Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Twenty five days until election day? Can you believe it?
Twenty five days? That's where we are.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
What's the media doing? Rolling out the red carpet.
Speaker 1 (00:12):
Tim Walltz doing a one on one interview on Good
Morning America. He sat down with Michael Strahan, you know,
the guy that played football, because that's a hard hitting,
you know, sit down interview to discuss President Biden's record,
the economy, gun violence, and more. Were just twenty five
days to go. The interview went exactly as you would expect.
(00:35):
The guy, Well, he lies a lot. We know that
he lied about his service, he lied about his rank,
He's lied about in Vitro with his own family.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
He's lied about a lot of different things.
Speaker 1 (00:48):
And he lied about being in Keennom Square for example,
and then said, well, you know, I sometimes misspeak, right.
He lied about seeing combat, which he never saw. Stolen
valor is what you call that. But the media is
willing to whitewash all of that because they are one
and the same. They work together. He did this interview
(01:11):
a moment ago. I'm going to play some of it
for you and I'm going to give you some commentary
as he continues to push out these lies. I also
want you to listen very carefully to the questioning. Now,
let me explain why I say that I want you
to listen to questioning. There's not a lot of hard questions.
I also think it's pretty clear from how easy he
(01:33):
is answering some of these questions that he knew exactly
what was coming his way, Like he knew the questions
that were clearly going to be asked. He was prepared.
I would even argue he was overly prepared for the
questions that he was asked. It was pretty clear that
(01:56):
this was all orchestrated. Just like Telemundo yesterday when they
had a teleprompter for the town hall for Kamala Harris
so she could read from a teleprompter while acting like
it was a real authentic town hall.
Speaker 2 (02:09):
It was. It was all scripted. Take a listen.
Speaker 3 (02:12):
Vice President Harris was asked this week on the view
she would have done anything differently than President Biden with
President Biden that he had done in the past four years,
and she said, quote, there's not a thing that comes
to mind. And she later says she would have a
Republican in her cabinet, and when it comes to President
and Biden and the presidency. Do you would you and
(02:34):
do you see anything that you would have done there?
Speaker 4 (02:35):
Yeah? And look, I as a governor.
Speaker 5 (02:37):
I was asked to be governor of this state when
Donald Trump was president and when Joe Biden was there.
And I watched Donald Trump dismiss the COVID pandemic. I
watched him drive an economy into the ground, and I
watched Joe Biden Kamala Harris pick those pieces up. And
I think for all of us, we make decisions, we
reanalyze afterwards. I think the thing that drew me to
this ticket, and I think what the Vice President's talking
(02:58):
about is that her values on these hasn't changed. They
have been working for the middle class. They've been doing
all they can to make sure prices come down. They're
protecting reproductive care.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
So it makes me want to ask you, do you
think that Biden's done everything right?
Speaker 1 (03:11):
Let's pause there, All right, So there's the first question, right,
would you have done anything differently? He's sticking to his script, right,
and then he gets asked to follow up, do you
think that Joe Biden's done everything right? Because we're in
a disaster right now. The new inflation numbers came out,
Inflation went up, unemployment went up.
Speaker 2 (03:34):
People are struggling.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
Telemundo, for example, one of the people in the audience
asked the question, my groceries used to cost me two
hundred dollars, now it's three hundred dollars. Talked about wages.
People are really concerned about this.
Speaker 4 (03:47):
Now.
Speaker 2 (03:47):
I have to tell you, I understand, I got you questions.
Speaker 4 (03:53):
I do.
Speaker 1 (03:54):
And if you're in a bad economy and you've had
all the problems that you Biden has had with prices,
and you've had all the problems he's had with all
the other issues that in this country, and the pull
out in Afghanistan and multiple wars that are popping up,
and interest rates that have skyrocketed. Home ownership is unattainable
(04:15):
for a large percentage of Americans now because of that.
It shouldn't be partisan hackery to the point where you
can't even answer a question like this, like if you're
if you're a smart person, and I'm not talking about
a smart politician, I'm just saying a smart person. If
someone asks me like, hey, did the guy who's in
(04:37):
office right now, when there's all these negatives around him,
is there anything you would have done what you know
that he should have done differently. You got to have
a real authentic answer for that. You got to have
an answer that is like, look, I think there's a
lot of things that I would have, you know.
Speaker 2 (04:53):
Looked at differently.
Speaker 1 (04:53):
In fact, I think there's things that Joe Biden probably
would have done differently, knowing where we are now, would
have changed some things, some strategies. However, you want to
put it without like knocking him. But you can answer
that question authentically. But that's not how democrats roll. I
actually go back to this. I don't believe they think
(05:14):
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(07:18):
me go back to something that I was talking about
a moment ago, and that Tim Waltz again is like
it's all been laid out, okay, So Waltz is out there,
he's doing all these interviews, the media is trying to
get them across the finish line with twenty five days ago.
They know that they're in some trouble. So that's part
of the problem is that they understand it. They got
(07:38):
to get people excited again about them. So it's like,
all right, how do we pull this off?
Speaker 4 (07:42):
Right?
Speaker 2 (07:42):
Like, what do we do?
Speaker 1 (07:44):
And it's a great question, It's very tough. It's a
hard one. So it's like, all right, how do.
Speaker 2 (07:50):
We do this?
Speaker 1 (07:50):
What do we do to get this going the way
we need it to get going. Let me, I want
to play this answer where number one the straight hand says, hey,
Kamae hers the other day said you wouldn't have done
anything different in the last four years, and they did
nothing wrong, referring to Biden's policies. So he gives kind
(08:14):
of a word salad answer and I'm going to back
it up just a second so you can hear it.
And then he's ask said, well, okay, like, so you
think Joe Biden's done everything perfectly?
Speaker 2 (08:24):
Listen afterwards.
Speaker 5 (08:25):
I think the thing that drew me to this ticket,
and I think what the Vice president's talking about is
that her values on these hasn't changed. They have been
working for the middle class. They've been doing all they
can to make sure prices come down. They're protecting reproductive care.
So it makes me want to ask you, do you
think that Biden has done everything right? Well, look, I
don't know if any of us do everything right, but
I can tell you he's done everything in the best
(08:45):
interest in the American public. He's listened to what the
public did, He's asked for answers, and I think, you
know and reevaluated afterwards. And I think if your values
and the judgments you're making and the ethical decisions you're making,
he's done that. And I again have seen the difference
that it made, especially during the COVID pandemic, of what
it looks like to have that ethical, visionary leadership versus
(09:06):
someone who's incredibly self centered.
Speaker 4 (09:08):
I want to go back to something you said on Tuesday.
Speaker 3 (09:10):
He said, I think all of us know the electoral
College needs to go, but the campaign came out later
that night and they said that's not their stands.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
By way, listen carefully to this question.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
He gives that other answer, right, He's like, well, I
think you know moral No, not real hard answers, right, Like,
it's all Kumbaiiism. There's nothing real there. It's like going
to church or they don't actually talk about God. Like
it's all warm and fuzzy and it's all everything's wonderful,
and we make you feel good about yourself and we
don't criticize or say there's anything that's right and wrong
(09:40):
in the world. That's the campaign. You've got that type
of leadership right now. The easiest way to get a
church to grow these days is to tell everyone in
the audience that no one's doing anything wrong, and you
make everybody feel good about every bad decision they're making.
That's basically the Biden Waltz campaign or the Harris Say
Waltz campaign. And so then there's this other issue, and
(10:04):
it's a throwaway issue.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
Is you can hear there throwaway.
Speaker 1 (10:09):
Issues or where you ask a question of somebody and
you're expecting that you get through it quickly and you
check the box. I want you to think about what
Waltz said he wants to do. He wants to get
rid of the electoral college. What does that mean. It
means that the presidency of the United States of America
(10:31):
would be picked by big cities. And the way that
we campaign is you would literally not ever even step
inside a place like you would not even campaign for
the president in rural areas. You would never campaign in
(10:53):
areas where there wasn't a lot of voters. So look
at the map right if you go, and this is
the reason why the founding fathers and our country wanted
to make sure that people weren't overlooked. You go and
look at a map right now, and you take a
look at it. If you get rid of the electoral college,
(11:15):
there's nobody that will care about Idaho, Oregon, Utah, Wyoming, Montana,
North Dakota, South Dakota. No one would care about Iowa.
No one would care about Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, no
one would care about Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana. Probably like if
(11:40):
you're on the liberal side, you would change the entire
way that you look at the country and you run
a campaign. Democrats would go and camp out in just
the big cities where there are liberal cities, and they
would just say, all right, we just got to get
big turnout there, We just got to win the popular vote.
All these other places in the country, we don't have
to listen to them, we don't have to represent them.
(12:00):
And then something else even worse than that would happen
if you didn't have the electoral college the way that
we have it, you would also have laws and policies
that would favor big cities and hurt rural and smaller
town America because you would say, all right, look, I
need all of la to like me, so let's give
(12:21):
them a bunch of free stuff. Let's divert a bunch
of funds there, so people love me and they'll vote
for me, and I don't care if we're screwing other
Americans in other areas of the country. This is one
of the reasons why the electoral College is vitally important,
because if you don't have that, then what you're gonna
have is you're gonna have taxation with.
Speaker 2 (12:42):
No representation at the White House.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
Because presidents would only do things that would like pump
up their votes in a place like New York, LA, Boston, Miami, Atlanta,
everybody else, you would just take and divert resources.
Speaker 2 (13:03):
And just screw them.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
Like that's the easiest way I can describe it.
Speaker 2 (13:07):
You would, you would say.
Speaker 1 (13:08):
Screw them and just let like just just screw them
because we don't need their votes like we did before.
We need to divert everything somewhere else. That's that's what
it is. We just need to do it everywhere else. Well,
then they asked him about like, well, are you different
than the campaign? Now, of course I'm not different than
(13:29):
the campaign. I love the campaign, right, Like that's what
he says. Oh no, no, no, I love the campaign. I've
got the same position as the campaign. Really you do,
because you don't. But I think he's actually telling the truth.
I think the campaign's line because they understand that now's
not the time to say it, right. They're saying, now's
(13:51):
not the time to actually admit what you really want
to do, which is fundamentally change how we elect a
president of the United States of America because Democrats would
have much easier time.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
That's what this is actually about.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
And if you listen to how he responded that question,
this is a threat to our democracy. I'm not sure
that a Republican could ever win, and I'm not sure
the American people would would ever be represented the way
they are now if you change the electoral college the
way that he's describing it to a popular vote only
(14:28):
if you want to be represented, you'd have to move
to a big city where they'd actually talked to you
and care. But under representation, I mean, I'll give you
another example of this. Imagine look at how the response
has been so different in the hurricanes that have hit
if by the biased in this administration, just by where
you live. Imagine if a tornado hits in Middle America,
(14:54):
they wouldn't send probably any help because they'd be like,
I don't need those votes. There's not enough peace pull
in these small towns of you know, Padukea, Kentucky, or Jacksonsissippi,
or even Biloxi after Hurricane Katrina, like they'd just be like, look,
we like we don't need those votes, don't send resources.
You need to hold that money for things that happen
(15:15):
in LA or New York or Atlanta or Philadelphia or
Boston or Baltimore like that.
Speaker 2 (15:22):
That's what it would actually be about. Like that, That's
what it would be.
Speaker 1 (15:26):
And so you would govern in a way that would
be completely different. You would pass laws that would hurt
a large swap of you know, piece of America. If
you thought it would help you in a big city,
you would. You would have policies that would favor big
cities and really hurt rural America. You would never care
(15:49):
about union workers anymore. You wouldn't have to. You would
never care about farmers anymore. You wouldn't have to.
Speaker 2 (15:55):
You would never.
Speaker 1 (15:56):
Care about you know, coal miners or manufacturing any of
these things. You wouldn't care about liquid natural gas or
any of those issues anymore, right or fracking issues because
it's in areas that are rule. There are entire states
that would be left behind. North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming,
those states. Anything happens there, like there could be wildfires,
(16:17):
for example, I don't think the federal government would get involved.
They just say, yeah, we don't care if the whole
state birds down. We're not going to send money to
those states. And the reason why is pretty clear. Why
would we send money to a state right where we're
not going to get anything back in a presidential election year.
Now you understand why the electoral college is so vitally important.
(16:41):
You look at Tennessee, for example, and look at the
scenario of Tennessee. Look at the flooding in East Tennessee
that happened after this hurricane came through, Helleen.
Speaker 2 (16:52):
You look at a state, Are they any chance they're
going to vote for us?
Speaker 4 (16:55):
No?
Speaker 2 (16:55):
Okay? Is there a lot of Democratic voters there?
Speaker 4 (16:57):
No?
Speaker 2 (16:58):
Especially in East Tennessee. Right, it's even more conservative.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
Nashville is more liberal proper, Memphis more liberal proper, like
the Memphis area.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
And you'd be like, all right, well, like.
Speaker 1 (17:10):
We don't need to do anything. We don't need to
see send FEMA. Why would we need to send FEMA there.
It's a waste of time. Those people aren't going to
vote for us, So screw them, Like, it's just a
waste of time, So get rid of them, don't help them,
let them suffer. They're not important to us winning the presidency.
(17:36):
Do I believe Kama Harris pleaves what Tim Walls?
Speaker 2 (17:38):
Please?
Speaker 1 (17:39):
Absolutely, I do, like one hundred percent. I do, because
it's just easier for them. The media ad bys you
would make would be so different. The ad bys would
be different. It'd be easier to get elected. You could
buy elections if you can just flood the airwaves information
(18:00):
in towns that you care about.
Speaker 2 (18:03):
This would be amazing for the Democratic Party.
Speaker 1 (18:06):
When they tell you that they this is how they
look at America, this is what they believe about America.
This is how they want to gain power. I say it,
and I'll say it again. Believe them when they tell
you this. Okay, like, believe them. Believe them. They're telling
you what they want to do, so believe them. Tamala
(18:27):
Harris doing fake town halls where she has a secret teleprompter.
Speaker 2 (18:31):
She got busted for that. That's the best part about it.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
But it doesn't really matter because the media doesn't expose it.
That's my job apparently, and others like me, because otherwise
no one would ever know. And what's even more shocking
than that is Waltz has come out now saying he's
in favor of getting.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
Rid of the electoral college. Why why not? Right? Why
why not just get rid of the electoral college?
Speaker 3 (19:00):
Listen to this, Like something you said on Tuesday, she said,
I think all of us know the electoral college needs
to go. But the campaign came out later that night
and they said that's not their stands.
Speaker 5 (19:10):
Well, it's not the campaign's position. And the point I'm
trying to make is that there's folks that feel every
vote must count in every state, and I think some
of folks feel that's not the case.
Speaker 4 (19:20):
Our campaign does that.
Speaker 5 (19:21):
And the point I'm saying is, I'm in five states
in two days. We're out there making the case that
the campaign's position is clear that that's not their position.
Their position and my position is is to make sure
that everybody understands their vote no matter what state they're in, matters.
Speaker 3 (19:35):
So that's something that you and our President Harris disagree on.
Speaker 5 (19:38):
I have spoken about it in the past that she's
been very clear on this and the campaign and my
position is the campaign's position.
Speaker 4 (19:44):
And let's talk about the economy that Like.
Speaker 1 (19:47):
I love that, right, Like, oh, it's just my position
is the position of the campaign.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
No, it's not. You just contradicted yourself.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
And you notice how straight hands like, Okay, I'm not
going to tackle you.
Speaker 2 (20:00):
You on that to use this, you know, favorite sport
he played.
Speaker 1 (20:03):
And now he's interviewing people for the presidency, which is
also just insane to me that.
Speaker 2 (20:06):
Michael Strahan is doing this.
Speaker 1 (20:08):
But whatever, I digress, Right, it's just like it's all rigged,
it's all against us.
Speaker 2 (20:12):
Who cares?
Speaker 1 (20:13):
So now let's go to the economy. He's like, yep,
trying to move on. Let's talk about other issues. Right,
Let's just let's just move straight past.
Speaker 3 (20:23):
That, and let's talk about the economy. That is the
top issue. You're voted out there. Seventy four percent of
voters said to pass you, they've had to cut back
on groceries because of the writhing costs, of course, and
a lot of those voters they're concerned that they cast
her vote for Kamala Harris, but she's responsible for that.
So how do you reach those voters? What do you
say to those voters who may blame her for the economy?
Speaker 5 (20:44):
Right now, folks in the middle, what we talked to
him about, what are the policies that are going to
make a difference. And we see some of the data,
but data doesn't impact people in their daily lives. Go
into the grocery store and you see false information, whether
it's bird flu impacting eggs. But the reality for most
people is if those costs are up, they want to
know what you're going to do about it. I think
that's why she's focusing on making sure whether it's home
ownership more affordable, tax cuts for the middle class, and
(21:06):
let's just be candid about this, this price couging piece of.
Speaker 3 (21:09):
This, and something that former President Trump says, something that
within your debate with they were saying that, hey, the
either policy that Kamala Harris could have done three years ago,
she was in the White House with President Biden and
she never did. What do you say to people who
bring that up, Well, well, Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 (21:30):
Had four years to do it.
Speaker 5 (21:31):
If you're going to talk about that, and the butt is,
you need a partner in Congress.
Speaker 4 (21:34):
You've seen these We've seen.
Speaker 5 (21:35):
Different bills that are ready to pass, and Donald Trump
make sure he steps in. We saw it around immigration,
a bipartisan bill widely respected. Wanting to make a difference
in this holding true to our value securing the border.
Donald Trump steps in and says look, that's going to
hurt my political future.
Speaker 4 (21:51):
Let's not make it happen.
Speaker 3 (21:53):
Let's talk about your record, and you call yourself a knucklehead.
Speaker 2 (21:56):
Can we go back to just how quick they edited that?
Did you know?
Speaker 1 (22:00):
Like, now let's go to something else, Like he just
said something that is not an answer to a real
question about the economy. He doesn't really answer the question.
He doesn't talk about the pain and suffering of the
American voters. It's a check the box interview and then
they immediately edit. You can hear the hard edit there.
(22:22):
You can hear the jump cut at it, as we
call it in radio and TV. And they're like, let's
talk about you. You kind of say sometimes you're a knucklehead. Now,
knucklehead is the excuse that they're now giving for him
lying about seeing combat, lying about his rank in the military,
lying about in vitro, lying about I mean, there's a
(22:45):
pretty good list. Now, the stolen valor one actually bothers me,
I think the most.
Speaker 2 (22:51):
It should bother you the.
Speaker 1 (22:52):
Most, because if you're willing to lie about stolen valor,
it's pretty bad. But listen, as he continues, right, they
are basically saying, oh, he lied about, you know, seeing
combat with a firearm.
Speaker 2 (23:08):
He was never deployed to a combat zone.
Speaker 1 (23:10):
He lied about that too, And they're like, oh, you're
just you know, you say you're a knucklehead, lied about
being in tim Square. He's like, I'm a knucklehead, Like
and not I'm a liar, Not I'm a pathological liar.
Speaker 2 (23:24):
Not my resume, what's on it.
Speaker 1 (23:26):
I've lied about the biggest things to make myself look
bigger than I am, to get where I am today.
It quickly worked, by the way he's now. People ask
questions and they're like, and so this is the media.
You've called yourself a knucklehead. That's the excuse, Not hey,
you're a pathological liar. There's a lot of people in
the military are very angry about you lying about seeing combat,
(23:48):
very angry about you claiming that you carried weapons of
war on the field with him and you didn't, claiming
that you were a rank that you weren't. There's a
lot of protesters out there, those that we're at Tenuman
Square that can't believe that you claim that you were
at Tenem Square during the worst days there. You lied
about that too, Like that would be a real question,
(24:10):
why should anyone trust you with your story at all?
Speaker 2 (24:14):
That would be a real question the question you got. Yeah,
you describe yourself as, you know, being a knucklehead. You're
a knuckle ahead, pathological eye now it is knucklehead. Now.
Speaker 1 (24:25):
By the way, media doesn't like sing Donald Trump says,
he says something that's not true.
Speaker 2 (24:30):
What are they saying?
Speaker 1 (24:31):
He's a dictator, he's a tyrant, he's a psychopath, he's
a narcissist, he's crazy, can't be trusted with the nuclear codes.
By the way, he said things that are true, and
they also say the same things. But there is your
bias in the media and this this question of him
and this ABC News exclusive, it's perfect example that you
describe yourself, you know, as.
Speaker 2 (24:53):
Kind of a knucklehead. You're you're you're a knucklehead.
Speaker 4 (24:57):
Happen, let's talk about your record.
Speaker 3 (25:00):
You call yourself a knucklehead, and call yourself a knucklehea
because you've made some statements that just aren't true. In
a common about weapon of the war that I carried
in ward, which you didn't. You said you were in
Hong Kong doing a tan and in Square massacre when
you weren't. You kind of chalked it all up the
bad grammar or getting the dates wrong. But your opponents
say you lied to make yourself look better.
Speaker 4 (25:22):
Do they have a point?
Speaker 5 (25:24):
Well, look, thirty five years ago, got the opportunity to
be in Hong Kong, be in China, learned a lot
about it, served twenty four years in the National Guard,
passionately in an instance talking about gun violence in schools
on an instance there. Proud of the service that I've done,
Proud to be a teacher in that classroom, Proud to
have been very public all these years and owning it
(25:46):
when I said, look, I was there in August of
eighty nine, and I think what you see here you
saw in Minnesota. I've been elected eight times here, these
things have been very public for folks here. They see
the results of things that we passed. We see a
state that it's a top five state for business. We
see third best state, top three state for raising a child,
and we've got the best healthcare.
Speaker 4 (26:06):
And I think the policies, whether.
Speaker 5 (26:08):
It be dealing with China and understanding China's human rights record.
What you can be certain there is that Kamala Harris
and I aren't going to pick dictators on speed dial
see c Jing pinions doing a good job during COVID,
as Donald Trump said, And I think those lessons learned
over a lifetime of being very public, whether it's in
the classroom or being elected.
Speaker 2 (26:28):
Great pivot there.
Speaker 1 (26:29):
By the way, when you do debate prep and when
you do prep for interviews, that is exactly I would
have him answer that question right, Donald Trump's evil and bad.
I just lie about my record. Donald Trump's evil and
bad and a threat to America. I just happen to
lie about the most important things accomplishments in my life. Now,
(26:50):
if you have a real journalist, they would have a
follow up question to that.
Speaker 2 (26:55):
Was there a follow up question?
Speaker 1 (26:58):
Now, there's a lot of questions about his service, his rank,
his lies about being at Tim Square's lies on in
feature of viertilization with his own kids, Like, there's a lot.
You could argue the biggest things in his resume have
major fraud involved in them. So did they do a
follow up question when they asked him a question about
(27:21):
this and his quote knucklehead andness or were they just
checking a box over there at ABC News? Well, he
answered the question by attacking Trump, not actually answering the question,
what's the very next question the interview listen, Well.
Speaker 3 (27:33):
You know, but if it's one thing of trust, some
people who say we can't trust him even tell the
truth about himself, what do you say to them?
Speaker 5 (27:41):
Well, I said, they know who I am. I know
who I am, I know the work that I've done.
I know that things gets fun in a political environment.
But I think what they see is if they want
to compare that talking about immigration policy or seeing the
things that Donald Trump would say, I think there's a
big difference than missing a date when you're there and
again and spinning something for a political reason.
Speaker 4 (28:02):
I'm very clear of who I've been.
Speaker 5 (28:03):
I'm very proud of twenty four years of doing that work,
and I think going to Congress and working for veterans,
they want to see it and make the difference look
a little different. I think people in Minnesota, my students,
the folks I've worked with members of Congress, they know
who I am, and they know the policies we put
in place have made an impact.
Speaker 3 (28:21):
And Vice President Harrison is she told you to be
a little bit more careful on how you say things.
Speaker 4 (28:27):
Well, I did it.
Speaker 5 (28:28):
You know, even the other day of just speaking passionately
about these gun violence situations and meeting with these survivors.
I've said in the room with the Sandy Hook folks,
a friend with David Hogg, who's been an activist on this.
People know in that, and then that gets spun in
that he didn't say something true. It was very clear
that I was talking about these veterans, very clear that
I wear you know, I wear my emotions on my sleeve,
(28:52):
and I do think in these positions, whether it be
governor or being vice president of the United States, you
do need.
Speaker 4 (28:56):
To be collect careful. You do need to be a
little more thoughtful on it.
Speaker 5 (29:01):
And I think what you see as as someone who's
been in classrooms a lot, I been around coaching a lot.
I speak passionately, and I think doing that you need
to you need to combine the two. And I think
that's what she's she's referring to. And you spent years
as a high school defensive coordinator. Yes, the coach getting
(29:22):
the guys.
Speaker 1 (29:23):
By the way, I love that jump there. They're like, Okay,
we got the coach answer. I speak passionately. Therefore I'm
allowed to be a pathological liar that that's the excuse.
I speak passionately, so I'm a I should be allowed
to be a pathological liar about my entire career. And
(29:43):
then immediately they jump from there to walking down the
hall and two football players right talking to one another.
You were a you were a D line coach, right, like,
you know, let's let's let's yuck it up here. I'm
just I'm just a guy that you know. I I
speak passionately. All right, let's talk football.
Speaker 3 (30:02):
And you spent years as a high school defensive coordinator, Yes,
the coach getting the guys together out there on that field.
Speaker 4 (30:11):
And you credit that experience and you say, that's something that.
Speaker 3 (30:13):
Makes you uniquely position to help America go where you
feel like you should go.
Speaker 4 (30:20):
How did that make you uniquely quantify for that?
Speaker 5 (30:22):
Well, I think it's about building teams, about bringing diverse
folks in finding where their skills work. I feel like
I'm on a championship team with Vice President Harris. But
it's that idea of molding, shaping, providing guidance, but understanding
that you're just a piece of it.
Speaker 4 (30:38):
The folks, the players got to play.
Speaker 5 (30:39):
I always said, you've got to put them in a
position to be successful. And I think where you see
these positions, whether it's governor or vice president, got to
put the American people in a position to be successful,
and they'll do it.
Speaker 4 (30:49):
They'll do it. That's it.
Speaker 2 (30:54):
There it is.
Speaker 1 (30:54):
There's your hard hitting, tough propaganda interview from Good Morning
America five days before election day. And that's what they've
got to offer you. That's the whole thing. Like there's
nothing else but that.
Speaker 2 (31:08):
That it that Like, that's it.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
There, it is there, there's there's there's no reason for
for you to not be excited, because there is the excitement.
You need to be excited. You need to be fired up,
you need to be all about this. You need to
make sure that you are We answer, we asked all
those tough questions. There is nothing else for you to
(31:34):
worry about. There is nothing else for you to be
concerned about. Like this is the ballgame, folks. We've got
it all for you, every bit of it.
Speaker 2 (31:44):
It's all yours. It's all yours.
Speaker 1 (31:47):
Make sure you share this podcast with your family and
your friends, and I'll see you back here tomorrow