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November 13, 2025 30 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Michael, fool me once, fool me twice, blah blah blah.
You know, buz, Goober's followed you over to the new
station at the new time because you said you loved us.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
We know that was a lie.

Speaker 1 (00:10):
Now and now you're inviting us to go on a
cruise with you. And let me guess I'm going to
show up. I'll get on board, I'll go look for
my host, only to find is being guest hosted by
Caldera or.

Speaker 3 (00:23):
That blond chick. Right, yeah, shame on me, Shame on you.

Speaker 4 (00:28):
I can't believe you figured it out. I mean, I
really thought that the goobers were dumber than that. But
jimminy Christmas. Yeah, I'm just trying to sell you, you know,
a crazy ship to go and we say it's the
Greek Isle, the Greek Isles.

Speaker 3 (00:42):
Yeah, it's not, that's really not really it is.

Speaker 4 (00:46):
We're going to Ukraine, to Ukraine, We're going to the
front lines to see what's going on. You've heard me
in the past refer to the congregants in the Church
of the Climate Activists because I believe the climate change is.

Speaker 3 (00:59):
Truly a real religion among the true believers.

Speaker 4 (01:02):
Well, I think that Marxism, communism, socialism, all the stuff
that whichever one of the isms you want to pick.
For Zofram Mom Donnie in New York City, it's turning
into a religion already. And it really bugs me because
as a Christian, and those of you who have followed

(01:24):
me over here from K H O W I, well,
I truly appreciate it. But for all you new listeners,
let me just establish something right up front. I'm a
Christian by by belief and by faith, and I believe
that you know, God, God sent his only son to
to you know, absorb all of our sins, and by

(01:46):
by the grace of God, we are forgiven of our sins,
and we will you know, ascend to Heaven, you know,
upon our death. Uh, you know, like you a lot
more detail, But basically, I'm a Christian. I'm not a Jew.
I'm not a Muslim. I'm not a Hindu. I'm not
a Sikh. I'm not a Methodist, I'm not a Presbyterian.

(02:06):
I am literally a member of the Disciples of Christ,
the Christian Church, and I believe as part of that
that we are we all have our own individual salvation.
My salvation does not depend upon Dragon, very very fortunately,

(02:27):
because well, then I would be in total.

Speaker 3 (02:30):
I'd be screwed.

Speaker 4 (02:31):
Likewise, Dragon salvation does not depend upon me, because he
would be screwed because I'm just as much a center
as he is. Well, maybe not quite as much as
he is, but you know, i'd like to think I'm
I'd like to think I'm better than he is.

Speaker 2 (02:46):
You've said more than I have, just because you're old older,
you turn a hund thirteen a year.

Speaker 3 (02:51):
You're right, I've had more time.

Speaker 4 (02:53):
I think it in more sins Like you know, I
might might concede that point to you, but.

Speaker 2 (02:56):
Then you never have worked on the FM, so maybe
we are the other league.

Speaker 4 (03:00):
That's right, because I've never worked on the third floor,
so I can't I can't claim that.

Speaker 3 (03:04):
By the way, have you heard this noise going on?
Two days in a row.

Speaker 4 (03:08):
I thought it was Shannon across the hallway, banging on
like he's killing something. So today I stepped in and said, Shannon,
are you off your made? What's wrong? And turns out no,
it's not Shannon, it's Steve. Steve, what's he doing in there?
He has a game called What's in My Can? Or
something of that nature. So he puts something and shakes
it up and well, yes.

Speaker 3 (03:28):
It like literally shocked me. I'm like, what the hell
was that? Today?

Speaker 4 (03:32):
I got worried. I'm like, what is happening to Shannon.
There's something wrong? Because we know there's something wrong with
Shannon to begin with, so I thought, maybe he's off
his mads. I need to go in and check the
pill bottle and make sure you know he's taking the
one for today, and do all that. But now I
find out something else. So anyway, we are each of us.
I believe, in fact, I believe this whether you're a

(03:52):
Christian or not, that each of us individually, because God created.

Speaker 3 (03:57):
Us in his own image, each of us are very.

Speaker 4 (04:00):
Unique individuals, some more unique than others. But as a
matter of fact, so I don't buy into the theory
that collectivism, authoritarianism, and in all the otherisms, socialism, fascism, communism,
all the isms are inherently anti religious. However, the problem

(04:23):
is is that many on the I shouldn't say any
I really don't know anymore, but I tend to believe
that those on the left, and I'll make a generalization here,
I think that most of the people on the left
are such collectivists, and they believe in this collectivism, just

(04:45):
like let's go back to the congregants in the Church
of the Climate activists, they themselves believe that in their
religion that they have a collective duty to somehow that
they are greater than God himself and they can save
the planet. And so, you know, whether it's zero, whether
kind of bull craft they're feeding us, they believe that

(05:06):
somehow that we can save the planet. Now I find
that seeking or seeping into Christianity, and it really bothers me.
On X last night I run X, which, by the way,
you should be following me on X at Michael Brown USA.
You know, we pay quite well for those follows. Yes,
oh yeah, we send checks out daily for the follows

(05:29):
on X.

Speaker 2 (05:30):
If it's good enough for elections, the mail is good
enough for the checks for the exists.

Speaker 4 (05:34):
That's exactly right. It's a mail in check. You'll get
it when you get it. So at Michael Brown, USA,
I come across a pastor. Now I don't really know. Look,
I'm just taking this at face value. This young lady
claims to be a pastor or a minister of the
Christian faith, and she is in love with zo fram

(05:59):
so wrong, So mom Donnie, and she ties his political
beliefs and says that it is, indeed a new religion.

Speaker 5 (06:11):
Donnie might be one of the most christ Like political
figures in our American system right now. And hear me out,
I'm Blair, I'm pastor apparent, a professor of theology.

Speaker 6 (06:18):
And I understand this. Zorn Is.

Speaker 4 (06:20):
You know, I and Kelly spaced that out. I've listened
to this like five times now. I've spaced out, professor
of theology. If you don't think that indoctrination is going
on in higher education, and in this case, pastor a
professor of theology. It could be undergraduate, it could be

(06:41):
a graduate school. I don't know which it is. It
could be a divinity school. But wherever she is a
pastor of theology. This is the absolute blasphemous stuff that
she's feeding us.

Speaker 3 (06:52):
But I don't I'm trying to avoid.

Speaker 4 (06:55):
I've established the baseline about the religious aspect. I want
us to focus much she says about the political aspect Muslim.

Speaker 6 (07:02):
That's not the point here.

Speaker 5 (07:03):
The point here is the way that Zoron describes his
own philosophy of the government.

Speaker 6 (07:09):
In a recent interview with The Daily and the New.

Speaker 4 (07:11):
All Right, he's about to describe Zoefram's philosophy of government.
Not his religion, not his Muslim belief, not his Islamic belief.

Speaker 3 (07:23):
None of that, his governmental beliefs.

Speaker 5 (07:26):
New York Times, he said, what democratic socialism means is
a belief that it is government's job.

Speaker 4 (07:33):
Catch that that with his democratic socialist belief it is
the government's job.

Speaker 5 (07:40):
Recent interview with The Daily and the New York Times,
he said, what democratic socialism means is a belief that
it is government's job to ensure that every person is
living a life of dignity.

Speaker 3 (07:53):
And pause, let that soak in.

Speaker 4 (07:58):
It's the government's job to make certain that everybody within
the jurisdiction I assume they're talking about the United States
government and in so Fram's case, the municipality of the
City of New York, that it is their job to
ensure that every person within their jurisdictional boundaries has a

(08:20):
life of dignity. That's the government's job. Well, let's just
suppose to take of argument. Let's say that it is uh,
you can't fix the streets, you can't fix the potholes,
you can't make the trains run on time. You don't
seem to be able to do much of anything to

(08:40):
the degree that the private sector is able to do things.
In fact, what's the government invented for us? I mean,
other than the founding fathers inventing the Constitution, coming with
the Constitution and giving us a form of self government
on a democracy, a republican small r form of government.
What has government done now? I know that over here
in this little corner somewhere with say DARPA, the Defense

(09:02):
Research Agency, that they've come up with some things, and
I'll give credit over here to NASA, that NASA has
come up a few with a few things that we've
adopted into the private sector. But it's been the private
sector that is taking these little nuggets of ideas and
commercialized them and made them marketable to us so that
we can use them in the private sector. Other than that,
as I pointed out either yesterday or day before, government

(09:25):
employees really have no transferable skills. And the people who can't,
you know, keep track of ballots, the people who can't
make certain that you know that you have the proper idea,
or the people that can't you know, enforce the laws.
The people that can't do that when you look at

(09:45):
how everything is failing around us, and how the how
this country, unfortunately the United States of America is we
haven't turned into it yet, although pockets of it have.
We're sliding into a third world country status. I mean,
you look around with some of our infrastructure. I mean,
it's it's horrible. And here's this woman claiming that, Oh,

(10:09):
but it's the government's job to guarantee everyone in the
life of dignity.

Speaker 5 (10:13):
Beef that it is a government's job to ensure that
every person is living a life of dignity, and dignity
is not the things that you'd like. It's not the
things that you'd want, And it's it's the things that
you need.

Speaker 4 (10:26):
Okay, let's just you know, let's keep disecting this as
we go along. So it's not the things that you want,
it's not the things you would like, it's the things
that you need. Okay, what do I need? Well, I
obviously need food and water. I need some kind of shelter,
and because of my lifestyle and my work, I need
some form of transportation. I need to eat, I need

(10:49):
to be able to drink, not necessarily just my diet coke.
But obviously I need fluids nor for my body to
sustain itself.

Speaker 3 (10:55):
So I need food and water, I need air to breathe.
I need what else?

Speaker 4 (11:01):
You well, I need my dogs. You know, I want
my dogs. I don't really need my dogs. I need
a certain kind of car. No, I really just kind
of want a certain.

Speaker 3 (11:10):
Kind of car.

Speaker 4 (11:12):
Needs versus once versus likes. Okay, well, what is she
talking about.

Speaker 6 (11:18):
I'm gonna say that one more time.

Speaker 5 (11:20):
The government's job is to ensure that every person is
living a life of dignity.

Speaker 6 (11:27):
And when I read the scriptures.

Speaker 5 (11:29):
And look at what Jesus does for people in his ministry,
it is ensure them a life of dignity. It's to
heal people who've been exiled because of their illness or
their disability.

Speaker 4 (11:41):
Oh so we should have government run healthcare. The government
should heal the sick, right, that's what she's claiming.

Speaker 6 (11:51):
It's to feed people when they're hungry.

Speaker 4 (11:53):
Oh so is the government's job to feed people when
they're hungry? You know, I do fasting, So I eat dinner,
you know, around five six o'clock in the evening, and
then I don't eat again until noon. So I do
an eighteen hour fast.

Speaker 3 (12:07):
Well one, this morning is one of those mornings where.

Speaker 4 (12:09):
My stomach is growling. I'm really kind of hungry this morning,
So sweetheart, could I get some food? Could you bring
me some food? Because and not you, No, I don't
want you to feed me. Uh Dragon, call the government
number and have them bring me some food. You know
the five five five one two one two number for
the government.

Speaker 3 (12:27):
Oh yeah, yeah, sure that one. Get right on it. Yeah,
get right on that.

Speaker 4 (12:30):
Have them to leurre me. Well, do you want some morning?
You must have pizza here. There's barbecue downstairs or something.

Speaker 3 (12:34):
But pizza. Pizza is good anytime, any time of day.

Speaker 4 (12:38):
Right.

Speaker 5 (12:38):
It's to see children as beloved and to belonging to
the community instead of.

Speaker 3 (12:44):
What this one just wants me to puke.

Speaker 6 (12:48):
People when they're hungry.

Speaker 5 (12:50):
It's to see children as beloved and to belonging to
the community instead of as property or possessions.

Speaker 6 (12:56):
Is to see women women.

Speaker 4 (12:58):
I never was I have two kids, have three grandchildren.
Dragons have got two kids and now three grandchildren.

Speaker 3 (13:05):
Just two two of each, just the two two of each.

Speaker 4 (13:08):
And do you see them in your property? Like do
you have a leader on them? Do you have a
title to them or anything. Do you have you know, like,
do you have any like a contract between them or something,
the grand parental contract.

Speaker 2 (13:20):
My own kids up until eighteen, they're my responsibility, but
after that you're on your own.

Speaker 4 (13:27):
You're horrible. You're clearly not caring about their dignity.

Speaker 5 (13:31):
And the same way Jesus ensures a life of dignity
for all those he meets. And so if you want
to talk about instituting a Christian government, I would pay
attention to what Zora and Mom Donnie is doing, because
what he is describing is a christ Like system of
government where we are all assured the basic necessities for

(13:55):
human dignity. And I think that looks like the Kingdom
of God.

Speaker 3 (13:59):
Wow, can we.

Speaker 4 (14:02):
Get George Orwell on the line, because it seems to
me that the New Speak dictionary now has so bastardized
the language that Democrat Socialists of America, of which Zoe Framp,
Mom Donnie and people like Bernie Sanders and alge Cosse
Cortez are proud members of the entire squad is a
proud member of the Democrat Socialists of America, somehow have

(14:24):
now conflated the responsibility that you and I have as
individuals to care for one another. They've now taken that
and they've transformed that into the government's responsibility to care
for one another. I don't want the government taking care
of me because I've seen what the government does, and
in fact, just to put a little fine point on it,

(14:48):
I've seen up close and personal what government does. And
I'm not just talking about my time as the under
Secretary of Homeland Security. I'm talking about when I see
government intervening in other people lives, or failing to intervene
in other people's lives, or claiming that they are helping
other people when wat what they're actually doing. If you
want to take, for example, Lyndon Baines Johnson.

Speaker 3 (15:10):
War on poverty.

Speaker 4 (15:11):
Oh, we're going to spend trillions of dollars on poverty
and we're going to eliminate poverty in the United States. Well,
I haven't seen that. Or we're going to eliminate bigotry
from the hearts of mankind, We're going to eliminate racism. Well,
I think we've done a pretty damn good job in
this country. When we fought the Civil War, we killed
you know, you know, six hundred thousand Americans to you know,

(15:35):
eliminate slavery and to try to keep the union together.
And yet there are still biggot people out there. So
I don't think the government has succeeded in doing that,
and quite frankly, I don't. I don't see the government,
if you want to take it down to the really
maybe gritty, I don't see the government doing much in
terms of people's individual lives making it better. I see

(15:58):
the private sector doing amazing things to make people's lives better.
The clothes I wear, the car I drive, the house
that I live in, everything that I enjoy that is
of high quality, that is of you know, not government source,

(16:19):
is pretty damn good. I have to admit that. And
even among the poorest in this country, it's still better
than the poor in other countries. And what I have, fortunately,
based on my willingness to work hard and get an
education and you know, go to graduate school and go
to law school and do all of those things, I've
lived a pretty damn good life. I've experienced many wonderful

(16:42):
things and some really bad things too. But then I
get in a really nice car and I have to
drive on a really crappy road or an unsafe bridge,
or if I were going to use public transportation, they
would never get me to the last mile of where I'd.

Speaker 3 (16:56):
Want to go.

Speaker 4 (16:58):
So the government cannot do what she claims. Yet that's
their attitude, that's their belief. Now we don't need necessarily
need to although it's not just her, but I don't
think we'll need to impose government run grocery stores because

(17:20):
we tried that before. I don't have it in front
of me, but in my notes from a previous program,
I've gone through different places around the country, including Kansas City,
where they have tried things like government run grocery stores
and they have utterly failed. And now mom Donnie has
planned for New York government run grocery stores because remember,

(17:41):
according to the professor of theology, it's necessary that we
provide human dignity. So that's providing things that people need
like food, water, and shelter. The liberals, I know, I
shouldn't use that word progressive Marxist communists, anti police, pro

(18:04):
crime policies may cause real grocery stores that have food
in them to actually close because of rampant shoplifting, failure
to enforce the law so you want to put together
a government run grocery store, and yet it's not really
going to accomplish what you wanted to do. But then
the government could just force them at gunpoint to stay
open at a loss. Because that sounds absurd, doesn't it.

(18:29):
Let's have grocery stores because you know, a target will
close down here, a Walmart might shut down. K Marsh
has disappeared. I think k Mart's disappeared.

Speaker 3 (18:38):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (18:39):
But retail stores that provide food and groceries and other
sundry items, you know, come and go and sometimes they
leave areas because of rampant crime. Well maybe what we
should do instead, as we'll hear from the new elective
mayor of Seattle, just forced them to stay open at gunpoint.

Speaker 7 (18:57):
Hey Michael, it seems to me the big problem here
is who defines dignity. You know, when we get into
these definitions of words, it can be very problematic. Who
gets to define those definitions.

Speaker 4 (19:15):
It's actually not problematic at all. They I can do
the little famous air quote. This is the this is
the see it right here? Can you see it? This
is the universal signal for air quotes.

Speaker 3 (19:32):
See that. Oh oh, we're on radio.

Speaker 4 (19:37):
I mean all the time I thought we were on TV. Yeah,
air quotes, they get to decide what it means. And
that's actually a very serious point. That's the whole point
about the New Speak dictionary in George Orwell's nineteen eighty four,
you know, up is down, down is up. Warri's piece,
all of that, you know, bull crap is is exactly

(19:58):
what the left is doing right now. And that's what
she's doing. She is taking Zoefram's words and she is
putting them in a theological context and trying to convince
you that it is the government's responsibility to take care
of everything that she described in terms of dignity, clothing, healthcare, food,

(20:22):
and housing I think were the things that she mentioned.
And by the way, just if you're curious and you're
curious who that woman is or that you would like
to watch that video, I have two comments to make.
Number One, if you wanted to ask me that question,
so let's say you wanted to send a text message

(20:44):
that said, ah, who is that woman, then you would
need to send that text message to three three one
zero three keyword Micha or Michael or I'm not going
to see the question. And so therefore I can't answer
the question. So if that would be a question that
you would want to ask the the proper way to
ask that question would either be in a talkback or

(21:05):
with a text message to three three one zero three
keyword Micha or Michael. So if anybody wants to pass
that question on the text line, then I'll go through
and do it. And then the other amazing thing. It's
amazing what we can do here is that dragon Redbeard,
despite the fact he really doesn't do anything.

Speaker 3 (21:21):
Back there, he said my name, I wasn't listening. What's
going on?

Speaker 4 (21:25):
See I I just not awaken. I'm like, I'm like
your alarm clock. Wake you up. If you would like
to see that video the producer back there, who is
half half awake.

Speaker 2 (21:37):
So oh wait, I did do something?

Speaker 3 (21:38):
Yeah, yeah, you did right. You don't even remember when
you do things?

Speaker 4 (21:42):
True, because it's so rare that you could actually go
to a website, Michael says, go here dot com and
you can watch it yourself, and you could share it
with your friends and say, this is what Michael Brown
talked about today.

Speaker 3 (21:55):
You got to be tuning in to listen to him.

Speaker 8 (21:56):
I guess, says, go here got com so sweet.

Speaker 3 (22:00):
She's the cutest thing too. She's let's go here dot com.

Speaker 4 (22:04):
So let's think about this whole idea about dignity and
that we ought to, you know, provide things like food.

Speaker 3 (22:11):
Well, I have probably about once.

Speaker 4 (22:13):
Every year I plagiarize an editorial from I think it
was the Orange County Register where it originally was written,
and the whole concept was back during the idea of
we all have government run healthcare, was the idea of
having government run grocery stores. And I always read that
as a parody about how stupid and insane it would

(22:36):
be to have government run grocery stores.

Speaker 3 (22:39):
Now here we are, and in twenty.

Speaker 4 (22:42):
Twenty five we have a member of the Democrat Socialists
of America who is advocating for government run grocery stores.
And as I said either yesterday or the day before,
my fear is that this is the proverbial foot in
the door, and that if a Democrat Socialist of America
starting with the squad, can now run the largest city

(23:04):
in America, the financial center of the universe, which I
find incredibly ironic, that we can have a self avowed
Marxist as the mayor of the financial capital of the
world burm Big Doodoo. Well, it's not always the East coast.
Sometimes it's the left coast. As I said earlier, if

(23:28):
you have government run grocery stores, when you combine that
with the Marxist anti police pro crime policies, that often
causes real legitimate private sector grocery stores to pick up
and move to close their doors and say we're not

(23:49):
we can't do business here anymore. It's not safe for
our employees, it's not safe for our customers, so we
shut down. Or as I saw at a I think
it was either. It must have been a CV when
I was in New York a couple of weeks ago,
you know, late at nine, I'm like, oh, I got
a headache, I've got allergies. I need to get some
suda fed or something. So there was a CVS about

(24:11):
two blocks away. So about eleven o'clock at night, I
walk over to the CVS, and of course I have to.

Speaker 3 (24:17):
Hey, hey, can you one, can you let me in? Two?

Speaker 4 (24:20):
Can you unlock the door over here so I can
get some suita faed Well, we need your driver's license
to see that. You know, I'm not making myth and
do I look like. Do I look like I'm making
meth in my hotel room. No, I just have allergies.
I have allergies. Give me some suda. Fad Finally got it.
But if we if we can't do the basic things

(24:42):
that we ask government to do, then I guess the
government can just force those targets or kmarts or walmarts
or whatever they might be, or the grocery stores that
move away. They could just force them at gunpoint to
stay open at a loss, which is exactly what the
new Marxist incoming mayor of Seattle, Katie Wilson. I bet

(25:06):
we start talking about Katie Wilson more in the future.
This is what she seems to imply in this video.
Not that there will be any empty shelf government grocery
stores too, but.

Speaker 3 (25:17):
That might happen. That might happen.

Speaker 8 (25:19):
Also, access to assortable, healthy food is a basic right.

Speaker 3 (25:25):
It's the basic right.

Speaker 8 (25:27):
Yes, we cannot allow giant grocery chains to stump all
over our communities, close stores that will leave behind food deserts.

Speaker 4 (25:35):
Oh, the government cannot allow the private sector to keep
open or to close down a non profitable retail outlet. Oh,
you're losing money will sucks to be you. We're from
the government and we're here to point a gun at
you and keep you open.

Speaker 8 (25:52):
Together, we can build the seattle where fresh food is
for everyone, not just for those who.

Speaker 6 (25:56):
Can afford it.

Speaker 8 (25:58):
Food doesnerts are not naturals, create them for the band
in our communities.

Speaker 3 (26:03):
What this with this woman is absolutely insane. She's totally insane.

Speaker 8 (26:13):
Who doesn't are not natural? Corporations create them for the
band in our communities. As a mayor, I'm excited to
step up and with UCW explore public option grocery stores
to fill those gaps.

Speaker 3 (26:26):
And we are now off to the races.

Speaker 7 (26:30):
Michael, hearing that last SoundBite reminds me of what my
dad used to say that lady must have been going
to a theology school at the church of what's happening now?

Speaker 3 (26:42):
I go to the church of Hey, what's happening baby church?

Speaker 4 (26:46):
Or what's happening now? So the the Democrats in the
media literally bark themselves horse about all the alleged threats
that they call the threats try our democracy. We got
to keep the world safe for democracy. Yet you know what,
they really don't have a lot to say when they're

(27:08):
fellow not jobs refuse to respect the.

Speaker 3 (27:13):
Will of the voters.

Speaker 4 (27:15):
From November twenty to November twenty two, twenty twenty five. Quote,
we will peacefully descend on the seat of power in Washington,
d C. To demand unmistakably that this lawless administration come
to an end.

Speaker 3 (27:32):
And the word end is not a cap, so you
know they're serious.

Speaker 4 (27:36):
Now, if they want the current administration, the Trump administration,
to come to an end peacefully, well, all they really
need to do is to stop trying to assassinate Trump
all the time.

Speaker 3 (27:46):
They ought to honor the process.

Speaker 4 (27:49):
The electual process, and make sure that that electoral process
has integrity and safeguards built into it. And then they
can wait until his term is up because he is
limited so he can't run again, and then they can
campaign and elect somebody to take his place. But patience,
I don't think is a virtue, particularly among the spoiled

(28:09):
children of well, quite frankly, of any age. I can't
just say these y'all, who's but of any age? I
know that patience is a virtue and something I'm kind
of short of. Besides JD. Vance, well maybe he will,
maybe he won't, But right now he's the presumptive nominee
and probably would win the next election.

Speaker 3 (28:27):
So instead, what do they do.

Speaker 4 (28:29):
They demand the Trump be removed from office immediately, and
so they encourage you to go. And I can't play
any sound bites from this because there's just too many
f bombs in it. But if you want to see
or listen to it yourselves, you can go to a
website called remove the Regime dot com and you can
look at all of the wonderful details for their three

(28:51):
days of well, they're peaceful ending a regime. How would
you stop and think about it and say, this is
how would you if you wanted to end the current regime?
How would you do that? That's not violent? Because the
only way to end the current regime would be to

(29:13):
engage in violence, to topple the government, to assassinate the
president and the Vice prea, to chop off the head
of the government. Interestingly, this mob marching on Congress, no
doubt brandishing. You know his cane is going to be
Congressman Al Green, the Democrat from Texas. And I say
he'll be brandishing his cane because remember he's the one

(29:35):
that was during the during Trump's speech before Congress was
shaking his cane and yelling at Trump, and the Capitol
police finally had the escort him out.

Speaker 3 (29:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (29:46):
Now imagine the pearl clutching if conservatives, if we held
a remove the Regime rally during a Democrat administration, well
they'd probably bring in Adam Kissinger to Kent Singer to
snivel and weep at the show trials. So here they are.

(30:07):
Liberals are preparing to storm politicians' offices on November and
demand Trump's impeachment.

Speaker 3 (30:14):
You know.

Speaker 4 (30:14):
Poly Market based primarily upon the stupid Epstein things, which
we will get to later on. Polly Market currently has
the odds of Trump being impeached at slightly above fifty percent.
It's never going to stop, it's never going to end.
They simply want to make certain that we just continue

(30:35):
and continue and continue to be all stirred up.

Speaker 3 (30:38):
I simply refuse to do so.
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