Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
There are so many different things that we could talk
about in the wake of the election. I'm looking at
some of the some of the numbers right now. The
most recent races that were called today, the last four
have gone to Democrats. That's in the last couple of hours,
three or two Nevada races in the House, and one
(00:23):
in Washington and one in North Carolina, all for Democrats.
The previous three that were called earlier today were all
in Pennsylvania for Republicans are still waiting on more of them.
And as I mentioned before, Iowa District one between Marionette
Miller Meeks and Christine Bohannon. Miller meets the Republican and
the incumbent is up by less than one thousand. It
(00:45):
is zero point two percent between the two of them.
With ninety nine percent reported in, they're certainly going to
need to recount that. And I don't think they're going
to need to recount. I just think they're going to
need to get those last five percent in. For District
two here in Nebraska, Don Bacon leeds by over eight
thousand votes and it's looking pretty good. He's up by
(01:05):
two and a half percentage points. But they haven't called
that race. Yet so each of every race that happens here,
they're nine. The Republicans are nine away from getting the House,
along with the Senate and the presidency. The Senate. By
the way, there is a very polarizing individual who operates
(01:27):
in the state of Arizona, and her name is Carrie Lake.
Are you familiar with Kerry Lake? I heard about her. Yeah,
So she ran for the governor spot and didn't win.
She's she's really like and I've played audio from her before.
She's a firecracker, right like, I mean, she the way
(01:47):
she talks, I mean, she's she's not a woman to
be messed with. Right At the same time, there are
a lot of questions about how good of a candidate
she actually is when it comes to this stuff. So
she's running for for the Senate here and as a Republican,
and she's currently losing by just two percentage points, but
(02:08):
there's only sixty nine point in And again I have
to ask, what the what the heck is Arizona doing.
There's got to be a better way. How are they
the only state they just cannot count their votes? Why
does it take so long? Like you know, how most
places have a Democrat and a Republican president for the
counting of votes in most precincts and also each county
(02:31):
as they tally up what the results are. Well, maybe
they like also have like a badger or something that
is also needing to be there, and they don't have badgers.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
Oh, like the badger has to count. Yeah, they probably
have some weird systems set up.
Speaker 1 (02:45):
This is what happens when everybody has their own and
everybody has their own rules.
Speaker 2 (02:50):
Maybe they're using like an old calculator, you know, upgrade
to a TI eighty four. That'll help you do that.
Then and then somebody gives you tetris and you know
tetris and you end up struggling in pre algebra. Yeah,
not that I know about that personally. Yeah, algebra, that's
something else. I'll tell you what. Still haven't used that
(03:11):
once since I graduated.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
Most arithmetic pretty useless unless you're like talking about the
basics or you're going into like engineering, Like if you're
going to be a dentist, Like, why do you need
to sit through calculus just to prove that you did it?
Seems like a weird thing. Calculus, Like what was the point?
You know? How much? How hard. That was to like,
just pay attention to it wasn't easy. The last couple
(03:34):
of minutes, the new Senate race has been called in
Pennsylvania Class one seat for Dave McCormick, Republican. They have
officially called that defeating the Republican or the Republican defeats
the Democrat there who was the incumbent. That's a fourth
flip seat for the Republicans in the Senate that just
happened a couple of minutes ago. That's fifty three senators
(03:56):
right now for the Republicans. And oh boy, there's still
there's still some outstanding races here, even if even if
the rest of the I mean they are only what two, Yeah,
there's only two left. So the Democrats are hoping to
win those last two. And if they do, I guess
they'll close the gap a little bit. But man, what
(04:17):
a what A what a dunk fest? Like? What a
what is a good term like? This is just a steamrolling,
a true good old fashioned political steamrolling. And it's hard
to imagine what the heck to do here? Right? And
I mentioned Carrie Lake because she is in Susan wanted
(04:39):
to make sure I mentioned this. She's not conceded that
she lost the governor's race. She thought in twenty twenty
when she lost the governor's race that that was stolen
from her as well. Uh, yeah, she's she's an interesting person,
immediately went out, wrote a book, has a lot of
people that like her. I think her personality is pretty interesting.
(05:00):
Doesn't seem to be the most likable person though, which
I think has been one of the reasons, Like you
have to kind of really fit into the very right
wing ideologies to even want to seem to deal with her,
which I think is a hurdle that she has to
deal with. And we'll see what the fallout is if
they ever count enough votes to call that race. But
it's something to keep in mind. But if she were
(05:21):
to win that and that would be a huge blow
for the Democrats to have somebody like Kerry Lake show
up in the Senate in Washington, d C. I mean,
he's crazy. And then Kerry Lake, you know, shared that
audio information of the people who are at the top
of the Republican Party in Arizona trying to talk her
(05:41):
out of running for Senate this time around, and she's like, no,
I'm going to do this. The people want me to
do this, and I don't know. It's kind of a mess.
It's kind of a mess at the same time, though,
she's right, if you can get elected, why the heck
wouldn't you run. That's one of the things though about
this race that we were learning about is we say
here on Thursday and we know basically everything except House control,
(06:06):
even though it looks increasingly like the Republicans going to
have that too. The real question, I guess is what
can the Republicans do with this and what's going to
be the first couple of things that they want to
try to achieve. You know, how you get more Republicans
elected in the future. You have to find a way
to be reasonable. You're gonna have a great opportunity here
(06:31):
to push a lot of the conservative agenda, and no
matter what the staunchly liberal people are going to say,
all of it is bad. That's just a reality. But
you don't need to win those people. You don't need
them to come across the aisle and say, hey, the
Republicans are good guys. You just need the rest of
America to know that Donald Trump isn't about getting his vengeance.
(06:51):
The incredible people he's got like surrounded himself with that
are likely to be in this cabinet and have major jobs.
It's hard for me to feel like there's anything other
than such great opportunity for Middle America to feel like
they're actually represented here. In a lot of ways, it's
the exact opposite of what the very truly lefty liberals
(07:14):
are trying to tell people, especially on their tiktoks, when
it's shown them crying and telling their small children that
Donald Trump Donald Trump won the presidency and their six
year old kids like, oh no, these are real people.
I just baffles me that you are so deep into
(07:35):
the weeds of your own political ideologies you just cannot
see or fathom that anybody else outside of you would
feel this way. And I do not try to generalize people,
but man, you can see you know a liberal when
you see a liberal on social media, you just do.
Speaker 2 (07:51):
Wellll the reverse is true as well, is it? Oh yeah,
there are a loud people on both sides. You're right,
And I bet you there would have been somebody on
the other side who had done the same thing if
they didn't get the result they want.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
What would they look like though, Would they be crying
or would they be cursing. I think they'd be yelling
and cursing. Y're not really the crying type. But they
wouldn't be wearing like a suit, you know. I'm talking
about like green hair and you know, the septum ring
and tattoos all up and down the arms. Okay, it's
hard for me to anticipate that being a Republican, you
(08:25):
know what I mean. I've been misread before. I've been misread.
Not that I'm out there with my like political identity
on my chest, but some guy randomly at the College
World series of talking politics with me and I had
my hair in a bun like I do today. He
just like assumed that I was just a big liberal
(08:48):
and I was just like, look, man, that's not what
I think about things. And he was like, oh really,
I had to like discuss, like I know what we're
talking about hair.
Speaker 2 (08:58):
He probably like looked over to make sure the man
bun was real. He probably squeezed it. He's like, is
that real? He didn't squeeze it. He squeezed it. It didn't
squeeze like you got the man bun. And I'm you
know what you probably do belong to a very small
group like if you all got together, you went in
a small room.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
And that's what I'm saying. I booked a trend. There's
not a lot of people like me, man Buns for
for for Maga. You guys should all get together and
have like a bowling night. That Facebook group would be wild.
Oh and there'd be like six of us. Oh Man,
Well that's funny stuff. All right, it's uh, what is it.
(09:39):
It's three seventeen or something. Yeah, that's right. We'll be
back with more on news radio eleven thing KFB.
Speaker 3 (09:44):
Emery's songer Shack with someone You on news radio eleven
ten KFAB.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
They played Nebraska on Monday, stayed up here in Nebraska
to play Creighton yesterday. They were making shots. They're athletic,
they're long, But Ryan Kalchbrenner, they have no answer. A
school out of the Southland Conference isn't likely to have
an answer for Ryan Kalchbrenner. First game of the season,
twenty of twenty two from the floor, two for two
from three, seven of eight from the free throw line,
(10:14):
forty nine points, most by a Creighton men's basketball player
since like at least the sixties, and also the most
ever scored by a Creighton basketball player in CCHI Health
Center last night. Wow. So I was there. I watched it.
People were begging in that last minute for him to
touch the ball when they were intentionally fouling so he
could go to the free throw and try to get
the fiftieth point. I didn't seem like he really cared
(10:37):
about it. There was a moment where he had the
ball and then passed it off to one of the
guards in that moment, and everybody in the crowd like
was telling him to hold on to it and then
groaned when he passed it off, and then he got
this huge smile on his face as soon as that happened.
I just don't think that they really cared about it
that much. But they were able to hold on and win.
So Creighton just want to know. It was a lot
of fun, a lot of fun without I'm not saying
(11:01):
too much, you know about Creighton's potential, not one hundred
percent sure about some of the new players. Yet, Pop Isaacs,
who was a big time transfer from Texas Tech, did
not play. You got a hip injury, so we got
to get him to full health. And then another guy
who was there for the first time Jamia Neil. He
comes from Arizona State and was a solid player there
at Arizona State. Very quiet last night, didn't really have
(11:23):
much of an impact on the game. So if it
wasn't for Cockbrinder's forty nine points and him just dominating
the big guys that U t RGV had, Yes, that's
the name of the school, then sounds like an infection,
That's all I'm saying. They would have they would have
probably lost, and that would have been really embarrassing to lose.
(11:43):
To no disrespect. I think they have a chance to
win their conference. But you got to win that game,
and they did, even if it didn't look as good
as it probably should have. All Right, so we mentioned
you said man bun for MAGA, and Eric sent me
a picture of Donald Trump with a man bun. Really
that is a haunting. It's a haunting photo Donald Trump
(12:03):
with a man but certainly AI or photoshop, which is
pretty darn good. It's a pretty good photoshop there, Eric, No,
I have a few opinions about different groups and their
unlikely support. One of them was in Pennsylvania, you know,
(12:24):
the there was a gay guy who really was his
name isn't jumping on a out of my mind right now.
But I mean, do you want to talk about just
kind of bucking the trend? What would be to you
when you have stuff like that? Right you have different
(12:44):
demographics that don't seem to be like Latino vote, for instance,
really showed up for Trump. What does that like? What
does that mean to you? Right? Like? If you were
actually that candidate and you get people I'm sure they
were trying, but the opponents say that you don't represent
those people very well. Yet they come out and they
vote for you anyway, Like, what does that mean?
Speaker 2 (13:06):
It means that people were wrong?
Speaker 1 (13:08):
I don't they It moves like something, something moved them
to vote for you anyway.
Speaker 2 (13:15):
People, everybody has a list of priorities that is different
than the next person, you know, Like and I just
I think legacy media right now, if they haven't taken
a time to do some reflecting, I hope they do,
because you know.
Speaker 1 (13:30):
You have to. You have to because talking about the
people that voted for Trump in this country as if
there's some sort of villainous people because they voted for
the guy that you didn't want to win, you you're
gonna lose again? You ever had that. By the way,
Scott Presler was the guy I was thinking of, the
Pennsylvania guy who's gay. He's and he's like got a
(13:51):
club called Gays for Trump and all this stuff, and
he was really boots on the ground and he did
more fundraising in Pennsylvania and door to door types. I mean, like,
this guy really was a mover and a shaker for
conservative activism, and you would just like, if you're a Democrat,
You're just like, how is this the guy that helped
deliver Pennsylvania for Donald Trump. We our whole campaign is
(14:14):
telling people in the LGBTQ plus community that the Republicans
don't care about you and they want to take away
your rights. Yet here is Scott Presler, who's a gay
American man, openly out, and he's actively campaigning in the
biggest swing state there was successfully mind you for Donald Trump?
Explain that to me? Democrats, Well, so is Caitlin Jenner
(14:35):
you know, yeah, I saw that too.
Speaker 2 (14:37):
Yeah, so I think that I.
Speaker 1 (14:40):
Don't know, how can the left just like, oh, they don't.
Speaker 2 (14:43):
Count well, they would probably use the term brainwashed or
some of another pejorative terms.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
Got Pressler's not even forty yet, so they're not even
the same generation that I mean. They just want to
act like these people don't exist. They want you to
think that Cardi B and making these Stallion and Lady
Gaga are the ones that are going to get your vote.
Did you see making the Stallion by the way she
did the Magan the Stallion thing at a political rally,
you know what she does or she throughout the baseball No,
(15:09):
but the reason that that went viral is for the
same reason that this went viral. Now what you do
paint the picture for the audience. I like big butts
and I cannot lie. The other brothers can't deny, you
know what I mean. Oh yeah, it's like one of
those things. Yeah, but how is that going to deliver
(15:31):
you votes? How is Cardi B needing to read a
speech off of a cell phone? How's that going to
help you? Well? The star power, how did that work
out for him?
Speaker 2 (15:40):
Well?
Speaker 1 (15:40):
The Avengers from Marvel Movies. Yeah, did like a fake
phony call to like endorse Kamala Harris a couple of
weeks before the election. These are the biggest stars Hollywood
has to offer over the last decade, and that didn't
move the needle for people, but Joe Hogan moved the
needle more than any.
Speaker 2 (15:58):
Of them did, right, which is pretty fascinating. But maybe
it was more the interview, maybe because I think it's
so interesting how there was did not do that tour
of of challenging long form interviews, right, And there was
this there was this narrative going propped up by the
legacy media that all, you know, Donald Trump is old
(16:21):
and tired and he's turning down interviews and he's not
putting himself out there. I mean it was, I mean
objectively ridiculous because but what he was doing was he
was kind of spurning legacy media and going on these
long form podcasts and nobody thought it would work. Yeah,
and it worked well because that's where the people are going.
I mean, I I don't know, I I I haven't
(16:43):
had cable in a well over a decade, so you know,
I just think that you don't even know what channels
are out there. Nah, I'm starting to learn them because
of the TV up here. We learned them, Like I know,
ESPN is like thirty one or something like that. But yeah,
I don't you know what I mean, Like, it's just
times are changing and people who who could tend to
(17:05):
and take care of and dominate a narrative. They don't
have that power anymore, and it's got to be pretty frustrating.
Speaker 1 (17:11):
Yeah, all right, Well, we'll keep talking about different things
like this, because I think that's a fascinating point. Right.
Not only is Donald Trump attracting manbun wears, but he
also is attracting Latinos, and he's also attracting people who
like watching THEO Vaughn. This is a Venn diagram nobody expected,
but it's true, and we'll talk more about it on
news radio eleven ten Kfab.
Speaker 3 (17:32):
Emory Sunger on news Radio eleven ten Kfab.
Speaker 1 (17:37):
I'm guessing Caitlin general is not the answer, but that
was not my first answer. Yeah, yeah, okay, So who
do you think? There's a lot of different ones here.
Speaker 2 (17:50):
My first inklining because he was a candidate for president
himself and at some point was actually polling. Did he
ever get in the double digits?
Speaker 1 (17:57):
Yeah, he was, I mean until he was left off
the first bait stage, but that had a lot to
do with him not making it on the ballot in
a lot of states yet.
Speaker 2 (18:04):
So yeah, it's hard not to say. RFK Junior but
then again, I think that there could be a compelling
argument to be made for Tulsi Gabbard as well.
Speaker 1 (18:14):
They were kind of tag team in America, right Like,
they they both were together in a lot of spots
around America talking about this, and I think that was
a powerful message too, because here are two former Democrats
who were Democrats as of just a couple of years
ago formally, I mean, Rfk was a Democrat at the
beginning of this calendar year.
Speaker 2 (18:35):
I think Elon Musk has to be considered as well.
He that's a guy who everybody knows and he's Is
he the richest man in the world. No, but he's
like he's up there.
Speaker 1 (18:46):
Yeah. And the Twitter thing, right like, I think people
saw him pledge an uncensored social media thing platform that
wasn't going to be filtering news to people. They it
wasn't going to slant news to people. It definitely has
its own slant, though, does it. I don't think it
has slant as much as I think it just has.
(19:09):
It's the wild West, I mean it really is. I
mean it's just there is no rules. The only rules
are that if you hope not to see bots all
over the place, you're going to see bots all over
the place, but you can say anything that you want,
and if you say something bad, you're not getting banned
for it. They'll just be like a community notes thing
that corrects you underneath of it.
Speaker 2 (19:29):
Yeah, I mean, as far as what's consistently recommended there,
there's a lot of more right leaning media influencers that
are consistently recommended to follow. Their tweets are consistently eye
up on the platform.
Speaker 1 (19:43):
I don't know how much of that's just the algorithm though,
because it much like Facebook, much like Instagram, if you
are looking at very specific things, it is going to
suggest things that are like what you're looking at. So
if I start looking at a couple of wrestling people
on X and follow them, ex is going to recommend
(20:04):
other wrestlers or wrestling voices to follow, you know what
I mean, like similar type people based on what the
algorithm says. So I don't know, I don't know exactly
how it works, and he might be right. At the
same time, they're not suppressing the Democrats on that app
at all, like AOC and Tim Walls and all that
stuff they make a killing on social media on as
(20:26):
you know what, I mean, sure, they post stuff all
the time, and there's obviously a ton of people that
support them. There's a huge amount of people that are
pro Palestinian or anti Israel that are on there. Even
if they are under anonymous names, they're not getting their
point of view censored or suppressed. But it is the
wild West. It's kind of a cesspool if you're not
talking to real people and you're not in constructive conversations,
(20:48):
but you're not censored, which is kind of the whole point.
He's my answer, Elon. Yeah, I think he is the
most important person that Trump surrounded himself with in this
election cycle, all due respect to hul Cogan. So Elon
Musk is an interesting person. Many people would say, what
is what is Elon? And how can like what job
(21:11):
can he have? What job do you think he should have?
Should he have a formal job in the cabinet? Or
is this a guy that needs to just kind of
be able to do his own thing and be kind
of an advisor in different roles. Because there's an excitement
to like the SpaceX stuff and some of the things
that Elon is going to be able to provide for
the United States of America as long as he's in
(21:31):
cahoots with Donald Trump. This is the guy that has
actively invested into things that would be a real risk
in a lot of ways, but he's willing to take risks,
and those risks have led him to, Uh, you know
what his net worth is? You want to you want
to guestimate Matt his net worth? Elon Musk, Yeah, it's
(21:53):
in the billions. Yeah, I don't know. I'm not very
good at this game. I know you always overshoot and
makes it sound less impressed that it is. We'll say
a solid thirteen billion. That's the right answer for you
to guess. Okay, because it's two hundred and sixty four
point seven billion, I played the game correctly. That's a
lot of money.
Speaker 2 (22:10):
That's a lot of money. He's working his way. He's
a quarter of a way to a trillion. That's crazy.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
I mean, Michael Jordan's barely like a couple of billion,
and he seems ridiculously wealthy and famous. So, Elon Musk,
the question is what job does he have? What job?
What job do you think?
Speaker 2 (22:27):
Well, the thing you hear is people saying he should
be like a part of like the efficiency manager. Yeah,
because you know.
Speaker 1 (22:36):
He he cut a bunch of jobs at X. People like, oh,
which people lost your jobs. It's like, I hate to
tell you this, but if your job is redundant and
not necessary, you shouldn't be getting paid to do it.
I hate to say this, like I'm not going to
pay somebody to mow my lawn right after I mowed
my lawn just so they have a job. This isn't
a country where we just do that, right. The government
(22:58):
doesn't just hand people money because they need money. Usually
you have to be a functioning person and member of society.
We've talked about this before. One of the reasons illegal
immigration is a problem in America, and not necessarily this
is beyond the fentanyl and the weapons and the criminals
that are coming across in committing crimes in the United
States while being criminals in other countries. It is because
(23:21):
there are businesses companies in America that are willing to
risk the penalties to hire illegal immigrants, pay them as
little money as they need to, while also knowing they're
going to get good, hard work out of them, because
it's hard to find good, hard working people to do
those jobs in America. There are jobs out there that
(23:42):
need to be done that people who are citizens of
this country are not doing, and we are lacking efficiency
in that regard. So I think that Elon Musk is
an advisor in that role would be fine. I don't
think I want him to be in the cabinet. I
want him to be an overall advisor, like a confidant
to the administration, because I want him to continue to innovate.
I don't want him to feel like he's got governmental responsibilities.
(24:04):
I want him to still be working on electric vehicle technologies.
Which is hilarious. This guy pioneered the EV and was
not invited to have a seat at the table when
the Democrats were working on their EV mandates across the country.
How is that a thing that you could do? How irresponsible?
This is a foremost person who was advocated for electric vehicles,
and because you don't like him personally, you're just not
(24:27):
going to have him be a part of the suggestions
or a part of the team that comes up with
a plan for electric vehicles in this country. That's crazy
to me. Now, there's some complications with Elon very specifically
and what it relates to and how powerful he possibly
could get in this country and I'll explain that next
on news radio eleven ten kfab Ah.
Speaker 3 (24:47):
Maurice Soehner on news Radio eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 1 (24:51):
You would technically you have to have lived in the
US for fourteen years at least. Oh, so you can't
just like move here and then all of a sudden
become the president potentially. Elon Musk is over thirty five
years old. He's fifty three. He is a United States
citizen naturalized citizen, which means that he has been a
(25:12):
citizen since two thousand and two of the United States,
for whatever that's worth. He was born in South Africa.
By the way, his mom is Canadian, his dad is
South African. That means he is not a natural born
US citizen. He was naturalized to be a citizen like
an immigrant can be legally. But he's not natural born,
meaning he wasn't born in the United States or born
(25:33):
outside of the United States to American parents. Those are
the two different things. So will they change that. I
don't know. We can debate whether or not that makes sense.
Does it make sense to change that just to allow
a guy like Musk to be potentially the president and
the leader of the free world. I don't think so. However,
(25:53):
he is able to be in the US presidential cabinet.
You must be a naturalized citizen or natural born citizen
to be in the cabinet. If a person like Elon
was going to be this, and I'm talking about this
because I think it's important, I don't think it's a
good idea for him to be in the cabinet. I'd
liked him to be free to continue to innovate and
to have freedom to operate his business and be involved
(26:15):
in SpaceX and the electric vehicle thing. I don't want
to just I don't want to specialize him at all.
That's what I'm saying. I don't want him to just
have a job where he's got to worry about one
specific thing as far as the government's concerned. We have
other good people who can do that. Let him be
just kind of an overall advisor about all this stuff
that we need. There aren't specific restrictions in the constitution
that would prevent or prevent him from actually serving in
(26:37):
the cabinet. They don't have to have any qualifications except
being a US citizen. So that means technically, Matt, if
you and I could get Donald Trump's here, we could
get into this cabinet somehow. I don't know what jobs
we would have. I was kind of just thinking about
in twenty twenty eight, how we're going to have you
run for president and be like a nominee for one
(26:58):
of the political parties in America and some o and
see if we can have you win that American SAMO
Caucus and then we get to go on all the
talk shows and talk about how we ran a campaign
that got the American smow and people to elect you
as the person they would most like to run for president. Yeah,
it seems like something we can do. I wouldn't vote
(27:18):
for me, but hey, Jason Palmer is a country. Jason
Palmer was able to pull it off. Nobody knows who
that guy is, right, I think Jason Palmer.
Speaker 2 (27:26):
I think Jesse Palmer. No, that's a different guy.
Speaker 1 (27:28):
Different guy. Confused. Yeah. See. Also, there is something with
his existing business interests that have potential conflicts of interests,
So he would probably need to divest to certain holdings
of the businesses or recuse himself from decisions that could
benefit his companies if he took a governmental job. Again,
don't want that. I would much rather him continue to
(27:49):
invest in his own companies and not have that conflict
of interest with the government. And that's a good point, right.
You don't want people who are running the country to
have all that inside information and then make decisions to
help their business holds. Doesn't that make sense? That makes
sense to me, sure. Yeah. And then of course the
president has the authority to nominate members of the cabinet,
but they have to be confirmed by the Senate, and
(28:10):
the Senate could be raising concerns if Musk is, you know,
appointed to something, the Senate would ask him about those
business interests and how that would affect a potential governmental role.
But even so, I think Republicans, considering how cohesive things
seem to be post election over the last forty eight hours,
I would imagine the majority of them, knowing they will
(28:33):
be Republicans, will indeed have that. Anyway, if you had
to bet, if you're a betting man, Elon Musk to
the cabinet, yes, yes or no? Is he going to
be or is he not going to be? After hearing
all of that, I have changed my opinion to know, Yeah,
I don't think so either, And I don't think he
needs to be.
Speaker 2 (28:51):
I think he's going to be the Dana Holgerson, you know,
like an advisor, yeah, consultant, yeah, consultant yeah, And I
think and then he can be more powerful doing that,
and he can still be free to run his businesses
and grow our ability with the United States of America
with you know, space and with electric vehicles and with
(29:11):
internet connections and all this stuff that he's experimented with.
If you think, you know the movie Office Space, Yeah,
he's gonna be those two guys that had all the
employees sit down and they said, now, what would you
say it is you do here? Yeah, Michael Bolton and
then like the singer I like him. And then after that,
you know what he's gonna Do's like you're fired. You
(29:32):
think he's been practicing. I bet he has your fired.
He seems like the type of guy who would practice.
He's the kind of guy.
Speaker 1 (29:38):
That Binge watched all of The Apprentice like within like
two days, all all of the seasons, even all the
celebrity ones. So Pat says, isn't he an African American?
I mean technically he is more specifically a South African American.
(30:01):
He is he was born in South Africa, and yeah,
but look up the history of apartheid and that might
yeah yeah, yeah yeah, get some context. Yeah, anyway, appreciate
the emails. It's three fifty six. We'll have some fun
into the four o'clock hour here. We don't have to
talk about the election the entire time. We don't have to,
even though we can. If you want to call us,
you want to talk about something related to the election,
(30:22):
Elon Musk or anything else, or you want to start
talking about people you'd like to see in high ranking
offices in the cabinet. When that happens, you can call
us at four h two five five eight eleven ten.
Four h two five five eight eleven ten. We'll have
more coming up for you just moments and another one
thousand dollars keyword right after the top of the hour.
So stay locked and loaded with us on your Thursday Thursday,
all right here on news Radio eleven ten. Okay, babe,