Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
A man who was grossly incompetent allowed us to have
open borders where millions of people flowed in.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
I campaigned on that issue. I wouldn't say it was
my number one issue, but it was pretty clever. I
campaigned on that issue. I've done an amazing job. I
have closed borders. He said, you couldn't do it, and
you wouldn't be able to do it, it would never happen. Well,
it happened, and it happened very quickly. Wait a minute,
when we have criminals, murderers, criminals in this country, we
(00:25):
have to get them out.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
And when doing it just the tip of the iceberg
and they sit down. Interview that the President of the
United States granted to Terry Moran, ABC News, and that's
not even close to the best of it. So I
went through this entire interview, all of these exchanges, the
questions back and forth, and Terry Moran was dedicated and
(00:48):
committed to being an adversarial journalist who would counter every lie,
misstep and exaggeration of President Trump that would fact show
him on the spot and continue to go after him.
Where was this journalistic integrity and doggedness with President Biden?
(01:10):
Point one Biden, his acolytes, his handlers, his comms director,
wouldn't grant the access to the media for an interview
like this, a sit down, a sparring, one on one interview,
because he was weak, because he was feeble, because he
was senile, and we all knew it. And we're going
to get to that topic because I haven't covered it yet.
(01:32):
I can't believe I've left it till Wednesday. But folks,
I only get two hours here with you, five seven, seven,
three nine year texts, and today I have Zach for
which I am thankful. The media is its own worst enemy.
The Democrat that left in cahoots with said media its
own worst enemy. Why because they forced themselves into a
(01:54):
corner to be stuck with an incompetent dummy who had
lost his mind and faculties Joe Biden as their candidate
until it was too late.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
This is why it's.
Speaker 1 (02:06):
Important to step out of your echo chambers and challenge yourselves.
Speaker 2 (02:11):
I do this every day so you don't have to
in some ways.
Speaker 1 (02:15):
Because I have to go through cuts of the view
and I don't like doing it, but I do it
because you want that oppo research, you want that scouting
report of what the other side is thinking. You want
to step outside of your own cauldron of beliefs and
thinking and consider it, Well, how is this being perceived
from the other side? Democrats, the left, they don't do it.
(02:39):
They inculcate themselves in these echo chambers on college campuses,
in entertainment and Hollywood. That's why we have the Right
Side of Hollywood every Friday at two pm Christian Toto
Debrah Flora, because we provide that outside, different, third party
perspective that is not immersed on the inside. Culture. And
(02:59):
you can't spell culture without cult.
Speaker 2 (03:02):
You got it.
Speaker 1 (03:04):
Side note, just for a moment. I hate it when
a new coach is hired. Could be college, could be pro,
could be high school. And the first thing the coach
says in the press coff, We're going to create a
new culture around here. I'm going to create a new
winning culture. No, I don't want a culture. I don't
want to cult. I want a system. I want a
way of doing things. I want a meritocracy. I want boundary, standards, guidelines, guardrails, principles, consequences, rewards.
(03:35):
You know, you want to have an incentive structure when
you set up shop and create your own program that
used culture. It's so cliche at this point, but it's a.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Shell of its former. Meaning.
Speaker 1 (03:49):
What I'm getting at with politics is the left's culture
cult is its own worst enemy. They cannot get out
of their own way. I don't have a problem with
a Terry Moran of ABC News or a Kyle Clark
of nine News sitting down Moran with Trump, or let's
say Kyle Clark with Representative Lauren Bobert and having a confrontational,
(04:13):
adversarial exchange that is well informed that does a service for.
Speaker 2 (04:17):
The viewer or listener.
Speaker 1 (04:19):
But the same rigor is not applied to the Left
because they have a horse in the race. That is
not true journalism, that is advocacy. Now, some will say, well, Ryan,
you do that every day in the show. Yes, and
I admit it to you. I have an editorial point
of view. I have a political belief structure. I've roughly
(04:43):
mapped it out as one third conservative, one third libertarian,
one third populist. It's not exactly those numbers, but we'll
go with that as a rough sketch. But I am
up front and I tell you things as I see them,
and I try to channel it time the great Maha
Rushi Rush Limbaugh and tell you.
Speaker 3 (05:03):
The way things ought to be as I see them
doesn't mean I'm right.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
In fact, I challenge you to challenge me, whether it's
in a text or doing your own research, watching your
own sources, consuming that outside media, and then coming back
to me with your formulated responses. Because what we conduct
here on a daily basis is an exercise in the
freedom of thought expression, investigative intuitive self information and relying
(05:37):
upon your own perceptions of the world, your own gathering
of that information, your own synthesis of that information.
Speaker 2 (05:44):
Why so you can think for yourselves.
Speaker 1 (05:48):
If I'm making a powerful enough argument, if I'm backing
it up with facts and figures and stats and case evidence,
then that should be enough to prove it on its own.
If it's not, then I have failed, and I admit that,
and I'll acknowledge.
Speaker 2 (06:04):
That, and I will own that.
Speaker 1 (06:06):
But the media cannot be honest with themselves about the
role they have played in the disinformation distrust that the
public feels in them. They are unfixable, they are oriented
to the left. They have not been doing a very
good job of even hiding that. They used to be
pretty good at hiding it. Through the sixties, seventies, eighties,
(06:29):
even the nineties, Walder Cronkite was a trusted deliverer of
the news. But it was Rush Limbaugh who first pointed
out Walder Cronkite is a liberal and he is was
Dan rather, Tom Brokaw, Peter Jennings that era of newsman
on the three major news networks. Every single night you
(06:50):
go there, you watch the evening news. It was app
your local news. It would air most of the time
I think six thirty PM at least an Eastern time zone.
Speaker 2 (06:57):
That's where we would watch it.
Speaker 1 (06:58):
And you would say, well, this is being presented to
me in a pretty even handed way.
Speaker 2 (07:03):
I'll make up my own mind.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
We play that highlight clip of Joe Biden dropping out
of the nineteen eighty eight race in disgrace because he
had plagiarized Neil Kinnick. The media was all over him,
including members of the left like Sam Donaldson. I love
Sam Donaldson. He was aggressive, he was annoying, he was abrasive,
and he was awesome, all four of those a's, and
(07:25):
he was something else that was an A. I can't
say it on the air, but President Reagan enjoyed engaging
with Sam Donaldson because Donaldson was a true old school
journalist and he would confront Bill Clinton the exact same way,
even if he agreed with Bill Clinton politically. Now, Zach,
(07:48):
I want you to take a stab at this. It's
just a guess. It's just a theory. So I went
through this interview and I have constructed for you editions
of Trump's hot take and Zach, if you could venture
and hazard a guess how many installments of Trump's hot
takes was able to compile from that Terry Moran interview
(08:09):
with Donald Trump.
Speaker 2 (08:11):
Just take a guess. Seven.
Speaker 1 (08:14):
You know, I could have made it seven, but I
wanted to consolidate them so I could play them all
in one show. It's four, and you will hear them
coming back from every break in this program, including the
next one and the one after that, and the one
at the bottom of the hour and hour two, and
the one coming back for the final segment of hour two.
(08:35):
You have four of them to look forward to, and
they run the gamut.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
President Trump shines.
Speaker 1 (08:42):
And as we had President Trump in quotes on this
program yesterday, and I know some of you were annoyed.
Mandy Connell texted me. We had an incident the week
before when Sean Ferrish appeared as President Trump with me
while I was filling in for the Ross Kaminski show
over there on KOA, and there was some vice president
(09:04):
of news stationed in Phoenix, Arizona that somehow caught wind
that I was doing this interview and called Kathy Walker,
who went storming into the KOA control room for Dragon,
say that really Donald Trump.
Speaker 2 (09:18):
I was Ryan. I got texts from.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
Listeners over there that aren't familiar with my stick, my bit,
the things that I do here, because comedy is a
big part of what we're trying to do. We want
to make this fun, we want to make this enjoyable.
You remember, I think it was Paul Shanklin who used
to write the songs for Rush Limbaugh's program that were hilarious.
They were awesome and it kept you coming back for more.
(09:41):
And what I did over there was introduced the segment,
and I didn't want to, you know, dampen the bit
by coming right on say you know, this isn't really
Donald Trump, but we're gonna pretend anyway.
Speaker 2 (09:53):
No, you jump into it.
Speaker 1 (09:55):
You do what I call commit to the bit, commit
to the bit right up, I'm the straight man. Sean
Ferrish is cutting it up as President Trump, and his
impersonation is scary.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
It's that good. It's spot on, it's that good.
Speaker 1 (10:09):
It is the best Donald Trump I've ever heard or
ever seen.
Speaker 2 (10:13):
Because Sean two things.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
He comes from Long Island, so he's got the accent
built in as a rock foundation of the Trump impression,
and he does it with love and affection, not ignoring
Trump's flaws and faults and exaggerations of bravadal.
Speaker 2 (10:30):
That's all part of it.
Speaker 1 (10:31):
This is the thing I can't really communicate with liberals,
and I'm sad for them that they can't connect the
way that maybe you and I can. That they fail
to see the humor in Trump that they don't want
to because if they admit that, if they admit that
he's funnier than hell, then they admit that he's human
and relatable, and they can't do that because he's the Boogeyman, he's.
Speaker 2 (10:52):
An orange man, bad, he's Hitler.
Speaker 1 (10:54):
But they can't square those things because they know, they
know deep down in the place they don't want to
talk about a dark spot, a corner of their ethos,
of their personality of their existence.
Speaker 2 (11:08):
They know Donald Trump is funny.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
They know that he's an effective communicator the likes of
which we haven't seen, probably comparable to Ronald Reagan in
that way, his ability to connect, to relate, to engage
in humor. But also he comes with a much sharper
edge than Ronald Reagan ever did. Now, Reagan had his moments,
and he could be sharp, and he's an all time
great president everything else, performer. He was a performer in
(11:34):
the role Trump is too. But what Donald Trump does
is he uses a rhetorical method device style that we've
never seen before. He is a brawler, He is a ballbuster.
He takes no prisoners, He gives zero f's. He tells
you exactly what's.
Speaker 2 (11:54):
On his mind.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
And I know when I'm saying these things, most of
you out there are not and going, yes, this is
what I love about the man. Absolutely, It's going to
come with drawbacks, setbacks, one step back, two steps forward.
Speaker 2 (12:07):
Stick with the script, stay on message, stick with.
Speaker 1 (12:12):
The program through all of this, the peaks and valleys
in the stock market.
Speaker 2 (12:18):
Hold on, just hold on.
Speaker 1 (12:21):
Trump's coming and this is going to work out in
the end. His long view of what he's trying to
do and how he's trying to do it is going
to work. And the reason I know that, and the
reason I believe that now more than I ever have before,
was punctuated by his performance last night. He was rocking
and rolling and ready to rumble. He was engaged with
(12:43):
Terry Moran, and he was not letting go. He was
dictating the direction of that interview. Much as Moran might try.
He failed. He tried to take it off in several directions.
But Donald Trump enlisted the strategy that the aforementioned Rush
Limbaugh always advocated. Do not grant them the premise of
(13:06):
their question. You grant them the premise you've given up
the game and now you're playing by their rules.
Speaker 2 (13:12):
Don't do it because they're going to come at you
in a very dishonest way.
Speaker 1 (13:18):
This is where one of the things that I take
away from all of this that saddens me the most
is I would have been fascinated to hear many more
conversations between Rush and Donald Trump.
Speaker 2 (13:29):
Rush, of course, was an expert. He was a master of.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
This craft and the ability to analyze media, to break
it down, to tear it apart, to expose it.
Speaker 2 (13:41):
For what it was. And Donald Trump.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
Knows, having gone through this now for ten years as
a political figure, he knows the game and he knows
how it's rigged against him. He uses that word a
lot when it comes to elections, but it comes to
the media. The media is rigged. It absolutely is. That's
what makes a show like this important because I'm one
of the only clarion voices out there that is standing up,
(14:05):
and there are many, but I'm one of them to
say no, don't believe what they're telling you. Don't just
eat what they're spoon feeding you, which is tripe, which
is garbage. Look out for yourselves, think for yourselves. If
something doesn't seem right to you, and your spidey senses
are activated, you're probably right and you should trust those instincts.
(14:30):
And I think people are more alert and aware and activated.
Could be red pilled, could be black pilled. There's a
difference between those two terms. Black pilled is you don't
believe in anything anymore and everything's a lie and you're
just not gonna you know. I think to a degree
that might sum up a Joe Rogan to it, but
he ended up supporting Trump. I think Bill Maher is
(14:52):
now in that camp of being black pilled. Now, none
of this makes sense. You guys are nuts. I'm not
going to be a conservative. I'm not going to support Trump,
but I'll have dinner with the man. I'll talk about
the issues of the day with him. Think about that
Kid Rock, who's awesome. He just set up a Detroit
fiend restaurant in Nashville.
Speaker 2 (15:10):
I gotta go. He's my guy, Kid Rock. As you
are well aware.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
He was on with Jesse Waters last night and Jesse
Waters was asking him about the first hundred days of
the Trump two point zero administration, and one of the
things that Kid Rock brought up was the dinner that
he brokeered. He's the one that arranged this for Bill
Maher to sit down Donald Trump. Now these two loathed
one another, tossed insults at one another. There was a
(15:36):
lawsuit against mar by Trump based on some depiction of Trump.
Speaker 2 (15:42):
I mean, there was bad blood there.
Speaker 1 (15:45):
But Bill Maher brought a list of insults that his
staff had compiled and printed out.
Speaker 2 (15:50):
He brought that to the White House.
Speaker 1 (15:52):
He presented it to Donald Trump and asked him to
sign it, and Donald Trump did.
Speaker 2 (15:56):
That's the thing about Donald Trump deep down a good guy.
Speaker 1 (16:01):
Yeah, he's a little too concerned with whether or not
people like him, but there is a big.
Speaker 2 (16:06):
Part of him that wants to be liked.
Speaker 1 (16:07):
He doesn't want to be a super villain or whatever
he's being accused of. He loves it when people laugh
at him or get along with him. He's a charmer.
His charisma's off the charts, and he charmed Bill Maher.
He charmed Bill Maher that night in the White House
over dinner, and Bill Maher, to his credit, was honest
about the exchange and found Trump to be warm and
(16:28):
engaging and not this boogeyman super villain that the left.
Speaker 2 (16:32):
Is trying to portray him as.
Speaker 1 (16:33):
Now, that doesn't mean that Bill Maher can't attack Trump
on policy or principle. That's fine, have that discussion, have
that argument, let those criticisms fly. But when you engage
in the exaggerated, cartoonish caricature of Trump as he's hitler,
all of us who supported him are Nazis. J. D.
Speaker 2 (16:54):
Pritzker's gone back down this road. By now.
Speaker 1 (16:56):
It's not only white noise. But people don't believe it.
They hear They're like, no, I know a Trump supporter
he lives right down the street. He's a great guy.
He helps me with my lawns. Sometimes when you actually
engage in conversations with people, you find out they're not
the margins or the extremes that are being painted about them.
(17:16):
I try to make an effort to have conversations with
people in this business in circles where I operate that
are left of center, and if they're willing to be
a Bill Maher and to have that broader discussion and
not immediately dismiss me out of hand, I'm willing to
have that conversation. But you got to come to the
(17:38):
table with all your cards on it and be honest
about who you are and where you come from. And
this is why, for instance, we make fun of Kyle
Clark on the show. He was just done with Ross Kaminsky.
If Comrade Kyle came right out and said, look, I'm
a dedicated leftist, I'm a liberal. You know, this is
who I am, this is my editorial point of view,
this is what I bring to the broadcast.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
I understand that it'll be in large part to a big.
Speaker 1 (18:02):
Demographic and cross section of the viewers. And why I
get ratings is in the Denver Boulder Corridor. I'm not
suggesting even that Kyle doesn't really believe these things. I
believe that he does, but it plays to an audience
that is thirsty and hungry for what he's got to
serve up. The only difference is he's trying to ostensibly
(18:22):
present it as journalism when in.
Speaker 2 (18:24):
Most cases it's not.
Speaker 1 (18:26):
Now when it is full credit to him, and he
does this at times, it's just if he had the
gusto for figures of the left. He just did a
sit down interview, I believe, or at least it was
over video. I saw this with John Hickenlooper, and I
think he was challenging the fact that only John Fetterman
and the Senate, out of all Democrats, had voted for
(18:47):
more Trump nominees than Hickenlooper did. I think that's a
fair observation and question to ask when a lot of
Hickenlooper's constituents hate Donald Trump. And I thought John Hickenlooper
gave an informative answer. Those are the types of exchanges
that we're looking for, and all is based on honesty
in approach, and that's where Terry Moran failed in this
(19:09):
sit down with Donald Trump. Last Night and Donald Trump
Hate him for lunch. Trump's Hot Takes, Part one of
four coming up next. A pragmatic, practical approach with priorities
based in principle. Those are my four p's. I try
to live by them because I like to win and
I seek winning at every turn. Well, you want to
(19:31):
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your wealth building your portfolio. How do you get from
here to there from A to Z? Well you need
that step B along the line. You can't go right
from A to Z. You don't want to do that.
You have to put some thought, effort, focus research into this.
But you can't do it all yourself either. So I
(19:53):
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(20:14):
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gonna go down long term. Do you believe in the
Trump tariffs?
Speaker 2 (20:26):
Are you mad?
Speaker 1 (20:27):
Yeah? Set that emotion aside. Set the emotion aside. You
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(21:13):
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Wealth LLC and SEC Registered Investment Advisor. Paid advertisement. Terry
Moran taking on Donald Trump. Wow, you go into the
(21:33):
lions Den, you better be ready. And I just don't
think Terry Moran was ready for prime time, and you'll
hear some of Donald Trump taking him to task along
those lines in our subsequent installments of Trump's hot takes.
That's just one of four, folks, What do you call that?
Three is a trilogy?
Speaker 2 (21:52):
What's for?
Speaker 1 (21:53):
I'll need some help on that, maybe from Zach and
maybe from a listener. At five seven, seven, three nine, now,
Zach pointed out, I'm looking at the very photo that
z Man is referencing, and he's right. So the truth
is somewhere in between what Terry Moran is contesting and
what President Trump is contesting. The photo that many of
you may have seen that has the MS one three
(22:15):
that's superimposed on there. So you pointed it out as
like a Microsoft word font, Zach, But if you look
at the context and the content of the tattoos themselves.
On the index finger, it is a marijuana leaf m
On the middle finger, it's a smile with two.
Speaker 2 (22:34):
X's for eyes smile s.
Speaker 1 (22:37):
On the ring finger, it's a cross that is supposed
to signify the number one, And on the pinky finger
it's a skull, which is supposed to signify the number three. Now,
Moran saying that as an interpretation is correct. But where
I'd like to maybe follow up on this and I'm
(22:57):
going to text this very photo to one John Fabricatory
because he knows he's dealt with these types of criminal
illegal aliens as a former ICE field director himself.
Speaker 2 (23:09):
And when Tom Holman was.
Speaker 1 (23:10):
Asked about the tattoos, you know, this is what the
Left does. They hyper focus on one little detail and
try to disprove that one little detail that they feel
that that's the card that they can pull, or the
Jenga peg that'll bring the whole tower tumbling down.
Speaker 2 (23:26):
But that's not it.
Speaker 1 (23:27):
The tattoo is just one element of the mosaic that
is constructed for a profile on someone the likes of
kilmar Abrego Garcia. It is not in and of itself
necessarily definitive proof, but it is a lead. And when
you put that in contact with everything else that ICE
(23:52):
had built in its case for the individual that is
kill Maar Abrego Garcia, they had human intelligence. It's linking
him more than one source, by the way, to the
gang MS thirteen. Kil maar Abrigo Garcia was pulled over
in Tennessee driving a van with many illegal aliens in it.
(24:12):
Why media is not asking the right questions on this.
There's enough smoke there to discern and to conclude that
there's fire and that kil Maar Abrigo Garcia has some
nefarious ties to a criminal illegal alien gang. Again, I'll
send this photo to John Fabricatory, but you can't get
(24:36):
lost in the sauce there about just the tattoo itself.
It is one piece of evidence, but you have to
compile all of the evidence. There was also a standing
deportation order for Kilmar Abrigo Garcia. It was valid, he
had had his case adjudicated. It was rejected. He stayed. Anyway,
(24:57):
this is where again we've got to draw that clear
red line I talked about earlier this week, and I
saw a woman interviewed in Michigan yesterday and I got
to tell you, when I take the temperature of the room,
of the folks out there, of the listeners like you,
you are adamant about this. And it shows in the polling.
(25:17):
People are sick of the illegal alien element in this
country doing multiple things. One the audacity of thinking you
can just walk into this country, get all constitutional rights,
put your hand out, get all kinds of taxpayer funded benefits. No,
we see African Americans in Chicago standing up against this,
wearing Trump make America Great Again hats in Chicago. When
(25:42):
it used to be a punchline that Jesse Smilette said,
this is Maga country going to subway at two in
the morning getting a sandwich.
Speaker 2 (25:49):
Right.
Speaker 1 (25:50):
But no, now it doesn't matter your political stripes persuasions.
This is undermining the American worker of individual that the
Democrats used to pretend to represent union members fair wages. No,
we need a permanent underclass to come in to work
(26:10):
for those folks on Martha's vineyard. Are you the help,
then you can stay. If not, you're on a bus
to Cape Cod. Those fraudulent phonies. And there's another f
I'd like to throw in there. And if you meet
me for a beer later tonight, I'll say it. I'll
say to Zach, But you know what I'm talking about.
The yard sides.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
Out front in this house, no human is illegal. But
they don't want them living there, and I don't want
him in the neighbor. But are they the help?
Speaker 1 (26:35):
They can live in the quarters next door, and they
can take care of the house, and they can look
after my kids like a nanny, or they can do
the gardening out front, you know, the jobs that.
Speaker 2 (26:45):
No American wants to do.
Speaker 1 (26:47):
Wait a minute, what are you telling us about how
you view this human being who's come across the border.
See this is the real, the tough brass tacks of
it all.
Speaker 2 (27:01):
I care about these people. I do, And you're heartless Ryan,
and you want to deport them. It's for their own good.
Speaker 1 (27:08):
Do you know how much better off somebody is coming
across our border legally through the proper channels, with the
proper documentation, with the proper adjudication. You are here legally,
You can work, you can live here, you could become
an American citizen. You can be paid fairly and fully
compared to whatever competitors are out there. You commit yourself
(27:30):
to this culture, to our society, to working in the
American economy and contributing to it. Guess what, we need
those people here, and I want those people here. I
want immigrants here that have nothing more than a dream.
But they got to come here the right way. And
the woman I'm referencing in Michigan has the same view
that I do, and the same view that many of
(27:52):
you do. If you're here here illegally. Don't care about
the reason. You gotta go try again, give it a
second effort, do it right this time. That's the only answer, folks,
because you start getting into the weeds on this wishy washy.
Speaker 2 (28:09):
Oh maybe they have a sob stad. This is where
I lose it with Dan.
Speaker 1 (28:12):
No, No, you can't do it, because you open that
Pandora's box for one person, then everybody's gonna line up
with a sob story behind that person.
Speaker 2 (28:22):
Oh and this and this is why I couldn't come
in legally.
Speaker 1 (28:24):
No, there are people of very meager means who come
to this country who come to our border and want
to do it the right way, and those people should
be rewarded. Those people should be at the front of
the line rightly so, and we may need to reform
our immigration system, make it more efficient, make those adjudications
(28:44):
of asylum claims quicker, to provide that service for those
that would be here legally. I want to enhance that process,
But you don't enhance that process by rewarding those who
thwart the process and come in through the back door.
If you're found here to be living in this country illegally, buy.
Speaker 2 (29:09):
If it sounds harsh. Well, it is tough.
Speaker 1 (29:12):
Love is necessary sometimes, as all of you out there, No,
and guess what that encourages. Guess what that incentivizes legal immigration.
If people know I don't necessarily have to come here
the right way, I'll just show up in America and
be released into the inner cities of all of American municipalities,
(29:35):
and usually I'll be able to become an American because
they're gonna backchannel this stuff with asylum and in mass amnesty. No, no,
it's not working, and it hasn't worked. It won't work.
It can't work. We're not doing it that way. That's
what Donald Trump is saying here. Let's go to some
text now. Five seven seven three nine. Ryan, thank you
(29:59):
for sharing your th about Rush. He would indeed be
having a field day with today's leftist Steven Lyttleton.
Speaker 2 (30:04):
Steve, you're right.
Speaker 1 (30:05):
When I hear comedians like Nick Swardson and several others
that I've interviewed, and they mentioned the late great Norm MacDonald,
there's a definite parallel there. And I love Norm as well.
But I never tried my hand at stand up comedy.
I just thought he was a master of it. But
Rush Limbaugh in the same way. In this craft as
a talk show host was the gold standard. And there
(30:27):
was so much that I learned from him, gleaned from him,
borrowed from him, and quite frankly stole from him. But
it was in tribute to Rush. And one of my
dreams I had connected with mister Snerdley now some years
ago on x on what was then Twitter, and my
goal at that time, we're talking seven eight years ago
(30:51):
something like that. I wanted to go work for Rush
in Florida, and that would have been my dream job,
just being one of his producers behind the scenes. And
I never got that opportunity, and in fact, I never
got to meet Rush.
Speaker 2 (31:03):
And that's one of my life's biggest.
Speaker 1 (31:04):
Regrets, to which Eric Manning, Eric, you're too kind, he says,
you are truly our Rush Limbaugh of Colorado. Thank you
for telling the truth without fear. Eric, that means a
great deal to me, and I am but an acolyte
of Rush. I'm a Rush baby, so to speak. It's
going back to my early teen years. My mom bought
(31:25):
me both of his.
Speaker 3 (31:26):
Books, The Way Things Ought to Be and See, I
told you so.
Speaker 1 (31:33):
And I think most underrated of all was his briefly
airing television show, and he hated it. He hated it
because it was only a half hour, so you're talking
like twenty one minutes of content, commercials built in, and
he couldn't get going, you know, like he did on
his radio show. But I loved it. I love the
TV show. I thought it was hilarious. He had a
studio audience. You can probably find old episodes online if
(31:56):
you look hard enough. A break, and we're back wrapping
up our number one, another edition, part two of Trump's
hot takes in his interview with Terry Moran, ABC News,
it's fake news after.
Speaker 2 (32:06):
This and Ryan schuling life.
Speaker 1 (32:12):
Vintage Trump is what we saw in that sit down
interview with Terry Moran, ABC News.
Speaker 2 (32:16):
Two down, two to go.
Speaker 1 (32:18):
Trump's Hot takes five seven, seven thirty nine, and that's
the number you can text in with. Got plenty of
those to read over the course of the next hour.
Real quickly. On CNN, there was a report from a
Trump official, apparently off the record, shared with CNN that
the United States did request to President of Bukeayley of
(32:38):
El Salvador to return Kilmar Abrigo Garcia, president of Bukeayley refused.
Speaker 2 (32:44):
So the court order was the United States needs to.
Speaker 1 (32:48):
Facilitate that's a keyword, facilitate the return of Brigo Garcia.
But here's the deal, here's the problem, here's the hang up.
What country is kilmar A Brego Garcia a citizen of?
Speaker 2 (33:04):
Well, it turns out it's L. Salvador. Does he hold
American citizenship? No he does not.
Speaker 1 (33:12):
Well that's a big roadblock and obstacle pail. Sorry, you
came here the wrong way, you stayed here the wrong way.
You play stupid games, you win stupid prizes.
Speaker 2 (33:24):
Of course, if he's an L.
Speaker 1 (33:25):
Salvadorian national, and the president of said country says, no,
I don't want to give him back.
Speaker 2 (33:31):
Oh that's it. That's the end of the line.
Speaker 1 (33:33):
As far as I'm concerned, he did not have status
Brego Garcia in this country. He was not offered, let alone.
Did he receive asylum status in this country from L. Salvador.
There was some fine print in Dan Kaplis's pointed this out,
and I believe he's correct on this, that he was
not supposed to be deported to L. Salvador, but pretty
(33:54):
much anywhere else was fair game. Oops again, when you
break the rules coming into the country, you don't really
have a leg to stand on when you complain about
the rules maybe not being adhered to with regard to
your deportation.
Speaker 2 (34:12):
Just gt to the FO is what I would say.
Speaker 1 (34:18):
Coming up our number two, Dusty Slay, He's coming to
Colorado Paramount Theater this Friday night and Pike's Peak Center
down in the Springs. We've got two pairs of tickets
to give away for the Paramount Theater appearance at seven
pm this Friday. You'll hear my interview with Dusty coming
up on the other side. You'll have your chance to
win those tickets after that interview. So stay tuned right
(34:41):
here to Ryan Schruling Life