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August 12, 2024 32 mins
Harris names a running mate who steals valor and whose wife likes the smell of rioters burning tires,  and RFK Jr admits to the great central park bear hoax.  This week's " did they really just say that clips" show us that sometimes, life is just stranger than fiction. 
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Kamala Harris name is a running mate who are you
ready steals valor and whose wife likes the smell of
rioters burning tires. And by the way, RFK Junior admits
to the great Central Park bear hoax.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
This week's did they really just say that?

Speaker 1 (00:13):
Clips show us that sometimes life is just stranger than fiction.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
I'm Nancy Shack, I'm Ben Parker.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
This is news bite, and we can make sure that
those weapons of war that I carried in war is
the only place where those weapons were.

Speaker 4 (00:39):
There were riots.

Speaker 5 (00:40):
I could smell the burning tires, that that was a
very real thing. And I kept the windows open for
as long as I could because I felt like that
was such a touchstone in front of me.

Speaker 6 (00:53):
Hit him bear and killed it, a young bear. So
I pulled over and.

Speaker 7 (01:00):
I picked up the bear and put him in the
back of my van because I was going to skin
the bear and it was very good condition, and I
was just gonna and put the meat my refrange Randy,
but I.

Speaker 4 (01:11):
Put it in Central Park instead because weird.

Speaker 2 (01:14):
Oh my god, that was RK Junior. By the way,
you can't seem to help himself.

Speaker 4 (01:18):
By the way, by the way, I mean he didn't
kill the bear, which is part one tells you yeah,
and in all honesty, bear meets pretty good. I mean,
I can't blame him for wanting to do what he.

Speaker 1 (01:27):
Did, but then that was nothing yet that that then
it turns weird.

Speaker 2 (01:31):
The whole thing is weird.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
You don't pick up roadkill and put it in your freezer.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
But at the same point in time he I mean.

Speaker 1 (01:37):
First we heard about how he had brainworm, and now
we're hearing that he was behind the great Central Park
dead bear hoax. If anybody remembers a few years ago,
there was a dead bear cob left in Central Park
and it looked like it had been hit by cyclists,
and it's like it was set up to look that way,

(01:58):
Like what the hell is that? Turns out that RFK Junior,
as he just told you in the open and which
we'll hear again, saw the bear cub being killed by
a motorists put in his car thinking he was going
to eat it later, and then he got busy, decided
he couldn't, and then so instead he had the time
to make it look like a site, like like a

(02:21):
motorists had killed it in Central Park. For some reason,
I don't understand any of this, But this is eighteen c.

Speaker 8 (02:28):
I was taking a group of people up and Gosh
in New York, up nuts And Valley.

Speaker 4 (02:34):
And I was supposed to.

Speaker 9 (02:36):
Meet them there at like maybe eight or nine.

Speaker 8 (02:38):
I was driving up maybe you know, really early, like seven,
and then.

Speaker 6 (02:44):
Woman in a van in front of me hit a
bear and killed it, a young bear.

Speaker 9 (02:50):
So I pulled over.

Speaker 7 (02:53):
And I picked up the bear and put him in
the back of my van because I was going to
skin the bear, and it was very good condition, and
I was just going to and put the meat my refrigerator.

Speaker 9 (03:03):
And you can do that in the York say, you
can get a bear at tag for a road killed bear.
And so then we went hawking and I had the
bear in my car, and then we had a really
good day and we went late. We were catching a
lot came and the people really loved it.

Speaker 8 (03:21):
So we stayed late, and instead of going back to
my home in Westchester, I had to go right to
the city because there was a dinner.

Speaker 1 (03:29):
Oh were they going to throw a bear at the dinner?
But then he says his friend, So the ones who
came up with they to put the bear in Central
Park cut eighteen A.

Speaker 8 (03:38):
At the end of the dinner, it went late, and
I realized I couldn't go home.

Speaker 6 (03:42):
I'd go to the airport, and the bear was.

Speaker 9 (03:44):
In my car, and I didn't want to leave the
bear in the car because that would have been bad.
So then I thought, you know, at that time, this was.

Speaker 6 (03:56):
A little bit of.

Speaker 8 (03:57):
The redneck and me.

Speaker 10 (03:58):
There'd been a series of bicycles accidents in New York
day and just put in the bike lanes and people
a couple of people, you know, and it was every day,
and people badly injured every day.

Speaker 6 (04:09):
It was the press, and so I thought.

Speaker 7 (04:12):
I wasn't drinking, of course, but people were drinking with me,
who thought this was a good idea. And I said,
I had an old bike in my car that somebody
to asked me to get rid of it. I said,
let's go put the bear at the Central Park and
we'll make it look like.

Speaker 11 (04:28):
People.

Speaker 12 (04:29):
Oh.

Speaker 9 (04:30):
Everybody thought that's a great idea.

Speaker 7 (04:32):
So we did that it would be a music for
who ever found it or something.

Speaker 4 (04:37):
People who were drinking thought that would be a good idea.

Speaker 2 (04:39):
Oh my god, by the way, oh my god.

Speaker 4 (04:41):
So in all honesty, and I know, look, people have
different opinions of stuff. The second half of that story
I don't get. You know, just don't take the bear
or bring it to a game or whatever. But so
so I don't understand why I do that. I mean, okay,
you've been drinking, Okay, got it. So But but the
first half I actually do understand because there are parts
of the country and in parts of various states where yeah,

(05:02):
you could take road kill home. I think you have
to report it, but you take roadkill home and cook it.
And a lot of people do that.

Speaker 1 (05:07):
I know you can, but I need to cut it.
Not a lot of people do that. Some people do that,
A lot of people. It's not a lot of people
do that. Well, I think it depends where you are
because the year, by the way, we're talking about a bear.

Speaker 4 (05:21):
Game is game. But there are i mean, all right,
a lot excuses for our I'm not being excuses for
K Junior. I'm just saying there are quite a few
people who take.

Speaker 1 (05:30):
Let's just put it this way, this is freaking weird
from beginning to add.

Speaker 4 (05:34):
Okay, again, I think the second half is weird. The
first half of the whole part of the weird.

Speaker 1 (05:38):
But it's not how many New Yorkers.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
We're not talking about. This is not Nebraska.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
Well, we're talking about this guy lives in Manhattan without
getting and he goes out and he basically picks up
a dead bear cub, puts it in his car, forgets
about it for twenty four hours, and then decides to
There's nothing normal about it.

Speaker 4 (05:54):
Any Without getting into a whole detail about game roadkill
in upstate New York, it's pretty rural and you might
as well be in upstate anyway.

Speaker 2 (06:03):
We're not in upstate.

Speaker 4 (06:04):
Well, he wasn't. Well, he was not in Manhattan. That
was he was.

Speaker 1 (06:09):
He was in the suburbs of Manhattan. That's that's the point, bears. Yeah,
so we're just saying this is this is not on
the out in the range where you might hit a
buffalo and want to take it home.

Speaker 2 (06:20):
This is outside of Manhattan.

Speaker 1 (06:22):
This is a guy with and he's not desperate for money,
he doesn't he's not looking to feed his family, and
he picks up a dead bear cob. That's just weird
to begin with, regardless of how many how you think
normal it is for people to eat roadkill and then,
on top of it, to stage an accident to make
somebody think that, you know, a drunk bicyclist, you know,
was killed by or got hit by a bear.

Speaker 2 (06:43):
The whole thing is weird.

Speaker 1 (06:45):
And the whole thing comes down to this. This guy
was a lot of people's hope for the White House. Yeah,
well the same people like roadkill.

Speaker 2 (06:59):
So and so there you go.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
And so I mean, and it we had to know
when his siblings came out and said don't support him
for president, that there was something going on here.

Speaker 2 (07:10):
And now the longer we get into it.

Speaker 1 (07:12):
And he's a smart guy, he's a well intentioned man.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
You know.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
The problem is either it's the heroin addiction or that
freaking brainworm. Something has just made him completely and utterly
unelectable at this point. And this did not help.

Speaker 2 (07:29):
Did not help.

Speaker 4 (07:30):
I ask you a serious question. Do you think this
bear story is the weirdest thing from his past?

Speaker 1 (07:36):
I don't, That's what I'm I think it may be
the weirdest one of the weird things that we know about,
But I know, I think there's a lot more out
there that we don't know.

Speaker 4 (07:43):
And and somehow, and either somebody who was with him
that night, or one of his relatives or somebody he
had told this story to in the past. Somebody dropped
a din to the New Yorker.

Speaker 1 (07:51):
Yeah, and that's why he's telling people now. He's getting
ahead of it. So you know, who knows what hasn't
been dropped on him that he's keeping to himself.

Speaker 4 (07:59):
And by the way, don't you don't drop a dime
on someone running for president unless you don't want them
to win. Like somebody who doesn't particularly care for his
politics said, hey, listen, there's a bear story about kfk
RK JR. You should hear it. You should hear it.

Speaker 2 (08:15):
I'm glad we did. You know, what can I say?

Speaker 1 (08:17):
But here's the thing, Benjamin, he is not the strangest
candidate in this election.

Speaker 4 (08:22):
That's strange, is not?

Speaker 1 (08:23):
I mean, doesn't that just strike fear into your heart?
The other person that's really bizarre in all of this,
and I'm not talking about J. D. Vance by the way,
who everybody they've they've blown out of the water. That
whole story about the couch, that's that does not that
was an apocryphal choosing JD.

Speaker 4 (08:42):
Vance is eating road kill.

Speaker 1 (08:44):
I don't all right then, But the other really strange
candidate has emerged is the man that Vice President Harris
has chosen as her running mate, and that would be
Governor Tim Wallas of Minnesota. First of all, let's start
with this. Both Vice President Harris and Governor Walls are

(09:06):
trying to paint him as a moderate, when in fact
he is a flame throwing progressive liberal. And if you
doubt what I'm saying, I want you to listen to
liberal political analyst Scott Jennings on CNN, who is as
liberal as they come, and I want you to hear

(09:27):
his response when Dana Bash tries to paint Walls as
a normal, middle of the road kind of guy.

Speaker 2 (09:34):
Cut thirty three.

Speaker 13 (09:35):
One of his friends told me this morning that his set,
his superpower is how normal he is?

Speaker 14 (09:45):
Is he?

Speaker 4 (09:45):
I mean, I don't know. I don't know this guy.

Speaker 15 (09:47):
I mean, is it normal to let your biggest city
in your state burn while you're the governor for four days,
destroying thousands of businesses hundreds of millions of dollars in
property damage while you do nothing?

Speaker 4 (09:59):
Does it sound normal?

Speaker 15 (10:00):
Is it normal for your wife to say she opened
the window so she could let the smell of tire
fires waft in, so they could take in the smells
of this radical chaos and anarchy on the streets of Minneapolis.
I don't view any of that as normal.

Speaker 1 (10:14):
I don't either, and that's a liberal Democrat talking, and
he wasn't. Through cut thirty three A.

Speaker 15 (10:19):
I look at this through the lens of decision making,
and in two cases they've showed us who they are.
Kamala Harris absolutely bowed down to the radical left in
her party by not picking Shapiro, who is Jewish. There
was a nasty campaign run against him. Everybody knows it.
No one wants to admit it, but everybody knows it.

(10:41):
And she wound about, and she wound up choosing the
person who was not Jewish, and not as talented, and
not from the state that she has to win. He
did a nice job tonight. Everybody could see why he
was the best choice. But she couldn't do it because
the party is somewhat awash and anti Semitism.

Speaker 1 (10:57):
Yeah, and more than that, he had a little bit
more to say about Waltz thirty three B.

Speaker 15 (11:03):
And for Walls when he did what he did during
the riots. To me, it was him saying, I don't
have the strength or the character to stand up to
this anarchy. So in two big decision points for this ticket.
They've showed us they will always bow down to the
radical left. So I think if you, if you want
to talk about normal to the normal people in this country,

(11:26):
bowing down to the radical left is not normal. It
shouldn't be normal, and it should be a flashing red
light to the normans of America that this is not
the ticket for you.

Speaker 16 (11:36):
Now.

Speaker 1 (11:36):
To his point, he talked about the First Lady of Minnesota,
gwn Waltz, and I just want to so you can
hear it for yourself. She gave an interview in which
she talked about keeping her windows open during the Minnesota
riots so that she could smell the tires burning because
it was a touchstone cut thirty, I.

Speaker 5 (11:55):
Would say, those first days, you know, when there were riots,
I could smell the burning tires and that was that
was a very real thing. And I kept the windows
open for as long as I could because I felt
like that was such a touchstone of what was what

(12:17):
was happening.

Speaker 2 (12:18):
Wow, I'm with Jennings. This is this is normalcy is it?

Speaker 14 (12:21):
This is wow?

Speaker 4 (12:23):
I just think by the way, it almost almost makes
RFK Junior story seem normal.

Speaker 2 (12:27):
It does.

Speaker 1 (12:28):
Actually this is what I'm saying. He's looking better compared
to this.

Speaker 4 (12:32):
But so here's here's my right. It's not really the question.
So here's my statement. Right, you're married to the governor
of a state, no matter which state in this case
it's uh. But so you're married to the governor of
a state and your city's on fire by rioters and
tires are burning, which, by the way, if you've ever
smelled a burning tire, it's not a pleasant I don't

(12:54):
care about touchstone moments. It stinks to I haven't anyway,
So don't you either go into the the living room
where if he's sitting there, or call him on the
phone and go, hey, honey, yeah, listen, I know you're busy.
Asma is acting up, but you're the governor and stops.

Speaker 2 (13:13):
Want them to let for four days.

Speaker 4 (13:15):
It doesn't make And she likes it well that that
that's even the weirder part.

Speaker 1 (13:20):
Exactly right, because because it meant that you know, they're
they were achieving their political aims.

Speaker 2 (13:26):
Basically, that's what she's referring.

Speaker 4 (13:28):
The weirder party. She likes to smell of burning tires,
which is disgusting.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
It is, well, that's why she's saying why she did.

Speaker 1 (13:33):
Now, a lot of people say, Okay, you know, the
Waltzes are strange, but they have you know, they have
the courage of their convictions. They may be, you know,
really firebrand progressives, but at least you know they're they're
standing up for what they believe him. And my question is, really,
do you really think he stands up for what he
believes in, because it turns out that he is laying

(13:55):
claim to a military record that he does not have. Now,
I want to lay this out really carefully for everybody.
This is Harris and Waltz when she introduced him as
her running mate, and this is back to back one
cut where they are really pushing his military record.

Speaker 2 (14:14):
Cut number five Eric.

Speaker 7 (14:17):
For some folks, they're just getting to know Coach Waltz's story.

Speaker 2 (14:20):
He is a veteran who served our nation in.

Speaker 1 (14:23):
Uniform for more than two decades as a member of
the Army National Guard for.

Speaker 17 (14:30):
Twenty four years. I proudly wore the uniform of this nation.
The National Guard gave me purpose. It gave me the
strength of a shared commitment to something greater than ourselves.

Speaker 2 (14:42):
Okay, so he's talking.

Speaker 1 (14:45):
He's a military guy, So you guys who are moderates,
who like the military. You should like him. But here's
the thing. He later on referred to carrying weapons of
war in a war at a constitution you an event
that's cut number six.

Speaker 13 (15:02):
I'll take my kick in the butt for the NRA.
I spent twenty five years in the army, and I
haunt and I gave the money back.

Speaker 4 (15:07):
And I'll tell you what I have been doing.

Speaker 13 (15:09):
I've been voting for common sense legislation that protects a
second Amendment. But we can do background checks, we can
do CDC research, we can make sure we don't have
reciprocal carry amongst states, and we can make sure that
those weapons of war that I carried in war is
the only place where those weapons were at.

Speaker 4 (15:24):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (15:25):
Then in two thousand and seven, he does an interview
with c Span where he claims to have been on
active duty during Operation during Freedom or intimates that his
battalion went to Iraq.

Speaker 2 (15:38):
Six A.

Speaker 13 (15:39):
In your military background, I spent twenty four years in
the National Guard.

Speaker 18 (15:42):
Some of that full time I was an artillery mon
I deployed in support of Operation and during Freedom.

Speaker 4 (15:47):
My battalion provided.

Speaker 18 (15:49):
Based security throughout the European theater from Turkey to England
in the early stages of the war in Afghanistan, and
that same battalion is now in Iraq at this time.

Speaker 1 (16:00):
Well it sounds like he went to war, right, Well,
here's the thing. He never went to war. He never
carried a weapon in war because he never went to war.

Speaker 2 (16:09):
In fact, I.

Speaker 1 (16:10):
Want you to listen to retired commander Sergeant Major Tom Barns.
He was in the squad with Tim Walls. In fact,
he had to take over Tim Wallas's battalion after Walt
to you ready for this, ran away cut seven A.

Speaker 4 (16:26):
He abandoned us. You know, I mean, what the hell
kind of leader does that?

Speaker 12 (16:30):
I mean he just as soon as the shots were
fired in Iraq, he turned and ran the other way
and hung his hat up and quit.

Speaker 4 (16:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (16:38):
So essentially what happened is he got they got the battalion,
got their orders to go to Iraq, and he said, no,
I'm retiring, I'm out of here.

Speaker 2 (16:44):
By I never saw action ever.

Speaker 4 (16:48):
I think about I think about the Kenny Rodgers Shaw.
You get no one to hold him, knowing to fold them,
no one to walk away, and no whe to run.
Apparently Walls knows when to run.

Speaker 2 (16:54):
Yeah, exactly right.

Speaker 4 (16:55):
He retired in fairness, he didn't just a bad We
didn't go a wall, I mean got he didn't.

Speaker 14 (16:59):
Go a wall.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
No, he abandoned his knacks.

Speaker 4 (17:01):
He did what take I'm out of here, I gotta go.

Speaker 2 (17:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (17:03):
So even CNN had to admit that things are not
as they're being represented by Governor Waltz. Cut nine A.

Speaker 19 (17:12):
Waltz did make a comment speaking to a group. He's
done it a couple of times where he has used
language that has suggested that he carried weapons in a
fighting situation. There is no evidence that at any time
Governor Waltz was in a position of being shot at,
and some of his language could easily be seen to
suggest that.

Speaker 4 (17:31):
He was yeah, no kidding, Hey, I got a question. Yeah,
I wasn't in the military. I wish I was. I
came really close. But that's a different story. But but
so now I do have guns, and I've gone to
the shooting range in the past. If I said, if
I said, hey, during the Afghanistan War, I carried a gun,
that would be factual.

Speaker 2 (17:51):
Because I did carry that would be called still.

Speaker 4 (17:54):
But I wasn't in Afghanistan. That's still that's what I'm saying. See,
I mean, but because you imply that you were carrying
it in Afghanistan, not that you actually had a gun, yeah,
back at home.

Speaker 1 (18:04):
Stolen valor. And that's the point that Jadvans made Cut
seven B.

Speaker 20 (18:07):
We shouldn't allow weapons that I used in war to
be on America streets.

Speaker 14 (18:13):
Well, I wondered, Tim Waltz, when were you ever in war?
When was this? What was this weapon that you carried
into war?

Speaker 20 (18:20):
Given that you abandoned your unit right before they went
to Iraq and he has not.

Speaker 14 (18:23):
Spent a day in a combat zone.

Speaker 20 (18:25):
What bothers me about Tim Waltz is the stolen valor garbage.

Speaker 14 (18:28):
Do not pretend to be something that you're not.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
I'm with them, completely with them. But here's the thing.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
So the Democrats, Democrat Party of the DNC, the Harris Biden,
well actually the Harris Waltz campaign now has no defense
for this because there's records and it's it's it's not
a gray area, it's black and white. So how do
they defend now against it. I'll tell you how they defend.
They send out surrogates to lie about JD. Vance not

(18:57):
having military military record when Jadvance not only was a
marine but served active combat duty in Iraq, I mean,
was shot at in Iraq. So they send out this
surrogate to CNN to claim the Dvance doesn't have.

Speaker 2 (19:11):
A military record.

Speaker 1 (19:12):
Even Jim Acosta on CNN, who dislikes the Trump Vance
campaign and it makes no bones about it, could not
let that lie stand.

Speaker 2 (19:20):
Cut nine B.

Speaker 11 (19:22):
Well, here is Tim Walls who enlisted when he was
seventeen years old. He served in the National Guard for
twenty four years, and I'm not aware of any military
service that Jada Vance has ever served. So let's just
make the comparison there and what happened in the tragedy
of the employed and then the unread Yeah, okay, pardon

(19:45):
me for that.

Speaker 2 (19:45):
Yeah, oh, what the hell?

Speaker 1 (19:47):
Why I'm not just served active duty, served with distinction.

Speaker 4 (19:52):
By the way, is there is It's not an exact comparison.
But I just thought, I thought to myself, because he
served in the National Guard. But fine, my father was
in the National Guard. I have nothing against people in
the National Guard. But didn't we have this whole brew
haha about George W. Bush only served in the National Guard.
Wasn't that the big deal? Back in the day.

Speaker 1 (20:11):
It's a really good point.

Speaker 4 (20:12):
So I wonder why it's okay to have but which
it is. By the way, be careful. National Guard, thank
you for your service. But JD, I mean Walls served
in the National Guard. But when Bush served in the
National Guard, that was terribly It was only in the
national Guard. Why did he try to dodge fighting in
the war and blah blah bla blah blah blah blah.
I don't know. It's just listen, there's there's different sets

(20:33):
of rules for different sets of people depending on well,
we're not even talking.

Speaker 2 (20:37):
About different sets of rules.

Speaker 1 (20:38):
We're talking about actively lying about what you did in
the service. And that's what Walls well, at least it
was outrageous statement that he made. It's not Ragi's statement
that sergate just made.

Speaker 5 (20:46):
Well.

Speaker 4 (20:46):
At least Walls didn't leave a baron Central Park.

Speaker 2 (20:48):
That's true.

Speaker 1 (20:49):
And speaking about regeous statements, one of my favorite rageious
statements from this past week, I know you like it,
and that's speaker Nancy Pelosi on CBS. She thinks there
needs to be a face added to Mount Rushmore. Guess
who's cut number ten?

Speaker 4 (21:04):
Please?

Speaker 21 (21:05):
So he wasn't a good place to make whatever decision
to the top of his game. Such a consequential president
of the United States, a Mount Rushmore kind of president
of the United States.

Speaker 2 (21:17):
You want to know what comes next that he belongs
up there on Mount Rushmore. Lincoln and Joe Biden.

Speaker 21 (21:25):
But you got Teddy Roosevelt up there, and he's wonderful.
I don't say take him down, but you can add Biden.

Speaker 4 (21:31):
Even Leslie stall had to stop the bus. Hey, hold on, wow, wow,
look it. I don't First of all, I don't think
there needs to be any more faces on Mount Rushmore.

Speaker 2 (21:41):
I think we're done.

Speaker 4 (21:42):
However, if there was a major push to put another
face on Mount Rushmore, he'd be further down the list.
I'm sure, not at the bottom. There's plenty of presidents
who don't deserve to be up there.

Speaker 1 (21:51):
But maybe you put the first black president up there.
Maybe you put Obama up there. If you're going to
add I don't want anybody added to Mount.

Speaker 4 (21:57):
Rushmore, right, don't either.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
But if you're going to.

Speaker 1 (21:59):
Add somebody, yeah, Biden is not the guy that would
be added.

Speaker 2 (22:02):
Let's just put it that way. You know, maybe if
you're going.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
To maybe add two more but put Reagan and Obama
up there, or you know, let's not put anybody and
just make everybody. But oh my god, if there's anything
that speaks to Nancy Pelosi having so being so partisan
that that she's nonsensical, that is the perfect that is
the perfect cut to make.

Speaker 4 (22:23):
Yeah, we got we got way more people. We get
add if we're going to add, which we shouldn't do anyway.

Speaker 1 (22:27):
Yeah, And speaking of progressives to the point where they
can't see straight, I want to play for you a
member of the squad.

Speaker 2 (22:34):
Corey Bush.

Speaker 1 (22:35):
Congressman Corey Bush lost her primary and she.

Speaker 2 (22:38):
Is really, truly, truly pissed off.

Speaker 1 (22:42):
I mean, she is so angry that the people would
have the nerve not to vote for her. Well, I'll
let you, I'll let her tell you exactly what she
plans to do about it.

Speaker 2 (22:51):
Cut twenty four A.

Speaker 22 (22:53):
Don't have some strings that I have attached it. As
much as I love my job, but all they did
was Radicalismia so noting.

Speaker 1 (23:03):
Dear free Hey, pet.

Speaker 22 (23:06):
I'm coming to tell your king I'm down and let
me put all of these corporations. Don't notice I'm coming
after you too.

Speaker 4 (23:16):
Oh my god, I thought I thought the hold one.
I thought I've been hearing from uh from from Democrats
mainly for so long about threats and everything else and
how they and you know what, the rights threatening people threatening.
You can't threaten people.

Speaker 1 (23:31):
And that was so bad that a White House Press
Secretary Coarine Jean Pierre actually came out and castigated her
for her language, which I give her credit for and
the White House because exactly right, they've been going on
about but this is divisive.

Speaker 2 (23:46):
You can't say that.

Speaker 1 (23:47):
And then you have this woman, you know, basically saying
that she's going to tear everything down, and KGP is like, okay,
cut twenty five please.

Speaker 23 (23:55):
So look, the President has always been very clear and
very recently after the assassination attempt of the last president
about lowing rhetoric, right, lowing political rhetoric, and the importance
of doing that. It is important, important that we be
very mindful of what we say. This kind of rhetoric

(24:17):
is inflammatory and defsive and incredibly unhelpful. And look, we're
going to continue to condemn any type of political rhetoric
in that way, in that vein, and so it is
important to be mindful in what we say and how
we say it, but we cannot have this type of inflammatory,

(24:39):
divisive language in our political discourse.

Speaker 4 (24:43):
Good for her, good well, a couple of things good
for her, except and it jumped out at me, and
it always jumps out at me. It's not just Korean
Jean Pierre who does that. Other people do it still
as well. But she refers to Donald Trump, who was
shot at as the last president or whatever. They never
mentioned his name, and by the way, she says, you know,

(25:06):
what you say matters, and blah blah blanca goes not
to say that, you know when you say the former
president or when they used to refer to the occupant
of the White House or the guy who was here
before or yeah, that to me does speak volumes that
you're disrespecting not just the person. Look, you cannot like
Donald Trump, but the office itself. Look, former President Carter

(25:28):
is in hospice care, not the guy who was president
back in the light seven days. Words do matter. She's right,
words matter, and when you talk that way, I think
it says something. So I'm glad she said what she said,
But she should have said the assassination attempt on former
President Trump or Donald Trump or call him Trump or whatever.
But they never mentioned his name because they hate him

(25:49):
so much. However, the other thing, too, is which I
thought was amusing as a guy who's done audio in
his life, Corey Bush was so loud she kept cutting
the mics out and that was her.

Speaker 2 (26:02):
The mics went.

Speaker 4 (26:03):
Right, it was over modulated. She's screaming and by the way,
that's kind of on her sound guy, but she's you know, look,
when you're speaking into a microphone, this is a little
advice for anybody doing it. Keep you can raise your voice,
step away, keep it moderated, or write or step back
or move away. Yeah, okay, So a little bit of
advice there, because that was annoying. As an audio person,
that was But I do.

Speaker 1 (26:23):
Appreciate the fact that the White House came out and
said that was bad. I do, and because President Biden
has made a big deal out of device of speech,
and I think that was the appropriate thing for the
White House to do in that particular instance.

Speaker 2 (26:35):
And speaking of President.

Speaker 1 (26:36):
Biden, the current president, what mean the current president and president. Yeah,
we like to end each week with the Biden Is
and this is a strange one. He the President has
done an interview with CBS this morning which is not
going to air for a couple of weeks. But they
let one question out and Robert Costa is the is

(26:56):
the interviewer, and he asked the president, President Biden, and
if he is confident of a peaceful transfer of power
in twenty twenty five. President Biden gives a Freudian slip
and see if you can catch it, cut one bee.

Speaker 15 (27:10):
Are you confident that there will be a peaceful transfer
of power in January twenty twenty five if Trump wins.

Speaker 16 (27:20):
No, I'm not confident at all.

Speaker 4 (27:22):
I mean, if Trump loses, I'm not confident at all.

Speaker 16 (27:25):
He means what he says. We don't take them seriously.
He means it. All the stuff about if we lose
there'll be a bloodbath is have to be a stolen.
Look what they're trying to do now in the local
election districts where people count the votes they're elected, they're
putting people in place in states that they're going to
count the votes.

Speaker 2 (27:43):
Right, okay.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
And in case you didn't catch it, so he starts
with saying, if Trump wins, there will not be a
peaceful transition of power. Oh my, oh my my, really,
and then he catches himself, No, no, if Trump loses,
Trump loses, then oh the horror. There are people in
place to count votes. We don't want to do that.
But why am I saying that's a Freudian slip Because
some very prominent Democrats, including Congressman Jamie Raskin, who is

(28:11):
from Maryland and who is despises President Trump, and it's
been very vocal about thinking Supreme Court needs needs to
be abolished and that Democrats need to do whatever it
takes to stop Trump from coming into power. Actually said
last February, and the audio just got out this past week.
I'm saying that Congress will stop Trump from taking office

(28:34):
even if he's chosen by the voters. Cut number one.

Speaker 12 (28:37):
See, what can be put into the Constitution can slip
away from you very quickly. And the greatest example going
on right now before our very eyes is section three
of the fourteenth Amendment, which they're just disappearing with the
magic wand as if it doesn't exist, even though it
could not be clearer what it's stating. And so you know,
they want to kick it to Congress. So it's going

(28:58):
to be up to us on January six, twenty twenty five,
to tell the rampaging Trump mobs that he's disqualified, and
then we need bodyguards for everybody in civil war conditions,
all because the nine justices, not all of them, but
these justices who have not many cases to look at
every year, not that much work to do a huge staff,

(29:21):
great protection, simply do not want to do their job
and interpret what the Great fourteenth the Mement means. And
I'm glad that Sherlin's creating her new center so we
can bring that.

Speaker 1 (29:32):
So he's saying, even if he wins, we're not gonna
let him take the seat, and that was buried when
he said that last February, but then he outcomes President
Biden this week in an interview saying, you know, with
a little Freudian slip, if Trump wins, we won't let
it happen. And then he corrected himself really quickly, because
the narrative is that Donald Trump, you know, will is

(29:54):
a threat to democracy because he won't.

Speaker 2 (29:55):
Take a loss.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
And actually it appears that's the Democrats who won't take
a loss.

Speaker 4 (29:59):
You also probably noticed it, and and former President Trump
did say the words, but Biden again took it out
of context. He didn't use the blood bath as well.

Speaker 2 (30:08):
He was talking about the automobile.

Speaker 1 (30:10):
He was talking about automobile factory. He's talking about blood
bath and the loss of union jobs in regard to factories.
He wasn't talking about a blood bathroom regard to election results.

Speaker 2 (30:19):
He was talking about jobs.

Speaker 4 (30:20):
He said blood bath. Oh my goodness, I must have
meant he was going to kill everybody.

Speaker 2 (30:24):
Yeah, so I mean so it's a misrepresentation.

Speaker 1 (30:26):
But at the same point in time, it's a little
bit of a telegraphing of what the Democrats intend to do.
And you can thank President Biden for for telegraphing that
to everybody.

Speaker 4 (30:36):
So be prepared if RFK Junior happens to win off handedly,
the bears need to be maybe bears everywhere a blood bath.

Speaker 14 (30:43):
Bears need to run with grief.

Speaker 4 (30:44):
They'll be laying in Central Park next to bicycles, which,
by the way, which actually that's not a bad thing
because there's the big push, of course to get everybody
on a bike and out of a car.

Speaker 1 (30:53):
So apparently not because if you apparently, if you ride
a bike in the park, you can be eaten by
a bear.

Speaker 4 (30:58):
So that's hit by a bear who wants Yeah, I
was trying to figure out, but the whole thing about
the He put a bike next.

Speaker 2 (31:04):
To the BENK to make it look like the bike
it hit the bear.

Speaker 4 (31:06):
Right. But here's here's my problem. I kind of I
look at it. When I think about it, I'm like, okay,
there's a bike and a bear. It almost seems like
you're making it look like the bear crashing the bike
the bike because if you if you crash into something
on a bike, even if you don't stay, you're taking
the damn bike with you. So it almost sounds like
the bear was the bike and fell off, unless.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
The bike is damaged to the point where it couldn't
be ridden and left the bike.

Speaker 4 (31:28):
That actually would be more funny. Now, just picture a
baby bear card to get you together.

Speaker 1 (31:32):
With RFK Junior. You guys can figure this out. This
is just you know, my be.

Speaker 4 (31:35):
We'll go and then we'll have a picnic with bear.

Speaker 2 (31:37):
Oh I'm okay, I'm skizing out now kill deer. Yeah, okay,
come on.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
So if you want to join Ben's picnic, you can
contact us at x on at news Byte three, or
on Facebook at news Bike. We upload a new episode
every single Monday, so check back next week and see
what new offerings we have, Well, what new kind of
meat Ben is out looking for? Have a great communisty shock.

Speaker 4 (32:01):
Call me if you hit a bear on the road.
I'm Ben Parker.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
This is News by
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