the people some of the time,
but let's see if the energy prices are really cut
in half in a year.

Speaker 1 (11:53):
All right, we will, Brian. And if they are, then
what are you going to say?

Speaker 2 (11:56):
Can I say I told you so?

Speaker 10 (11:58):
Yes, I'll say so and be happy about it?

Speaker 2 (12:02):
All right?

Speaker 1 (12:02):
You're you're going to say it. If that doesn't happen,
I'm going to tell you that I told you so.
If it does happen, America who wants to give the
opportunity to see what happens. And I think that's what
you're missing here, is that America had a chance to
voice their opinion. Four two, five, five, eight to eleven ten.
Kevin's on the line, Kevin, Welcome to the show today.
What's on your mind?

Speaker 12 (12:22):
At Emery? So this fella you're just talking to got
it all wrong. Idiocracy is a rauchy movie, but it's
pretty funny and it explains how you're brainwashed by the government.
And the Republicans aren't brainwashing anybody. It's the Democrats that

(12:43):
are brainwashing people and controlling people. So that's kind of
the problem there. But we have seen Trump do what
he said he was going to do for four years,
and every promise he made he followed.

Speaker 1 (12:57):
Through on, yeah, or at least it's tempted to follow
through on yeah exactly.

Speaker 12 (13:03):
So he's gonna follow through on everything he said he
was gonna do, or try to and make sure that
things happened properly.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (13:10):
So I'm just not a real big government control fan.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
Nope, And it looks like the rest of America isn't either.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
As far as last night's results are concerned, Kevin, I
appreciate the call.

Speaker 2 (13:20):
Thanks for listening to us.

Speaker 1 (13:22):
All Right, hey, you call us, you got some thoughts
on what happened last night, you got some feelings inside
of you. I'd like to know where you're at on this,
and we'll talk about some of the other things that
are on my mind in regards to the results. We'll
get to some local races as well. But man, what
a day to be an American. One way or the other.
You're gonna remember what happened and this is going to
fundamentally change. I think the Democratic parties approach and it

(13:44):
better if they want to win a race as big
as this in the future. Four oh two five five
eight to eleven ten is the number. Four oh two
five five eight to eleven ten. News Radio eleven ten Kfab.

Speaker 13 (13:56):
Emery Sunger on news Radio eleven ten KFAB.

Speaker 1 (14:00):
We'll keep you up posted on that and we will
take a listen in to that to listen to what
she has to say. I think it's incredibly important to
hear how she accepts the defeat that has been bestowed
upon her by the American people, not in just the
electoral college, but also with the popular vote, which is
something I never thought I'd be saying about a Republican
president anytime in the near future.

Speaker 2 (14:19):
It happened. It happened.

Speaker 1 (14:21):
He still got like a four plus million vote lead,
and I just I can't believe it anyway. Phone numbers
up four h two, five, five, eight to eleven ten.
Love to talk to you, Bob's Online. Bob, Welcome to
the show today. What's on your mind?

Speaker 14 (14:37):
It all when Reagan won, I got seven drugs and
paid money go to the grocery start. Didn't have to
give an arm and a la again your child. So,
I've been married thirty seven years. Yesterday my nephew had
a daughter foreign yesterday. Wow, I knew it was going

(14:57):
to be a good day to day and for that.
Gentlemen talking about the oil, how many barrels of oil
did Trump put in the ground to save when he
bought it pennies on the dollars, and their Democrats turn
around and sold it and made a lot of money
to give to another country. Nobody needs to say, I'll

(15:18):
tell you so it is going to happen. I burned
ten thousand gallons a month between my trucks and my
drivers driving home. Well, I good you know, an eyehole lighthoul.
So I see it all happen prior watching the grocery
stores go up because I'm hauling it before it's even killed.

(15:41):
And I got to make money. Yeah, see what? And
nobody's gonna put off my bubble because you know, being
married thirty seven years thirty six years. Sorry, my wife's
not listening. Oh and a little Republican was born yesterday. God,

(16:01):
I got a list here. Just hang on, what was
the other one? What was the other one? You know,
I'm sorry man. I'm from Minnesota, and you know, ninety
five percent of Minnesota voted for Trump, but in the
other five counties they out populize, right, poculization, you know.
And it's sad to see that the national thing on

(16:24):
the TV is all blue when, if you know, and
that's another one. I want Walls he builds a cabin
in South Dakota. I want people on two twelve to
keep all their Trumps and Van signs up. So when
Walls leads the White the capital of Saint Paul and
drives to South Dakota, I want him to see every

(16:48):
Trump sign going out there.

Speaker 8 (16:50):
Right.

Speaker 1 (16:50):
Well, hey, Bob, I got some other people I want
to get to But your your point makes a lot
of sense. And like you said, there there's a lot
going on in life. The election wasn't going to make
me feel good or bad one way or the other
for long because I want to live my life the
best that I can. But it's hard not to notice
that America had a point to prove and they did
so in a massive way yesterday, and.

Speaker 14 (17:12):
Reagan did it popular vote.

Speaker 1 (17:14):
Man, Yeah, I know about it, but think about how
long ago that is and here we are in twenty
twenty four when they said it couldn't be done, especially
with this candidate, and it's gonna happen. I mean, it's
just it's insane to think that this is out. It
got that bad that he's winning the popular vote. It's
just wild stuff.

Speaker 14 (17:30):
Man.

Speaker 1 (17:30):
I appreciate it, Bob, thanks for listening to our show later.
Oh yeah, that's a that's definitely this. He's talking quite
a bit right now how a lot of people feel.
I think Ted is on the line, and I appreciate
Ted for holding what's going on.

Speaker 15 (17:47):
Ted, Well, I.

Speaker 16 (17:50):
Just want to make a point that I think I hope,
I hope that the rhetoric that has gone on really
since Obama, uh, that it calms down, that people can
actually start talking to each other again about what they
believe and what they think without their family or friends

(18:14):
or neighbors saying if you believe that way, you're out
of my life.

Speaker 2 (18:18):
Yep.

Speaker 16 (18:20):
I mean seriously, it goes on. It's happened today already
where where we've had people say, you know, if you
voted in this direction, your craps.

Speaker 1 (18:32):
You know, yeah, yeah, and well in Ted just to
follow up on that specifically, I'm going to give like
a forty eight to seventy two hour buffer here for
a lot of the people that lost yesterday. They didn't
think they were going to lose, because I know how
it would be the other way around to and I
know what that response would have been if the Democrats
would have had resounding victories in the Senate, in the House,

(18:53):
and then in the presidency. So I'm going to give
them a little time to, you know, like to be mad,
because I can I understand that, but you're right, you
want to know one of the reasons they lost is
because of all that hate fielled rhetoric about people being
racist or fascist just because they have conservative values or
because they voted. I don't even think it's about Donald
Trump as much as it's about the American people wanting

(19:14):
to see a change. They wanted something different to happen.
And yes, Donald Trump is the candidate and he spurs
a lot of reaction and emotion from both sides, but
it's really about the policies that he ran his campaign on,
and the policies outweighed the personalities in this election by
a lot, and that has to be something noted by

(19:35):
the Democrats that maybe we need to talk more about
our policies and get our policies figured out, to talk
about more of America and the people that actually, you know,
are going to be voting for us, instead of just
saying orange man bad.

Speaker 7 (19:47):
Yeah, yeah, I would agree.

Speaker 16 (19:48):
I just hope, I hope it calms down and there's
some working together versus go in the other director for.

Speaker 1 (19:59):
Sure, weep all. I appreciate that, Ted, Yeah, he's right.
The you want you want to know what the word
it was that I was thinking of last night. I
was like, now's your chance for unity. This is their
chance for unity, and a lot of that has to
come in winning with grace too, not just trying to
rub the Dems or the Libs feelings into it. Right,
you want to let people know, hey, you got to take,

(20:21):
you got to take keep your eye on the ball
as to why exactly this went down. Okay, At the
same time, I think it would be a mistake to
then tell all the Democrats that, you know, it's their
stupid approach to this election and the way that they
talk to conservative voters is the is the like. You
got to note that that at some point has something
to do with why people don't want to support you.

(20:42):
Sarah's on the line. Let's get to Sarah real quick. Hey, Sarah,
thanks for calling in. What's up?

Speaker 3 (20:46):
Thanks Emory partaking my call. I just want to rejoice
and praise God Almighty that initiative for three four did pass,
and that that means that preborn babies will be protected
even more so here in the state of Nebraska, and
that moms will be protected. One of the things that
some people didn't know is that there's fifty years of

(21:06):
protections of laws on the books. You can look them
up Nebraska Family Alliance. Like theseic shafty standards in abortion
facilities have to fit to be inspected by the Health
inspectors just like a nail swan or another facility, and
those will stay and that babies will be protected. And
you know, we don't want to go out. We want

(21:28):
to be kind, we want to be loving. We want
folks to know that their initiatives that didn't go through
that we care about them and that we all want
to be kind and lead with love. And also know
that you know, a lot of folks on the other
side of pro life think that we might not care
about the babies after they're born or the families because

(21:50):
some folks find themselves in an unexpected pregnancy, are an
undersupported pregnancy, and think that the only choice they have
is abortion, But they do have the choice of life
essentialps dot org EPs is essential. Ps dot org is
one of the health centers and their street in town
as Sure and women.

Speaker 2 (22:09):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, care center.

Speaker 3 (22:11):
But they got to know that this up until eighteen
months with EPs, they will help with pipers and cloths
and cars and parenting classes.

Speaker 13 (22:20):
I know the one.

Speaker 3 (22:21):
I've seen the board of parenting classes in their admin
room and I would love to go to them.

Speaker 2 (22:27):
Yes help, Yeah, Sarah, I'm picking up.

Speaker 1 (22:30):
I'm hearing you, Sarah, I really appreciate you bringing that up,
and we'll talk more about a lot of the local
races coming up.

Speaker 2 (22:34):
But I appreciate you for being a part of the show.

Speaker 17 (22:36):
Okay, okay, thank you.

Speaker 1 (22:37):
Yeah, we'll get to the other calls coming in four
two five five, eight eleven ten. And we're keeping an
eye on Washington where at Howard University, Kamala Harris is
expected in the next half hour.

Speaker 2 (22:47):
You'd say, we got it on. We're watching the monitor.

Speaker 1 (22:50):
We're going to make sure that we let you hear
what she has to say when she gets onto the
stage there as she is going to concede this election.

Speaker 2 (22:58):
We'll hear what her message is. In the meantime, we're
going to talk to you.

Speaker 1 (23:02):
Keep calling us four h two five to five, eight
eleven ten on news Radio eleven Tin kfab Hey.

Speaker 5 (23:06):
Brother, the President Trump just does any part of what
he said, especially with the taxes on people that make
about seventy five thousand dollars or less. If they take
the taxes off of tips, they take the taxes off
your soul security, and they take the tax off your overtime,
that's going to give the bottom twenty percent of that
population about another fifteen to eighteen percent of money to

(23:28):
live on every year, it's going to make a big difference.

Speaker 2 (23:32):
Yeah, well, and you know what people have.

Speaker 1 (23:35):
It was interesting when he started talking about a lot
of those that the Democrats started to just kind of.

Speaker 5 (23:41):
Echo, jump right on board.

Speaker 1 (23:42):
Yeah, they were echoing all of what he said, like, Yeah,
that actually sounds like a pretty good idea. Maybe we
should run on that too, And.

Speaker 5 (23:49):
I hope they take it to Washington and it's something
they can agree on and get it done quickly.

Speaker 2 (23:53):
Absolutely, it's going to make a.

Speaker 5 (23:55):
Big difference with the cost of living. Now you start
giving poor people under seventy five thousand another seven eight
ten thousand dollars a year to live on. It is
a complete life changing.

Speaker 1 (24:05):
Experience for absolutely. George, thanks for bringing that up, but
thanks for listening to us. We'll move on and talk
to Dan here. Dan, Welcome to the show. Dan, what
do you got on your mind today?

Speaker 5 (24:15):
Hey, how you doing?

Speaker 18 (24:16):
Thanks a lot for taking my call.

Speaker 7 (24:18):
Yeah, no problem.

Speaker 18 (24:19):
I really think that anybody that broke the law, including
Hunter Biden, Joe Biden Milly where he contacted China on
Trump's first term and undermined his presidency, all the way
back to Clinton where she destroyed subpoena's emails. They all
need to be held accountable. People need to go to
prison that broke legitimately broke the law. I'm not talking

(24:41):
about law there, but I mean people don't they're not
held accountable.

Speaker 6 (24:45):
They're just going to keep doing the thing.

Speaker 19 (24:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (24:46):
Well, Dan, I just want to be careful about that,
because this is a big opportunity on the heels of
this huge landslide victory for Donald Trump in the popular vote,
as in winning that as well, and then to get
the Senate and put potentially also have the House, which
they have called yet this is a chance to build
on this for twenty six and for twenty eight and
a chance to really get people from the middle America
is to see that the Republicans are the voice of

(25:09):
reason here. And I don't want to give them any
opportunity to be like, oh, never mind, he's weaponizing the government,
even if that's not what he's doing. He's holding people accountable,
like you.

Speaker 18 (25:17):
Said, legitimate if they don't do it right, right, but
never get our country back.

Speaker 1 (25:21):
But Dan, all I'm saying is if he just gets
in there and starts throwing people in jail or trying
to do the same thing that was stopped out there.

Speaker 18 (25:28):
And he's going to do that. I'm just saying he
needs to have a justice department that legitimately follows the law.
And if it's not too long ago, back where Hillary
Clinton destroyed subpoena email, she needs to be held accountable.

Speaker 2 (25:42):
Well, you just spent time in prison, right Dan. I
hear you. I hear you.

Speaker 1 (25:46):
But I just want you to know that there's an
optics to that that is going to make that a
little bit tougher. I think people to swallow as something
other than just retribution. But I appreciate the thought today
something does need to happen if people were not doing
their job or they weren't following the law. But everything
that Donald Trump was saying about the government being weaponized
against him or the DOJ being weaponized against him, like,

(26:08):
I don't like the immediate reaction of Okay, here's him
winning in a huge margin in the election, and then
he immediately like the first thing he wants to do
is get revenge on the people that wronged him in
the same way he thought was wrong against him. There's
got to be like a way to do that and
hold people accountable without making it seem like you're just

(26:29):
trying to get revenge on people. Steve, Denise, Jared, Tom
everybody else on the phone lines, please stay right there.
We are going to get you on the show. Just
hold tight, and we're keeping an eye on Howard University
in Washington, and we'll let you know what Kamala Harris
has to say when she starts talking. All that and
more on the way, So stay right here on news
radio eleven to ten kfab. She did not speak last night.

(26:50):
As the results are coming in, they pulled to Hillary
Clinton and said, hey, we're going to actually like go,
you know, go back home, and everybody else should go home,
and we'll you know, talk to you tomorrow. The crowd there,
we'll pay attention when she pops out, we'll we'll go
ahead and take that for you real quick. And we'll
get the more local election news and stuff throughout the
rest of the show. But right now, I want to
get your thoughts on the phone line four two, five, eight, eleven, ten,

(27:11):
and we have Steve on the line. Steve, thanks for
holding and being a part of the show. What's going on?

Speaker 18 (27:16):
Hi?

Speaker 19 (27:16):
Thanks Emory. What the last night's results gives me is
and I'm an older guy in my fifties, mid fifties,
it gives me hope in the younger folks in America,
all of the people in America, that they weren't manipulated
by the media, that they did their homework and they
realized that the last administration they really didn't do that

(27:39):
good of a job for the American people, and they said,
you know, we're not going to buy into all the
these Hitler or whatever they would say about them, and
they did what they did. I mean, this is I
never thought I would. The last time I saw something
like this. I was a freshman in high school when Reagan,
I think, do you win like forty nine states?

Speaker 2 (28:01):
Yeah, that will never that will never happen again.

Speaker 18 (28:04):
Yeah, no, I agree with you on that.

Speaker 19 (28:06):
But I mean, this is as close as you're gonna get.
And it just gives me hope because I got kids
and grandkids, and that the people can can still use
their own brain and make it right.

Speaker 1 (28:20):
Well, and Steve, let's go ahead and put to bed
the whole the whole election rigging stuff, because so many
people said it was already rigged, you know, like and
all this stuff in election fraud and Republicans don't have
a fair shake and all that stuff.

Speaker 2 (28:32):
No, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 1 (28:34):
The people, the people got a chance to speak, and
did they speak. They definitely spoke last night.

Speaker 19 (28:40):
Yeah they no, And it was so good to have
this election over, Bob, you know basically what one in
the morning archives?

Speaker 1 (28:46):
Oh yeah, yeah. I mean, you knew where it was going,
even if they hadn't called yet. By the time you
went to bed, you knew where it was going. And
I stayed up all night just to make sure nothing
crazy happened. And nothing crazy.

Speaker 2 (28:56):
Did you know?

Speaker 1 (28:57):
They they made the call middle of the night that
he enough states. So here we are, Steve. We did it.
We made it through the finish line, and now we'll
see exactly what the Republican agenda's going to look like exactly.

Speaker 17 (29:08):
So thanks taking my call.

Speaker 11 (29:09):
Man.

Speaker 19 (29:10):
You have a good rest of your day you as well.

Speaker 1 (29:11):
Let's go to Jared. Jared, welcome to our show today.
What are you thinking about?

Speaker 7 (29:17):
Hey, Emory, you know four years ago we all went
to bed thinking Trump had it, and woke up in
the morning and we felt it was you know, something
funny happened right last night. I stayed up till I
knew that Trump had won it. And I'm not a

(29:37):
very emotional guy, but I was in tears in my living.

Speaker 12 (29:40):
Room watching it.

Speaker 2 (29:41):
It's a pretty It.

Speaker 7 (29:43):
Was American people finally are awake and not woke.

Speaker 2 (29:47):
Well, but that's the thing, Jared.

Speaker 1 (29:48):
It was a pretty powerful moment, I think, just to
see what it was, see the way that it was
the African American votes in the swing state, it was
the Latino votes in the swing state. It was a
larger vote of young people eighteen to twenty nine voting Republican.
It was a bigger segment of people that are you know,
women all over the country that were voting Republican. This

(30:09):
is why I think it's bigger than Donald Trump. I
had a lot to do with the failures of the
Democrats over the last four years, but it also had
a lot to do with people just knowing they had
a voice and they wanted to be heard, and they
made themselves heard last night.

Speaker 7 (30:21):
My wife is one that she's not overly political, and
by any means, she hasn't voted since before twenty sixteen,
and she went out and voted yesterday. My brother, who
is a I guess you would call him a libertarian
in a way. He said he would never vote for Trump.
He texted me yesterday morning saying he went and voted

(30:42):
for Trump. I never thought i'd hear those words coming
out of my brother's mouth.

Speaker 8 (30:46):
Right.

Speaker 7 (30:47):
It was amazing to see. It was emotional to see.

Speaker 1 (30:52):
And it takes a big person to make that, you know,
to say that, right, And Jade Vance kind of was
the flag bear for that. It's just like, yeah, called
him Americas hitler, you know. But then I realized what
he was doing for the country, and I changed my viewpoints.
And look where you know, look where he ended up
getting after that, right, So, yeah, there's a lot.

Speaker 2 (31:11):
There's a lot, Jared, for sure.

Speaker 7 (31:13):
And I'm too young. I was born in eighty six,
so I never saw the Reagan era of when he
won forty nine of the fifty states.

Speaker 2 (31:23):
Sure, yeah, this is this is.

Speaker 7 (31:25):
Our my generation, the younger generation that didn't get to
see that. This is our Reagan moment for sure.

Speaker 2 (31:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (31:32):
And the popular vote, which I thought was never going
to happen again for a Republican candidate.

Speaker 2 (31:36):
Nor did I ye unbelievable. Hey, Jared, I appreciate it.

Speaker 7 (31:40):
We made it too big to rig.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
That is one percent true. Jared, thanks for the call,
Thanks for listening to us today. Yeah you too. Tom's online. Tom,
Welcome to the show. And what are you thinking about today?

Speaker 20 (31:52):
Hello? Yeah, yeah, let's know exactly why the Democrats lost him.
That's yesterday. I'm gonna kind of date myself year. I
graduated in nineteen seventy seven, and at that time it
was not uncommon for racial or ethnic slurs to be
thrown around right and left, you know, as you were
sitting around drinking in the bar. But a lot of
my friends were going to college then they learn that

(32:15):
that's not nice. But there's still one slur that was
not only discouraged, but actually encouraged at the time in college.
In fact, I can say this word on your radio.

Speaker 2 (32:27):
Oh boy, have the done button ready?

Speaker 20 (32:29):
Redneck? Oh yeah, And guess what you know that's still
thrown around today like it's funny. Well, that just shows
everybody that everybody in the city, thanks everybody out here
in the world. Rural areas are stupid.

Speaker 2 (32:42):
Be easy. I live in the city, Tom, I don't
think you're stupid.

Speaker 20 (32:45):
Well a lot of city people do.

Speaker 1 (32:47):
Yeah, I'm with you in where your boat down in
the map. You know, that's the thing about the map
as well. Trump made a lot of gains in the
cities as well. I think they noticed that that his
platforms are more for the people and not for the elites.
And it's not all about just hating the other side.
It's about running an election or a campaign on policies,

(33:09):
and hopefully because of the decisive win that this is,
that brings us back to wanting to run our campaigns
on policies and not just trying to look at the
other side, point fingers and name call.

Speaker 20 (33:20):
It definitely a redneck turnout. I'm glad there was.

Speaker 1 (33:24):
All right, Tom Well, I appreciate it. Thanks for listening
to us, Thanks for calling in. We'll talk to you
again soon. All right, we'll get to Trevor Justin, Aaron,
everybody else calling in four, two, five, five, eight, eleven, ten,
more on the way, and we're keeping our eye on
Kamala Harrison. We'll let you know what she has to
say when she gets up on that stage today. On
news radio eleven ten kfab.

Speaker 13 (33:43):
Hey, Maurice Sung on news radio eleven ten kfab.

Speaker 2 (33:50):
Justin, Welcome to the show. What's going on?

Speaker 6 (33:52):
Hey, how are we doing.

Speaker 2 (33:53):
Hey, what's up?

Speaker 8 (33:54):
Man?

Speaker 7 (33:55):
Hey, thanks for taking my call.

Speaker 18 (33:57):
Appreciate everything you do doing it great day to.

Speaker 7 (34:00):
Be an American.

Speaker 21 (34:02):
My question is, what is the worst case scenario?

Speaker 22 (34:05):
So for two ways, if we win the House and
we hold all three and this left judge.

Speaker 21 (34:11):
Decides to throw the book or try to throw the
book at Trump, what happens in the you know, best
case scenario on that side, and say we don't win
the House and he throws the book, what happens? Does
jdvn's take over?

Speaker 1 (34:23):
I mean, well, yeah, so so he could still be
the president. And I mean, like, let's just say you
go to prison, he could still be the president there.

Speaker 2 (34:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (34:32):
So I mean, to be completely honest, justin I'm not
exactly sure what that's going to look like now. I
don't know what, you know, a lot of those charges
are even going to be like pursued at this point,
especially when the Supreme Court said there is some level
of presidential immunity. It obviously depends on, you know, the
way that people interpret what is or isn't an official
active president. We're still kind of working on that. But

(34:53):
now that he's the president again, I would I would
be really kind of surprised if they continue to pursue
a lot of that stuff. And if they did do that,
that what kind of weaponizing of government is going to
be a loss for everyone because certainly the Republicans are
going to try to protect Trump at all costs and
go after that judge, and then it's just going to
be a back and forth kind of you know, weaponization

(35:13):
of both sides to get what you know, do you
either protect Trump try to throw him in jail. I'd
be surprised if we see an escalation in that just
because a judge wants to take care of it. But
it's something to keep an eye on, that's for sure,
and we shouldn't forget that that's still kind of looming
over him. So I appreciate you calling in and bringing
that up today justin thanks for listening. Thanks Trevor's on
the line four two, five, five, eight eleven, ten, Hey Trevor,

(35:36):
how you doing today?

Speaker 22 (35:37):
Doing well? Thanks Greg and McCall. I just want to
say a big win for conservatives, and I think one
key takeaway that is going to be down the line
is this is going to pull a lot of those
far left Democrats more to the center.

Speaker 2 (35:51):
For sure.

Speaker 22 (35:52):
I think. I think because of their poor performance, I
think a lot of the aocs, the squads, they're gonna
they're going to have to start changing their tune on
their far crazy left radicalism and kind of pulling it
more center. And I think that's the first step to
bringing us as into a more unified country.

Speaker 2 (36:12):
You're one hundred percent right.

Speaker 1 (36:13):
There is absolutely no way they can keep going on
with the status quo and expect anything to change. If
this election is anything to say, I completely agree, Trevor.
I don't know if AOC needs to like because of
the way she governed. Certainly works for her district, but
she's got to slow down the rhetoric when she talks
to other Republicans. There's just no way that you can
keep doing that and expect to win. Do appreciate your

(36:33):
thoughts in your call today, Trevor, thanks for listening to us.
Aaron's on the fun Line at four two, five, five,
eight eleven ten, Hello Erin. What's going on with you today?

Speaker 17 (36:43):
Hello Emory, I'm doing well. Thank you. I appreciate you
taking by call. Yeah, so I voted for Trump this
time and for a lot of reasons, but I have
a child who I love dearly, who is tran and
this terror fight and crying.

Speaker 20 (37:00):
Today, Yeah, because of all.

Speaker 17 (37:03):
Of the things that people have been saying to them.

Speaker 7 (37:05):
That Trump will do.

Speaker 23 (37:07):
Meanwhile, Trump and Trump's supporters have been saying, no, that's
not us.

Speaker 17 (37:11):
We're not hateful, we don't actually hate you. We're not
going to put you in jail, you know, regardless of
race or anything. And I understand there's a reaction against
the insanity, but I guess I just want to remind
everybody that it would really be great if it turns
out that everything.

Speaker 15 (37:28):
Trump and the supporters have been saying are true, That
it would be great if we all just worked very
hard to make.

Speaker 17 (37:34):
Sure it's face true. Yeah, and I think the creeps
don't come out of the woodwork.

Speaker 1 (37:39):
And hijack this city right well, and Erin, I think
in regards to this, can I ask about when your
child transitioned?

Speaker 17 (37:49):
Is I suppose they're thirteen, I wouldn't I dug in
very hard on any sort of medical oh okay, intervention,
because I just think it's potentially to just harmful to
their health ultimately. But that doesn't take away the fact
that I support them because I'm I'm their father, and
I love.

Speaker 23 (38:09):
Them, of course to see them figure it out, and
you know, it's a hard age anyway, and trying to
figure your way out of things, and especially with all
the yeah, it's great and you should do or it's
terrible and you shouldn't, or.

Speaker 17 (38:20):
You're going to hell, or you're not going to help,
you know what I mean. It's so continuted in Granny
thirteen year old. But at the end of the day,
they've been told over and over.

Speaker 15 (38:29):
That Trump hates transsexuals and that his supporters are going
to put.

Speaker 17 (38:34):
Him inhale and make it illegal. And I don't believe it,
and I just want to make sure that it stays
true that that's not going to happen.

Speaker 1 (38:41):
Well right, Well, Aaron, that's one topic of many that
I think people are going to wait and see exactly
what is going to be done. And you know how
much of this Project twenty twenty five that the Democrats
said was going to happen, how much of it actually
is going to happen, if any of it will. My
understanding from everything that I've heard is that they want
to just protect parents from their young children wanting to

(39:04):
transition without them knowing about it and them having a
say in that and not being kind of aided in
whatever issue without the parents knowledge in their school system
and things of that nature. But you're right, we just
need to take receipts on the stuff that matters like this,
especially for your family, and then revisit this as we

(39:26):
get further along through this administration. Is this something that
they tackle really hands on? And I'm sure there are
a ton of other things that they're more interested in
doing upfront, including the southern border, including the wars in
Europe and the Middle East, including the economy.

Speaker 17 (39:43):
I could say one more thing, Right, we just watched
the Left with a lot of well meaning people get
hijacked by the loons, right, yeah, and now we've got
the right with a lot of well meaning people, and
I just want to make sure we don't get hijacked
by the loons, you know what I mean?

Speaker 1 (39:59):
Yeah, for sure. Yeah, I'm with you. Hey, Erin, I
appreciate you for being a part of the show. It's
a really an interesting conversation. Thanks for listening to us.

Speaker 17 (40:07):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (40:07):
All Right, let's go to Emma. Our friend Emma from Dublin,
who is on the line, talked about voting yesterday.

Speaker 11 (40:13):
Hey, Emma, I just wanted to say thank you to
the United States for making a great decision.

Speaker 9 (40:27):
And a lot of people think that because I'm Irish,
I'm going to vote Democrats.

Speaker 20 (40:35):
Not so.

Speaker 5 (40:37):
No way.

Speaker 9 (40:38):
So I finally have some hope for myself and I'm
just gloriously happy. So thank you everyone in Nebraska for
helping me on leading mid through this.

Speaker 1 (40:54):
Go Black, Emma, we love you. Thanks so much for
calling back. I'm glad that you had a good experience,
and I'm glad you got to celebrate the victory today.
Can't wait to talk to you again soon. Let's go
to Dan real quick before we move to forward. Actually, Dan, sorry,
can you hold on. Let's get to Dan real quick.
Let's do like thirty seconds, Dan real quick. Becau Kamalain's
about to speak. Go ahead, Dan, Sorry, we messed up, Dan,

(41:15):
Go ahead, No, it's okod oh.

Speaker 24 (41:18):
I just want everybody to remember back in the early
two thousands, we had a president that was elected that
said elections have consequences, and I just want to make
sure this one has substantial consequences.

Speaker 2 (41:31):
Like what.

Speaker 24 (41:33):
Well, First of all, I think there's a lot of
people that need to go to prison.

Speaker 1 (41:38):
Okay, hold that thought, Dan, because Kamala's about to speak,
but we'll put you on hold and we'll get to him.
Let's go ahead and just listen to Kamala here for
a bit. Is she is she live?

Speaker 25 (41:46):
There?

Speaker 2 (41:46):
Can you hear her? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (41:49):
Okay, Let's listen to Kamala Harris as she concedes at
Howard University.

Speaker 25 (41:53):
Good afternoon, good afternoon, good, good afternoon everyone, Good afternoon,

(42:15):
good afternoon, good afternoon.

Speaker 26 (42:23):
All right, thank you all, thank you, thank you.

Speaker 2 (42:26):
All right, you come on.

Speaker 26 (42:29):
So let me say and I love you back, and
I love you back. So let me say. My heart
is full today.

Speaker 27 (42:41):
My heart is full today, full of gratitude for the
trust you have placed in me, full of love for
our country, and full of resolve. The outcome of this
election is not what we wanted, what we fought for,

(43:02):
not what we voted for. But hear me when I say,
hear me when I say the light of America's promise
will always burn bright as long as we never give up,

(43:25):
and as.

Speaker 26 (43:26):
Long as we keep fighting.

Speaker 27 (43:35):
To my beloved Doug and our family, I love you
so very much. To President Biden and doctor Biden, thank
you for your faith and support. To Governor Walls and
the Walls family. I know your service to our nation

(43:56):
will continue. And to my extraordinary team, to the volunteers
who gave so much of themselves, to the poll workers
and the local election officials.

Speaker 26 (44:18):
I thank you. I thank you all.

Speaker 2 (44:20):
Look.

Speaker 26 (44:21):
I am so proud of the race we ran and.

Speaker 27 (44:24):
The way we ran it and the way we ran it.
Over the one hundred and seven days of this campaign,
we have been intentional about building community and building coalitions,
bringing people together from every walk of life and background,

(44:47):
united by love of country, with enthusiasm and joy in.

Speaker 26 (44:53):
Our fight for America's future.

Speaker 27 (45:00):
And we did it with the knowledge that we all
have so.

Speaker 26 (45:04):
Much more in common than what separates us.

Speaker 11 (45:08):
Now.

Speaker 27 (45:09):
I know folks are feeling and experiencing a range of.

Speaker 26 (45:13):
Emotions right now. I get it. But we must accept
the results of this election.

Speaker 27 (45:22):
Earlier today, I spoke with President elect Trump and congratulated
him on his victory. I also told him that we
will help him and his team with their transition and
that we will engage in a peaceful transfer of power.

(45:46):
A fundamental principle of American democracy is that when we
lose an.

Speaker 26 (45:50):
Election, we accept the results.

Speaker 27 (45:54):
That principle, as much as any other, distinguishes democracy from
onnar or tyranny, and anyone who seeks the public trust.

Speaker 26 (46:05):
Must honor it.

Speaker 27 (46:08):
At the same time, in our nation, we owe loyalty
not to a president or a party, but to the
Constitution of the United States.

Speaker 1 (46:22):
We're gonna go ahead and we'll pause her right there.
We have the ability to pause here, and then we'll
pick it up from right there. Kamala Harris making her
concession speech, so you're not going to miss anything. Some
good stuff there about her, the peaceful transfer of power,
accepting the election results, all that stuff. We'll get to
more of what she has to say next on news
Radio eleven ten kfab Emory's longer.

Speaker 2 (46:42):
This is what she finished up with.

Speaker 26 (46:45):
To the young people who are watching.

Speaker 13 (46:49):
It is.

Speaker 18 (46:51):
I love.

Speaker 27 (46:57):
To the young people who are watching it is to
feel sad and disappointed, but please know it's going to
be okay. On the campaign, I would often say, when
we fight, we win.

Speaker 26 (47:11):
But here's the thing. Here's the thing.

Speaker 27 (47:14):
Sometimes the fight takes a while. That doesn't mean we
won't win. That doesn't mean we won't win. The important
thing is don't ever give up. Don't ever give up,
don't ever stop trying to make the world a better place.

Speaker 26 (47:34):
You have power.

Speaker 27 (47:36):
You have power, and don't you ever listen when anyone
tells you something is impossible because it has never been
done before. You have the capacity to do extraordinary good

(47:58):
in the world. And so that everyone who is watching,
do not despair. This is not a time to throw
up our hands. This is a time to roll up
our sleeves. This is a time to organize, to mobilize,

(48:19):
and to stay engaged for the sake of freedom and
justice and the future that we all know we can
build together.

Speaker 13 (48:32):
Look, many of you know.

Speaker 27 (48:33):
I started out as a prosecutor, and throughout my career
I saw people at some of the worst times in
their lives, people who had suffered great harm and great pain,
and yet found within themselves the strength and the courage
and the resolve to take the stand, to take a stand,

(49:00):
to fight for justice, to fight for themselves, to fight
for others. So let their courage be our inspiration, let
their determination be our charge. And I'll close with this.

(49:22):
There's an adage and historian once called a law of history,
true of every society across the ages. The adage is
only when it is dark enough, can you see the stars?

(49:43):
I know many people feel like we are entering a
dark time, but for the benefit of us all I
hope that is not the case. But here's the thing, America.
If it is, let us fill the sky the light
of a brilliant, brilliant billion of.

Speaker 26 (50:04):
Stars, the light.

Speaker 27 (50:10):
The light of optimism, of faith, of truth and service.

Speaker 2 (50:25):
Ain't you.

Speaker 28 (50:31):
And made that work guide us, even in the face
of setbacks, toward the extraordinary promise.

Speaker 26 (50:44):
Of the United States of America. I thank you all.
May God bless you, and.

Speaker 27 (50:50):
May God bless the United States of America.

Speaker 26 (50:53):
I thank you all.

Speaker 1 (50:54):
All Right, there's a Kamala in her concession speech. What
was that about time? A fifteen twenty minutes, fifteen ish
something like that sounds about right.

Speaker 27 (51:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (51:06):
If she sounded like this on the campaign trail, she
could have won. I'm just gonna sell that out there.
This is as genuine as she's ever sounded. And for
her to start and if you missed the beginning, start
by saying, we reached out, we talked to Donald Trump,
president elect Trump, and we wish him well. We are
going to accept the results of this election. We are
going to make sure there's a peaceful transfer of power.

(51:28):
That is such a good message, and it's sad that
we have to, you know, like keep score of stuff
like that because we just don't know what the reaction
is going to be. But that could be that kind
of have a real calming effect on people on both sides
to just hear that knowing what the volatility of is
the level of volatility that the rhetoric has. But there

(51:50):
wasn't rhetoric like this. She said, Hey, it's okay to
be sad and disappointed. You know what it is. It
is you know what when the Washington Commanders beat the
Bears with the hail Mary the other week, I sat
in the booth at the bar for like fifteen minutes
and I didn't even move, like I felt that. I
felt bad, okay, And that's a football game. It was
okay to be disappointed about a football game. If it's okay,

(52:11):
if it's okay to feel bad about being disappointed a
football game, it should be okay to feel sad and
disappointed if the candidate you supported and put a lot
of energy behind in the presidential election, which happens every
four years. I can I can totally get behind giving
people some buffer time to be sad and disappointed about that,
no doubt. But you know what else, I think it's
important that you mentioned there, even if you are sad

(52:32):
and disappointed, we need a roof for America and if
it is a dark time in America, we're gonna shine
like bright stars while we get through this and we're
gonna be working. It was a positive message, So kudos
to her and kudos to her campaign for, you know,
getting her stuff together. It sounded like she at different
points kind of holding back tears there because you know,

(52:54):
it gets this is an emotional process. I mean, they've
been going and doing everything they can for the better
part of the last three months and she's gotten this
nomination to try to rally support very quickly and try
to win this thing.

Speaker 4 (53:05):
It didn't look that way on video. Just wanted to
clarify because I was watching the video while we were
hearing the audio, and it just kind of looked like
frog and the throat situation. Sometimes you can tell video.

Speaker 1 (53:14):
I just wanted to you know, I don't know, you know,
I've had that happen to me though, where it felt
like I was kind of trying to hold something in
and you kind of hear a little cracky. But anyway,
we'll move into the four o'clock hour and keep talking
election stuff on news radio eleven ten kfab Okay, we
would definitely get fired if we did that. The second
part of what you're saying there is, I mean, even
if people like us, and we're told by most people

(53:37):
that they tend to like us, we have a pretty
good approval rating. You know, it took I think people
a few months to get to know me and to
like me. And I'm pulling out more personality out of
you every single day, making people have an opinion on you.
And I feel like people like you too, you know,
you know they haven't seen you in George before. But
you know, now what's not to like there? But my

(54:00):
whole thing is, you know, like we started doing that,
people would be turning off our station and cursing at
us for you know, ricon, like conjuring up the ghosts
of political ad past.

Speaker 2 (54:12):
I don't want to do that, do you, do you?
I know you're not a big social media guy.

Speaker 1 (54:17):
You're you're you're kind of on there now, but have
you have you gone on just to go through like
people's reactions like this is one of my favorite things.
When like a team that I really dislike loses, I
just love to go through the reactions and to see
people like making fun of them and all that stuff,
and I kind of just want to see people's reaction here.
But I found this was my favorite one I've seen

(54:38):
so far. America lost last night. I have no clue
where this all went wrong and what happened to the country.
I love, whether you wear red or blue. I think
we can all agree that Indiana and by you should
be ahead of Miami and the polls. Now, that's something
I can get behind. In Miami, they are still undefeated,

(54:58):
but a lot of close fitctories and I to, oh, yeah,
it didn't think I was going for football there, did you?

Speaker 4 (55:05):
BYU? Though, I yeah, I don't know. I'm not feeling
I'm not riding the BYU train quite yet.

Speaker 1 (55:11):
They're undefeated two if they played Oh we're going schedule now,
you and the Big twelve hater.

Speaker 4 (55:17):
BYU has done a couple of sit downs, a couple
of puff pieces, but where was the hard hitting press.

Speaker 1 (55:23):
Conference They've given SMU the only loss of the season.
SMU number thirteen. This WEEKMU SMU thirteen. You know, I
don't know thirteen thirteen for them if they played SMU. Yeah, okay,
if you're going to go there, you can't say jack
all about Miami.

Speaker 2 (55:41):
You can't.

Speaker 4 (55:41):
And you can't put Florida State on that list because
Florida State is terrible.

Speaker 1 (55:45):
This year, SMU's only losses to BYU. They've beaten Louisville Duke,
and then they destroyed Pittsburgh, who was previously unbeaten. Oh
last week, all right, okay, all right, my they beat
TCU and put up sixty six points on them. All right,
that's tough Pittsburgh. So Pittsburgh was undefeated and then SMU
beat him, correct, Okay, all right, yeah, yeah, it's looking
a little better.

Speaker 4 (56:05):
And they also beat k State. K State's pretty good
this year. Yeah, ok in b YU. Yeah only last twise, okay,
all right, Well, good for Mitt Romney Miami. He didn't
go there, did.

Speaker 2 (56:17):
He get well?

Speaker 1 (56:18):
I don't know he's up there. A whole lot of
Romneys up there, that's all I know. Miami has gotten undefeated.
They have not beaten a single ranked team, although Louisville
was unranked when they beat them. They are a ranked team. Now,
you want to know a fast fact. Utah State's stadium
this is called Romney Stadium, is it it is? You
know who the quarterback for Utah State is used to

(56:38):
be Jordan Love. It's Spencer Peatrice now the former Iowa Hawkeye.
They stink though, anyway, huh, we don't need to talk
about football. Also, Creighton basketball starts tonight. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah,
you go into the game.

Speaker 2 (56:50):
I'm not or not. They're playing ut r GV ut
r gv GV. What do you think?

Speaker 25 (56:57):
What is?

Speaker 2 (56:57):
It? Sounds like a staph infection.

Speaker 4 (56:59):
Oh come on, hey, I'm just trying to be honest.
And you said I need I need more personality. That's
my personality. I'm just telling you that the list of
those letters together, all in a row, I feel like
I need a prescription for that.

Speaker 2 (57:12):
Oh come on, that's all I'm saying. Hey, you guess
what it is?

Speaker 4 (57:16):
U t rgv A sounds like something I might need
to be on AMAXA Cyland for.

Speaker 2 (57:20):
U t RTV U t RGV. What do you think?

Speaker 4 (57:25):
I hope it's not hereditary, but then again, I don't
want to have caught it somewhere either.

Speaker 1 (57:31):
What is wrong with you, No, is it bacterial, It's
University of Texas Rio Grand Valley.

Speaker 27 (57:35):
Ah.

Speaker 4 (57:36):
You put it that way, that definitely seems like it's
might be a viral situation, that is airborne.

Speaker 1 (57:42):
You are ridiculous, all right. Local elections, Dan Osborne for
a while there was leading. I don't know if you
saw that. It kind of works in Nebraska differently than
it does the rest of the country and the rest
of the country. A lot of times it's the rural
counties that report early because they have less votes to count,
and then they send him in and you see kind
of an early spike when there's only like twenty percent

(58:05):
or whatever in the Republicans favor or whoever is winning
those rule votes, and then you see kind of the
Democrats with the urban areas that takes longer to count,
especially with the mail ends or the early voting, and
then that number kind of closes up. And that's kind
of what we saw, even though it didn't close up
enough nearly enough in all of the swing states, but

(58:25):
it was kind of the opposite. Osborne won like four
or five counties in that of course included the Lincoln
in Omaha area. But deb Fisher eventually came back with
a lot of that rule though, what do you think
that was all about? It's just fell early this year.
We knew Osborne was running. He was on the show
pretty early in the process, before a lot of the

(58:47):
advertising really dropped. And I guess my big thing was
trying to understand what the you know, like, what was
the perspective for us?

Speaker 2 (58:59):
Right? Like, didn't feel like they took that seriously at all.

Speaker 4 (59:04):
Kind of reminded me of jim Esh That's a name
that goes back away as you wouldn't remember because this
is back when I was in college. He ran against
Lee Terry, and it just reminds me of that because
on election night it was the same thing. Early results
were going one way and then it hard switched the
other way. So that's just what I thought of. But yeah,

(59:25):
it's interesting, you know so, but what do we make
of that?

Speaker 1 (59:30):
Is there a lesson to be learned with how close
that ended up being They have a lot to do
with the money and the advertising, or was that more
just the Republicans didn't expect that to be as competitive
as it ended up getting. Because obviously Pete Ricketts in
his Senate race, I mean, that was never a close
race between him and Preston Love and you know, just
people are wondering like, how was that any different? Well,

(59:51):
first of all, Osbourne was kind of positioning himself as
more of a middle independent who has opinions on both sides,
even though the entire process many people were not fooled
by that and felt like he was more of a
caucuser with the Democrats and that's just not what you know. Obviously,
Preston Low's like, hey, you know I'm a Democrat. No
Democrat is going to win the Senate. Well can you imagine.

Speaker 4 (01:00:13):
Being a candidate and trying to be that sort of
like I don't belong to either party, but then actually
getting money from both parties? Like imagine that scenario, right,
how would that to put off at some point?

Speaker 1 (01:00:25):
But how would that work? Like that would be my thing?
Like how how would it work? Does the money buy you?
That's what I also wonder, Right, that money came from
you know, left leaning Democratic stronghold packs from out of
Nebraska to prop up that, to prop up that situation,
And I don't know, like what do you think? Like

(01:00:48):
to me, I think that's a chicken and egg conversation.
But I do think the way that we know politics,
and you know, everything that we've been told about how
politics works, especially in DC, is hey, if you get elected,
kind of owe people some things.

Speaker 4 (01:01:02):
Yeah, I mean, I don't know how those backroom deals work.
That's what people say, backroom deals were their backroom deals.
I don't know, you know, it just it makes it
makes you wonder. There certainly were a whole lot of ads, right,
and they came from organized places, some of which were
from out of this state.

Speaker 2 (01:01:20):
Yeah, And that was the thing.

Speaker 1 (01:01:21):
And that was one of the things that I think,
you know, the Fisher campaign tried to make, as you know,
abundantly clear as possible, is that, hey, by the way,
this money isn't Nebraska money, you know it. That was
I think a very compelling race for us to watch
because I just didn't feel like, and you know, I'm
not gonna ask Dev Fisher this because you know, they're

(01:01:44):
in the middle of, you know, celebrating a reelection bid.
But I just feel like Republicans in general didn't expect
that to be a competitive race, and it ended up being
a lot more competitive when that money swung in, and
you just can't I just don't think in this day
and age, knowing how politics works, you can just rest
on your laurels, even if this is a Republican stronghold state.
We'll talk more about this four eighteen, News Radio eleven

(01:02:05):
ten KFAB.

Speaker 13 (01:02:06):
Em Ry's songer on news Radio eleven ten.

Speaker 2 (01:02:10):
KFAB this morning.

Speaker 1 (01:02:12):
When Don Bacon was on this radio station and eleven
ten KFAB, he was like, Hey, you know, it's a
close race, but everything that we're seeing seems like he's
got an insurmountable lead.

Speaker 2 (01:02:25):
Considering that ninety nine percent.

Speaker 1 (01:02:27):
Is reporting and the lead is roughly oh, eight thousand
and three hundred, eight thousand, three hundred, it's gonna be
tough to make up that ground. I think, considering what
we are seeing here, are you surprised?

Speaker 27 (01:02:45):
I'm not.

Speaker 1 (01:02:45):
I don't think I'm surprised. Based on you know, Tony
Vargas didn't want to even be on this radio station.
We had reached out. We'd tried to be you know,
as inclusive as possible and give as many, you know,
like as much of an opportunity as we possibly can
to anyone from any political ideology or party on this show.
We've had Dan Osborne on the show. We talked to

(01:03:06):
Pete Ricketts. But sometimes people just are like, we don't
want to go into a hornet's nest that we think
is ideologically opposed to us, and that's a bad I
think that's a bad strategy. I think that's probably played
out in a lot of these races. You have to
reach out across the aisle and try to explain yourself
in different ways if you're going to have an opportunity

(01:03:27):
to win. And Don Bacon look looks like he's going
to survive another really tough test because I think people
really care about conservatism outside of the very small dot
that is.

Speaker 2 (01:03:38):
Omaha, it's interesting to me.

Speaker 4 (01:03:41):
Yeah, I mean, well, it just it goes back to
a conversation that you had with with some callers a
couple of months ago when you were getting some flak
and the idea that they were challenging the idea that
this here is a purple.

Speaker 2 (01:03:57):
District saying that it's not, and I just it totally is.

Speaker 4 (01:04:00):
I feel like this is yet again another election cycle
that once again completely confirms that so well Biden won
in twenty twenty, and that was that wasn't necessarily that close.

Speaker 1 (01:04:16):
I mean it was about seven points and I had
people that were calling in it was like, hey, you
know they manufacture some of that vote. It's like, I
just can't I can't buy that. I'm sorry when the
same area has been blue a long time and how
close these races are, and if they were manufacturing the

(01:04:36):
votes to help Biden win, then how did they not
somehow get in that specific election. It was Kara Eastman,
That's not how it worked. She went up against him
twice and lost both times, but it wasn't by much.
And then the libertarian candidate in twenty twenty, Tyler Schaeffer,
got ten thousand votes, which makes up three percent essentially

(01:04:58):
of the vote, and that definitely kind of made that
race a little bit wonkier than usual in twenty twenty.
I'm just not buying that. And then Vargas and Bacon
Part one was about the same. I mean, Bacon ended
up winning that by something like almost seven thousand votes,
six six thousand votes, about six thousand votes, And it's

(01:05:18):
not that unli it's not that different, right from two
years ago with the same two candidates. Vargas didn't come
up with enough stuff, I think, to set himself apart.
And that's just I don't know. To me, I think
we there are better things for us to be able
to learn here from a lot of the different races.
But one thing that I think we understand, you can't

(01:05:40):
be the non incumbent Don Bacon. People can say Don
Bacon in the whole not wanting to have Jim Jordan
be the Speaker of the House and all that stuff
was going to catch up to him. And it might
have if you were like supporting Dan Frye in the primary,
but that didn't end up being that competitive of a race,
and people would rather have a conservative, I think more
so than a liberal in this situation. And Tony Vargus

(01:06:03):
didn't change his message enough from twenty twenty two to
twenty twenty four and expected the results to somehow be different,
and they're going to be almost exactly the same. So
I don't know if there's a lesson to be learned
on that race. It's hey, you might want to try
to find a way to grow, And if that meant
Tony coming onto our show or on our station and
trying to talk to us about this stuff, to voters

(01:06:24):
who might be on the fence that listen to KFAB
because we don't just have hardcore conservative listeners, and I
wouldn't even consider this show hardcore conservative. Like I agree
this is a conservative talk radio station and we talk
a lot about conservative politics, but I don't think that
inherently means that we're a conservative show through and through.

(01:06:45):
Even if we talk conservative radio, we have very open
minds here. Heck, mary Anne Williamson was on this show
talking about her attempt at being the president not that
long ago.

Speaker 2 (01:06:57):
So was Perry Johnson. So was Perry Johnson.

Speaker 1 (01:07:00):
Like, you could have people across the entire spectrum, and
I'm willing to talk to them, and I'd be nice
to them. I'm not gonna be here just trying to
get I'm going to ask them hard questions about what
they believe in, what they have like on some of
the major topics, but just to not come and like
even face me and talk to us here on this
radio station.

Speaker 2 (01:07:17):
Did you think you were gonna win when you did that?

Speaker 1 (01:07:19):
Like, did you expect all these conservative voters to just
vote for you because you're Tony Vargas. It didn't work before,
and why would it work now? And it doesn't look
like it did. So the lesson is maybe step outside
your own little bubble every once in a while if
you want to actually win a purple district like this
four twenty nine.

Speaker 2 (01:07:38):
More on the way.

Speaker 1 (01:07:38):
We'll talk more local elections and break them down for
you on news radio eleven ten KFAB.

Speaker 13 (01:07:43):
And recently on news Radio eleven ten KFAB.

Speaker 1 (01:07:48):
Not that you know, every single waking minute of our
show usually is politics, because it's not. We try really
hard to balance some other stuff in community and we'll
have more of that later this week. Is now we
kind of are able to un kind of the spring
that was this election.

Speaker 2 (01:08:02):
But what's your emotion now?

Speaker 1 (01:08:04):
As like those results were coming in last night and
you realize that everything that we've talked about since I
was hired, I mean we were immediately talking about, you know,
when I came in the middle of the summer last
year and moved to Omaha and I started doing this show.
A lot of what we were talking about right away
was the Republican primary process. And then from the start

(01:08:26):
of that journey all the way through to last night's results, Like,
what's your emotion here? Because it's been a journey, I
mean even just for us, like caring about it and
watching it every single day, you know, you watch a
football game, it's over in three and a half hours.
This was like a year and a half of us
talking about this stuff, and then the results the way
that they came out, coming to a head the way
that they did last night.

Speaker 2 (01:08:46):
Like, I'll tell you how I feel after I get
your thoughts.

Speaker 4 (01:08:50):
I just I feel like my answer is kind of boring,
but I don't really it's fine.

Speaker 2 (01:08:54):
A warring answer is still an answer. I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:08:57):
I'm trying to parcel that out, honestly. I I guess
the one that comes to mind would be still kinda
I don't know, a little bit pensive. Maybe what does
that mean?

Speaker 2 (01:09:14):
That's a word? Yeah, let me ask Jeeves. Pensive is
that is?

Speaker 17 (01:09:19):
That?

Speaker 2 (01:09:20):
Does that mean?

Speaker 4 (01:09:21):
Like just kind of me engaged in involving or reflecting
deep or serious thought. So you you've been reflective?

Speaker 2 (01:09:31):
I think so? Yeah, I am.

Speaker 4 (01:09:32):
Honestly, that's a good one. Well that's a weird poll
where that one come from?

Speaker 2 (01:09:35):
Nice?

Speaker 4 (01:09:35):
Thanks, tenth grade English teacher. I guess you thought me
something after all. Pensive? Yeah, I'm pensive today. That's how
I feel. I'm pensive. I wish I had a better word.

Speaker 1 (01:09:46):
What's the pensive emoji. You could probably ask for one.
Chaed GPT might be able to help you out with that. Hey,
you know, I don't know. I think I've gotten such
bad sleep the last week and a half just thinking
about it coming to an end and not knowing what
was going to happen. And it wasn't dread like I
told people, I wasn't anxious about I didn't have anxiety
about it. I wasn't afraid of what the results were

(01:10:07):
going to be. I didn't have any thoughts like that
at all. I think mostly what my thoughts were were
kind of an excitement to get to the end, to
the finish line, to know what the results would be.
But also this kind of like boiled I don't know,
there was like these butterflies of just kind of like
getting a chance to talk about it every single day

(01:10:29):
in the run up and then what to make of
it when it finished. And I've been able to build
such a good understanding of I think the people around us,
like for instance, the people in my email inbox and
my Facebook messages who you know constantly are like talking
to me about different stuff, especially when we're on the air,

(01:10:50):
and I love talking to people in their phone lines,
which I'll get the phone lines back up and running
here in the five o'clock hour. I don't know, dude,
Like to me, there's a big chunk of me in
my heart that I'm excited that things ended the way
that they did. I'm excited that we have change on

(01:11:10):
the horizon from what seemed like kind of a muddy
You know, have you ever tried to like walk through
like a field that is freshly wet. Like you go
and you're just like in a field and you have
the wrong shoes on, and you take a couple of
steps and your feet go like three inches deep, and
it's hard to get your feet back out of there,
and you just know that your feet are super wet,

(01:11:31):
and it's so uncomfortable. Like it kind of feels like
that was the slog of the last four years if
you're a conservative, and conservatives have only themselves to blame
for the losses that were incurred there. But four years
after the Democrats held all three chambers or both chambers
of Congress. In the executive branch, four years later, Donald
Trump wins in a bigger margin. He's on pace for

(01:11:53):
a bigger margin than he won in twenty sixteen, and
he's on pace to win the popular vote, which is
I think something nobody even thought was possible. I mean,
some people said that they thought he would, but I
didn't even take that seriously.

Speaker 4 (01:12:05):
I like to add another emoji to my pensive one. Yeah, surprised.
You're right, that's I didn't. I didn't see that coming.
And to win all seven swing states, yeah, I didn't
see that coming of all of the all the conversations, dude,
and he's gonna like one side one of them all,
max Is Parlay yesterday man could have made some money. Yeah, yeah,
I don't know. I think if you're looking at this

(01:12:27):
from a standpoint of just the emotion afterwards, especially if
you're a Republican, you have to feel really excited. But
at the same time, I have to reiterate I am
hopeful that the Republicans can be the party of leadership
that can get us to heal and unify. And Trump
said that at his you know, it was two in
the morning when he took the stage, but when it

(01:12:49):
became clear that he was likely to win, he came
up with a few great zings of just like it
wasn't like a goatcha thing. And he didn't attack the
Democrats at all. He basically just up said I want
us all to do this together and be in this together.
And I know people are going to scoff at that
and say, of course he said that whatever. But that's
a pretty unifying statement from a guy that isn't usually

(01:13:10):
known to say those things. Here's what I have to
say about anybody that has questions about the legitimacy of
his presidency that he is about to have, and anybody
that's got any questions about, well, if he does all
this project twenty twenty five stuff, turns into a dictator,
all this stuff. Let's talk about all the people that
surrounded himself that he surrounded himself with in this cycle.

(01:13:31):
Let's start with former Democrats like Robert F. Kennedy Junior
and Tulsi Gabbert, who were staunch Democrats. I mean Tulsi
Gabbert spent twenty years. He's spent twenty years. She still
is in the military. This is a woman who loves America.
She was a staunch Democrat. She ran for the office.
She wanted to be the president for the Democrats. The
nomination in twenty twenty she is somebody who doesn't follow

(01:13:55):
party lines, doesn't like to be told what to do,
pretty anti establishment. Basically was chased out of that part
and eventually just this cycle jumped all the way to
the other side and endorse Trump and now has become
a Republican. You think Tulsa Gabbert and all the common
sense she seems to stand for, regardless of if you're
a Democrat or a Republican, and you think she's just
gonna join up with the guy she thinks is going

(01:14:16):
to be a dictator when she has defended this country
in the military for two decades.

Speaker 2 (01:14:22):
Elon Musk.

Speaker 1 (01:14:23):
We give Elon some guff for all the bots that
are still on Twitter and everything, but there's no doubt
this is a modern genius. This is a guy who
has made investments. This is the guy who sees the
world incredibly different than so many others who've come before
him that I would consider geniuses. And this is a
guy who has utilized free speech, no censorship, and trying

(01:14:44):
to promote what the future could be if he has
a say in what Donald Trump wants to do in
the future. You think Elon Musk, a guy who wasn't
even born in this country and is thankful for this
country and what it stands for. You think he's just
gonna watch Donald Trump be some dictator that puts all
this Project twenty twenty five I stuff in play. Immediately,
you think that's like what he stands for. What about
Joe Rogan? He has been pretty politically back and forth

(01:15:07):
over his career. He hasn't really gone one way or another.
And for him to actually at the buzzer essentially endorse
Donald Trump and what he stands for and then celebrate that,
you think Joe Rogan, of all people, are it's going
to be like rooting for a guy to like take
more governmental control and be a dictator.

Speaker 2 (01:15:25):
It lends itself a little bit too.

Speaker 4 (01:15:26):
You see this online sometimes people say this is less
Republican Democrat, this is more people versus establishment. I'm not
saying that I'm endorsing that thought. I just it's something
that I've seen. And I think of Joe Rogan as
a guy who who was the last person he endorsed
for President Bernie Sanders big time.

Speaker 2 (01:15:46):
He was a big Bernie guy.

Speaker 4 (01:15:47):
So you want to talk about that flip and have
you heard about the stats of the amount of people
who voted for Trump, and also Dan Osborne.

Speaker 2 (01:15:56):
That was actually a pretty big number.

Speaker 4 (01:15:58):
Yeah, So I mean this is more than just your
you know, your stereotypical red versus blue. There's something different here.
There's different components here, and anybody who wants to act
like it's not it's well, okay, be ready to go
on your eyes. Yeah that keep that wool on your eyes,
and then it's not going to go well for you.

Speaker 2 (01:16:16):
Next time.

Speaker 1 (01:16:16):
We'll finish up this conversation before the five o'clock hour
next on news radio eleven to ten kfab.

Speaker 2 (01:16:21):
That gives her two twenty six.

Speaker 1 (01:16:22):
Now it's over, but we're just paying attention to it
because if Trump does win Arizona, which he is up
by almost five points there, we still have almost forty
percent of that outstanding. We know Maricopa County very slow
with how fast or how slow they are with counting
their ballots, so it could be a while before we
officially get the word on that. But that's eleven. That
would put him back over three hundred, and that'd be

(01:16:43):
three six. And then Nevada, which they haven't called yet,
but he's up by five points there, and that's eighty
five percent reporting. I don't know what we're waiting on,
but if they call that, that's six more. He would
have more electoral votes in twenty twenty four than he
did in twenty sixteen. And that I think is like
Matt mentioned, if you're the Democratic Party, this is a

(01:17:03):
this is an indictment, not a literal indictment. We got
used to saying that during this election cycle, but this
is an indictment on your strategy. This is indictment on
your messaging. I don't know if Kamala Harris was I mean,
she certainly was a flawed candidate. She wasn't battle tested,
didn't have a whole lot of things that really set
her apart from Joe Biden, and she tried, i think,

(01:17:24):
in different ways to make herself be set apart versus
you know, the Biden administration and some of the short
falls that they've had there, but they didn't do a
good enough job of doing that. I was thinking about this, Matt,
what was Joe Biden's emotions when these results started going in,
Because from everything that we know, he was kind of
pushed out of the way and it wasn't something that
he really wanted to do, even if it was in

(01:17:45):
the best interests of the Democratic Party to at least
have a fighting chance in this election cycle. What do
you think his emotions were? Is he saw Donald Trump
pulling ahead?

Speaker 2 (01:17:54):
I don't know. He's probably in bed, but you know
what I mean.

Speaker 4 (01:17:56):
There had to be a little bit of conflicting emotions there.
There's been people saying, Oh, I bet he loves this.
I don't know I could go that far, you know,
because I mean, he's been on that team his whole
adult life, his whole career. He's been team Democrats, So
you know what I mean, Like he's this is decades
and decades, So I wouldn't think that he's sitting there,

(01:18:17):
you know, quietly beaming about this by by any means.

Speaker 2 (01:18:21):
But I don't know. Is there a little bit of
vindication if that's the word.

Speaker 1 (01:18:27):
You see what Joe Biden was wearing when she voted,
huh had to toe red. Now I don't like reading
into too much of that stuff, but is that just
kind of like an underneath the not that to say
that they were voting for Donald Trump?

Speaker 2 (01:18:39):
But did they?

Speaker 1 (01:18:41):
You know, usually the red jumpsuit is not a Democrat color.
But I don't know, you know, I'm just saying I
think that there's a little bit of animosity there. Joe
Biden was mostly absent after you know, he really didn't
have much to say, and then him talking about you know,
the guard vision all this stuff. He had some gaffs

(01:19:01):
along the way. I just don't think he I don't
think he cares that they lost. I really don't. But
this is the thing that the party was a mess.
Biden I don't even think was the best possible candidate
they could have run in twenty twenty. And we know
that there are plenty of questions about how twenty twenty
was run with the COVID nineteen and all the mail
in ballots and how the final results came in and
all that stuff. But in twenty twenty four, there's no

(01:19:21):
doubt America made their voice very clear that they were
ready for Donald Trump two point zero. We'll talk more
in the five o'clock hour. News Radio eleven ten KFAB
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