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August 20, 2025 • 31 mins
In the second hour of today's show, Ryan Schuiling has 'President Donald Trump' (Shawn Farash) on to talk about the drama surrounding his Smithsonian Museum changes.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
American exceptionalism is not It is not that we are
better people. It is not that we are superior people.
It is not that we are smarter people. It is
not that God loves us and hates everybody else. It
is not that God prefers us. It is not that

(00:24):
God doesn't prefer anybody else. American exceptionalism has nothing to
do with anything but freedom and liberty. Here is what
American exceptionalism is.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
By the way, this is one of the fundamental reasons
why I got so excited when presented with the idea
of writing a book about the truth of American history
in stages and various elements for young people.

Speaker 1 (01:01):
My book Rush Revere in the Brave Pilgrims is all
about the exceptionalism of those people. So what is it, Well,
if you know the history of the world, read your Bible,
read whatever historical account of humanity you hold here, and
what you'll read around is human tyranny. You'll read of bondage,

(01:25):
you'll read of slavery. The vast majority of the people,
the vast majority of the human beings who have lived
and breathed and walked this planet, have lived under the
tyranny of despots the vast majority.

Speaker 3 (01:44):
It isn't even close.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
The vast majority of the people of this world since
the beginning of time have never known the kind of
liberty and freedom that's taken for granted every day in
this country. Most people have lived in abject fear of
their leaders. Most people have lived in abject fear of whoever.

Speaker 3 (02:17):
Held power over them.

Speaker 1 (02:21):
Most people in the world have not had plentiful axes,
access to food.

Speaker 3 (02:27):
And clean water.

Speaker 1 (02:29):
It was a major daily undertaking for most people to
come up with just those two basic things.

Speaker 3 (02:36):
Just surviving.

Speaker 1 (02:39):
Was the primary occupation of most people in the world.
The history of the world is dictatorship, tyranny, whatever you
want to call it. Subjugation of populations long came the

(03:00):
United States of America. Pilgrims were the first to come
here seeking freedom from all of that. They were oppressed
because of their religion. They were told they had to
believe in the King and his God, whatever it was,

(03:21):
or they would be imprisoned. They led an exodus from
Europe to this country of people of the same.

Speaker 3 (03:32):
Mindset.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
They simply wanted to escape the tyranny of their ordinary lives.
This country was founded for the first time in human history,
a government and country was founded on the belief that
leaders serve the population. This country the first in history.

(03:59):
The exception, ex cept except the exception to the rule
is what American exceptionalism is. And because of this liberty
and freedom that our country exists, because the founders recognize
it comes from God. It's part of the natural yearning

(04:20):
of the human spirit. It is not granted by a government.
It's not granted by Putin, it's not granted by Obama
or any other human being. We are created with the
natural yearning to be free, and it is other men
and leaders throughout human history who have suppressed that and
imprisoned people for seeking it. The US is the first
time in the history of the world where a government

(04:43):
was organized with a constitution laying out the rules that
the individual was supreme dominant, and that is what led
to the US becoming the greatest country ever because it
unleashed people to be the best they could be, unlike
it had ever happened. That's a American exceptionalism. Putin doesn't
know what it is. Obama doesn't know what it is,

(05:05):
and it just got trashed in the New York Times.

Speaker 3 (05:07):
It's just unacceptable to the courage to the talent to
succeed Brush Funy. Yes, remembering Rush on this national radio day,
the man who started it all in talk radio. He
is the alpha and I'm just in pursuit of the
omega on his behalf, carrying the torch, doing what I can,
the little part that I can to shine my candle

(05:30):
compared to the blow torch that he had right here
on Ryan Schulding Live along with your text at five seven,
seven thirty nine. What are your takeaways from what Rush
has said? And it stands the test of time. And
yes he made those comments during the Obama administration, but
he mentioned Putin. And you know who understands more than
probably anybody else what American exceptionalism is, and that is

(05:53):
President Donald J. Trump. He's lived it, He's experienced it.
He has spearheaded that app for it as a venture capitalist,
as a real estate mogul, as a negotiator the art
of the deal, as somebody who built not just a business,
not just success, but a brand, the Trump brand worldwide.

(06:16):
People they kind of dismiss this. They look at all
the theatrics, some of the over the top comments and behavior,
the bombastic nature of Donald Trump, himself. But the thing
I always keep in mind that I know most of
you do as well, is He's always been that way.
But you can argue that that is integral to Donald

(06:37):
Trump's success is his pursuit of excellence, his demand for excellence,
his recognition of excellence in what this country stands for,
what it means, and what it represents. And that is why,
unlike some conservative commentators who won off the deep end,
so called conservative Bill Crystal, George Will, there are others.

(07:01):
If you remember correctly, Rush Limbaugh was lockstep with Donald Trump,
even as unorthodox as he was not a true conservative,
which Russian and Boy believe was in large part. But
what Rush was anticipating was this movement mattered what Donald
Trump was saying, what he was doing. The bull in

(07:22):
a China shop of an establishment Republican party that had
become stale to a disaffected middle class, working class, blue
collar America. In Flyover Country, most people felt there wasn't
anybody in the fight for them. The Democrats had left
them behind. They became coastal liberal elites, going to their
cocktail parties, living it up among the muckety muck, and

(07:45):
they felt establishment Republicans like Mitt Romney were out of
touch and didn't care about people like them. And then
along came Donald Trump, and now he's making waves by
saying the Smithsonian is out of control, that everything discussed
is how horrible our country is, how bad slavery was,

(08:06):
how unaccomplished the downtroden have been, and nothing about success,
nothing about brightness, nothing about the future. Now he capitalizes
each of those words in this post. He does that
from time to time, the random capitalization success, brightness, future.
When a foreigner goes to one of our museums, should
they be constantly reminded of the perils of slavery and

(08:26):
the darkness that it created and that which we had
to overcome with our own American Civil War, the bloodiest
conflict this nation has ever fought in. It should not
be excluded. That's not the point. And that's the extreme
position that liberals will have you believe that those of
us on the right want to maintain and then there's
nothing further from the truth. You tell that as part

(08:48):
of the story, but that does not define us. And
you know who agrees, and he's probably in trouble right now.
It's going to surprise you. Maybe a little bit. How
about Tony Docopil, CBS News, no conservative. He gets into
a sticky wicket right here, pushing back on the criticism
of Trump, saying the Smithsonian focus is too much on slavery.

(09:08):
American history shouldn't be a thing of reverence.

Speaker 4 (09:10):
The country's not above critique, but we shouldn't look at
our history with contempt either, And I think there is some.

Speaker 3 (09:15):
Room for a correction back toward the middle.

Speaker 4 (09:17):
And in fact, you know Lonnie Bunch who heads the Smithsonian,
and Donald Trump and is a job in a letter,
they are saying quite the same things. The mission of
the Smithsonian is a forged a shared history, a shared future,
not just context, but hope to lead the country and
communities together. That's essentially the same language that Donald Trump
is offering here.

Speaker 3 (09:37):
And I do think there's room to say in American
history what you are describing, that process of a journey
toward greatness is very real, and.

Speaker 4 (09:45):
We all have something to be incredibly proud of it.

Speaker 3 (09:47):
You'll talk about overseas. Oh, I think the world and
its people.

Speaker 4 (09:50):
If you ask, if you ask someone, is the world
that it's people better off because of the existence of
America and its people.

Speaker 3 (09:58):
To me, the answer is unquestionably yes, yes. So I
think we were walking to the Smithsonian.

Speaker 4 (10:02):
When they walk out of it, they should get some
sense of that, Yes.

Speaker 3 (10:06):
We shouldn't whitewash who we are and where we came.
I don't think they have to, and so that conversation
needs to and we continuously get better.

Speaker 5 (10:17):
I don't think I think they want to go through
the exhibits and decide. I hope that they will take
historians and experts who know exactly what it means, because
I don't think there's been an over correction. I think
it's just putting out a history that that's all part
of who we are.

Speaker 3 (10:31):
This conversation is so healthy and so.

Speaker 4 (10:33):
Good, and we're having it on the two hunred and
fiftieth anniversary of the country.

Speaker 3 (10:35):
It's wonderful. It's wonderful. Well, he's right, and Tony is
spot on with his comments there. I was shocked to
hear it from him and pleasantly surprised, and of course
you get well, we can't ignore we can't stop talking
about it, can we, Though not that we ever stop entirely.
It's part of the story of this country. But you
put it in context. Historical context, of course, slavery and

(11:00):
twenty twenty five through our lens, what the hell were
they thinking? It's evil, it's wrong. We know that. That's
two hundred and fifty years of progress and evolution in
the American spirit, in the American consciousness. It was not
even one hundred years later that the Civil War occurred
and that this matter was decided. Now, the solution was

(11:23):
not rendered immediately, far from it total acknowledgment of that
through reconstruction. The South continued to try it to exact
some kind of discriminatory laws against Black Americans, former slaves
now freedmen and freed women, and denying them their rights
to vote, poll taxes, Jim Crow laws, fear intimidation. The

(11:46):
KKK was birthed out of that philosophy by Southern Democrats
to keep Black Americans subjugated in the South in some way.
And it was but through the efforts of Congressional Republicans
in nineteen sixty four and sixty five that they cajoled
President Lyndon Baines Johnson to get this thing across the

(12:09):
finish line. And he had nefarious motives of his own,
very cynical ones, and Nick Ferguson and I talk about
that all the time. Where do you come down on
this five seven seventy three nine, Let's get some texts.
Ryan almost teared up a bit hearing Rush's voice again.
He has truly missed Ryan, I really miss Rush. Yeah,

(12:32):
Stephen Littleton retired, Ellio, thank you for starting to remember
Rush segments. You know, it brings him back to life
in a way that's kind of cosmic. I mean, Kelly,
you sit there and listen and for a moment you
forget that he's gone, and in reality he's not. And
we're going to revisit this on a weekly basis because
Rush had so much to teach us. And don't forget

(12:52):
the Rush Revere books that he was talking about For kids.
This is a real way to learn about American history,
a real great way to learn about American history. Ryan,
you should see if Sean Ferrish could join your show
like Trump did for Howard Stern. Every couple of weeks.
I forgot to ask if you can imitate Howard Stern.
If I could, I wouldn't at this point because I

(13:15):
don't know. I just feel sad that he's become a
shell of the former man. We thought he was. But
interesting that you mentioned Sean Ferrish. Little did you know
he's coming up in a little over ten minutes, So
stay tuned for that. Petty Patty, she's ready gloves her off,
ran Let's look at what Trump wants with the museums
in a personal way. Who would put a welcome mat

(13:36):
outside the front door that said something like, welcome to
the home of a divorced gossip who needs to call
their grandparents more, has thirty thousand dollars in credit card
debt and should really try better to give more than
sixty percent at work. That is very specific, Petty Patty.
I think you might have someone in mind. That's true.
I'm not here, the guy said in a whitewasher history,

(13:58):
of course not. Don't make that ridiculous extreme argument. That's
not the point, and they're trying to drive you off
of the point. They cannot lose this as an issue
to divide America. Ask yourself this question, not that is
America the greatest nation in the world. I believe that.
But that's even more extreme than I'm going to ask.

(14:19):
And it's going to be revealing if we just issued
this poll question. Gallup or whoever else Is America great?
Is the United States of America great? You ask Republicans
that question, I guarantee you it'd be at least ninety
percent who say yes. You ask Democrats that question the

(14:41):
present day, Kelly, would it break thirty percent that would
believe America is great? The United States? This country is great? No,
I don't think so either. I think it'd be somewhere
in that twenty to thirty percent range.

Speaker 6 (14:52):
Shall have that that maybe twenty five percent.

Speaker 3 (14:54):
Whatever endangered so called moderate classical liberal Democrats are left.
There aren't many, and a lot of that's going to
be Trump. Oh, it is not great as long as
that orse Fan's president, and that's going to be there out.
But no, no, no, in the full context of history,
take Trump out of it. Is America great? Was our

(15:15):
founding a signature moment in world history, demonstrating greatness and
what was possible as a standard bearer and a beacon
of light, hope, and freedom for the world, as Rush
Limbaugh told us, as Ronald Reagan told us, as Donald
Trump is attempting to tell us again. But the left
is pushing back on that. They don't want you to

(15:37):
think America is great because if you do, you're going
to acknowledge that they don't have a leg to stand on.
This country is not as bad as they're making it
out to be. It's not perfect. We have problems. There's
a lot of division in our country, and you might
think that Donald Trump is contributing to that, but he's
dominating the conversation. CNN is all over this and it's

(15:57):
one of two parts here. The other one we'll get
into Shan Fairy after the break, and that is Donald
Trump declaring an a radio interview that Mettan Yaho Benjamin Netanyah,
who is a war hero, and I guess I am too,
oh boy crying. Adamkinzinger had something to say about that,
and we'll have President Trump in quotes coming up after

(16:21):
the break to respond to it. Your text is well
five seven, seven thirty nine. If you've got a question
for the President, you'd like me to ask him? Stick
and stay for that reason enough to stay tuned, Zach
Seegers Kelly could share. I'm Ryan Schuling. All of you listening,
thanks for tuning in to Ryan Schuling Live.

Speaker 7 (16:44):
The President was and he was talking about the Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Ntya, who when he said something that
I have to.

Speaker 3 (16:50):
Play for you.

Speaker 5 (16:50):
You've got to hear this.

Speaker 8 (16:53):
He's a war hero because we worked together. He's a
war hero. I guess I am too.

Speaker 3 (16:59):
Nobody shares with I am too.

Speaker 9 (17:00):
I mean I said those plans.

Speaker 3 (17:02):
Well. Trump driving the news cycle per usual with Aaron
Burnett and CNN, and she brings on crying Adam Kinsinger,
did he get a little weepy? Did he get a
little emotional here in responding to this? He got a
little worked up? But listen for a tier, maybe a
single one right down his left cheek. Yeah, I mean, look,
this is just nuts.

Speaker 10 (17:20):
This is nuts, and they're gonna find his people are
gonna find a way to justify this.

Speaker 3 (17:24):
Listen, when they.

Speaker 10 (17:25):
Were putting out a something honoring the Army's two hundred
and fiftieth anniversary, they put out a picture of Donald
Trump in his military academy uniform, which has nothing to
do with the military except they drill you.

Speaker 3 (17:38):
This is nuts. He's not a war hero. You can
like what he's done, that's fine.

Speaker 10 (17:42):
I hope he gets a resolution in Ukraine, But.

Speaker 6 (17:45):
To put himself on the same level of people that
had actually gone out and served this country not claimed
bone spurs is an offense to anybody who served. And frankly,
you just take somebody that served calling themselves a war hero.
Even that would be inappropriate for a guy that never
served to say it.

Speaker 3 (18:05):
It's nuts. But somebody they'll defend it. They'll find a way.
Former Illinois congressman and former Republican I like to say,
Adam Kinzinger there joining us now to respond, We're honored
to have President Donald J. Trump on the line with
us here on Ryan Schuling Live. Mister President, thank you
for your time.

Speaker 11 (18:19):
As always, well, we're very happy to be here to
tell you. You know, it's not often that I get
to get the opportunity in the great state of Colorado.
You know, your fat governor's a disgrace, sees really he's
got a lot of problems, including an eating problem. But
you hear crying Adam Kinsinger, he's a crime aby, he's

(18:40):
a loser and a third rate person right at a slob.
And I'll tell you something else too.

Speaker 8 (18:46):
You look at him, and he's got a really bloated
face nowadays.

Speaker 9 (18:50):
I think he's been drinking.

Speaker 8 (18:51):
So hopefully he stops doing that and he can get
his act together because quite frankly, it's disgusting.

Speaker 3 (18:58):
Mister President, I want to give you a chance to
band and explain what you meant by saying that Benjamin Etya,
who the Prime Minister of Israel, is a war hero,
and that you guess you are too. How would you
define a war hero and how would you fit into
that definition?

Speaker 8 (19:12):
Well, you know, first of all, bb Littnia, who's doing
a tremendous job. You know, he's taking out a lot
of terrorists, he's giving a lot of beautiful orders.

Speaker 9 (19:21):
And I would say, you know, he launched the offensive
on Iran.

Speaker 8 (19:24):
He wanted to take out their nuclear and he couldn't
do that, so we dropped what's called a bunker buster
on them, which was a thirty thousand pound bomb otherwise
known as Stacy Abrams right, the Beasts of the Southeast.
But you know, in terms of my heroics, everybody knows it,
everybody's seen it. I fought very well with George Washington

(19:46):
at the American Revolution.

Speaker 9 (19:48):
I gotta look very well with George.

Speaker 8 (19:50):
I even got along well with Bennedett Arnold until he
decided he was going to fight for the other guys.
But I got along very well with George. I got
along very well with.

Speaker 9 (20:01):
General Gates.

Speaker 8 (20:02):
These are tremendous people. And then of course Ulysses at
scrant great guy in the Civil War. So I got
along well with all of these people. These are all
great people. And so I've had my own heroics. You know,
I single handedly stopped pickets charge in Gettysburg.

Speaker 9 (20:19):
So you look at it.

Speaker 8 (20:21):
I've done a lot for this country, and we're going
to continue to do a lot. By the way, I'm
also very heroic for what I did. I sat down
with Putner and not a single journalist was harmed. You know.
They were shouting questions at him, and he said to me, sir,
this is why I killed the journalists. I said, no,
we're not going to do that. We can't do that
in our country.

Speaker 9 (20:42):
So we saved a bunch of the fake news too.
So they owe me their lives.

Speaker 3 (20:46):
President Donald J. Trump, as you can hear joining us,
and I want to go back to that, mister President,
because you have averaged about one piece deal in stopping
a war per month of your presidency, and this one
would be the crowning achievement, to stop war in Ukraine,
to stop the Russian aggression, to reach some kind of
deal and compromise. But I want you to hear how

(21:07):
the BBC characterized the welcome of Vladimir Putin in Anchorage, Alaska.

Speaker 12 (21:12):
Signs of respect right being paid to the Russian president.
It's quite remarkable how things have changed. Three and a
half years ago. When that inclusion launched his so called
special military operation, the full Skid Invasion of Ukraine, he
just treated as a pariah, and now he's being given

(21:34):
this great compet welcome.

Speaker 3 (21:35):
Mis president. I'm wondering, what are they expecting you to
do in welcoming Vladimir Putin to the summit in Alaska.
Are you supposed to give them a flying elbow or something.

Speaker 8 (21:45):
Well, we rolled out the red carpet and we also
flew a beautiful B two over them. But he thought
that was tremendous. I have to say that. But we
did very well with Putin.

Speaker 3 (21:54):
We have an agreement with Putin.

Speaker 9 (21:56):
He's very happy with it. I said, if we strike
peace in Ukrain.

Speaker 8 (22:00):
And Nancy Pelosi promises to buy all of a vodka
from Russia, right, and he says, sir, that's going to
really help our economy.

Speaker 9 (22:07):
So you look at that, you know they thought we
were going to be nasty. They thought it was going
to be contentious. But I have a lot of respect
for Putiny has a lot of respect for me. I
even spoke Russian to him. I says, with Ti Vladimir right,
that means hellow in Russia, Russia, Russian.

Speaker 8 (22:22):
And he thought that was a tremendous thing to say.
And he thought that was very nice to hear. Then
you heard him speak English.

Speaker 9 (22:29):
Towards the end. He said, we'll go to Moscow. We'll
see what happens.

Speaker 8 (22:32):
I don't think that's going to happen, but we'll see
what goes up.

Speaker 9 (22:36):
But we did very well with him.

Speaker 8 (22:38):
And then we had Zalinsi on Monday, and we're getting
very close to peace.

Speaker 9 (22:42):
I can tell you that we're getting very close to peace.

Speaker 8 (22:45):
And I've ended wars all over the place Azerbaijah, and
we ended the war India and Pakistan, which I called
World War seven eleven, which a lot of people say
to me.

Speaker 9 (22:54):
Sir, you're not supposed to say that, But we pulled
it that. We got it to end.

Speaker 8 (23:02):
You know, both countries said to each other, thank you
coming again.

Speaker 9 (23:05):
We got it to end. So we've ended wars all
over the place, and a lot of people are very
happy about it.

Speaker 8 (23:11):
And we're going to end this war between Russia and
Russia and Russia and Ukraine.

Speaker 9 (23:15):
Ukraine, Ukraine.

Speaker 3 (23:16):
I can tell you that President Donald J. Trump ruinning
us here exclusively on Ryan Schuling Live and we fast
forward then passed the weekend and the Friday summit with
Leader Putin in Alaska to Washington, d C. Voladimir Zelenski
shows up in his Sunday best and he addresses the
trilateral meeting being potentially possible with Donald Trump moderating.

Speaker 13 (23:37):
We will discuss on the level of leaders during trilateral
meeting and President Trump will try to organized such meeting.

Speaker 3 (23:46):
And he said that he will come or not come.
Ukraine will be happy.

Speaker 9 (23:51):
If if you give you won't be there.

Speaker 13 (23:54):
I will be there here, thank you, And I think
this is very important. Yes, security guarantees bringing his back
and all our people, not only warriors, possible warriors, and
all the civilians, journalist, a lot of people in prison,
so we need them back, not.

Speaker 3 (24:13):
Only Zelenski, President Trump. But I was reminded when all
these European leaders came to the White House and this
photo was being taken with you in the middle, that
there was a great deal of respect shown to you,
that there was more movement toward peace, said the President
of Finland than there had been in the previous three
and a half years under Joe Biden. And I was
reminded of that famous iconic shot of you with your
arms folded in Angela Merkel leaning in along with other

(24:36):
European leaders and your sidekick, there's Shinzo Abbi having the
same posture as you. Did you feel that same dynamic
in the White House during this meeting, Well, I.

Speaker 8 (24:48):
Felt the beautiful dynamic. It's a tremendous dynamic.

Speaker 9 (24:51):
You look at it. Yeah, here's the dynamic. What it
was is I'm the boss.

Speaker 8 (24:56):
And everybody realizes that they used to come into the
White House. It was an elderly care facility, right, visiting
Angels America's place for home care is.

Speaker 9 (25:06):
What they called it. Right, That's what they called it.
And you had a president, crooked Joe who I had.

Speaker 8 (25:10):
What's called Putin with Putin, right, he had a lot
of problems when he saw let him at Putney. He
started dropping kotzeros like he did at the Vatican, which
you're not supposed to do.

Speaker 9 (25:20):
I would never do something like that. The thing news
would never let me live it down.

Speaker 8 (25:24):
By the way, if my dropped on the floor, we
would never They would never let me live it down.
But you look at what they were used to Europe.
They were used to a week president, and now they
have a strong president and.

Speaker 9 (25:39):
They know that I'm the boss. They know not to
try anything funny, no funny.

Speaker 8 (25:43):
Business, no shitananigans. And so we're not letting the shenanigans happen.
And we did very well, and the Europeans are on
their best behavior, including Georgia Maloney, who's a wonderful person.

Speaker 9 (25:55):
She does a tremendous shop.

Speaker 8 (25:57):
And e Mattuel mccron, who was also a fantastic woman.

Speaker 9 (26:01):
You know she did a great jump too, Emanuel. So
we're very proud of all of them.

Speaker 3 (26:05):
I can tell you that President Donald J. Trump joining
us here after two very important meetings, one with Vladimir
Putin and Alaska, the other with Voladimir Zelensky and leaders
of Europe in Washington, d C. Mister President, as I
mentioned off the top, you are the one driving the
news cycle once again, and you're leaving the left spinning
in reaction to this post on true Social I will

(26:26):
summarize it this way. The Smithsonian is out of control.
Where everything discussed is how horrible our country is, how
bad slavery was, and how unaccomplished the downshrodden have been.
Nothing about success, nothing about brightness, nothing about the future.
You continue, this country cannot be woke because woke is broke.
We have the hottest country in the world, and we
want people to talk about it, including in our museums.

(26:48):
Scott Jennings took up the cause for you on CNN
with this exchange, again fending off the leftists.

Speaker 7 (26:54):
Those museums like to your point, make America exceptional, and
the museums all around the world that document atrocities, whether
it be you know, from Nazi Germany to eradicating slavery
here in the United States, you have to learn the
lessons of the past, and to deny it is to
defend it.

Speaker 3 (27:10):
I don't think he's.

Speaker 14 (27:11):
Denying it, and I'm about you may want to comment
on this as well, but I think what he wants
to ask is a simple question. As we present our history,
are we spending most of our time focused on something terrible?

Speaker 3 (27:23):
Are we going to spend more.

Speaker 14 (27:24):
Time as we enter our two hundred and fiftieth anniversary,
focused on what this country has done to improve the
lives of every single person who lives here. We are
the light of the world for a reason, because we're
in improving.

Speaker 3 (27:36):
Ask when I hear you say that is why. I
mean the idea that slavery happened.

Speaker 5 (27:43):
It's hard to understand what we've overcome if you don't
even talk about what it was, you know.

Speaker 3 (27:49):
I think that that kind of waters down the whole.
I don't think.

Speaker 14 (27:51):
Anybody's proposing that we ignore that it happened.

Speaker 15 (27:54):
I think that the problem is that there are people
and Scott used the term a couple of time. I mean,
I don't think it was meant with any type of
ill intent, but he said, you know, we got over it.

Speaker 3 (28:05):
And I think that's the problem, mister President, to Scott
Jennings's point, have we gotten over slavery? Will we ever
get over it? And in your mind, what is the
Smithsonian doing wrong on this issue?

Speaker 8 (28:16):
Er, the Smithsonian is going walked right, and we don't
really want to worry about and we always look back
at slavery and we have to say that, you know,
what happened with the slaves. Was terrible and it never
would have happened if I was the president, by the way,
I never would have happened. We never would have let
it happen. But it did happen, and the people who

(28:36):
were in charge, they ought to be ashamed of themselves.
I have to say that they ought to be ashamed,
and they are ashamed, and history looks at them poorly.
But we're not a nation that was built.

Speaker 9 (28:48):
Because of disgrace.

Speaker 8 (28:50):
We got over it, and we've risen to tremendous occasions.
You know, we put a man on the moon, We've
done so many wonderful things. We won a bunch of
wars with the strongest economy, and the Smithsonian only wants
to focus.

Speaker 9 (29:03):
On the negative on the band. We're not going to
let that happen.

Speaker 8 (29:06):
We're going to have places that talk about how great
our country is, not the nasty stuff. And we could
look at the nasty and we could say that was
a bad thing, but we learned from the mistakes, and
that's the point. We learned from the mistake, and all
of those people ought to listen to that and change

(29:28):
it up with the Smithsonian and make their country look
great because they make our country look horrible, and we're
not going to tell our that.

Speaker 3 (29:34):
I'm so glad that President Donald J. Trump is in
office making America great again and joining us on this
program here today, mister President, thank you as always for
your time. We'll talk again soon.

Speaker 9 (29:45):
Thank you very much.

Speaker 8 (29:46):
And by the way, you know what I tell you,
and I heard you've been doing it a lot.

Speaker 9 (29:49):
Don't quit your day job. Okay, don't quit your day job.
You're very good at it. That's the best thing you do.

Speaker 3 (29:55):
Okay, duly noted. When the President tells you something, you
got to take that and stride. You can follow the
president also known as Sean Ferish. There I let you
off the hook at sewn Underscore Farish as s H
A w N Underscore f A R A s H
and don't forget to catch his ungoverned podcast Farishmedia dot
Com closing out Ryan Scherling live after this or it's

(30:22):
Gee broncis now a couple of texts to close out
Alexa who's now here. So this is kind of meta.
Emmanuel McCrone fantastic woman, Lol, I know, I know. The
President just told me not to quit my day job
and not to impersonate him, but I can't help it.
That was the highlight. I thought, DK and Broomfield, you're right,
World War seven eleven. They don't want me to call
it that, but that's what it was. He goes, this

(30:44):
bit is incredible. Yeah, George, do we have you fooled men?
You did?

Speaker 16 (30:50):
And I'll be honest, it's the first time I've heard
this guy who's who's a genius. But I'm like, my
mind was like, there's no way Ryan wouldn't have pumped
the hell out of this thing before it happened, Like
you don't just come in and go, hey, it's the president.
But then when he got to the part about it,
and I was with George Washington and I was like, Okay,
all right, I'm pretty sure that's not real.

Speaker 3 (31:07):
That's pretty good. Now you've got an ag story from
Rhode Island that we're going to get into good. So
it'd be fun, so fun. It's so fun to have
g Brock here. And I just hit a rumor we
might have the teaming that everybody's been waiting for. George
Brocklord twenty third Ya and Wild County Sheriff Steve Rings
on the same show for it. Five seven, seven nine,
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