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October 13, 2025 • 34 mins
President Donald J. Trump delivers an address at Israel's legislature, known as the Knesset, in the wake of his historic peace deal to end the war in Gaza. As a consquential leader and political figure of our time, Trump may now rank among the most important and impactful in modern world history.

Lindsay Datko, founder of JeffCo Kids First, joins Ryan with the latest fiasco from the Jefferson County Public Schools. The Jefferson County Education Association (JCEA) has announced it has withdrawn its recommendation of Michael Yocum for school board, but in its vague statement about a 'sealed court record' pertaining to him - the organization focuses more on the 'political extremists' (apparently referring to Lindsay and others) unearthing the information rather than the information contained in the court record itself

JCEA withdraws recommendation of Michael Yocum - JCEA | Jefferson County Education Association
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
After two harrowing years and darkness and captivity, twenty courageous
hostages are returning to the glorious embrace of their families.
And it is glorious.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
Twenty eight more.

Speaker 1 (00:14):
Precious loved ones are coming home at last to rest
in this sacred soil for all of time. And after
so many years of unceasing war and endless danger, today
the skies are calm, the guns are silent, the sirens
are still, and the sun rises on a holy land

(00:34):
that is finally at peace, a land and a region
that will live God willing in peace for all eternity.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
I don't think it can be overstated what President Trump
has accomplished over this last week or so. Detroit Connection.
Shannon's got on the other side of the glass joining
me Ryan Schuling on this Monday edition and you can
text around the program at five seven seven three nine.
But I'm thinking back to historical events that I can

(01:07):
remember in my lifetime, the tearing down of the Berlin
Wall in the late eighties, prompted of course by the
iconic words a President Ronald Reagan, mister Gorbachev, tear down
this wall. And that did happen, and we saw the

(01:28):
fall of communism in those Eastern European Bloc nations Mike Yugoslavia, Romania,
several others, some of whom would gain entrance into NATO,
much to the chagrin of the soon to fall Soviet

(01:48):
Union itself. And somehow, I won't get on a tangent here,
but somehow, over those thirty odd years, the stain of
communism and the misery it brings and the promise of
futility and failure is lost on the academic left. They

(02:11):
were made fun of, take my word for it, the
commie professors and college campuses. You know, we kind of
just pointed and laughed. But then they were taken seriously
by a new generation that did not witness what Shannon did,
what I did, what many of you did growing up

(02:33):
as gen xers are older or even millennials, you should
remember this. But I know a lot of millennials that
have gone far left COMI. If you wear a Shag
Guavara shirt, you've lost the plot right out of the gate.
That man was a maniac, a murderer, a violent thug

(02:54):
on behalf of a Castro regime, and you have the
the youth gone wild of today embracing these communist principles.
But I think there is a you know, as I
go on this tangent, I do believe there's a Kamala
Harris has been diagram overlap with from the Marxists, the

(03:19):
professors who indoctrinate with it on college campus is the
students who absorb it become it. And then you have
like you saw the shot outside of I think it
was in power Field my Onhih Stadium, three young women
probably mid twenties, leaning in for a Ussie you know
the version of a selfie that has multiple people in

(03:41):
it leaning in. It's a beautiful morning and they're wearing
the cafeas. These are no doubt wealthy liberal white women.
Oh free Palestine all from the river to the sea,
gays for Palestine, Like come on, like Benjamin Etyah who

(04:04):
said that is like Kentucky Fried Chicken chickens full of
Kentucky Fried chickens for KFC. Not a single female hostage
was returned alive. Not one twenty hostages were returned, as
President Trump correctly stated, they were all men from beyonds

(04:26):
to that why were there no women? There were no
women because they couldn't be allowed to live to tell
the tale that they endured, which had to be as
bad as it was for the men. I am sure.
I am certain it was astronomically cataclysmically worse for the women.

(04:52):
Women have no rights under Sharia law. Women have very few,
if any rights or liberties living in the Middle East
under Muslim nations which subjugate women. So the thought of
a liberal, wealthy white woman taking up the cause for
Palestine blows my mind, should blow your mind. Is idiotic,

(05:15):
is idiotic and self destructive. And they don't even know it.
There are people living in this country right now. One
there's one level that may be not even aware of
the news from over this weekend, This glorious news of
peace in the Middle East, a ceasefire in Gaza, something
the likes of Annie Lennox was crowing about at the Grammys.

(05:38):
You might recall this in her tribute singing nothing Compares
to You, honoring the late Shinead O'Connor. And I love
Annie Lennox. I think she's a tremendous artist, one of
the great female vocalists of all time. But that broke
my heart. I talked about this with Michael Rappaport last

(06:02):
week along with Christian Toto. There should be unwavering, unblinking,
unyielding support for Israel, for the Jewish people of Israel,
for our ally that is Israel, for our Jewish students
and neighbors here in the United States. Unqualified. No, yeah,

(06:24):
butts No, I'm pro Jewish, but I'm anti Zionists.

Speaker 3 (06:29):
No.

Speaker 2 (06:30):
Michael Rapaport said it best, you're anti Jewish. Throw out
even these mollified Polish terms of I'm anti Zionists. I
just don't believe in Israel's right to exist, It's all.
It's not that bad or even anti Semitic at this
point that gets lost in the sauce. You're anti Jewish,

(06:54):
And that's the feeling on a lot of these college
campuses and in a lot of these inculcated echo chambers
that don't take time to think. This is another thing
that Rappaport pointed out amongst his Hollywood brethren and Sistern
that they don't even pause to question what they're doing,

(07:19):
and they don't appreciate what it is that the Jewish
people have gone through. I got such a nice text
from Russ Waldman, thinking dan kaplus myself for our unwavering
support of Israel, the Jewish people. But what blows my
mind again is that that should have been commonplace for

(07:40):
anyone in this space, for anyone in the media, for
anyone in Hollywood, for anyone with a platform and a voice,
after what happened on October seventh, twenty twenty three. To me,
at that point, all bets were off Hamas Faa in
a major way. Twelve hundred Israeli's dead, I might add

(08:05):
Israeli civilians, many of whom were infants, babies, toddlers, children, women, elderly, raped, burned, smashed, murdered.
Anything Israel did in response to that, to me, maybe

(08:26):
I'm the hardliner here and that's fine, was justified. Anything
would have been justified in response. Israel is a nuclear power,
they could have done that. I wouldn't have supported it.
But in response to an existential threat, not even just
knocking at your door, not even just residing right outside

(08:46):
your home, but invading your home. They went into Israel.
They sacked a music festival populated by probably many young
people that may have been fairly sympathetic to a Alistinian
state that might not have been very fond of Benjamin
that Yahoo or the right wing government of Israel, or

(09:07):
the right wing politics or politicians of Israel, and yet
they were slayed and murdered at a music festival. How
do you defend that? How does Annie Lennox justify that
any of these Hollywood liberal elite weirdos, how do you
equivocate that, Oh, but there's a genocide in Gaza. No no, no, no, okay. Well,

(09:31):
if we're going to go by that definition, let me
just spell with something out for you. Adolf Hitler invaded Poland.
He then proceeded to invade all of Europe, including France,
including Czechoslovakia, and he tried to invade the Soviet Union.
That was ridiculous, stupid, and probably cost him the entire war.

(09:54):
But that being said, this guy was nuts evil needed
to be stopp What did we do well? Hitler in
the Nazis and the Germans did systemic bombings of London,
of England, killing civilians, and Winston Churchill again the theme

(10:17):
from that time. You might see it on some trinkets
and t shirts and keep calm and carry on, you know,
stiff upper lip for the Brits, and the Brits, the Americans,
the Canadians leveled Berlin bombed Germany killed a lot of
German civilians and that's not great, and I don't love that,

(10:42):
but the German people were represented by an evil, existential
threat to the world, and so we had to fight
a war to win it. And that's what happened. And
I don't remember any of the history books. I could
be wrong. Maybe the lefties of common and dear that
now too, coming out and crying for all the dead

(11:05):
German civilians. It's terrible that they died. But whose fault
was it that they died? Eightolf Hitler's and the Nazis
and the Axis powers. That's whose fault. It was. Not Eisenhower,
not Harry Truman, not Franklindelano Roosevelt, not Winston Churchill. Was

(11:28):
the evildoers, as President George W. Bush like to say
that initiated the war. A response to that is exactly
that aside starts a war, the other side is compelled
to finish that war. I mean, you can go back
to the Civil War and General Sherman in his march

(11:49):
through the South controversial the South fell soon after that.
He burned cities to the ground, raised them. Yes, but
that's the fo part. The FA part was the secession
from the Union by the Confederacy and Abraham Lincoln, the
Union of the North attempted to just save this nation,

(12:12):
and it was horrible. War is hell, it's horrible. Israel
didn't start that war. Now there are claims and there
is gas lighting that Israel, through a series of oppressive actions,
somehow invited the attacks of October seventh, twenty twenty three.
That is hogwash, That is balderdash. That is a lot

(12:35):
of words that I can't see on the radio, but
that you know, and so many on the left the
kind explanations that they fall for it. But I don't
think it's that easy. They don't fall for it. They
willingly buy into it. Carry that narrative forward. Genocide in Gaza,
Palestinian civilians murdered, Palestindian civilians, I might add, that were

(12:58):
being used as human shields as a war tactic. How
does that work? Weapons munitions were stored underneath mosques and
hospitals and schools. So by the order of the Geneva
Convention and twisting that to their needs, their war aims,

(13:19):
their goals a mass, then they rendered those very real
military targets. Now moot the Israel somehow committing war crimes
by attacking mosques and schools and hospitals that have munitions
stored under them. What is Israel supposed to do, go

(13:40):
knocking door to door, put the lives of their idf in,
all of their members of the military at great risk,
which they did do. I might add this is one
of the most careful wars ever fought. Israel, much to
their own detriment, did that out of care for the
Palestinian civilians. But I go back to the evils and
the awfulness and the hell of war. The Palestinian civilians, Yeah,

(14:05):
are they caught in the crossfire often that's going to
be the case. But when their own representative government terrorist
group Hamas decides that they're going to use the civilians
as human shields, what is Israel to do? Just back off?
That's the whole point of the tactic. No, you don't,
And where was it ever written? When was it ever done?

(14:26):
I've said this before, but I'll say it again because
it bears repeating on a daylight today. Why is it
Israel's responsibility or even the worlds to nourish, shelter, and
clothe the Palestinian civilians? And that's a tactic, because much
of that aid was set in intercepted by the war

(14:46):
lords of Hamas kept for themselves, replenishing their own fighters.
You're going to feed their army. Come on, how naive
is the world community to think this, Well, we can
separate a hold on We're going to send in those
trucks and Hamas won't get it, even though they control
the while area and they're very militant and will kill people,

(15:07):
but they're not going to do that. We're just going
to get it to the Hamas the Palestinian civilians, and
we're going to separate those things. They won't ever conflate. Foolishness, idiocy.
All to bring this full circle and the incredible feat
that President Trump has accomplished here the comparison to the
Berlin Wall, the comparison to the Soviet Union falling in

(15:31):
the early nineteen nineties, But those were falling of an empire,
of a way of thinking, of a way of governing,
in the battle between capitalism and communism, and people in
Germany wanted to be free, wanted to have a life.
The West Germans had didn't want to have a life
the East Germans had today, And this whole weekend in

(15:53):
this last couple of weeks is unique in our American history,
at least over the last fifty years. And President Trump
joe with Marco Rubio's Secretary of State that maybe it
was one hundred years and he might be right that
this was a cause for peace. Can you think of
a more signature moment that was meaningful, that got something
done to this level, that ended a war, that started

(16:16):
a ceasefire, that got hostages freed, that laid the framework
and the groundwork for continuing peace in the Middle East,
that now represents other nations in that region getting on board,
like Saudi Arabia, like Turkey. President Trump even mentioned it
Iran and wanting to be peaceful with them. If Donald
Trump is hitler, he is the worst hitler ever. He

(16:38):
is literally the anti hitler. He is creating peace. He
is saving lives, millions of lives. Eight wars now ended.
And Shabez Sharif, Pakistan Prime Minister, was very grateful and
today not so bold move, I don't think, but it
is in the light of our current body politic world

(17:01):
says Donald Trump should win the next Nobel Peace Prize.

Speaker 4 (17:05):
Is the most.

Speaker 5 (17:07):
Genuine and most wonderful candidate for Peace Prize because he
has brought not only peace in South Asia, saved millions
of people their lives. And today here in Sherman cheer

(17:29):
achieving peace and Raza is saving millions of lies in
the Middle East.

Speaker 2 (17:36):
He's correct. And again the long term implications of this
because the timing of everything, the October seventh, twenty twenty
three invasion of Israel, the starting of that war. What
that did was it cooled the momentum of Saudi Arabia
and other nations in the Middle East being brought further
into a potential alliance with Israel. The Abraham words a

(18:00):
remarkable achievement of President Trump's first term, but to expand
on that, he needed a second term, And unfortunately Joe
Biden was the winner of the twenty twenty election became president.
Was weak. Biden's weakness invited Putin's invasion of Ukraine, in
Hamas's invasion of Israel. And Donald Trump correctly states that

(18:23):
I don't believe either of those two things happen. If
Donald Trump is at the wheel, if he is president
of the United States at that time, he is a
man for this time. Is he perfect? No he's not.
Sharif concludes with this.

Speaker 4 (18:35):
Mister President, I would like to salute you for your
exemplary leadership, visionary leadership, and I think that you're the
man this world needed most at this point in time.

Speaker 5 (18:54):
World would always remember you.

Speaker 4 (18:56):
As a man who did everything went out of the
way to stop seven and G eight loss eight wars.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
Indeed, and President Trump deserves the lion's share of the credit,
and he is a lion in that office as president.
A timeout when we come back, Lindsay Dako Jeffco Kids First,
she has another harrowing update from the Jeffco Public Schools
here on Ryan Schuling Live midway through October, times of

(19:26):
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Speaker 6 (21:01):
Then another sign appear going to have an enormous red
dragon relation.

Speaker 2 (21:06):
Twelve years.

Speaker 3 (21:19):
Once again an armed attack in the Middle East.

Speaker 2 (21:22):
But this time it's different. October Seventh's the Devil's help.

Speaker 5 (21:35):
It's very hard to believe what happened, even though I
was there and seeing with my own eyes and seeing
them laughing and killing and having fun with it.

Speaker 3 (21:43):
Because if you don't open the door, they are going
to kill you, and they are going to kill me.

Speaker 2 (21:47):
So please open the doors. So who are the Jews?

Speaker 3 (21:54):
Who are the Palestinians?

Speaker 2 (21:56):
And whose land is it?

Speaker 7 (21:58):
Really?

Speaker 2 (22:00):
Who could the fate of the world.

Speaker 3 (22:02):
Of humanity itself be somehow tied to displace The nation.

Speaker 7 (22:08):
Of Israel is a resurrected nation, So what if there
was going to be a resurrection of another people and
enemy people of Israel. The Bible speaks about this whole
war as a dragon representing the enemy attacking a woman
representing Israel.

Speaker 3 (22:27):
Civilian debts on both sides represent victories on the part
of the dragon.

Speaker 1 (22:33):
The mastard everything within their ability to maximize the civilian casualty.

Speaker 2 (22:38):
We came back to a land that was largely barren
and empty, and we brought it back to life, and
we're going to keep it.

Speaker 7 (22:45):
The devil hates the Jewish people because they represent the
existence of God, because without that Jewish foundation, there is
no Christianity.

Speaker 2 (22:55):
If we're approaching the end of time, God will reveal
himself self more and more dramatically. We speak back through
the stels. The story that they've been telling me is
that Israel is a colonial project. The problem with that
is the City of David. We are an inconvenient truth.

Speaker 3 (23:15):
Are you aware of any significant archaeological finding that contradicts
the Bible? God's word stands firm.

Speaker 4 (23:25):
The good.

Speaker 2 (23:28):
The Dragon will not prevail.

Speaker 3 (23:34):
Your message here is become a dragon slap.

Speaker 6 (23:38):
That's the fast of Jonathan CON's number one international bestseller,
The Dragon's Prophecy.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
This film contains graphic violence.

Speaker 6 (23:45):
Of October seventh, streaming a DVD starting October ninth, The
Dragon's prophecyfilm dot.

Speaker 2 (23:52):
Com and that website is what you want to remember
About a half an hour from right now, Denesh Desuzo,
you heard in that trail, will be joining me here
on this program. Always great to talk to him and
about his new documentary, The Dragon's Prophecy. What a better
time to talk to him? Than today in the wake
of these peace announcements in the Middle East in Gaza,

(24:14):
and this unfolds the events of October seventh, twenty twenty
three and ties it into the biblical nature of it
in the Dragon's Prophecy. And one more time, that website,
the Dragon's prophecyfilm dot com Denesh Desuza coming up in
thirty minutes, so stay tuned for that right here on
Ryan Schuling live back with you your text five seven

(24:35):
seven three nine. And this was brought to my attention
by our next guest. More news out of Jeffco Public schools.
Rarely is it good, except for the fact that the
founder of Jeffco Kids First, Lindsay Dadko, is bringing certain things,
certain facts to light and to the attention of people

(24:57):
not just in Jeffco, but stay wide and often nationally.
This from the Jack Jefferson County Education Association. It's entitled
JCEA withdraws recommendation of Michael Yoakum. Not to be confused
with Dwight Yoakam. It's spelled differently too, And thank God

(25:18):
for Dwight, because it would not be a good association
for him to have due to the following quote JCEA
recently learned of a sealed court record from Michael Yoakum.
This issue did not come up in the questionnaire, interview
or the vetting process. In light of this information not
being disclosed to JCEA during the recommendation process, JCEA will

(25:44):
be withdrawing the recommendation of Michael Yoakum. The next paragraph
it's a real hoot, cause look who it's focusing on. Quote.
This does not downplay the action of political extremists who
are trying to use a complicated and traumatic event from

(26:05):
over a decade ago to achieve their own political outcomes.
These harmful political tactics do nothing to support our students, teachers,
or public schools. Unquote, well then why if it wasn't
that bad and it's just a political hit job hackery, JCEA,
why then would you not stand by your man and

(26:29):
continue to recommend Michael Yoakum for the Jeffco School Board.
I'm confused. Let's seek some elucidation from Lindsay datco founder
of Jeffco Kids. First, she joins us here in Ryan
Schuling Live, Lindsay, welcome those two paragraphs. I think they
create more questions than they give answers, So.

Speaker 8 (26:49):
Please fill in the blanks if you would please, Yeah,
for sure, that first paragraph surprising, second paragraph not surprising,
definitely sidestepping the.

Speaker 9 (27:01):
Gravity of the situation and their responsibility and clearly prioritizing
their self preservation of their only thirty percent membership.

Speaker 2 (27:10):
Let's not forget Well, it seems to like I said
in when I sent you the invite for the interview, here,
it seems like they are much more focused and concerned
about you. You, Jeff go kidds first. Other maybe conservative
groups who are going through these fact finding processes really
something JCEA should be doing themselves. And it's that you

(27:32):
found out, is that you discovered, It's that you noticed it.
That's the problem, not that Michael Yoakum had this in
his sealed court records. So for the listeners out there,
don't get any information from this press release statement by
JCEEA Lindsay, what did Michael Yoakum do?

Speaker 9 (27:51):
Yeah, well, somebody close to the situation came to us,
and as you know, Ryan, we have uncovered around thirty
reseexual abuse in this conduct cases. We've shown how methodical
and careful we are about doing so, which has brought
a level of trust to people to confide in us,
and I've also mentioned we work with a PI who

(28:15):
has a legal background.

Speaker 2 (28:17):
We ended up.

Speaker 9 (28:18):
Recording this candidate at a board forum and where he
admitted to a sexual offense and a deferred adjudication as
a juvenile. This ended up leading us to discover that
there were charges of sexual assaults on children. We went
through a very careful process asked this candidate to step

(28:41):
down quietly on September thirtieth and eight days before. Eight
days later, we launched a deliberate, careful process to alert
the public because he clearly showed he did not intend
to step down and continued to show up at more forums.
We also alerted his manager, a long time affiliated with

(29:02):
the union as their candidate manager.

Speaker 8 (29:06):
So after all of.

Speaker 9 (29:07):
This intense pressure, JCEA, as you just showed along, they
ended up issuing this statement today.

Speaker 2 (29:16):
Lindsay Dacho, Jeff co kids first joining us. I want
to give this full service in terms of coverage. It
makes it difficult when JCEA is being coy about it,
very dodgy about it, Lindsey, through what you were able
to discover. They point out again in this second paragraph

(29:37):
that points the finger blame at you and political extremists
like you who do these sorts of investigations on your own.
Where again, in the hiring process, the vetting process, this
should have come to light if they had done their jobs.
You're the one doing their jobs for them. Anyway, it
says that you were trying to use quote a complicated
and traumatic event from over a decade ago to achieve

(30:01):
your own political outcomes. So what about this event, this accusation,
this charge he was a juvenile? What made it complicated
and traumatic? I'm trying to figure that part out.

Speaker 9 (30:13):
I believe this the aspect that he is a juvenile,
And it is fascinating that they blame their vetting process
rather than the highly unacceptable risk to seventy five thousand
children for a person that would then be in an
authoritative decision making position. But it's also very interesting that
they use the word recommend. This was their candidate. Not

(30:37):
only do they recommend, they endorse, they spend hundreds of
thousands of dollars. And we don't have political motivation here,
as you know, Ryan, we don't endorse candidates. What we
do is shed light. We are fiercely working to just
dismantle and defeat deception. This was just simply that it
is up to the voters now who they vote for,

(31:00):
or this was us shedding light on a potentially very
risky situation for jeff COO Schools and quite frankly for
JCEA as well.

Speaker 2 (31:09):
Lindsay, I know that you mentioned that number thirty three
types of cases in which children were endangered or sexually
assaulted or sexually abused, or the accusations of these things
or grooming. We saw that in the Columbine High School
case in which the young lady now lives with her
groomer in California, which is harrowing to say the least.

(31:33):
But in any of these cases, Lindsay, I'm looking to
throw jeff Co Public Schools a bone here, Not this one, obviously,
not this one with Michael Yoakum. In any of them,
have they admitted or acknowledged responsibility, gotten in front of
the story, taken that kind of action to nip something

(31:53):
in the bud a story and control the narrative. Or
have they constantly, in every single case, spin on the reactive.

Speaker 9 (32:01):
Side of this, Brian, Absolutely every case been on the
reactive side of it. I will say there is a
new case where we see a little bit more, but
that case is not a union teacher or employee, which
is a very interesting comparison, something we could dive into later.

Speaker 6 (32:20):
For sure.

Speaker 2 (32:22):
So little time and so much ground to cover. We
did a little bit of that today with Lindsay Dadko,
but I'm sure she'll be back. I wish there would
come a day when we wouldn't need you to come
back and talk about these things, Lindsay, but we do,
and we thank you for doing that here today.

Speaker 9 (32:37):
Thank you so much, Bryan.

Speaker 2 (32:38):
All Right, Lindsay dad Cooe founder jeff Co Kids First,
thank God for that organization, Thank God for Lindsay Dadko.
And if you're in jeff Co, I don't know what
to tell you. Homeschool your kids signing a private school.
Join the force that Lindsay Dadko's group represents. You got
to push back against stuff like this, and you gotta
hold JCEA, the jeff Coo Public School Board, the superintendent,

(33:02):
all of them. You got to hold them accountable and
you got to hold their feet to the fire figuratively metaphorically.
There needs to be change in Jeffco Public schools and
a lot of it a time out wrapping up our
number one of Ryan schuling live on this Monday. After this,
the whole crowd here started to erupt into cheers of
thank you Trump, Thank you Trump.

Speaker 3 (33:24):
And I have to say, everywhere you go here there
are posters of Trump.

Speaker 8 (33:29):
We have seen people who have made artifacts.

Speaker 2 (33:34):
Dedicated to Trump.

Speaker 3 (33:37):
Fair to say that President Trump is possibly even more
popular here.

Speaker 6 (33:42):
Than he is in the United States.

Speaker 2 (33:45):
Clariss Awards CNN reporting that and Trump is just winning.
He's Reaganing. As I've told you before, that term from
thirty Rock and Jack, the character portrayed by Alec Baldwin,
that the episode that is so apropos for all the
ws that President Trump keeps hanging. But this is the
biggest win of all I think of his presidency. And

(34:07):
it's not even close. Very interesting that CNN would report
that as such. Trump's big in Israel. There are posters
of them. There was a tribute you might have saw it,
like spilled out on a beach with a silhouette of
his head, you know, very different from what James Comy
was trying to do with the seashells. Right. And then

(34:28):
also you could say that Donald Trump is bigger in
Israel than Benjamin net and Yahoo is. I think you
could make that argument. And then this posted just now
on CNN. What's the first thing you think of when
you see this slug or hear it sources senior prosecutor
removed from job in office handling DOJ's cases against James
Comy and Letitia James. My first thought, they're in on it.

(34:49):
Whoever that person is is in on it, and it's
time to carve those insiders of the deep state out
of it.
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