Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I mean, there's so many things in this thing. Nine
and forty pages is what they settled on. Nine mad
Did you read that in the time that it took
for me to take my nap today? Did I sent
you the I sent you the link? Did you read
all nine hundred and forty pages?
Speaker 2 (00:17):
I didn't see that link come through. And you know what,
I'll check my junk folder. Oddly enough, things have been
landing in my junk folder lately that shouldn't true. Story.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
Probably quite a bit of junk in this would be
the argument you're gonna hear from some.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
Maybe that's why I ended up there. Did my outlook
inbox just preemptively said, now it's just full of junk.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
There's way too many words in this thing. You shouldn't
you shouldn't be reading this.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
Maybe it was the bogus ups link in the in
the file you know that takes you to the fishing website. Yeah,
you get those sometimes you just send them right to junk.
All right, So I'm looking at some of the things
in here. It permanently wants to extend that twenty seventeen
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which Trump oversaw in his
first term, and that would expire later this year, So
(01:05):
if that were allowed to expire, taxes theoretically for American
families would go up twenty two percent. Tax cuts, especially
for people who are workers who get tips tipped wages
up to twenty five thousand dollars. So I think you
still have to, you know, report how much money you're
making on tips, but if it lands and tips, as
(01:26):
long as it's twenty five thousand dollars or less, then
no more taxes on tips. That's probably pretty good for
people like that. I know you work for tips. Sometimes
I don't. I can't even think of a moment where
I would.
Speaker 1 (01:41):
Well, when we go out and do our remotes, you know,
like we put a little hat in front of us
and see if people will come, I think that counts.
Speaker 2 (01:48):
I've done one remote since I've been here and I
didn't bring a hat, So maybe I will next time.
Speaker 1 (01:53):
Yeah, you're missing out and it's non taxable now, so
people just come by and leave you dollars then you
don't have to report. Well, you have to report it,
but if you put it in the tax category in
your tax returns, now all of a sudden you don't
get taxed on that money. What kind of hat works best.
You think, uh, one, that maybe a bucket. Maybe it's
a bucket you know, I don't want to you don't
(02:13):
want to get like a Nebraska hat. And then aybody
who's not a Nebraska fan doesn't want to give you
any money.
Speaker 2 (02:17):
A bucket hat like one of those floppy buckets. Oh sure, sure, yeah,
but no logo, gotcha. It'd be as least offensive as possible, right.
It helps when you look to shoveled. You look to shoveled,
you have the hat and it just is sitting in
front of you, and it says tips please. You'll get
like thirty bucks in they're real easy, I think, and
you won't get text on it. You don't want you
to get taxed on it normally, probably like six or
(02:37):
seven bucks at least. Okay, So you say it's like
a Big Mac just the sandwich though, no fries and drink.
It's way more expensive than that for the whole meal. Yeah, maybe,
like if they take a bun off top or the.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
Bun in the middle, which I never quite understood. I
know that's what it makes the Big Mac the Big Mac,
but never quite never quite caught on for me.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
Is it because the M. Did they do the butN
in the middle because the M.
Speaker 1 (02:56):
Yeah, maybe that's a good that's a good point.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
I just thought of that. Maybe that's yeah, you turn
it Sighways, it kind of looks like a M.
Speaker 1 (03:02):
What the I don't know, I'm not a big big
mac Gay deduction also begins to phase out if you
are making one hundred and fifty grand a year or
three hundred thousand dollars a year as a married couple.
So that's an important misnomer that this just could be
like an infinite amount that you wouldn't have to report, right.
It got me to thinking about this though. What about
(03:23):
the penhandlers, the people who busk or just like ask
people for money when you know you're in the old market,
you just have nowhere to go. I'm sure they get
a lot of money, so they don't certainly don't report
that on a tax return, right, Well, I would think
if well, you're probably supposed to.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
I don't know a whole lot about circumstances and all
the things around that, but I would think that if
you don't, if you're a true panhandler in the sense
that you're doing that for your livelihood and makes all
you're doing. Yeah, maybe you don't have a physical address.
How do you pay taxes? So I don't good point.
It's it's kind of like the guys who yell out
their window, those who are misfortunate to get a job.
(04:02):
It's like, how do you get a job when you
don't have a home. Yeah, it's a deeper issue. Maybe
we should work on fixing that whole thing.
Speaker 1 (04:11):
Maybe. Also, the Senate bill deducts twelve five hundred dollars
in overtime pay with the same income diet, So there's
your no taxes on overtime pay. So we are getting
paid hourly every time you go over forty hours a week.
Now you're luck looking at no tax on that overtime
dollars up to twelve thousand, five hundred bucks. So if
(04:33):
you're getting more than that in overtime, eventually, after you
get past twelve thousand, five hundred dollars, that overtime pay
is going to require you to take a to get taxed.
Those wage reductions are available until twenty twenty eight. There's
also no tax on car loan interest. You can deduct
the interest paid on car loans until twenty twenty eight
as well. Also, if you're a senior age sixty five
(04:55):
and older, this bill gives you an additional six thousand
dollars of tax reduction. Again, it's through twenty twenty eight,
So all that through twenty twenty eight makes you kind
of wonder this is set up for it to expire
and maybe be redone or re extended right in the
middle of you know what's happening in twenty twenty eight,
right the next the next election.
Speaker 2 (05:15):
Oh, I was gonna say the Olympics, but yeah, that
happened in twenty twenty Is.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
This Los Angeles? Good job? Oh?
Speaker 2 (05:21):
Hey, yeah, there we go in a nice one. Uh No,
it's the election.
Speaker 1 (05:25):
So Donald Trump may not be running for reelection by
the time we get to twenty twenty eight. Not probably not,
but probably not certainly not if we're if we're enforcing
the constitution. But my point is that he would be
utilizing his background and this this bill extension for political purposes.
(05:47):
If you know, all that they did was just extend
these tax cuts going into November. It's a game. This
is all a game. It's always going to be a game.
There's plenty more in this. I'll try to keep digging
in and again the House is going to have to
for whatever it's worth. This doesn't mean that this thing
has passed. The House has to repass this now. So
and you know how much many people, how much they
had to pass this with, you know how much of
(06:08):
a margin they passed it in the House before the
Senate had to do a bunch of different stuff into
it one vote. So there's no slam dunk. It's going
to be super easy to pass in the House. But
maybe they're just sick and tired of talking about it,
and maybe they'll just do it. Who knows. I'll tell
you more about what's in this bill next Sunday. He's
ready eleven to ten kfab you's telling high cost of
(06:28):
living areas, this is not going to necessarily affect us.
But people from red states have been kind of critical
of this part because this would raise the salt deduction
cap to forty thousand dollars for five years before bringing
it back down to ten thousand dollars where it stands
for five more years. The whole point of this these
are tax deductions, saying it's people who are Republicans in
(06:52):
blue states, you know the handful that are from like
California or New York or whatever, and they say that
this is essential to get back to their states and
try to utilize republicanism and conservatism to keep them in office,
but also to try to help offset any sort of
(07:13):
opportunity of you know, the socialism movement and maybe some
of these larger cities. So I don't know if that's
going to work or not. And obviously it's incredibly expensive
to live in those places already. I don't know if
those salt deductions are actually going to make much of
a difference, but we'll find out. The Medicaid cuts, which
we've heard more about than probably any part of this
bill over the last month, these are I don't know
(07:37):
anybody to have like a big problem with a lot
of this, at least the part that we're seeing now. Yes,
up to twelve million Americans could potentially lose their health
insurance according to the Congressional Budget Office, but this cut,
these cuts could land at about a trillion dollars or so.
There have been stricter work requirements putting in So if
(07:59):
you were a able bodied, childless adult between the ages
of eighteen and sixty four, you got to work at
least eighty hours a month to maintain your benefits. That's
between you, it's your household. Those are two people together.
Or if you want to maintain your benefits, participating in
community service, going back to school and getting a degree
(08:20):
even at that at any age in between eighteen and
sixty four, or you engage in a work program, so
at all from aazes eighteen to sixty four, if you're
relying on government aid medicaid, if you are able bodied
and you have no children, you should between the two
people have to work at least eighty hours a month.
In general. Well, that's not two people, that's a single person.
(08:41):
And eighty hours a month could be across a job,
it could be across community service, going to school, engaging
in a work program. Eighty hours a month, how much
is that a week?
Speaker 2 (08:50):
Ish?
Speaker 1 (08:50):
It's twenty hours a week. Isn't twenty hours a week?
Kind of like just part time job, part time work.
I mean, I don't think anybody gets a full time
job that's only twenty hours a week.
Speaker 2 (09:00):
It brings that great line from dumb and dumber to
mind when they go out and they look for a job,
and they spend the whole day looking for a job
and don't turn up any new leads. And Harry says
to Lloyd, I can't believe we spent the whole day
looking for a job and got nothing. And Lloyd's like, yeah,
unless you want on work forty hours a week. So
(09:22):
I mean, I don't think that's too much to ask. Now,
if you're just sitting at home, not working, not doing anything, Heck,
you don't even have to have a job. If you're
participating in community service, you can improve that, or you're
in a work program, or you're going to school and
you can prove that you still qualify. You just have
to prove that you're doing that eighty hours a month.
The tax rate, the provider tax rate for Medicaid would
(09:44):
change year by year in lowers provider tax and Medicaid
expansion states from six percent to three point five percent,
and that would start in the fiscal year of twenty
twenty eight.
Speaker 1 (09:53):
So what is that. That's July first, twenty eight. Just
ahead of this passage. Also, the g doubled a rural
Hospital Stabilization fund for pushed for by these lawmakers that
were concerned that the changes to the provider rate would
hurt rural hospitals because they're not getting enough money and
(10:14):
we don't want that. Right. You want to be able
to have, you know, areas that have their own hospital.
You don't want to be, you know, forty five minutes
from the nearest hospital. And this was boosted to fifty
billion dollars distributed through grants and chunks of ten billion
dollars each year from now until they run out of money.
They also have removed the ban on Medicaid benefits funding
(10:35):
transgender healthcare, and that wasn't because of their principles. This
was because it didn't comply with the rules of the
United States Senate. Then of course we have the SNAP
benefits or food stamps if that's the more what you're
looking for in terms of, you know, trying to figure
out what those are. And this is this the same
kind of rules are in application here. Able bodied working
(10:59):
age adult between ages eighteen and sixty four. You have
to work for the eighty hours a month in some
way any of those things that I suggested to qualify
for the SNAP benefits if you want to apply for them,
and if your parents of children over the age of seven,
you have to do that as well. This does not
apply for children or people who have children under the
age of seven. That's a completely different group of people. Also,
(11:21):
the states would have to cover some of this moving
forward in the federal government, and the past has covered
the cost of the food Stamps benefits, but depending on states,
if they have a higher payment error rate, they would
have to cover a greater share of the benefits cost.
And that's they delayed snap work requirements for states with
(11:42):
a payment error rate of thirteen plus percent, which as Alaska.
They've slowed those down for an entire year. So if
you're wondering about how the errors operate, it's who shouldn't
be getting SNAP benefits that are currently getting Snap benefits
and how do you implement the change. That's what that's
talking about. And then, of course the debt limit. The
(12:03):
bill raises the national debt ceiling to five or an
additional five trillion dollars to you know, which if we
used up all five trillion dollars, it'd be forty one
point two trillion dollars in the national debt. A failure
to raise the limit before the government runs out of
cash to pay those obligations could end up resulting in
a downgrade of the credit rating for the country and
(12:25):
could mess with the financial markets as we know well
at this point. So is that just going to be
what we do? Can we just keep raising that ceiling?
Can keep raising that until like the end of time?
Because I mean, is anybody coming to collect that money?
Is anybody knocking on the door right now? I don't know.
There's a bunch more in here. We'll get to immigration, fees,
defense and border spending, which Pete Ricketts talked about yesterday
(12:46):
is a big part of what he was supporting in
this We will get to all of that and more
as we tried to unpack bullet points out of this
nine hundred and forty page behemoth that has been passed
today and the Senate and it heads back to the
House and we will see if that can get done
by the end of the week. More coming up on
news Radio eleven ten KFAB.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
And Marie's songer on news Radio eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 1 (13:08):
Guess where it landed on the top on the charts.
I just told you it's number one. It was a
number one hit. And if you watch the video for this,
it is premium premium like the song and the video
premium mid two thousands nostalgia. I just went back, you know,
sometimes I'll just watch music videosh. I'm at home, just
kind of working on stuff, and this thing popped on
(13:31):
and it took me back. It took me back to
a simpler time in my life. It's nice to have
things like we need those things. I was just about
to say that we need those things, yeah, just to
balance us a little bit. We're chasing all this news,
and we're chasing all this future and ambition and what
am I going to do tomorrow? What am I going
to do today? I mean, it's all a question mark
(13:52):
in a lot of ways. Right, Does it hurt to
go back remind yourself of the great memories and the
great times that you've had in year's past? Nothing hurts,
It hurts nothing to do that. We'll never be back
in two thousand and seven, but gosh if we can't
feel like we are sometimes even for a few minutes
at a time.
Speaker 2 (14:12):
Not a great year for the Huskers, but oh yeah,
probably good year for you know, lots of cool pop cultures.
Oh yeah, yeah, what an interesting year in college football?
Speaker 1 (14:19):
Though?
Speaker 2 (14:19):
Sorry, is the best?
Speaker 1 (14:20):
Total?
Speaker 2 (14:20):
Is the best topic?
Speaker 1 (14:21):
No? No, seriously, yeah, it will go down. If you
go back and read about the two thousand and seven
college football season, it is literally the best college football
season of all time. There's there's no ifans or butts
about it. Two words Pat White. We had figured it out.
Then Pittsburgh may have something to say about Pat White.
Speaker 2 (14:35):
Okay, Yeah, but that was quite the run for the Mountaineers.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
Yeah. Man, great stuff. We're talking big beautiful bill. Senate
has officially voted on it, passed it, by, pasted it.
They tied it fifty to fifty, and Jade Vance was
able to catch the tie breaking vote in favor. And
we were talking about some of the stuff that's in here.
Of course, it's a lot of it is worded incredibly confusing.
I'm using ball points and artificial intelligence to kind of
(14:58):
like help me discern some of the important and things.
The immigration fees as part of this now some provisions
as far as fees for migrants who are looking to
seek asylum or work permit or are apprehended, and they
have a ton of other little things that are like
listed out among this. If you're seeking asylum, you have
(15:22):
to present one hundred dollar fee. It's an annual fee
every year that the asylum application is pending. So if
you're coming from a place that is you know, it's
having our heart, like a hard time or whatever, and
you're seeking asylum, or you're seeking asylum from something to
the United States and you come in, I suppose legally
there's a one hundred dollar fee yearly or annually. There's
(15:44):
a new one thousand dollars minimum fee for immigrants granted
temporary entry into the US on the grounds of humanitarian
or significant public interest. So again, these are people that
aren't coming to try to you know, do business or
get a job or anything like that. Looking for a
better life. They're coming here, but a thousand dollars minimum
fee for these immigrants if you're granted temporary entry into
(16:07):
the US on the grounds of humanitarian or significant public interest.
If you're trying to enter illegally through a port of entry,
a minimum fee of five thousand dollars comes into play.
And there's another five thousand dollars fee for migrants that
are arrested or being ordered to be removed. So big
fines if you're trying to cross illegally. It's between the
(16:29):
fees if you're coming in legally versus illegally and you're caught,
which you know, you're going to need people, and we'll
get to that in a second. But if you're caught,
I mean, that's that's a lot of money, and if
you can't pay it, I don't think. I think part
of the deal here is that you can't stay. There's
new fees between five hundred and fifteen hundred dollars for
migrants whose immigration status is changed by a judge or
(16:51):
who appeal for a status change, So that's costing something
in the court system. You can't just be constantly applying
for new stuff, for difference stuff and prolonging the process
while paying nothing. That is that's not what's This seems
to be definitely a move in the direction of you
better think long and hard about wanting to be here
(17:13):
and doing it the right way, otherwise it's going to
get quite expensive for you. And that's not a ton
of money, right Like in the scheme of things, five
hundred to fifteen hundred dollars isn't a ton of money,
But that could be enough money that deters people who
are crossing our border with I mean, honestly, a lot
of these people have nothing, so that could definitely deter
the way that some people are approaching this situation, and
(17:35):
you're going to have to start enforcing stuff like this
to make it known to those who are thinking about
crossing illegally. Also, there's a thirty dollars electronic visa update
system fee for just a certain portion of Chinese nationals
that also they would have to maintain biographic and travel
information while they're in the country and that has to
(17:55):
be available online, So like a database essentially for people
people who are immigrants that you have to keep updated.
If you change your name, you change your job, you
change your address, that has to be updated, kind of
like how we have to update what we do. And
you know every time, you know you have to get
a license registration. You know how much that cost now
(18:17):
just to get our car registered. And it's got to
be accurate information. You can't be lying about where you
are like that stuff. They could dig it for that.
If you're gotten pulled over for not having your registration
on your license plate renewed, oh the sticker, Yeah, yeah,
I have. Yeah, I've been in cars that have been
pulled over for that too. It's kind of embarrassing. I
didn't know that I was supposed to renew that. That
(18:39):
was the first time I had a new car, and
I kind of forgot that that was something I had
to worry about doing. But they ding you. I mean,
that's a fine. You have to you know, you can
go and show them that you got the sticker and
all you have to do is pay for the court
fee if you're over the month late. But it's like,
this isn't that different than what the rest of us
are supposed to do in a variety of different ways
(18:59):
all year long. I mean your license, right, Like, if
your license expires and you're obviously like from here, it
doesn't matter, like you have a window to get it updated.
But if it's already expired, it doesn't matter. You have
to like it's invalid, so you have to go and
get a new one. Also, defense spending, of course, is
a huge part of this. This was the big hitting
(19:20):
point for Pete Ricketts who was on our show yesterday.
He said, while the the there was a ton of
cuts to a lot of different stuff, but there was
a lot of improvement improvements in terms of funding and
spending for our defense programs and our immigration enforcement. Twenty
five billion dollars in this bill to build the Golden
(19:42):
Dome missile defense system, which would be kind of like
the Iron Dome in Israel, except this would be covering
pretty much all of North America, you'd imagine. Includes forty
five point six billion dollars to complete the border wall.
In the border wall system, as Pete Ricketts mentioned, they're
going to have a bunch of cameras and stuff that
are going to be part of that spend. It's not
just the wall itself, it's the cameras and things of
(20:03):
that nature that are helping protect the wall. Four point
one billion dollars to hire new border agents so they'll
be able to do their work along the border. An
additional forty five billion dollars to ICE for the detention
of illegal immigrants. That's going to be a sticking point
for a lot of blue cities. On top of a
lot of other stuff in this bill, but forty five
billion additional dollars for ICE agents to continue to detain
(20:28):
illegal immigrants. Additional fifteen billion dollars directed toward the modernization
of the US nuclear triad. Twenty nine billion dollars for
ship building and the maritime industrial base. So a ton
of money invested by the United States and this bill
for defense. I can't imagine a ton of Republicans want
to stand in the way of this, But the leaders
(20:49):
in the House have already kind of mentioned they expect
to have this ready to go by the fourth of
July on Friday. It's pretty tricky and there's a lot there,
and we'll keep you posting on it. Time goes on
as the big beautiful bill is passed in the Senate
after much debate, it is two forty seven. We got
plenty more to talk about. I want to talk about America.
(21:10):
It's America Week for goodness sake. Of course, we have that.
We have firework talk coming up at the top of
the hour with the Omaha Police Department. Plenty more on
the Way you stick around on news Radio eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 2 (21:23):
Andrieselman on news Radio eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 1 (21:28):
Senator Tom Tillis or Tills, who's from North Carolina's he's
been an adamant opponent of this and to the point
where he was if you're looking at Tom Tillis's resume,
right like, this is a guy who has been a
politician and sitting in the Senate seat since he assumed office,
(21:51):
in twenty fifteen. He has won reelection once. Now I
don't know if Senator Tillis was planning on running for reelection,
but he said he's out, so I'm guessing he just
he couldn't bear to vote for this and tell us
couldn't bear to sit there and watch this happen without
speaking up. And maybe he already knew he was retiring
and just said this is going to be a stand
(22:11):
that I'm going to make. And I don't know, but
it was him. Rand Paul, as we kind of anticipated
depth Fisher was on our show last week and said
he votes against everything. He's incredibly hardheaded and not necessarily
ever looking to cooperate that much, which I don't know.
I think he votes plenty of times in favor of
(22:32):
the things that he truly believes. But I also think
that he's made it pretty clear that anything that's super
chunky or pork filled that seems to be kind of
a thing that he's just not willing to go that direction.
It's a bit more libertarian in the way that he
sees things, and the less government spending the better in general.
And then the last one shouldn't necessarily surprise us. Susan
(22:54):
Collins of Maine, who has been voting against bills like
this in cooperation of Donald Trump for you know, gosh,
she's just she's barely a Republican at all. At this point.
Lisa Murkowski eventually came around. She was also kind of
been partnering with Susan Collins. She's the Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski.
(23:15):
She voted in favor. They had been working on her
for a bit. Mitch McConnell was always kind of like,
is this guy gonna Is he not gonna? He did
support this, and then Jade Vance when it was fifty
to fifty had the opportunity to vote in favor and
break the time. For whatever it's worth, this is not
going to be known, as far as I know, as
(23:36):
the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which we've been calling it,
because right before it passed, the Senate Minority Leader Chuck
Schumer wanted to get a little needling in there, and
he used raise a point order against lines three to
five on the first page of the legislative proposal, and
the thing said short title this act may be cited
(23:56):
as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. He said, the
title of the bill violated Section three thirteen B one
A of the Congressional Budget Act of nineteen seventy four,
are what's known as the Bird rule. He said this,
I don't want to play it. And Pete Ricketts actually
was speaking and was finishing this up, and he said
that that point of order was sustained in that front.
(24:19):
The front the title it has to be changed, and
this is what he said. I don't want to play
the audio because I man, listening to Chuck speak just
makes me depressed. So I'll just I'll say it. This
is not a big beautiful bill at all. That's why
I moved down the floor to strike the title. It
is now called the Act, that's what it's called. But
it is really the big ugly betrayal, and the American
(24:41):
people know it. This vote will haunt our Republican colleagues
for years to come. Because of this bill. Tens of
millions will lose health insurance, millions of jobs will disappear,
people will get sick and die, kids will go hungry,
and the debt will explode two levels we have never seen.
This bill is so irredeemable that one Republican literally chose
(25:04):
to retire rather than vote yes, and decimate his own state.
End quote. Of course he's talking about Tom Tillis anyway. Okay,
that's fine, that's dandy. Nine hundred plus pages. It is
what it is. We'll see what happens the House of Representatives.
A lot of people have been confused about what's in
the bill. We've talked about what's in the bill this hour, Matt,
(25:24):
we'll podcast this. I'm probably set it in very convoluted
in beginner level terminology because I don't really know any better.
I'm not a legislator and I have really no legal background.
So I think I did the best that I could
on the major talking points of what people will probably
take from this, both in cuts and in spending. For
(25:46):
whatever it's worth.
Speaker 2 (25:47):
What did Senator Schumer call it? The big ugly disaster
betrayal betrayal? Oh bub, yeah, oh bub.
Speaker 1 (25:55):
It's a lot. We could have worked that in.
Speaker 2 (25:58):
Yeah, if you put you in there and then you go,
it's the bub.
Speaker 1 (26:01):
The bub.
Speaker 2 (26:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (26:02):
So the the Act as it is officially known. I
have no idea what it eventually will be called or
look like, but you know, it is what it is.
Elon Musk. Remember what he said, Remember what he said yesterday,
the minute that this passes, every person who voted for it,
he is funding a primary against those people. So that's
fifty people in the Senate that you're gonna have to
(26:23):
You're gonna have to fund the primary over the next
you know, four to six years or whatever. He has
the money for it, and then whoever votes for it
in the House, assuming the House thinks that they can
get it passed the way that it is by July fourth,
if that's the way that it works, I mean, that's
like two hundred and eighteen, two hunred and twenty people.
So now he's funding for like two hundred and seventy
different primaries around the country, and who's just like, how
(26:46):
many of them are even gonna win. It seems like
a kind of a waste of your money, isn't it.
He also said, you know what he's gonna do once
this thing passes. He's going to be starting the America
Party the day after, and he is going to be
starting movement that politically will speak for everyone in America,
not just the radicals on both sides in the way
(27:06):
he said it, So, I guess we're on the clock
to see what the American Party looks like elon your move.
We'll talk fireworks, the fireworks rules in Omaha. Coming up
next on news Radio eleven to ten kfab