Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Mister Brown, I've been investigating you ever since you first
lied on the air. You said he had friends, and
we know that's not true. That goober from South Dakota
must be NSA or CIA, because those of us raised
in North Dakota know that no one in South Dakota
gets out of bed before noon. He must have gave
(00:20):
you your MK ultra code to destroy the lap your laptop.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
You know, you know what I like about that talk
about he he slammed everybody, yep, and he threw out
about four or five conspiracy theories, dropped the NSSA, as
you know, as if I would know anybody in the NSA,
that's pretty good.
Speaker 3 (00:47):
And then he brought to the attention we still don't
have a map where all the goober listeners are located.
Speaker 4 (00:51):
So you got to get on that. I'm working on that,
sure you are. I'm working on that, just like the
card reader in the bathrooms.
Speaker 2 (00:59):
But as I said to you, you know, we slept.
We slept to go downstairs to take a whiz, and
it's well, it's good exercise. I still do my stretches
during the break, you know, from my back. But that
yielding the steps is actually part of that, so that
(01:19):
that helps. But I foolishly turned around today as I
got in the stairwell, just got a curiosity because because
let's frame it, let me back up, I didn't set
this up very well. They're remodeling the bathrooms on the
fourth floor, which in my estimation will take about six
years give or take. The card reader on the south
(01:44):
on the north end of the building where we are
where we are does not work, so you cannot get
from the third to the fourth floor using the stairs,
which I think is a security and a safety issue.
So I had gone to and it hasn't worked for years, correct,
I mean I'm guessing at least three years.
Speaker 4 (02:04):
It hasn't definitely a plurality of year.
Speaker 2 (02:06):
Yes, So when it first quit working, I went to
a person whose responsibility that was, or so I thought,
and said, it doesn't work and we really ought to
fix that for safety and security reasons. I was told
use the other staircase at the south end of the building,
or just take the elevator, which is great if you
(02:29):
have time, and is great unless you're like on the
weekend program. It's only happened twice in the weekend program
where I've had a problem with I have to short
story start short story shorter. I sometimes have to go
into the KOA production room to make something work in
the studio that I use on the third floor, and
(02:53):
I don't have much time during that program to do that.
So I'm just kind of pissed off about that response
that they're remodeling the bathrooms on the fourth floor. Greg
and I both and I would guess other people did too.
Speaker 4 (03:08):
I would like to think other people take me.
Speaker 2 (03:09):
I would like to think are not the only a
holes that point out that, you know, we're not the
only masters of the obvious. So we sent a response back,
not to reply all, but just to the person who
originated the email about you will have to use the
elevator or the or the fourth floor while they do
the remodeling. We both got responses back. You got a
(03:32):
response back, too, didn't you. We said, we've put in
a trouble ticket, correct, which made me spew my diet
coke all over my laptop, because that's the bureaucracy of
our art. Put in a trouble ticket. So it goes
to San Antonio, to New York to get approval, then
back to San Antonio, and then finally gets back here,
(03:53):
and then someday sometimes somebody will actually decide to take.
Speaker 3 (03:58):
Action on the credit might be signed to somebody. Then
the assignment will be a sign there you go.
Speaker 2 (04:03):
Then go. Today, out of curiosity, I turned around and
tried my key card. Any mistake didn't work, So that
when Dragon finally joined me in the bathroom, which he
tends to do. It's really weird, but he joined me
in the bathroom, I said, I did something really stupid there.
Speaker 4 (04:22):
What now?
Speaker 2 (04:23):
And and I said, I tried. I tried to see
my key card worked. He goes, yeah, it didn't it, No,
it didn't. And then Dragon said, I bet it's done
in a week. And I said to you, now you're
the stupid one.
Speaker 4 (04:37):
Yeah, but I have insight in. But then you have
inside your information.
Speaker 3 (04:40):
I saw the building maintenance company guy here yesterday.
Speaker 2 (04:47):
Was he looking at key cards?
Speaker 3 (04:48):
He was up here on the he was, you know,
out of like a little box in his hand. So
and he was at that door, and we'll sit yeah, oh,
he's probably ordered some new equipment and then we'll be
here in eight to ten weeks and nope, he'll be
able to fix it.
Speaker 2 (05:02):
Yeah, eight ten weeks is probably coming from China, you know.
Once he gets here from China, makes his way through customs,
and then it will be delivered, because he'll be delivered
by FedEx. It will be delivered out here to the
reception area sit there where it will sit for another
six weeks until somebody finally says, huh, wonder what the
crap this box is?
Speaker 4 (05:23):
Yep.
Speaker 2 (05:26):
Nobody loves the sound of former FBI Director James Comy's
voice more than James Comy. You go back over all
the years of congressional testimony and media interviews. He always
plays the hero and Donald Trump is always the villain.
No matter what, I don't care what the question is,
(05:47):
I don't care what the topic is. James Comy will
make himself out to be the hero and Donald Trump
is always going to be the villain. Surely you've heard
by now what he did on He now has a
substock page of his own, and he's engaging in pure
mental masturbation, which is not surprising and it's well, it's
(06:09):
just Oh, by the way, the name of his page
is James Comy. I wonder if he had a marketing
firm come up with that. It was launched about four
or five days ago, and it was launched to coincide,
he's publishing another novel, to which I say, well, congratulations.
I didn't know he had written any I didn't know
he had written novel number one and number two, but
(06:31):
he's apparently written a third fiction novel. And then he
disingenuously claims in the first post that he had quote
struggled a bit these last few months, trying to figure
out whether I have anything useful to say as we
begin the long, painful journey that is Trump two point zero.
(06:54):
That's he is obsessed, obsessive, compulsive disorgan disorder. It was
two days after his Substack debut that's when Comy landed
himself in hot water over the Beach Rock incident where
(07:14):
he put the rocks that said eighty six forty seven
in a formation because his wife suggested it. Really your
wife suggested that. Then two days ago he did a
post on Taylor Swift that's gotten a lot of, I
think justified in appropriate mockery on social media. Other videos
(07:38):
kind of confirmed the dark depths of Comy's sociopathic narcissism,
his prephebescent level luss for acceptance, and his totally endless
contempt for Donald Trump, with the tables of Fate neatly
turned Trump back in the White House call me under
criminal investigation. You see, the universe always kind of works
(08:01):
things out. Cony just chatters away as if the reality
unfolding around him isn't really happening. It's an unsympathetic version
of the of the movie character Sybil, who somehow believes
that he can color his way out of a federal
indictment and then convince the public that he is the
victim rather than the perpetrator of one of the most
destructive political operations in American political history. So there he
(08:24):
is clad in business attire, wearing some sort of really
kind of lousy white makeup. They mean, have your wife
to your makeup or Sunday. He looks awful. He's got
a continuous puffy eye problem, which I can't make fun
of because I got the same thing. He gives a
scripted performance in this kind of really KLOI up top
(08:45):
cadence to enter his critics and a care for you way.
It sounds like he isn't worried about the butt is
a legal consequences for what you know? Alfredy Newman wat
me worry. He talks about love and laughter. He finds
peace in the second era of Trump, which makes me
believe that Tommy actually has very little love laughter a
(09:05):
piece in his life. Someone might even say it might
be a well earned, miserable existence. Various topics they hate
embedded in the MAGA movement, the weaponization of the Trump
Department of Justice, the authoritarianism of the president. You know,
all all the usual you know tropes about Donald Trump
from the cabal who besides Comy is buying that the
(09:32):
man that routinely bragged about confronting the incoming president with
bogus tales of peeing prostitutes on a bed in Moscow
and then goes and Ambush's Lieutenant General Flynn in inside
the White House with a bogus tail of Trump Russia collusion.
What does Comy want, Well, he wants merely to be
considered a husband, a father, and a grandfather who sees
(09:54):
his past government work in the distant rear you know,
rearview mirror. I I just don't get it. A few
days after CIA director John Radcliffe announced that he had
sent the DOJ criminal referrals on Kobe and former CIA
director John Brennan to the Department of Justice regarding Russia Gate.
(10:19):
Colemy tried to laugh off the one hundred and ninety
seventh attempt by the Trump administration to put me in jail,
But then he goes online. You know, I'm your rubber,
your glue, oh, and just really weird stuff.
Speaker 5 (10:39):
I he there are a lot of these lucy held
footballs in Trump world, and the poor Charlie Browns of
MAGA end up repeatedly on their backs. And I don't
want to make this all about me or torture of
the metaphor, but I'm kind of one of those footballs.
I'm kind of the football Donald Trump can't get.
Speaker 2 (10:59):
Over for some reason. Isn't that projection? Isn't it him
that can't get over Donald Trump? And he kind of
thinks that he's kind of like a founding father. I
don't know what it is.
Speaker 5 (11:13):
It's a special day for us because of a tradition
that we've had for many, many years. We do a
group reading of the Declaration of Independence. I assigned parts,
and somewhere between nine and twelve of us, depending on
which of the single kids bring dates, read those parts
in order and years ago. The kids cut up a
paper copy and then dipped in I think coffee with
(11:39):
maybe some lemon juice, and for reasons I can't explain,
lit it on fire to make it seem authentic. So
there it is with the number one for the top
piece in the corner. That's as authentic as you can get.
Speaker 4 (11:52):
But I passed those.
Speaker 5 (11:52):
Pieces out and we read them in order for people
who can't make it to my house, we join them
by video.
Speaker 2 (12:00):
Wow, I'm really touched. And he goes from Thomas Jefferson
to comedian Nate Bargot. Do you know who Nate Bargats is?
I don't know this commedian.
Speaker 4 (12:17):
I recognize the name.
Speaker 3 (12:17):
I'm not sure I could recall any skits or sketches.
Speaker 5 (12:22):
I usually read the end where the signers pledge their
very lives to this idea that we should be ruled
by law and not by a king. I actually get
choked up every time I read it. They were flawed humans,
the signers of the declaration, but they were rich people
willing to risk it all. They had a lot to lose,
(12:45):
but they risked it because they believe that principles matter.
It would be great.
Speaker 2 (12:52):
This is just too bizarre.
Speaker 5 (12:54):
The best comedians poke fun at themselves and reassure the
audience that they aren't the only ones who struggle, or
worry or do dumb things. As a result to help
us laugh together. Laughter heals and connects. I like the
comedian Nate Bargatzi because he makes me see my own foolishness,
(13:15):
and in the process he generates real warmth in a
crowd of thousands of people. So don't be like the grouchy,
sad trumpets. Laugh and connect.
Speaker 2 (13:26):
Are you a lousy, sad Trumpist? I find most Conservatives, Republicans,
Trump supporters to be really kind of joyful, happy people.
Do we have things that we really worry about, Absolutely,
But I don't find this all sad. In all of that,
(13:48):
it's bizarro world.
Speaker 5 (13:51):
I used to talk about this a lot at the
FBI because I worried about a disease especially in high
stress environments, called get back idea. I worried that our
people would tell themselves, Look, I'm trying to protect a country,
so I'll get back to my spouse, my kids, my parents,
my siblings, my friends. There is no getting back. I
(14:13):
used to tell them. In this line of work, you'll
learn that bad things happen to good people. You'll turn
to get back and they'll be gone. So I used
to say, I order you to love somebody. It's the
right thing to do, and it's also good for you.
Speaker 2 (14:28):
I order you, I order you to love somebody.
Speaker 5 (14:33):
Really, my life has been wonderful since I got fired
in twenty seventeen. And it may surprise you to hear that,
but it's because it gave me the precious gift of time,
and I've been lucky enough to spend that time with
the people I love. I have coffee and do yoga
every morning with the love of my life, who still
(14:55):
puts up with me after thirty eight years of marriage.
And I'm pop. I was a good parent, but as
a grandparent, I get to draw with chalk on the
driveway at two o'clock on a weekday afternoon. I get
to play hide and seek, to make mac and cheese,
my specialty, by the way, and to do so many
other silly, ordinary things that are a gift for me
(15:16):
beyond measure. I get to love deeply.
Speaker 2 (15:21):
I want to say something about this, because I mean
what he says, said by anybody else, is true. There's
nothing greater than being a grandparent. There's nothing greater than
having loved ones that love you back. You know, the
whole family structure, all of that, that's all very important,
(15:43):
but there's something just strange about the whole. I need
to do this because I think that the guy that's
in the White House is evil. He's a king, he's authoritarian.
All of this, I I don't get it. It's it's
(16:05):
just this bizarre kind of attitude that whatever I have
to say is important to the entire world. I recognize
that what I do on air, for example, it's not
important to the entire world. It's important to those of
you who tune in and listen. And I recognize that,
(16:28):
and I and so I'm happy in my little corner
of the world doing what I do. And whether that gets,
you know, blown up worldwide or not that I just
don't care. I'm I'm just happy expressing what it is
that I believe about things and getting you to think
about things. And maybe sometimes sometimes I do. Sometimes I
(16:50):
don't change your perspective on things. I don't do any
of it, though, even though there are at least I
hope I don't. There are plenty of people in my
life who have treated me wrong, treated me in some
cases actually illegally treated me in ways that I find
(17:14):
kind of dehumanizing and kind of divorce from reality. But
that's not the focus of my life, and nor do
I need to feel an obligation to come on here
and somehow share that. I mean, I talk about my grandkids,
(17:34):
talk about my dogs. I talked about those things as
sometimes segues into other stories. His August seventeen post on
Taylor Swift I think received probably the most justified mockery
on social media and then, but all the other videos
confirm these dark depths of coma sociopathic narcissism. Hatter's away
(18:00):
as if the reality unfolding around him isn't really happening,
and it really is. I've never been in his shoes.
I've never been in those exact same shoes I've been.
I've been in political shoes where yeah, bad things happen
because that's the nature of politics. But I've never faced
any sort of legal kind of like, oh my gosh,
(18:23):
I could go to jail for what I did. I've
never faced that kind of situation, so I can't fully
judge it. I just find it odd that a former
director of the FBI. It makes you wonder, if this
is you post FBI, what would you like while you
were in the FBI? Unfortunately, I think the.
Speaker 1 (18:46):
Dragon Michael Uri seems fired up.
Speaker 4 (18:49):
Today be the day that everybody spends how you talk
that I do more.
Speaker 2 (18:58):
Had a hard time.
Speaker 3 (18:59):
Understanding is today today we should send in annoying talkbacks
to piss off Michael even more.
Speaker 2 (19:06):
I find talkbacks in general to be annoying. So what
would be different about today from any other day?
Speaker 4 (19:11):
True?
Speaker 2 (19:12):
Yeah, as I mentioned earlier in case you missed it,
the Texas Democrats that fled the state trying to avoid
dealing with Governor Abbot's redistricting session, Well they've given up
the ghosts and they reinvaded the lone Star state yesterday.
So they're all back at work, and of course they're
all upset because, well, you know, truthfully, this was really
(19:34):
just a matter of time, and those penheads couldn't even
last three full weeks before just throwing up the white
flag and surrendering typical Democrats. But hilariously, the surrender came
barely a week after they had all declared victory because
they had forced Governor Abbott's first fifteen day special session
(19:57):
to end without any final bill being passed. You just
can't make this stuff up. But why you want to
try to make the stuff up, because it's actually funny
just on its face. Something else happened. Attorney General Pam
Bondi announced the hiring of the former, well the Missouri
current Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey, who's done an incredible
(20:20):
amount of good work in Missouri. He's a staunch Trump supporter.
Trump has now or Attorney General Bondi has named him
to be the co deputy director of the FBI. So
now Andrew Bailey is going to be paired with Dan
Bongino as co deputy directors at the FBI. Clearly that
(20:44):
raises some questions about Bongino's ongoing role there, Brookes Seingman
over at the I think The New York Times tweeted
out exclusive Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey Missouri. Andrew Bailey
has been tapped as co deputy director of the FBI
by a G. Pam Bondi FBI director cash and we'll
work alongside FBI Deputy Director of Bongino. Here's an excerpt
(21:07):
from the story in The New York Times. The move
was reported earlier by Fox News Digital, prompting a one
word response from mister Bongino on social media. I Dan
and I follow each other, and so when I saw this,
I had it was totally out of context. It was
just a standalone post on x that just said welcome.
(21:31):
I wasn't quite shy. I didn't know what he was
talking about. So I had to go back and kind
of scroll through and you know, try to see if
he was responding to something. And then I realized, oh,
it's it's a welcome to the Missouri attorney general as
the co deputy director. And he wrote welcome, followed by
(21:52):
I think three or four American flag emojis. Now let's
go back to the New York Times story. Donald Trump
wants briefly considered nominating mister Bailey to be the attorney general,
and during the transition, discussed selecting him to be the
FBI director, but the president, who likes aggressive personalities, found
(22:14):
him too laid back and somewhat lackluster, according to people
briefed on the meetings at the time. Maggie Haberman at
the New York Times White House correspondent reporting on Trump
is somehow part of this story. I don't what difference
is part of the story, they write. It remains to
(22:34):
be seen what mister Bailey's hiring means for mister Bongino,
whose future has appeared tenuous after a furious fight with
the Attorney General, Pam Bondy, spilled into public view in July.
He and miss Bondy had an angry confrontation in the
White House in front of top age over unreleased files
(22:56):
in the case of the disgrace financier Jeffrey Epstein, and
over whether mister Bongino was leaking information to the news media.
For a few days after the dispute, writes The Times,
it was unclear, remember he took some time off. He
was unclear if mister Bongino would return to work. He
(23:16):
ultimately did, though he has kept a considerably lower profile since.
People close to mister Trump were unhappy with mister Bongino's
display of anger, but believe that having him leave his
job could undermine the president. The appointment of mister Bailey
bewildered many current and former FBI agents, who said they
(23:36):
had never heard of a co deputy director. Well, let
me throw my hat in that group too. I've never
heard of a co deputy director. It seems very strange
to me. Anyway. That's the end of the story. But
you got to love that last sentence, since the time
doesn't bother. They don't identify a single one of the
(23:58):
so called many FBI agents that it relied upon for
their assessment. Now, any FBI agent who has not heard
of mister Bailey, the attorney general in Missouri hasn't been
doing has or her job very well in recent years,
because Bailey has been one of the most prominent and
aggressive state attorney generals fighting against the excesses of the
(24:20):
Biden administration. But back to the Bongino question for a second,
I think it's legitimate to speculate whether this move, if
made of the attorney general's own volition, means that Pam
Bondi is trying to marginalize the guy that's already serving
as deputy Director, Dan Bongino. But given their fight and
(24:44):
some of their recent conflicts, I don't think you'd be
surprising if that's exactly what she's doing. But absent any
real information, any verifiable information, as opposed to ransid speculation
by the leering press and cry frank even by me,
nobody knows, but it does seem a bit odd though,
(25:05):
doesn't it. Why all of a sudden do we need
a co Deputy Director of the FBI. So here's what
some people are saying. This is from This is from
Pan Bondi. I'm thrilled to welcome Andrew Bailey as co
Deputy Director of the FBI. He has served as a
distinguished state Attorney general and as a decorator war veteran,
(25:28):
bringing expertise and dedication to service. His leadership and commitment
to country will be a tremendous asset as we work
together as advanced President Trump's mission. And she goes on
and on about how the FBI is the leading investigating
body of the federal government of the Department of Justice,
will always bring the greatest talent of this country that
we have to offer in order to accomplish the goal
set forth when an overwhelming majority of American people elected
(25:51):
Donald Trump. Something cash Battel said that Bailey will bring
an integral part of this important mission and he looks
over to the continue fight to save America together. Well, okay,
let's go save America by actually maybe arresting some of
the real bad actors from the Obama years, like I
don't know James Comy, Like we just heard from Girl
(26:14):
Powell James Comy. I don't know what's going on, but
it just seems strange to me that suddenly we have
to have a co deputy director of the FBI. Dan
Bongino gave up a lot, as many people do when
they go to government service, you know, nationally syndicated radio host,
(26:36):
he had his YouTube channel I Do not Rumble, he
had his Rumble channel. He had really a good sized
media empire in which he had a very devout following.
And I think Dan Bongino is probably one of the
smartest people that I've ever known, and I think he
makes a great deputy director of the FBIB gave up
(27:00):
in terms of not just his own income, but the
income from his media empire. He probably gave up you know,
tens of millions, if not more, in terms of income
every year to earn what maybe one hundred and ninety
thousand dollars a years thereabouts, to be the deputy director.
And then, as you've told your audience for years before
(27:21):
you became the deputy director, that the Epstein files should
be released, and then you get there, and it's either
a nothing burger or there's something there and it doesn't
get released. Either way, you got to be pissed off
because you were led to believe that there would be
something and there wasn't something, or you looked at it
yourself and you realized, oh, I've been telling my listeners
(27:43):
and my followers for years that we need to release
the entire files, and we're not going to do it
because well, we released a bunch of stuff and the
stuff that we didn't release are things that we can't
release or should not release. Either way, you want to
look at it because it's going to further victimize the victims.
So I think he's found himself in a really tough spot.
(28:04):
And I think the other lesson is, you know, if
you're gonna have an argument with the boss, do that
in private. Don't do that in the hallway in the
White House where staffers and other people are going to
hear it. Because it's no different. You know, the White
House in that regard is no different than your office,
your place of work, or where Dragon and I work.
(28:27):
There's probably very little that goes on in this building
that I don't ultimately hear about because somebody tells somebody
or tell somebody, or that somebody originally comes and tells me,
and they'll come and tell me because well, we know
where you're a lawyer, and we can trust you not
to tell anybody else, and I don't. I don't tell
anybody else. Well maybe dragon occasionally, but I don't tell
anybody else anything. When you have that kind of blow
(28:50):
up and you have that kind of fight, inevitably it
causes the boss to look around and go, am I
going to have more of that? A co deputy director
just makes me uncomfortable because who's in charge. M Are
you dividing up the responsibilities? How are you going to
(29:13):
manage that? And how you divide things up? Co deputy
directors seems like an oxymoron to me.
Speaker 6 (29:21):
Could give a little feedback from the other guber, No,
you know. The day to send in annoying talkbacks are
when you hear the one from the fella that talks
about detachable penis and repeats it about eight times. That's
the clue. That's when you send them the annoying talkbacks.
Speaker 2 (29:43):
That has to be a p one listener understands the
ebb and flow of the program, understands the highs and
the lows.
Speaker 4 (29:53):
They're a lot more lows, and.
Speaker 2 (29:58):
We're quite proud of that. Well, Monday morning, I yeah,
started off with a bang, because no, I'm not talking
about the meeting. I'll talk about the meeting later. Trump
went on truth Social to tell us how he really
feels about mail in voting and what he wants to
(30:20):
do about it. In case you hadn't read what he wrote,
here's what he wrote. I'm going to lead a movement
to get rid of mail in ballots and also, while
we're at it, highly inaccurate, very expensive, and seriously controversial
voting machines, which costs ten times more than accurate and
(30:42):
sophisticated watermark paper, which is faster and leaves no doubt
at the end of the evening as to who won
and who lost the election. We are now the only
country in the world that uses mail in voting. All
others gave it up because of the massive voter fraud encounter.
We will begin this effort, which will be strongly opposed
by the Democrats because they cheated at all levels never
(31:05):
seen before. By signing an executive voter to help bring
honesty to the twenty twenty six midterm elections. Remember, the
states are merely an agent for the federal government in
county and tabulating the votes. They must do what the
federal government, as represented by the President of the United
States tells them for the good of our country to
do with their horrible radical left policies like open borders,
(31:27):
men playing in women's sports, transgender and vote for everyone,
and so much more. Democrats are virtually unelectable without using
this completely disproven mail in scam. Elections can never be
honest with mail in ballots voting, and everybody and particularly Democrats,
know this. I in the Republican Party will fight like
how to bring honesty and integrity back to our elections.
(31:50):
The mail in ballot hoax using voting machines that are
a complete and total disaster must end. Now. Remember, without
fair and honest elections and strong and powerful boarder, you
don't even have a semblance of a country. Thank you
for your attention to this matter. Donald J.
Speaker 3 (32:05):
Trump, President of the United States of America. Hey, that
means he's serious. That goober said, so everybody knows that.
Speaker 2 (32:12):
I know it. I just love I just honest to
goodness bleed. He's trolling us with this thank you for
your attention to this matter. Three exclamation points, Yep, it's
so funny. Here are the most important, and we'll continue
this over at the end of the news top of
the hour. I think these are the most important segments
(32:33):
of that fairly long message. Looking to get rid of
mail in ballots and voting machines, I guess presumably the
entire electronic elections infrastructure. He wants to install a sophisticated
paper balloting system that must be hand counted. He wants
timely election results, mail in voting, he says, mail in
(32:54):
voting enables fraud and lengthy delays that are then used
to manipulate the results. There's an executive water coming soon.
He wants to clean things up for twenty twenty six,
and Democrats will put up every obstacle toure prevent implementation
of his executive order. The lawsuits will begin instantaneously. Now,
(33:14):
for anybody out there that's still upset about some agenda
item or campaign promise that's not yet been address or fulfilled,
I don't think, and I think you should understand that
there's not any other president who would take things that far.
Trump has been given plenty of opportunities to abandon the
rigged election narrative, and even saved face when he claimed
(33:40):
a too big to rig when last year, particularly in
the battleground states, still heavily targeted by the tactics outlined
in his truth Social post, and he's still going after
the jugular, the cheap machine Governor DeSantis. He's tightened things
(34:01):
up with the mail im balloting system, there by demanding
address verification and that voters have to request ballots for
each election rather than just automatically receiving them in the
mail but getting rid of them altogether. Ron de SAMs
isn't even close to that. I kind of thought there
(34:23):
was something in the works when Trump made the following
comment after a summit with Putin in Alaska. You can't
have an honest election with mail in voting. That was
all he said, and I thought he's getting ready to
do something. I know he wonders awful lot in his speaking,
(34:43):
but that was that was it. You can't have an
honest election with mail in voting. Now, apparently Putin told
Trump what we all know, and that was that the
twenty twenty election was ripped off by mail in ballots
and that he should have won by you're significant on margin.
Who else do you know has been saying this for years?
(35:05):
So I've always been a post mail in balance. Does
that make me a Russian asset? Now more accounts hey
to