Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good morning from South Dakota and welcome to the situation
with Michael Brown on eight p. Fifty Kowa the blow
chart of the Rockies what not until next Monday the
tenth at nine. Oh okay, uh, never mind, everyone, have
(00:20):
a great day.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
You gotta give him credit. Yep, you gotta give him credit.
By the way, how are we doing on collecting new
rules of engagement?
Speaker 3 (00:30):
At dawn? You still sent it's like two minutes long. No,
that's not going to work, Wayne. You sent me one
that I already have, so I need the new one.
We have gotten a couple new ones, so this is
you know, but we'll we'll need more.
Speaker 2 (00:49):
Than a couple. Should you tell them how many we had?
I don't know how many we have.
Speaker 3 (00:55):
Did you the.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
Figure you told me yesterday? It kind of surprised me.
Me too.
Speaker 3 (01:00):
No, I'm going through the rotational cart that has all
of the rules of engagement, and all I was doing
yesterday was listening for six thirty or k how things
of that nature.
Speaker 2 (01:11):
Because that's not work across the hall.
Speaker 3 (01:14):
So I went and changed the end date in that
cart so that we could still use them this week. Yeah,
it's a little bit technical for probably anybody that it
really doesn't care. But I had to change the end
date on sixteen rules of engagement. So sixteen rules of
(01:37):
Engagement we cannot use across the hall, which.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
Means we actually had more than sixteen.
Speaker 3 (01:44):
I didn't know we had sixteen rules of engagement.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
That quite a bit.
Speaker 4 (01:49):
I like it.
Speaker 2 (01:49):
I love it too, So you need to step up.
Come on. I know you're in mourning for the former
vice president, but that's not a reason to not go
do some stuff to I can't. I can't start the
show out without talking about the death of Richard Cheney,
the former vice president. So here goes little biography. Biography.
(02:17):
You know he was. He was born in Nebraska, grew
up in Casper, Wyoming. He went to Yale University of Wyoming.
He started out as I mean, this is impressive. Yet,
whether you like Jamie or not, this is impressive. He
starts out as a king. You know, he's a He
truly was a swamp creature in that regard who loved
(02:38):
li fishing. So figure that one out. He started out
as a congressional intern. He became a US congressman. He
became the White House Chief of Staff that was under
President Ford he became a congressman. He was George H. W.
Bush's secretary of Defense. Then he came to the Bush
(03:02):
forty three White House as Vice president. He and I
did not get along very well. His staff and I
got along famously. And I think the reason that the
vice president and I did not get along very well
was because in some ways we had similar personalities, sometimes
(03:23):
a little passive aggressive, which I know comes as a
shop to Dragon that I might be a little passive
aggressive at times like this morning, Like this morning when
I came in and the lights were off and the
blinds were still close, and he hadn't done what he
was supposed to do, and I think we were just
both bull headed. But the staff, in particular was he
(03:43):
had an amazing staff, which always fascinates me because you know,
you go to a doctor's office, for example, a doctor's
office can be saved by the staff. The front office staff,
the back office staff, the nursing staff. Everybody can save
a doctor that otherwise doesn't have very good bedside manners,
(04:05):
or is just kind of gruff and rough and not
that great of a doctor. I always measure people by
the staff that are around them. And Scooter Libby, who
I think got an incredibly raw deal, and not just
because I think I consider Scooter to be a friend.
He was always helpful, David Alexander, the Vice President's council,
(04:28):
they were all excellent staffers. And I never went to
Cheney directly for anything because I knew, why waste my
time go to Scooter. So I go to Scooter and
get stuff done. Here's a story that you may or
may not know. I remember there was an HBO or
Netflix or somebody did a many little mini biopic about
(04:52):
the Vice President which I watched, and I remember telling people,
maybe even this audience at one time after I watch it.
I don't think there was a single thing in that
thing that was true. Now, there were a few things
that I didn't know about, because obviously I wasn't around
the Vice president twenty four to seven, but the main
(05:13):
top level things that were in that biopic were just
simply untrue. The whole thing about Cheney being the puppet
master of George W. Bush simply was not true. Was
he influential in the White House, Absolutely he was, particularly
when you compare it to someone like oh, say, Kamala Harris,
who was was she even around. I mean, I wonder
(05:36):
if anybody was around. Cheney was to some degree the
architect of the war in Afghanistan and the war in Iraq,
and that's primarily because of his role previous role as
Secretary of Defense. Over on Drudge, it says, Maga trolls
Liz if you are stop it. Her father died. I
(05:59):
don't like Liz Cheney. I don't agree with her politics.
I think she was an abomination on the January sixth Committee.
I think she did some unethical and perhaps some unlawful things.
But leave her alone. Her father's just died. Good grief.
Now I understand that their public figures and what's going
to happen. I mean, I you know, I can't imagine
what Dragon's going to say today that I die. So,
you know, it's just like come on, back off a
(06:21):
little bit. But the thing that's interesting to me about
the selection of Dick Cheney belies the idea that he
was chosen, or he was picked, or he was forced
upon the pre Bush forty three by Bush forty one.
(06:41):
That simply is not true because I know the background
about how that appointment occurred, at about how that selection occurred,
So at the time that George W. Decided to run
for president, my friend Joe Alball, who had been the
president's campaign manager and had been Governor Bush's chief of staff,
was selected to be the head of the search committee.
(07:06):
The Iron Triangle. Carl Rove, Karen Hughes, Joe Allbaugh sat
down with George W. Bush to figure out, we need,
you know, to have a figurehead to be the head
of the search committee to be vice president. And they
decided that Dick Cheney would be the person to head
that search up. So Joe and Carl and Karen all
(07:30):
start coordinating with Dick Cheney to vet all of these
different people that might be considered by George W. Bush
to be the vice president. And they search and they search,
and they search and they search. At some point Joe Allball,
the campaign manager, the governor's chief of staff. So the
(07:50):
person who has the closest relationship with George W. Goes
to George W. And I know this because Joe was
a friend of mine told me the entire story himself.
He goes to George W. And says, I think we
have found the perfect person to be your vice president.
And W's Alexido, you know, tell me who it is.
(08:14):
We think it's Dick Cheney, and they lay out the reasons,
and they are all the reasons. I just gave you
a Congressional intern, a former White House chief of staff,
and that really tells you a lot about what they
were thinking, because a White House chief of staff really is,
(08:35):
in my opinion and based on my observations, the most
powerful person, even more powerful than the vice president in
the pecking order. A president turns to the chief of
staff to control the Oval Office, to control the West Wing.
So including the vice president, there are very few people
(08:57):
who can just walk into the Oval Office at any
time without going through the chief of staff, and that's
a presidential spouse and a vice president, and of course
the navy officer who carries the football. If if suddenly
we're under attack, then the kid, it's usually a kid
(09:21):
twenty five to thirty five years old that's carrying the
nuclear football that's able to walk right into the Oval
Office and open up the football or open up the
open up the bag and pull out the code and
say here's what's going on. So of course Chaney had
that authority to walk in. But I think that the
(09:43):
search committee, after going through all the list of, you know,
people in the private sector everywhere else. But they explained
to George W that the problem is technically because Cheney
was running Haliburton at the time in Houston, he had
(10:04):
his primary residence in Houston, and the president the vice
president have to be from separate states. Well, that would
be like telling me if Polish, let's just make this
totally absurd. Poliss is running for president, he's gotten the nomination,
and he's looking for a vice president and he turns
(10:25):
to me, well, my residency is in is in Colorado
right now. But I could on a dime switch my
residency to New Mexico. I pay property taxes there, I
own real estate there, I lived there part time of
the year. I even worked from there part time of
the year. So I could instantaneously change my residency to
(10:45):
New Mexico. And that was the issue they had to
deal with Cheney. So that was the solution that came
up with. You go back to your home in Wyoming,
you registered vote, you change your residency, will name you
as our vice presidential nominee. So that's kind of only
And I think that belies this idea that somehow he
was there because of George H. W. Bush Bush forty one,
(11:08):
and that's how he became the vice president. This is
simply not true. This is simply not true. And I
can tell you that based on my interactions because even
though I had nothing directly to do with either of
the war in Afghanistan or the war in Iraq, because
of our role in continuity of government and continuity of
operations programs, all the black ops programs that oversaw, I
(11:30):
was in those conversations. I didn't really have much to
say except you know, when I are we ready? If
somebody at texts us, yes, yes we are. And then
my next kind of interaction with Cheney was he was
given a portfolio, which again belies the idea that he
was the puppet master. If he's the puppet master, if
(11:53):
he's truly Darth Vader, you don't give him a portfolio.
He tells the president what's going to happen, exactly the
reverse occur, and I just kind of get kind of
gets old with me about and as much as I
hate to say, what I'm really trying to do here
is defend George W. Bush Bush forty three, because he
was he the vice president, was given this portfolio and
(12:15):
the portfolio that he was given was National Security. All
of the undisclosed locations, the black ops programs that I
just mentioned, continuity of operations, continuity of government. Let me
tell you b real quickly what those are. Continuity of
government is if if we have to evacuate Washington, d C.
(12:37):
Or we're under attack by you know, some outside forces,
we have to be able to immediately know where everyone
in the chain of succession is. And we we imagine
an air tag. Just imagine an AirTag. So there is
a system. And that's pretty much all I can tell
(12:57):
you is there is a system that allows everyone that's
in the chain of succession that at an undisclosed location,
we know where they are at any given moment. Any moment.
We can tell you precisely where the president, the Vice President,
the Speaker of the House, the Secretary of State, the
Secretary of Defense, and on down the chain. I think
(13:19):
Secretary of Homeland Security has been moved up. We can
tell you where they are at any given moment. All
all I have to do is call out to the
a particular undisclosed location, reach the National Security Office, and
ask them where's the Vice president right now? Oh, he's
on Air Force two, and he's at such and such altitude,
(13:41):
cruising and such and such and blah blah blah. We
know precisely where they are. That's continuity of operations, making
sure that the Supreme Court, the Congress, all of the
agencies can continue to function. This continuity of government. It's
making certain that we can secure those heads of state,
(14:04):
that we can secure and protect the President, the Vice President,
the Speaker of the House, the Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court, those people that we need in place so
that if we have to reconstitute the government, we have
people that can start that reconstitution of the government. This
continuity of government. So that was Cheney's main portfolio, and
(14:26):
in so doing, it would be the same here's the
equivalent in the transition from Clinton to Bush. One of
the things that was done was let we parachute people
into every single department and agency. So every secretary of
(14:47):
every department, every director, administrator, whatever their title is, of
every so called independent agency, they would parachute someone in
from the transition team, and they would literally have an
office in the secretary or the director, or the administrator,
the exactly whatever in their office, and that job was
(15:08):
to assimilate and collect these gigantic briefing books about everything
that was going on in that department. Let's just pick
the Department of Homeland Security, although it did not exist
at that time. Well, let's use the Department of State.
That's a good one. So we need to know everything
(15:29):
that every initiative that the then Secretary of State is undertaking.
So that would have been who Madeline Albright? So everything
that Madeline Albright is doing, the things that she had
planned to be doing, and all of the in conjunction
with the CIA, what do all the station chiefs have
going on? So somebody would be out at Langley at
(15:49):
the CIA, they would be collecting all of that data,
collecting all that information and it gets put into these
gigantic briefing books so that when the new team starts
to get selected. So for example, when the new director
of THEMA is named, that director can sit down, go
through the briefing book, speak to the permanent bureaucracy about
(16:13):
tell me what's going on here and there. Turn to
the transition members that were parachuted in and probably usually
in separate meetings, tell us your take on these programs.
Tell us your take on these initiatives, what do we
need to stop, what do we need to start? And
so Cheney was in charge of that in terms of
the transition, which again I mean, it gives you great authority,
(16:37):
gives you great influence, but it's not a puppet master.
Simply not a puppet master. What else would I tell
you about Cheney. I think my most famous encounter with
Cheney was during Katrina we had given He had announced
(16:57):
he was coming down. In hindsight, I know I was
coming down because they were getting ready to pull me out.
He wanted to see what was really going on. He
wanted a briefing on the long term housing program. So
my housing director, who went on to become the emergency
manager for the State of New York, put together I mean,
they worked twenty four hours, thirty six hours to put
(17:20):
together this plan about how we were going to deal
with long term housing. And Cheney and his wife, Lynn
comes in, who might absolutely adore Lynn is a wonderful person.
They come in, they sit for the briefing. Lynn listens
to him. Chane's busy doing something else, He's not paying
much attention to it, and it just pisses me off.
(17:42):
So when the briefing's done. The President, the vice president,
and Lynn get up and start to leave the room.
I follow him down the hallway. I step in front
of him and I stopped the movement as he's going
to greet people in an op center and tell him
here's your briefing book. He left it on the table.
You really do need study this because this is our plan,
(18:02):
and if you object to it, I need to know why.
Speaker 4 (18:04):
I agree with Michael that the staff around somebody can
really lift them up. And so Dragon, I'd like to
thank you for lifting Michael up and being the wind
under his wings. It's a beautiful thing.
Speaker 3 (18:19):
It's a tough job, it really is, especially when somebody
shows up, you know, fifteen twenty minutes later than they
normally do.
Speaker 2 (18:27):
For the first time in how long years? And of
course this is the one morning that Kowa comes running over.
Oh please please do grace please.
Speaker 3 (18:38):
You barely got your laptop out, and they're like, can
you hear dude?
Speaker 2 (18:43):
They come running, can you come over? And for what
I hadn't I hadn't heard heard, I hadn't even heard
the news yet. I don't I didn't know what was
going on, And how did I know that when I
talked about staff that somebody would pick up on ooh dragon,
the wind beneath my wings? Can we get some beat
middler you know thing? Can you know? I kind of go,
you know, hop, skip and jump down the hallway together.
(19:07):
By the way, I brought you some Halloween candies there,
and yeah, the Snickers are gone, go figure.
Speaker 3 (19:14):
There is also Reese's kit cats and uh something else
over on the other other food bank see.
Speaker 2 (19:21):
A total tam. I said that this is what will
happen after Halloween. This will all show up here. It'll
all be gone today maybe maybe till through tomorrow.
Speaker 3 (19:28):
Chocolate will be gone today, the fruity stuff will be
gone tomorrow, and the hard candies will last about a week.
Speaker 2 (19:35):
Yeah, and eventually somebody just throw those away like the
kids do when they get home. They get them to
the old farts here. You want this? Who gives away
hard candy? Do you?
Speaker 3 (19:46):
You know?
Speaker 2 (19:46):
I don't get it? Somebody in the text line. And
I'm not going to apologize. I'm just gonna tell you.
I'm not gonna go look up your text right now.
But it hit me yesterday that you were really pissed
off because Donald Trump and Andrew Cuomo, I would just
simply say this. You know, I was putting together I
(20:08):
was telling Dragon this morning about putting together a letter.
That was one of the reasons I was late, because
I had drafted the letter last night. I was rereading
it this morning, and I decided to submit it to
an AI platform and asked him to rewrite it and
see if he can make it. To see one if
it was passive aggressive.
Speaker 3 (20:30):
To me, I mean, not sound like an a hole.
Speaker 2 (20:32):
Yes, I don't rewrite the letter, and wow, when you
compare the good trast the two, I realized just how
passive aggressive I was in the first letter. So I'm
trying to figure out how to refer to your your
text message without being passive aggressive.
Speaker 3 (20:48):
Well, real quick, we'll get to this text message here
from seventy five to seventy two, Mike or Michael, did
you hear that Dick Cheney had passed?
Speaker 2 (20:55):
No? Huh what's the timestample on that one? Uh? Two
minutes ago? Okay, all right, okay, I just want to
see if they were if they were being passive progressive
right speak, Yeah, because I don't know how long it
takes to you know, like, do they go through a
censor program, like on a server in San Antonio or
(21:17):
New York, and they decide whether because if it's something
really positive about the program or you or me, then
it gets filtered out and they alter it and then
they send it on to us. You know, you know
that's what happens, right of course, So this text message
is all. This was from yesterday, which is why I'm
not going to scroll through and trying to find it
even do a word search for it. But you were
(21:38):
upset because Trump had said something about I'm encouraging people
to vote for the bad Democrat over the communist. If
the communist wins, then I'm going to try to figure
out ways to withhold money from New York. I think
that Trump is spot on, but I live in the
(22:01):
real world. Now you could say that maybe Trump should
have just kept his mouth shut. Well, you forget that
New York City is Trump's hometowns. That would be me
like saying, for my little hometown, there's some communist running
(22:22):
for mayor, even though I haven't lived in Oklahoma for
a while. And Trump technically has moved out of New York.
Only that goes there when he has to for court
or he's doing a fundraiser or something. He's not technically
he's living in Marlago, he's not living in Trump Tower.
So he's trying to preserve a city. And I would
ask you, if your choice was between a bad Democrat
(22:46):
and a communist, wouldn't you vote for the bad Democrat,
because if you don't vote, that's a vote for the communists.
Because he's in the lead. And I also want to say,
I'm quite aware that my friend Curtis Sly is running
once again for the mayor of New York. He's this
is his second run. The first time he lost by
(23:08):
forty points or more. But let's talk about the real world.
Democrats constitute about sixty five percent of registered voters in
the City Republic. Unaffiliated independent voters account for about one
point one million individuals, which is about twenty to twenty
(23:28):
two percent. So let's just take the lower end twenty percent.
That means that eighty five percent of voters in the
five boroughs of Manhattan are five birrels. The five boroughs
of New York are independent and Democrat. Now, of that
twenty to twenty two percent that is independent, I don't
(23:52):
have a breakdown, but my guess would be they're mostly Democrat.
Because if you take a proportional percentage of the sixty
five percent of the total voters, of the total voters
sixty five percent or Democrat, then approximately the saying of
independence are probably going to be Democrat or left leaning. Also,
(24:16):
Republicans barely make over ten percent, somewhere around eleven percent
of total registered voters in New York City. So if
Curtis were to get all Republican voters, and if he
were to get all twenty percent of the an affiliated
(24:38):
or independent voters, that's still not enough to win. And
you know, in the real world he's not going to
get that to begin with. So if I'm the president,
I live in the real world and I would say yes.
And in fact, if I lived in New York, I
would hold my nose and vote for Andrew Cuomo. And
(25:00):
if you listen to me at all over on KOA
during the COVID crisis, you know that I absolutely eviscerated
Andrew Cuomo for everything that he did. Plus I just
don't like him. I don't like his family. I just
like what they stand for. But I'll take a liberal Democrat.
I'll take a John Fetterman a liberal type Democrat any
day over over Mom Donnie anytime, anytime, and that's what
(25:24):
Trump say. According to New York County data as of
this past February, the number of registered Democrats is obviously
substantial larger than Republicans. Now, I can go down by
precinct by precinct, but they're about five point one million
registered voters, which is kind of sad when you think
(25:45):
about the population of New York is about eight million.
Just slightly over half of them are actually registered to vote.
Democrats sixty five percent about three point three million, Republican
eleven percent, barely half a million un affiliated approximately twenty
two percent about one point one million total registered five
(26:07):
point one million voters. So it is a statistical improbability,
not impossible, but it's certainly an overwhelming improbability that Curtis
Slilo can win. So every vote that goes for Curtis
is actually a vote for Mom Dommy, because that's one
(26:28):
less vote for Cuomo. Then I would ask this, and
I'm really serious. I know people don't like New York.
I happen to be an individual that likes New York
because I've done a lot of business there and I
spent time there. Would I live there? No, Now, I
(26:49):
would not say you could never pay me enough money,
because well, I'm a whore. And if you, you know,
you offer me ten million dollars, I might go live
in New York while I might live in one of
the burbs, but I might. I'll go live in Westchester
County and then just commute in or work from home.
But it's got to be ten million dollars or more.
And then I'm not technically living in New York. So
(27:11):
technically to live in New York, I don't know. Yeah,
ten million dollars is the minimum that it would take
to get me to move to New York. And then
I might do it for a year. I can't I
can't stand I can't stand New York for more than
three or four days. There was a time when I
had to go spend weeks at a time, for an
entire year, every single week, Fly to New York, fly
(27:31):
to LaGuardia, go into Midtown, sit with the lawyer, sit
with the bondholders, do all of that, fly back out,
come home, go again. I literally did that for forty
nine weeks, forty nine weeks one year. So I know
the city pretty well, and if I were there, I'd
be voting for Cuomo. In fact, I would tell Curtis
the same thing everybody else is telling him that I
(27:54):
admire you for running. You don't have the numbers, you're
not doing anything to get the crossover vote, you're not
appealing to them whatsoever, and you're fighting an uphill battle.
Cuomo is a known name. I don't like him, but
if I've got to have a communist and here's the
other argument, I hear, give New York what they deserve. Really, really,
(28:21):
I mean, we may hate New Yorkers, you may hate
New York City, you may you know they're politics and
everything about them, but I don't want the largest city
the financial capitalism, as far as f today still the
financial capital of the world. I really don't want to
falling in communist hands. And if you think that I'm
being overblown about that, go to London. Go to London
(28:45):
and see what happens when you elect a Muslim mayor,
a radical Muslim mayor, and you look at how crap,
what a crap whole city London has become. I don't
want that on American shores. Please and thank you Michael.
Speaker 5 (29:03):
I predict that Mondam is going to win in the city,
and I think the wealthy are going to try to
gut it out for a little bit so they're not
accused of whatever phobia their peers accused them of, and
then when it gets real.
Speaker 6 (29:16):
Bad, they're going to leave. But by then I could
bet you that they're going to impose an exit tax
on anyone who decides to leave the city, and then
they're really going to be in it.
Speaker 2 (29:28):
Have a great day. They'll be fascinating to watch. And
I wonder what the timeline will be if he wins,
as I think that he will, unless there's some private
pulled out of the hat, what they will first start doing. Now,
(29:50):
remember he is he still has the city council to
deal with, and then he also has a problem that
a lot of the things that he has proposed doing
he can't do without the approval of Albany. So the
governor and the state legislature have to approve a lot
of the things that he wants to do in terms,
particularly in terms of taxes, et cetera. So there's going
(30:11):
to be a a timeline, and I'm just not sure
whether that's a short timeline medium or length A lengthy
timeline before. I mean, let's just use Jamie Diamond and
JP Morgan Chase. How long would it take Jamie Diamond
to see what is happening with his firm and not
(30:34):
just his firm but his people. What what's the effect
of these policies on his on his personnel? Now they
already have I think I think JP Morgan's already relocated
some of their businesses to Dallas or Houston, one or
the other. So will they accelerate that or will they
just boom pull it off and just go a lot
(30:55):
of smaller companies And by smaller, I mean obviously that's real,
but smaller companies than JP Morgan Chase may have a
very short leash and before they can impose an ex attacks,
maybe they just pack up and go somewhere. It will
be California all over. They'll end up going to Texas, Tennessee, Florida, wherever.
(31:18):
And where will they go, Well, don't get too excited.
I'm not sure they'll come here, but certainly they won't
stay there. Speaking of California, Nancy Pelosi is back in
the news again. She was out in her home state
yesterday campaigning with Gavin Newsom in favor of his Prop
(31:40):
fifty scheme to redistrict the state. He's trying to add
a couple of Democrat districts to California, and during an
interview prior to that event, Pelosi very bluntly stated her
real feelings about Donald Trump, sending a dog whistle to
potential assassins by calling him a vile creature. Who is
(32:00):
the worst thing on the planet.
Speaker 7 (32:04):
It's a vile creature, the worst thing I want to
the earth. But any way, do you.
Speaker 2 (32:10):
Think he's the worst thing on the face of the earth?
I do, Yeah, I do.
Speaker 7 (32:14):
Why is that because he's the president of the United
States and he just oh, he's.
Speaker 2 (32:18):
The most vile creature on the face of the earth.
Because he's the president of the United States. Okay, Well
is because he's the president.
Speaker 7 (32:29):
Un its States and he does not honor the Constitution.
Speaker 2 (32:32):
He doesn't honor the Constitution. Okay, tell me where.
Speaker 7 (32:36):
Why units States? In fact, he's turned the Supreme Court
into a row court, the Supreme.
Speaker 2 (32:43):
Courts of road Court. Yes, because they're making decisions that
go against the Democrats.
Speaker 7 (32:48):
Abolish the House of Representatives.
Speaker 2 (32:50):
He's abolished the House of Representatives. Has anybody told them?
Has anybody told them that?
Speaker 3 (32:56):
Yet?
Speaker 2 (32:56):
Maybe they should.
Speaker 7 (32:57):
He's killed the press, his child, the press.
Speaker 2 (33:02):
Really, he was just on sixty minutes Sunday spared people.
He scared people. Okay, well you scare.
Speaker 7 (33:09):
Me, sweetheart, are in our country legally?
Speaker 2 (33:14):
He scared people who were in our country legally. Wow,
she really is some kind of stupid. That six bald
face lies in a single statement containing just fifty three
words a ratio of by my calculation, which you know,
I may be wrong, that's about seven point eight words
per lie. Now, that's a pretty impressive pace of line,
(33:37):
which you can learn after decades of well careful practice
and repetition by that reptile who's haunted the Capitol Hill
in Washington, deceeed liquor stores for I don't know what
sixty years since she first entered politics in the mid
in the mid nineteen sixties. Yeah, I was a pure
dog whistle