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October 17, 2024 • 13 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Win for the station to win for us too.

Speaker 2 (00:02):
It's just selfishly, we want all of the winners to
be off our show. What's good for the goose is
good for the gander. I don't know if that applies here,
but I yes, I don't often gander at gooses, so
I wouldn't know you should.

Speaker 1 (00:14):
I like geese.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
I know a lot of people have villainized him over
the years, and I'm going to tell you that they
should not, because I liked him.

Speaker 1 (00:22):
They're birds, and I like birds.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
Speaking of birds, how about that Brett Buyer, not one
of my not one of my better segues.

Speaker 1 (00:30):
Hey, you got the bees though the birds? Brett? What
is it? The bay or Buyer? I messed that up.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
I I was thinking the alliteration could work there.

Speaker 1 (00:41):
It didn't work. What kind of bird is he? Ostrich?

Speaker 2 (00:45):
No, No, he's not an Ostrich. He's he's probably, I
don't know, a rooster of some kind.

Speaker 1 (00:52):
I don't know. He's pretty understated. Maybe a barn owl. Maybe.

Speaker 2 (00:56):
Maybe if you had like a night time slot, maybe
he's he's more afternoon guy.

Speaker 1 (01:01):
So do you wear glasses now?

Speaker 2 (01:03):
Yeah? See, he kind of need that if you're going
to be an owl. All right, anyway back back to
the point here. After I butchered the Seguay, Kamala Harris
was with Old Brett on Fox News yesterday.

Speaker 1 (01:14):
We told you that was gonna happen.

Speaker 2 (01:15):
It was about twenty seven minute interview, and we're gonna
go ahead and play some of the hits. I thought
of this whole shebang. Kamala was pressed about what she
has or has not done at the southern border, and
I thought this was something that needed to be probably
at the forefront of this conversation, especially with the Republicans

(01:36):
calling her the borders are Let's go ahead. And this
is Kamala Harris and Brett Bayer at Fox News speaking
on there the Southern bore.

Speaker 3 (01:45):
Before the bipartisan Safe Communities Act, the first bill practically
within hours of taking the oath, was a bill to
fix our immigration system.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
Yes, ma'am.

Speaker 4 (01:56):
It was called the Ussen Citizenship Act of two thousand
exactly twenty one essentially, but I a citizenship issue.

Speaker 3 (02:04):
I finished, I finished responding for you, but you have
to let me finish.

Speaker 4 (02:08):
You had the White House and the House and the Senate.

Speaker 3 (02:10):
I mean, they didn't bring up responding to the point
you're raising, and i'd like to finish. We recognized from
day one that to the point of this being your
first question, it is a priority for US as a
nation and for the American people, and our focus has
been on fixing a problem. And from day one then

(02:33):
we have done a number of things, including to address
our asylum system and put more resources, getting more judges,
what we needed to do to tighten up penalties and
increase penalties for illegal crossings, what we needed to do
to deal with points of entry between border entry points.

(02:54):
That's the work we did, and we worked on supporting
what was a bipartisan effort, including some of the most
conservative members of the United States Congress, to actually strengthen
the border. That border bill would have put fifteen hundred
more border agents at the border, which is why I
believe the border patrol agents supported the bill. It would

(03:14):
have allowed us to stem the flow of fentanyl coming
into the United States, which is a scourge affecting people
of every background, every geographic location in our country, killing people.
It would have allowed us to put more resources into
prosecuting transnational criminal organizations, which I have done as the
attorney general, former attorney general of a border state. Co

(03:34):
executed trafficking of drugs, guns, and human beings. And Donald Trump,
let me just finish, learned about that bill and told
them to kill it because he preferred to run on
a problem instead of fixing a problem. And in this election,
this is rightly a discussion that the American people want

(03:55):
to have, and what they want are solutions, and they
want to president of United State was not playing political
games with the issue.

Speaker 1 (04:02):
I hear you, all right.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
So there's a Kamala on the border, redbear, you know,
giving her some stuff. Hey, Matt, can you do me
some math here? Okay, you're you're a partial mathematician.

Speaker 1 (04:15):
First.

Speaker 2 (04:15):
One of the first things that they put into office, eh,
that they were talking about for two years after this
time period we're talking about January of twenty twenty one.
They had the White House, they had a majority in
the Senate and a majority in the House of Representatives.
They're talking about trying to like get everything lined up

(04:36):
before bringing that to a potential vote, which never happened
over those two years or the year and a half
since with Republicans holding control of the House. Is that
not enough time for one of these things to actually happen?
Time isn't it relative I'm running out of ways to

(04:56):
give non answers. Yeah, that seems like a lot of time.
That's a lot of what else were they do it right?

Speaker 1 (05:04):
Like what I mean?

Speaker 2 (05:05):
This wasn't important enough to like figure this one out
while you had full control of the entire legislative branch
and the executive branch. I mean, that's a word salad.
And Brett Bayer, I am not. People get on me
for like interjecting with callers, but sometimes when you're talking
to a caller, and this is not to demean any callers,

(05:28):
but sometimes you kind of have to keep them on
track or I can't just like turn the entire show
over to them and wait for them to stop talking.
It'll turn into a filibuster situation. And you just can't
have that in my in our job, you know, like
I have time and deadlines and commercial breaks and also
other callers that I'd like to get to, So I
don't generally like to jump in, except for, you know,

(05:49):
when somebody's trying to like take control of a show
or give misinformation without being checked. And that's what Brett
Bayer was trying to do. However, he kind of stuck
in there a few seconds too long, and then had
Kamala scold him and said, yes, ma'am, you know, sorry,
but it made for you know, thirty seconds of not
great television when you have them, you know, her trying

(06:10):
to answer his question in him trying to interject, Oh, well,
I know what you're talking about here kind of thing.
And I don't think it lended itself, at least early
in this interview to a productive exercise. He got to
keep the politician from monologuing and turning it into a
campaign speech when this is a discussion, it's an interview, right,
But he's also got to know when to dip back

(06:31):
out of that, yeah, and wait for a little window.
He could have got in there and just said, you
had control of the legislative branch as a whole. How
did this not get done in those two years? If
this was something you actually cared about. I remember people
lauding Theo Vaughn for his ability to kind of interject
himself into what Donald Trump was saying when he was

(06:53):
interviewing him, so that he could kind of keep the
conversation going and keep it away from a monologue to
a campaign. Yeah, but what THEO was doing was not journalism.
What THEO was doing was just cracking, like little jokes
in between, you know, and that's what he does. You know,
if you listen to a Theo Vonnit podcast, which I've
listened to some of them that are just awesome, like him,

(07:16):
not being a journalist doesn't matter. He's a funny guy.
He's a comedian, but he's also battled like addiction and stuff,
so he's he's a guy that you know, he's got
an interesting perspective on the world. It's interesting to hear
him talk to other people, whether they've had addictions or not.
But sometimes those conversations because of his interjections just take
hard right and left turns and never get back on
the tracks. Yeah, with Donald Trump, he knew what he

(07:39):
was trying to say and eventually would stay on the tracks.
But THEO is pretty funny, but you want to keep
them on track at the same time. I think there's
a way to do that without getting yourself in a
position where she can basically scold you like she's your mommy,
which is kind of what she did there in that answer.

Speaker 1 (07:54):
So you're saying that she is mom a lot of
the country.

Speaker 2 (07:59):
All right, You've reached your mama la quota for the day.
No more Mamala for you. Otherwise I'm going to come
over there and give you a purple nurple. Okay, he
feels empowered to do this. Ladies and gentlemen. I did
not give him the green light for this. You walked
into that one. Yeah, whatever, all right, when we come
back out. More from Kamala with Brett Bayer and Fox

(08:21):
News Next News Radio eleven teen Kfab.

Speaker 1 (08:24):
Emery Sunger on News Radio eleven ten kfab.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
Now, let's listen to what Kamala has to say about
some of the bigger problems that illegal immigration has created,
like the Lake and Riley situation. An illegal immigrant who
has a criminal history released into our country commits heinous
crimes that affect American families. Here's what Kamala had to

(08:50):
say in that question.

Speaker 4 (08:51):
President Clinton actually referred to Lake and Riley Sunday campaigning
for you and Georgia, saying, if those men had been
properly vetted, Lac andn Riley probably would not have been killed.
So if it wouldn't have happened, this is well before
any negotiation. This is well before Donald Trump got involved
in the politics this is a specific policy decision by
your administration to release these men into the country.

Speaker 3 (09:13):
So what I'm saying to you, do you know.

Speaker 4 (09:15):
Those families really I think an apology.

Speaker 3 (09:18):
Let me just say, first of all, those are tragic cases.
There's no question about that. There is no question about that.
And I can't imagine the pain that the families of
those victims have experienced for a lass that should not
have occurred. So that is true. It is also true

(09:42):
that if a bard of security had actually been passed
nine months ago, it would be nine months that we
would have had more border agents at the border, more
support for the folks who are working around the clock
trying to hold it all together, Madame Vice, press ensure
that no future harm would occur. And this election in

(10:04):
twenty days will determine whether we have a president of
the United States who actually cares more about fixing a problem,
even if it is not to their political advantage in
an election. Because there was a solution brand all right.

Speaker 2 (10:19):
So that's again Kamala is saying that it was the
Republicans who blocked that bipartisan border bill, which I have
to continue to let you know that there was more
to it than just this border stuff that we're talking about,
and the eventual executive order that Joe Biden put through
didn't necessarily put more bodies at the border, didn't necessarily

(10:41):
say he's going to complete the border wall, but it
did have a more strict per day limit on average
for what this conversation was going to behold down there
at the southern border. Again, Matt Matt am I mishearing things.
Have they addressed she at all addressed why it was
not something that was completed even though it was one

(11:02):
of the first bills that they had tried to draft up.
Why that vote never came for that border bill in
the entire two years that they had with democratic control
in all chambers and executive branch. I don't think so.
I didn't hear that. So what are we doing here?
And again, Brett Bayer can only ask that question so
many different ways. Do I think that Kamala Harris is

(11:26):
solely responsible for this? No, we impeached a secretary of
the Defense Secretary or Homeland Security, sorry, the Homeland Security Secretary,
Alejandro Maiorcis. He got impeached by the House of Representatives.
That is pretty clearly a significant assessment of who's most

(11:47):
responsible for not protecting our southern border, is that he's
mostly the guy. At the same time, I want to
make sure that everybody understands Kamala Harris here has to
answer for the entire hired of her administration, because she
is a big part of it. Even if she's not
making a lot of the decisions, even if she's not
putting together legislation, even if she's not necessarily responsible for

(12:11):
any of the good or really even any of the
bad of what's going on there in the Biden White House,
she has to be that person that has to answer
these questions because she's trying to run for president. We'll
get to more on how she feels she fits into
the whole Biden administration Momentarily. I got a lot more

(12:31):
clips that I'm going to play, but I want everybody
to understand first and foremost, more so than anything that
we have talked about yet to this point. We'll get
more into the next hour here. She has to have
that responsibility of telling us the American people where those
shortcomings are coming from. You can't tell us that you're
seeing the problem and not actually dealing with the problem.

Speaker 1 (12:55):
We'll do all of this we'll come back. We have
plenty more for you, so stick around. We are very
grateful for you to be a part of our program today.
We'll get more on Komala a little bit later.

Speaker 2 (13:03):
Also preview Indiana and the Nebraska corn O Skers will
have an Indiana guest coming up here in the next
hour as well, So stick around on news radio eleven
ten kfab
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