Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good morning, Michael and Dragon.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
It's cold out there and I had to put a
hat on.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
I was freezing my earballs off. I'm just thinking about
this auto pen. If any investigator is able to prove
that Joe Biden, you know, has cognitive issues, then wouldn't
anybody who is being held accountable be able to say
that he just has cognitive issues and does not remember
(00:28):
authorizing them to take their actions with his auto pen.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
Exactly? See, that's that we I think the public forgets
that there are here's a great example. If i'll talk
about it gets me off track of what I wanted
to talk about.
Speaker 2 (00:47):
Real cook, Were you just going to glaze over earballs
nine thirty?
Speaker 3 (00:50):
No, No, we'll get back the earballs in just a second.
I want to I want to work this one backwards.
So just hang tight, hang tied. I know you're back there,
just fitting nine thirty out of your out of your mouth,
and any of your balls. Everybody just thinks that because
Biden probably was out of it and didn't actually know
(01:12):
that the staff was signing or using the autopin to
sign pardons, that that just automatically makes the pardons null
and void, or the executive orders that he signed noll
and void. Whether it does legally or not is going
to be for the court to decide, because the president
(01:35):
is given great power and widespread immunity.
Speaker 4 (01:41):
And insofar as proving.
Speaker 3 (01:44):
To your point, yeah, the president told us to do that. Okay,
let's go talk to the president. Oh, I may have
I just don't remember where's if if you're in a
and it wouldn't be criminal court, but let's say it's
(02:05):
a criminal court. Just for the sake of the argument,
how are you going to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
that those things are invalid because he had no clue
of what was going on. The other problem you have
is it's just like and I'll use my mom for
(02:25):
an example. One of the reasons why I was gone
Monday is I had to take care of some stuff
for her financially. I needed to check on her because
Tamra and our son had been down the weekend before
and they were very concerned about her health and her
well being. And I needed to put my own eyeballs
on things. Earballs. I need to put my own earballs
(02:47):
on things. And so I went down and put my
earballs on things at nine thirty and I came away.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
With.
Speaker 3 (02:58):
I went in with very expectations that, oh my gosh,
Mom's going to be so bad that it's nursing home time.
But I came away no, it's not. In fact, depending
on how she continues to live and certain things I've
got to take care of with doctors. You know, she
(03:19):
may live to be as old as her mother was,
which was I think either ninety seven or ninety eight
years old. So she might have another four years, or
she might continue to decline and that trend line might accelerate.
Speaker 4 (03:33):
I don't know, doctors don't know.
Speaker 3 (03:36):
It just depends on her her body and how stimulated
and active that we can all keep her, and that
her friends can keep her. Now, while I was there
and we're all going to face this, so I'm not
like giving away family secrets here. But while I was there,
(04:00):
there were times when she was very cogent, very aware,
was able to help understand what I was doing in
terms of finances and bills and everything else, you know,
and and her money and stuff. She was able to
fully understand that. Yet later that evening it would be
now what were we doing again?
Speaker 4 (04:23):
What what? And I would I'd had to stop myself
because I like.
Speaker 5 (04:30):
It.
Speaker 3 (04:30):
Frust It would frustrate me and I'd have to calm
down and just say, Mom, don't you remember we were
going to do this, this, this, and this.
Speaker 4 (04:38):
Oh yeah, I remember. Now.
Speaker 2 (04:39):
She hasn't forgotten nine thirty though now.
Speaker 3 (04:41):
But she did not forget nine thirty. And uh, well,
I've already told her about nine thirty, so you know,
she because I figured, and I would make a horrible
joke here, but I figured I could go ahead and
tell mom about nine thirty because she won't remember nine thirty.
So you know, I'm safe until nine thirty this morning.
Speaker 4 (04:59):
That was But.
Speaker 3 (05:02):
My mom has the kind of sense of humor, but
she would actually appreciate that, So I don't I don't
worry about it. That's It's the same thing with Joe Biden.
So while this report is damning, let's go back to
Woodrow Wilson. We now know historically that Woodrow Wilson was
completely incapacitated and Edith Wilson Wilson was running everything in
(05:25):
cahoots with the staff. He was up, he was he
was up in the residence and she was literally signing
things and you know, doing stuff and everything. What was
the what what was the fix for that?
Speaker 4 (05:36):
Oh, an election.
Speaker 3 (05:38):
You have political issues and you have legal issues, sometimes intertwined,
sometimes they don't. In this case, when it comes to
the pardons, the power of the president to pardon some
is absolute. Okay, you just have to have to start
with that baseline. He can pardon anyone for a federal crime,
(06:00):
for any reason or for no reason. It's just like,
you serve at the will of the president. That means
the president can fire you for any reason or for
no reason. When you work for the president, it doesn't
make any difference whether you have, like I did, two
centate confirmations, that doesn't make any difference once those confirmations
(06:21):
are done. You serve at the pleasure of the president.
So that this that's why this report is a bombshell
from the historical perspective, and it shows that they probably
should have invoked the twenty fifth Amendment but failed to
do so. Okay, what are we gonna do, Well, we're
going to learn that next time. If let's just say,
(06:43):
let's use Trump for an example.
Speaker 4 (06:44):
Trump had an MRI, but we don't know why.
Speaker 3 (06:47):
Let's just pretend for a moment, emphasize, pretend for a moment,
imagine he's got a brain tumor at nine thirty, at
nine thirty, and they discovered that, and so he's going
to decline. Well, if we've learned anything from the Biden presidency,
I would think that it would be that jd. Vance
would have the cajones to say, at some point, look,
(07:09):
President Trump is unable to fulfill the duties of the office.
And I think we have a cabinet in place now
that is so loyal, so dedicated to doing their job
and fulfilling his agenda, that if he was incapable of
actually acting as president, they would fulfill their duty and
(07:31):
do what needed to be done into the twenty fifth Amendment,
And I think jd Vance would do so likewise, because
they care more about the country than they do about,
you know, Donald Trump when it comes to really getting
down to the nutcutting. So I just want everybody to
(07:51):
put everything that was said about the Cooma report in perspective.
All right, earballs, I just want to say thank you,
because that means you listen. They listened to their earballs
nice with their earballs, and I asked you to listen
to your Look. All right, I'll spill the beans right now,
(08:13):
I'm gonna show my earballs at nine thirty. See, we're
bringing Kyle Clark in at nine thirty. We're gonna do earballs.
All right, let's move on. The ballroom thing is driving
me nuts. But the ballroom thing goes beyond just the ballroom.
(08:40):
And I'll explain why in just a second. But let's
just kind of lay the groundwork for just how Remember
yesterday I said the Democrat Party was in disarray. Not
only are they in disarray, but the Democrat Party is
absolutely losing their minds.
Speaker 5 (08:56):
We've only got a minute left that I want to
play quickly what President Trump said today about the republic attendant.
Speaker 4 (09:02):
This is ms NBC. No, we have great people.
Speaker 6 (09:07):
I don't have to get into that, but we have
one of them standing right here. We have JD obviously,
the Vice president is great, the Marco is great. I
think I'm not sure if anybody would run against us.
I think if they ever formed a group would be unstoppa.
Speaker 4 (09:23):
I really do. I believe that I would. I would.
Speaker 6 (09:26):
I would love to do it, and I have the
best numbers ever, Its right, terrible, I have my best numbers.
Speaker 4 (09:32):
You're you read it?
Speaker 6 (09:35):
Am I not running it?
Speaker 4 (09:36):
Out which and you'll have to tell me.
Speaker 6 (09:37):
All I can tell you is that we have a great.
Speaker 4 (09:40):
He loves to troll people.
Speaker 3 (09:44):
He's not going to serve a third term.
Speaker 4 (09:48):
It's not going to happen.
Speaker 3 (09:50):
But the Democrats are so stupid that they continue to
fall for well, am I run for turn Oh, I
don't know.
Speaker 4 (09:59):
You'd have to tell me.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
Make great with me.
Speaker 7 (10:02):
Marca Ruby has a very good, like resting face.
Speaker 4 (10:05):
He just you know, didn't even respond to that.
Speaker 2 (10:07):
But the question is.
Speaker 7 (10:10):
Is it Donald Trump to decide who succeeds him.
Speaker 4 (10:14):
That's the nominee.
Speaker 5 (10:15):
Nobody's going to succeed him.
Speaker 4 (10:16):
He's going to succeed himself.
Speaker 5 (10:18):
Let's just be real. He's not building that ballroom because
he's planning on leaving. He's not going anywhere, and nobody's
going to get him out of there. And by the way,
the Supreme Court says you can't run again. He will
just ignore the courts. And I'm happy to see Marca
Rubio without Steve Wickoff as our secretary of state. So
I'm happy to see that he's appeared and popped up somewhere.
But he's not going to be the nominee. Gg Vance
is not going to be the nominee because Donald Trump
(10:38):
is not going anywhere. And I understand that sounds crazy
and wacko, but think about all the other crazy, wacko
things that this president has done that we could not
believe he'd ever do. And you see why he's going
to run again in twenty twenty eight. And he's not
going anywhere unless you know, the ravage is a time
take him away. He's not leaving that White House.
Speaker 4 (10:56):
Julie Rigin's gig, thank you are insane.
Speaker 3 (11:03):
And I think that this is really from a pure
psychological psychiatric point of view, this is projection, true projection.
Speaker 4 (11:15):
Donald Trump, Let's just be honest.
Speaker 3 (11:17):
He's not gonna lea He's building that ballroom because he's
not gonna leave. What is it a bunker? Are they
gonna put like turrets on the windows and they're gonna
have fifty calibers sticking out of there? And he's going
to fight off the US military and the DC Police
and the Secret Service and everybody else, and he's gonna
(11:37):
hunker down in the new ballroom that's replacing the East Wing.
Is that what's going on? No, but that's what they
would like to do. They would like to take control
of the country and never let go. These people are
nuts again. In SNBC Nicole Wallace.
Speaker 7 (12:00):
Two hours is not just about remaking the country in
service of Donald Trump's retribution and revenge, which sounded petty
at the beginning. It's now all consuming.
Speaker 2 (12:12):
But now it is.
Speaker 7 (12:13):
It is like a fire burning through the actual structure
of the way.
Speaker 4 (12:18):
Oh. Absolutely, it's a fire burning through the action.
Speaker 3 (12:22):
There's a fire going. Have you seen that wrecking ball?
There's dust, there's fire. Oh my gosh, I had a
don't shout fire in a crowded theater nine thirty.
Speaker 8 (12:31):
What Jonathan Carl said last hour, He said that Donald
Trump's revanelist is made up of folk who tried to
cancel it, and by building this ninety thousand square footballroom,
you can't cancel that. He's going to imprint his revenge
on the people's house. He's going to imprint himself on
(12:52):
the on the bureaucratic infrastructure, because he's going to he's
going to remake government in the image of himself.
Speaker 3 (12:59):
Which is what Theodore Roosevelt did when he built the
West Wing. Yeah, he imprinted in fact, that's why if
you've never been there, but just off the Oval Office
is what's called the Roosevelt Room. It's a big conference room.
I mean, I'll never forget the very first time I
(13:20):
got to sit in that room because I'm a huge
fan of Theodore Roosevelt. And there is a oh, the sculpture,
the famous Western Sculpture has a has a sculpture of
Theodore Roosevelt as a rough rider. And then there's the
great Old Remington and then there's the great painting of
(13:41):
Theodore Roosevelt on his horseback, and it's just, you know,
he's I walked in that room and I thought, Theodore
Roosevelt's never left. He's still here. He left his imprint.
Every president leaves their imprint on the White House. Good
grief these people are.
Speaker 4 (14:00):
They're not.
Speaker 8 (14:01):
And interestingly enough, it will take generations for us to
undo it. So the folk who tried to cancel, they
will not take another breath before it's undone. And so,
you know, we face a moral choice with political implication
in this country. We have for over a decade and
we have not chosen wealth, and we're dealing with the
(14:22):
consequence its day in and day out.
Speaker 7 (14:24):
When you say the generation, I mean, I think of
that It's very hard to cover a baby dying of measles, right,
and I think about how our babies will eradicate measles
the second time, or pullio or whatever else. The anti
vax movement Ussurance distain up on the vaccine French, but
I think the story broadens out the generational work of
(14:45):
undoing the damage to an actual structure, right.
Speaker 8 (14:47):
Is what happens to the in the interim, I mean
the period between the end of reconstruction and Brown v.
Speaker 4 (14:54):
Board. Think of all the carnage, all the loss, what
we have to deal with whenever the fevered Wait wait
a minute, the carnage.
Speaker 2 (15:06):
Please think of the children.
Speaker 3 (15:08):
The carnage between the Civil War and Brown v. Board
of Education that was all wrought by the Democrats. That
was the Democrat Party. Jim Crow was a Democrat Party platform.
Speaker 4 (15:24):
Holy cow, these people are nuts.
Speaker 3 (15:28):
It's I really think that in whatever that book is
of psychiatric diseases, they really do need to put Trump
to arrangement syndrome, because.
Speaker 4 (15:39):
That's how absolutely off the wall. They are. So when
when when.
Speaker 3 (15:45):
Newsom California Governor Gavin Newsom, when he took to x
T mack Trump's privately funded this three hundred million dollars
White House ballroom, he thundered, just like they do with
righteous indignation. He even accuse the President of bulldozing the
White House while Americans pay more for groceries and essentials,
(16:07):
even though that completely belies the fact that not a
single taxpayer dollar is going to pay for this. And
then he claimed that by building the ballroom, Trump was
quote ripping apart the constitution. Then declared that it's not
his house, it's your house, and he's destroying it. You know,
(16:28):
if you call Discount Bath, like I've asked you to
do many times, if you call the guys, if you
call christ and the guys at Discount Bath and you
say I want to remodel my bathroom, what's the first
thing they do. They come in and they do the teardown. Yes,
the demo, the demolition. Oh my gosh, they're ripping apart
(16:49):
my bathroom because you wanted to remodel it. He said,
you wanted a new bathroom. Well, if you want a
new bathroom, the old bathroom has to go out. Shusaiah
One never thot about that.
Speaker 4 (17:01):
Such theatrical outrage might have landed.
Speaker 3 (17:05):
Better if Newsom were simultaneously presiding you with the most
bloated oh pay, oh pay, and hypocritical public works projects
of modern American history. The California State Capitol and ex renovation.
I know you've never heard of it. That's why you
listen here.
Speaker 4 (17:21):
And at nine thirty, mor name Michael and Dragon. This
is your favorite j goober. Hey, is there something happening?
At nine thirty, we know all about it, guys.
Speaker 2 (17:33):
At nine thirty, Michael will put his shoes back on
and the air will clear.
Speaker 1 (17:37):
In Denver, speaking of bathrooms, do we have an update
on your bathroom the first.
Speaker 2 (17:43):
Floor of horse floor.
Speaker 1 (17:45):
Oh, that's the nine thirty announcement.
Speaker 3 (17:51):
We're sworn to secrecy until nine thirty. But it is
a it's a big ass announcement.
Speaker 2 (17:57):
It's thirty at nine thirty.
Speaker 4 (17:59):
It's big. Yeah, it's really big. I'd like to say
that it involves the.
Speaker 3 (18:06):
Restrooms DIGG nine thirty, I'd like to say it involves.
Speaker 2 (18:15):
Nine thirty.
Speaker 3 (18:17):
So tuning in at nine thirty and well, I'm finally
getting a decent producer.
Speaker 4 (18:23):
Is what's happening? That's that's the good news.
Speaker 2 (18:25):
At nine thirty.
Speaker 4 (18:26):
At nine thirty, an.
Speaker 3 (18:30):
Win, we'll have we'll double the audience from twelve plus
alternate to uh twenty four plus two alternates. It'll be fantastic,
absolutely fantastic.
Speaker 7 (18:44):
Question is is it Donald Trump to decide who succeeds
him as the nominee.
Speaker 5 (18:51):
Nobody's going to succeed him.
Speaker 4 (18:52):
She's going to succeed himself.
Speaker 5 (18:54):
Let's let's just be real. He's not building that ballroom
because he's planning on leaving. He's not going anywhere, and
nobody's going to get him out of there and buy them.
Speaker 2 (19:03):
Wow, didn't Isn't that exactly what Biden did nine thirty.
Speaker 3 (19:08):
Yeah, at nine thirty, except he didn't know was nine
thirty bye because Biden Biden never got out of bed
before nine thirty.
Speaker 4 (19:16):
He never went to the Oval office before nine thirty,
so he really had no clue.
Speaker 3 (19:20):
But back to Newsom for a moment, because and again
this is another example of now I know that this
is a local story to Sacramento, or maybe a local
story to California, but it's also a national story that
is not being told to you because it might allow
you to do a little compare and contrast. It might
(19:42):
allow you to realize how hypocritical and how bad the
Democrats are in terms of lying to you and feeding
you all the bullcrab to continue to feed you about
what's going on with the renovation of the Ballroom. Trump's
Ballroom Edition, a privately financed modern newsization of the East
Wing that's designed to accommodate state function, state dinners, diplomatic events.
(20:07):
It is just being smeared by Democrats as some sort
of symbol of excess. And now it's excess plus it's
a signal, it's a super Batman signal that Trump's not
going to leave the White House. Newsom and the Senate
Democrats now complain that Trump's acceptance of private donations is
(20:32):
now raising conflicts of interest, and that the project lacks
sufficient historical oversight, and that the demolition of the old
East Wing somehow desecrated the people's House. But what they
don't tell you is that under federal law, the president
is fully within his rights to alter the White House complex,
(20:52):
quite frankly, in almost any way that he sees fit.
I would go so far as to say that in
any way that he sees fit. Huh, And it used
no taxpayer funds. Now, let's do a little compare and
contrast Newsom's own Capital annex project, which he championed and
(21:15):
he shielded from public scrutiny, is a billion dollar taxpayer
funded embarrassment that embodies every abuse that he and the
Democrats falsely attribute to Donald Trump. Let's start with the scale.
Just you know you always need anytime you look at
(21:38):
a map, give a scale over here. Well, this topic
has a scale too. Trump's ballroom costs about three hundred
million dollars, all again covered by Trump himself and private donors.
The California Capital renovation was originally budgeted at about five
hundred and forty three million dollars originally. It now exceeds
(21:59):
one point one billion dollars in taxpayer money, and it's
estimated to reach one point six billion dollars upon completion,
which I am going to low ball and say, I
bet it's two billion dollars. What was promised as a
two year upgrade has turned into a five year debacle.
(22:20):
So while Trump's team complied with all the federal preservation guidelines,
the California Democrats and Gavin Newsom just bulldoze not just offices,
but all the decades of environmental and historic safeguards that
they force upon everybody else in the state of California.
So when lawsuits under the California Environmental Quality Act delayed
(22:42):
the capital project, which oh, interestingly, nobody has sued Donald
Trump that I know of. Anyway, I should have checked
next to Lexus next Us this morning to see if
there were any lawsuits. But best I could tell earlier,
there were no lawsuits filed, no environmental problems, not none
of that. But Newsom ignored all of the requirements under
(23:06):
his own state laws, the California Environmental Quality Act. So
that lawsuit delayed the project. So what did they do?
They changed the law. Oh, you're suing us because we
violated the law. So Newsom goes to the Democrats in
the California General Assembly and says, wait a minute, let's
just change Let's just change the law. Therefore, make the
(23:30):
lawsuit moot. They quietly slipped an exemption into their budget
trailer for the twenty twenty four budget, effectively declaring that
the rules that bind every other private developer in California
doesn't apply to them. Talk about hypocritical. Now, that was
done by Senate Bill one seventy four. It got rammed
(23:51):
through at the end of budget negotiations. There were no
public hearings whatsoever. It's just one of those things that
hey tell the staffer to type in this paragraph on
that legislation.
Speaker 4 (24:00):
Boom, got it.
Speaker 3 (24:01):
Okay, everybody vote all in favors, say I post same
sign motion carries bill goes through the same Democrats. And
I want to pull Colorado into this now too, because
the same Democrats in every Democrat controlled state that lectures
you and me as homeowners, farmers and ranches, branchers, small
(24:23):
business owners, lecture us about environmental stewardship. What did they
do in California? They exempt that exempted themselves in the
darkened night. Even the former chair of the California Historical
State Capitol Commission called the move a trick card at
the last minute.
Speaker 4 (24:42):
Now, Republicans called this hypocrisy.
Speaker 3 (24:45):
I would have called it the BS word, but Democrats
pushed ahead, determined that they were going to protect their
billion dollar vanity project. But that's that's just the beginning.
There's more to the story. I need, you know, dragging me.
I need a short somewhere on the board. Paul Harvey
(25:06):
satting and now the rest of the story at nine
thirty will do that that's what we're doing at nine thirty.
We're bringing Paul Harvey back. I'm getting fired and Paul
Harvey's going to replace me because you know, AI think
about that, I heart can save a lot of money
just by taking Paul Harvey's voice. And they're just taking
all my show prep and just having Paul Harvey come back.
(25:27):
That's what's happening at nine thirty. So they they they
rush through an exemption for all the environmental laws that
everybody else has to comply with. They exempt themselves. Then
came to no bid contracts, and exactly the opposite Trump's ballroom,
which relied on competitive bids from top us construction companies Newsance, Capital, Renovation. Oh,
(25:56):
those are all no bid sweetheart deals. Key contracts got
to warded to politically connected firms without any competition whatsoever.
Over two thousand individuals, workers, contractors, and staff were forced
to sign NDA's non disclosure agreements. That level of secrecy
(26:17):
would be unthinkable for a private developer. The California's ruling class,
the California commies, they forced it on the taxpayers that
are actually funding the work. So the NDA's conveniently shielded
the details of all the cost over runs, all the
design changes, all the conflicts of interest, all of that,
(26:40):
while Gavin Newsom goes out there and rails about transparency
in Washington, while his own government and his own office
runs its flagship construction project like a classified operation.
Speaker 4 (26:51):
And let's just pause for a moment.
Speaker 3 (26:57):
Raise your hand. If you heard about this project before,
I confess I hadn't. I hadn't heard about it until
I started digging around just trying to find out about
Trump's ballroom project and the construction firms and blah blah blah.
And then there's a little footnote. Compare and contrast this
(27:17):
with over here. That's something good about AI. That's something
good about AI because it will give you sources who
will give you you know, as you have a conversation
with AI, it will you know. He can be bad too.
Don't get me wrong, because I know we got the
suicide case. But you know, I'm having a conversation and
they're like, hey, have you looked at this?
Speaker 4 (27:39):
Oh no, let's go look at that for a while.
Speaker 3 (27:43):
The irony gets even worse when the supposed moral contrast
the Democrats tried to draw and what was that moral contrast?
Speaker 4 (27:55):
That's next, and.
Speaker 3 (27:56):
Then there'll be something at ninety something at nine thirty.
Speaker 2 (28:01):
You know, if you.
Speaker 4 (28:03):
Add five and six and then.
Speaker 1 (28:10):
Add six squared times five squared, you know what you get.
Speaker 7 (28:21):
Do you want to give him a hit dragon?
Speaker 4 (28:24):
Nine thirty?
Speaker 2 (28:27):
Math checks out? Nine thirty?
Speaker 3 (28:28):
Does it check out? I was doing it long in
my head until he got to the second squared and
then I kind of lost I lost lost.
Speaker 2 (28:36):
It at that point nine thirty.
Speaker 3 (28:39):
And by the way, for those of you there, we
have a text. If I don't give out the number
of people get pissed off. Kuber in ninety six twenty
four is listening on the East coast? Uh oh, I'm sorry.
Is Scubert number nineteen seventy is listening on the East coast?
It's nine thirty where I am listening. Where's the an now?
Speaker 2 (29:01):
Yeah, but it's five thirty where girl dad's listening. So
he's gonna wait even longer, right.
Speaker 3 (29:06):
So you know, maybe we should just start specifying nine
to thirty mountain time.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
Well that's what I did in the very beginning, but
you know, it's just so much easier to say nine thirty.
Speaker 4 (29:15):
I'm just happy to know that I've got somebody.
Speaker 3 (29:18):
All the way on the East coast and in Alaska,
and then you know, we have somebody in Japan.
Speaker 2 (29:24):
And yet we still don't have a map in this
studio with pins in it to where everybody is listening
nine thirty.
Speaker 4 (29:40):
Back to Newsom.
Speaker 3 (29:41):
I gotta I gotta finish the Newsom story otherwise I
get in trouble and I'll miss the nine thirty announcement.
I want you, I said. The irony deepens. Think about this.
Newsom is out there portraying the East Wing renovation as
a sign.
Speaker 4 (29:58):
Of royal arrogance. He's a king. Oh, I'm sorry, I forget.
We don't have any kings yet.
Speaker 3 (30:04):
The California Capital Annex has private corridors for the legislators
so that they can walk from you know, meeting room
to meeting room without you know, touching the you know,
the plebes out there underground parking for one hundred and
fifty officials, secure access routes designed to keep lawmakers out
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of public view. This is not a people's house, as
the Democrats like to claim. It's a fortress for the
ruling class, the political class. The leader of the California Assembly,
James Gallagher, put up bluntly this project is not the
Republican leader. This project is not about serving Californians, is
(30:47):
about serving themselves. So for all of nuisance talk about
fiscal responsibility, the numbers tell a gross story of gross mismanagement.
But it's not unlike their stupid rail project. It's not
unlike rebuilding after the fires. It's not like anything else.
And he has the audacity, he has the cajones, and
of course does does the media ever, does the cabal
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ever say.
Speaker 4 (31:11):
Wait a minute, wait, can we kill your.
Speaker 3 (31:15):
Bitch about what's going on on the formerly the East Wing,
which can I remind you once again it was tiny.
It was tiny and dusty and decrupit and old and
just tiny little offices that most of which were not used,
or if they were used, people were crammed in. They're
kind of like crammed in here. I'll let me put
(31:37):
it this way. Many offices in the East Wing were
actually worse than this studio. That's how bad it is.
That's how bad the East Wing was. And I'm talking
when I was there, and that's been twenty freaking years ago. Now,
(31:58):
even some Democrats in California privately whisper they have no
idea where this money is going. And then you compare
that to Trump no cost overfronts. You know it's not
it's it's not gonna it's it's gonna change the footprint.
And if somebody say on the text line, they just
saw Trump being welcomed in South Korea in a giant ballroom.
(32:21):
But what do we do, Well, they drive, they drive
up to the South Portico and they and they walk
in and they go into which is an I would
not change the Oval Office. I think it's too historical.
But then you go into the Oval Office and it's
really tiny. Or if you're really going to have a
meeting with a international delegation, the only place to do
(32:45):
that is going to be right now in the East room.
And now with this ballroom, you could bring in the cameras,
you could bring in all of their staff, You could
do everything. Plus you could actually have a state dinner
where people are you know, where women or women are
not wearing their high heels and getting it stuck in
the grass at on the south lawn. How about that?
(33:08):
This is just misleading you by omission by the cabal.
I know that's shocking, right, shocking is nine