Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:18):
News Talk eleven, ten ninety nine three WVT. It's the
Brett Winter Bowl Show, and we are at the beginning
of the week of broadcasting where we expect any number
of big surprises happening this week, no doubt about it.
Later on in the program, Steve molloy will be joining us.
We're going to talk about this huge or I should say,
like the President says huge, the huge energy deal that
(00:41):
has come about. Lots of stuff happening, So let me
start with this, just out of the box. The economy
is the thing. Seriously. I know there's a whole bunch
of stuff that's going on out there. I know that
there's a whole bunch of drama that's happening around. I
understand all of that. Even Roy Cooper is running and
(01:04):
I'll have some commentary on that. But Pete did one
heck of a job hammer and tonging him. But here's
the thing that we have to remember. The economy is
the thing. MSNBC is afraid of a good economy. CNN
is afraid of a good economy. The elites in Washington,
d C. The elites at the college campuses are all
(01:24):
afraid that the economy is going to take off. And
the reality is, let's be honest about this. You know this,
You're really smart. You know fully that Donald Trump was
going to get this economy moving in the right direction.
And that is the thing that the Democrats cannot account for.
(01:44):
The only way they can account for quote prosperity, which
isn't it's just deficit spending. The only thing that they
can do is to take your money and give it
away to illegals, terror rists, humus supporters, whack jobs who
are trying to get elected as socialists in New York
(02:06):
City and in Minneapolis, and current socialists sitting in the
seat in California. That is all that they can do.
They can only take your money. They can steal your money.
They can steal your children's money and throw it out
the window and say, look at how great we are.
Have you been watching the storyline that's occurred in the
(02:28):
last ten days, the storyline of the fire aid concert.
One hundred million dollars raised, and it's going to all
these left wing causes that don't give a rat's rip
about how people are going to rebuild after a fire.
(02:49):
This is the con This is the con CNN woke
up this morning and discovered a byline by Lucy Bailey.
I'm assuming Lucy Bailey must be an intern or maybe
(03:13):
has already lost the job, because the headline at CNN
is this could be the most consequential week for the
economy in years. Not mashed Potato Biden, not party Manhunter,
not ha Kamala Harris, none of that. The state of
(03:37):
President Trump's economy is about to come into full view.
A slew of crucial economic data sets is ready for
this release this week, including the jobs report, inflation, consumer confidence,
and corporate earnings. We will get to see the first
glimpse at America's second quarter gross domestic product, the broadest
(04:02):
measure of the economy, and most crucially, the Federal Reserve
will decide whether or not to cut rates or hold
them steady. One more time. You can tell how CNN
wrote this, you can tell how the intern wrote this.
That we're going to look at only the second quarter
(04:23):
of economic growth. We're not gonna look at the first,
We're not going to look at the third, We're not
gonna look at anything else. We're just gonna look at
one of those things. And remember, ladies and gentlemen, they're
always wrong when it comes to the economy, they are
always wrong. Trade policies have come due, says Lucy Bailey.
(04:46):
Did you notice the deal that just got made with
the European Union fifteen percent tariffs? Did you see what
just happened? Did you see the deal in which we
are sending appens to the European Union so they can
go and try to fight off Vladimir Putin. Donald Trump
(05:07):
called the note on Vladimir Putin today. He called the
note and said, listen, he's not serious. I'm gonna compress
the period of time where we can have this deal done.
And it's likely that Vladimir Putin is not going to
want to play ball, so be it. The next deals
that are going to be made are going to be
with China. These are a way of surrounding Vladimir Putin
(05:33):
and China by a larger extent in terms of how
the economy is going too fair. And while we're at it,
what was it a three hundred billion dollar? Was it
three hundred billion dollars? Was it four hundred billion dollars?
Was that the number that the European Union is going
(05:54):
to purchase for energy? Because Donald Trump came out today
and made one thing about clear something that Roy Cooper
couldn't even understand. That energy drives the economy. Not lockdowns, Cooper,
not lockdowns, not grabbing people and forcing them into masks
(06:16):
and forcing them into shots, and none of that sort
of stuff. Cooper, mister Cooper, Roy Cooper, you can't you
cannot come out of moth balls off of that horrific
picture that was COVID. But Donald Trump, he rode through COVID,
(06:37):
came back and whooped the Democratic Party. And if these
economies continue to remain robust in when these situations come
to pass, with the numbers that are going to be
moving as we get into the third quarter and the
fourth quarter and then into the first quarter of next year. Ooh,
(07:03):
I just I feel bad for you guys. Growing a
beard doesn't make you tough. Building an economy makes you tough. Sorry,
not sorry, I I it was Talk eleven ten nine
(07:27):
three WBT. It's the Brett Winterable Show. It's good to
be with you looking at the storylines that are out there.
I was laughing earlier today as I was watching our
President Donald Trump have a conversation with Keir Starmer and
his wife, and it was a fascinating sort of a
back and forth. It was an interesting sort of a
(07:49):
take that was happening here. And President Trump pointed something
out that I think is interesting. I don't know how
exactly accurate it is exactly is, but this is that
long clip for me is cut number eight. I think,
all right, cut number eight. This is the president talking
(08:09):
about the chaos that might be happening but for his efforts.
Speaker 2 (08:15):
Yeah, she's fires possible, but you have to you have
to get it, you have to end it. You're talking
about with Israel's you're talking about there because we have
many sees fires going on. The whole world is if
I weren't around, you'd have right now six major wars.
India would be fighting with Pakistan. You see what we
just did yesterday with two nations that were trading with
(08:37):
and during the trade I said, I'm not going to
do any trade deal unless you got to settle your differences.
And we got to settled in twenty four hours. I
mean they just announced it was settled, which is a
tremendous thing. But Serbia Kosovo is another one. We have
many hotspots that were at war. I think a very
big one was India and Pakistan, because that's you're talking
(08:58):
about two nuclear nations. That was a very big one.
But now we get help from the UK. The Prime
Minister's helped. We have cases where we specifically need to
help because somebody comes from here that you're aware of,
and you know when you come from a country you
can do things, and why call up the prime minister
and all of a sudden he's able to do things.
(09:19):
True also with other presidents and prime ministers. But we've
done it. Nobody's ever done what we've done. We have
six different major looker. If you take a look at
Rwanda and the Congo Republic of the Congo, they've been
fighting for thirty one years, eight million people dead. It
(09:40):
was going on. Nobody could go to that part of Africa.
They were being killed. If even walk there, you're being
killed with machetes. And it was a violent situation. And
I was able to they like Trump. They wanted to
make a trade deal with Trump. They wanted us to
take their rare earth. They want to give us their
rare wor And I got to know the leader of
(10:02):
the Congo. I got to know both of them indirectly,
and I called him. I said, let's end the war.
I don't want anything until the end of the war.
And we ended the wars. You know, the foreign ministers
came up two weeks ago, and the leaders are going
to be coming very shortly to Washington, Rwanda and Congo.
I mean, that's another one that we did. So we've
(10:23):
done a lot. It's an honor to do it. It's
not hard for me to do it. And I used
not in all cases, but I used a combination of
knowing them a little bit or in some cases knowing
them a lot.
Speaker 1 (10:36):
I mean, so, okay, so I'm doing the math here,
so we already know Russia and Ukraine are at war.
But he inherited that, right, He inherited that from Joe Biden,
when Joe Biden said, Okay, we're not gonna do anything
to Vladimir Putin if they just penetrate a little bit
into Ukraine, right, he said that as president by and
(11:00):
said that, and and obviously what ended up next was
the Ruskies, the Russians, the Soviets. I still call them
the Soviets, uh he he he. He did go in,
he penetrated, and and it was a it was a
big deal. And that's when the war began, right, So
so Donald Trump inherited that war like that that war
is an inherited war. But you also have, like he said,
(11:24):
African nations. The first country that he was talking about
originally in that back and forth was Cambodia versus Thailand,
which sounds like a World Cup matchup somehow, but they're
they're they're fighting the Serbia. I didn't know we I
didn't think. I wasn't familiar with the new flashback or
(11:46):
flash forward of the people uh fighting each other on
the European continent that I'd have to look that up.
Maybe I don't doubt him. But then he talked about
rare Earth. He talked about a whole bunch of other
stuff like that. And so when you when you look
at all this stuff that's going on here, what is
the threadline that goes through all of this. You have
(12:08):
a president of the United States who wants people to
be prosperous, who wants people not shooting and killing each other,
but instead he wants those people to go ahead and
build their economies and build everything out. And I mean,
it's a really interesting sort of of a model if
(12:30):
you if you think about it. I'm not gonna I'm
not gonna, you know, cast dispersions, and I'm also not
going to you know, pull out what kind of presidents
in the past had tried to do some of this
sort of stuff. But the countries that trade with each
other do not go to war with each other. It's
very rare. It's it's it's extraordinarily rare to see countries
(12:54):
going to war against each other when they trade. And
that means that you're going to lose a whole lot
of money in that in that effort. Right, And so
the President of the United States is sitting there saying,
look at look at what we're trying to do here,
look at what we're trying to build here, look at
how this is supposed to come to pass. And unfortunately, unfortunately,
(13:18):
right you you get to this place where you say,
all right, I just can't take it anymore. I look,
we have fifty states in our country. We have not
had a civil war since the Civil War, and people
understand that when you are trading with people with whom
(13:42):
you have relationships, that you're in a much better position
all the way around. I mean, now, look at the
fundamentals of the economy itself, and again This is an
important thing. This does not just happen overnight. This is
not just something that pops up and look at how
great everything is. President Trump's first four years in the
(14:03):
White House were already a big success. This is out
of a zero hedge, which is why people fought so
hard to bring him back for a second go round.
Donald Trump's second go round has already surpassed the growth
(14:23):
in just one eighth of the time. Completely and instantly.
Securing the US Mexico border after four years of Biden's
invasion is one of the most important and impressive accomplishments
in American presidential history. TV News said that the president's
(14:47):
tough trade talk would crash the economy in days. Instead,
the stock market hit record highs this week and blue
collar wages arising f faster than they have in sixty years.
You're welcome. I know many of you voted for Biden.
(15:07):
I know many of you voted for Kamala. I know
many of you voted for Pdboo, Pete Buttajege. I know
you voted for those people. You voted for Shift, you
voted for all those weirdos. And still I'm excited that
you got money in your pockets. Now you're gonna burn it,
You're gonna give it away to the socialists. But that's
(15:30):
your choice. That's your choice. Under any other recent president.
This is bye, by the way, Tyler Durden, It's actually
be it, Charlie Kirk under any other recent president, he says,
I am convinced that the June Iran crisis would have
(15:52):
ballooned into a full regime change war and it didn't happen.
How about that he was able to do a pinpoint
strike and he was able to not have it explode.
Why was he able to do it? Why was he
(16:13):
able to hit the Iranians with confidence that this thing
wouldn't spread? Because he neutered every one of those other
countries that might have thought about jumping in, and he
built a relationship with the Qataris, with the Arab Emirates,
(16:35):
with all of those countries. The only people that are
still shooting their mouths off and shooting off missiles are
the Yemenies, the Yemenies, the who Thies. That is a
historic moment when you think about that, and when you
think about how you crippled the Iranian nuclear program while
(16:59):
suffing ring zero casualties and even bringing a cease fire
to Iran and Israel as part of the bargain. What
else you got? Okay? So I had somebody send me
(17:41):
a drive by note and that that came, Uh, you
came across the transom. You don't have to know where
the transom is. I know where the transom is. And
I'm I'm very astute with the transom, okay, and that
the word is transom. Is that what I'm saying here.
I really think that in the next two or three years,
(18:03):
there has got to be an imperative to teach people
what economics are, Okay. And I don't mean this in
a boring way. I don't mean, you know, all kinds
of weird vectors and things. I'm just talking about scarcity
and understanding how economies work and all of this sort
(18:24):
of stuff. This is an important thing that needs to happen,
especially as you have the kids getting ready to go
back to school. It would be wonderful if we could
just have a little less of the freaky deeky talk
and a little more fundamental talk, meaning economy, jobs, businesses,
(18:46):
all that sort of stuff. And there's a fascinating piece
that is over at the Mesa's Institute. Okay, so mesas
is a really good resource. These are the people who
believe in the importance of economies. Capitalism's biggest threat isn't inequality,
(19:07):
it's artificial entrepreneurs whoa inequality has become one of the
defining issues of our time. Economists Thomas Piquetti, among others,
has popularized the idea that capitalism inevitably concentrates weal's wealth
in the hands of a few. His solution more taxes,
(19:30):
more redistribution, and more government intervention. But what if Piquetti
is missing a deeper problem, one that libertarians and classical
liberals must urgently address. What is it? There are two
types of entrepreneurs. There are those people who live inside
(19:55):
the free market, and there are the others who are
more insidious, and they are part of the the rise
of the artificially successful entrepreneurs. In any society, there are winners.
How do they win? First? There are naturally successful entrepreneurs
who innovate, take risks, satisfy customer needs in a competitive marketplace.
(20:19):
They create value, and their profits are a reward for
serving others. However, there's also artificially successful entrepreneurs, who, by contrast,
win not through merit or creativity, but because they receive
government favors, subsidies, protective regulations, tax breaks, or public contracts.
(20:48):
Their success is politically engineered, not market earned. Think of
somebody who has somebody telling them, Hey, this build thing
that's on this lot is going to be knocked down.
I heard it from a Congressman so and so or
Senator so and so. And you know when that happens,
(21:11):
you you could easily just get in on that deal
and split it with them and get all that kind
of stuff. That's the sort of stuff that we're talking
about here. It's not an open process. It's an open
process to just those in the know. That's the problem
with this situation. The distinction is vital. When too many
(21:36):
winners are artificial, people begin to lose faith in capitalism itself,
moving toward what worsens the system in the first place.
What are we talking about. We're talking about free markets
devolving into rigged games. Give you a great example, a
(22:00):
super easy example. During the COVID nineteen pandemic, for instance,
lockdown policies devastated small businesses while boosting e commerce giants
like Amazon. Was that the result of a market competition
or a political decision. You should ask former Governor Roy Cooper,
because he shut a lot of stuff down. Take the
(22:23):
case of Celindra, a US solar energy firm that received
over five hundred million dollars in government loans before collapsing.
Or France's Xavier Neil, who capitalized on favorable telecom regulations
changes to leapfrog more established competitors, or Elon Musk, whose
(22:47):
companies combine innovation with massive state subsidies and public contracts.
In each case, the line between the entrepreneurial success and
the government engineering become blurry. That's a problem not just
for the economy, but for the democracy because the democracy
(23:08):
is the important thing. It's actually not the democracy will
always find its own way, but it's the market place
that gets warped. And you have people like Joe Biden,
Kamala Harris, and a Hunter Biden coming in and putting
their thumb on the scale. Or better yet, for a
visual in your mind, imagine Nancy Pelosi sitting there surrounded
(23:32):
by all of that ice cream. It's delicious. Yes, that's
the seventy two dollars bottle of the stuff that I
put on my ice cream. How come, you're with Twitter
and forty two million dollars. Now, I don't know, doesn't
make any sense to me. I'm not gonna question it.
(23:53):
But Ketty's proposal is a global wealth tax of up
to ninety percent along with massive redistribution, which means they're
only going to take the money out of the people
who create, and they're going to take that money and
hand it off to the big corporations period full stop,
where they'll go out and they'll sell weapons, and they'll
(24:13):
get your kids in a new war, maybe three new wars,
who knows what that's going to be. But tariffs are
the problem. See how this all works. I think this
thing is fascinating. I think this thing is incredible. What
we need is to abolish subsidies and preferential treatment for
(24:33):
politically connected firms. That's the answer. Repeal regulations that protect
incumbents and prevent new market entry, promote open competition, not
government sponsored monopolies. Reform taxes to reward innovation and risk taking,
(24:54):
not rent seeking, and cutback on state intervention in finance, labor,
and product of markets. That's what we need. You know
what that is. That's not the government calling winners and
losers because you know, and I know when they're calling
(25:14):
winners and losers, the government is always the winner and
you're always the loser. News Talk eleven, ten, nine nine
three WVT Brett whatever show. Good to be with you.
Let's jump out and talk to Robert. He's been patiently
holding on. Robert, Welcome to the program. What's on your mind?
Speaker 3 (25:36):
Hey, thanks for taking my call. I didn't know if
you mentioned this or if you know about it, but
about lee zeld and signed a contract with Mexico letting
considering all the sewage that was coming in from Tinajuana, Yes, sir,
and I didn't know what people in California and especially
in San Diego will give Trump credit for it.
Speaker 1 (25:58):
Or yeah, well, look, this is a problem that's existed
for I mean, my gosh, thirty years, forty years, and
they keep they kept pumping in the waste into the
United States. In fact, the way the way the travel goes,
it does go up into the United States. And they
they never did a single thing to try to remediate
(26:18):
that from the Mexican side, and so on this one,
this is a big win and I don't know how much,
how much it's going to be talked about. But I
certainly am going to be somebody who's going to be
talking about it because it's a big, big deal. It's
one of the biggest things that that people have been
talking about. And the reality is, when you consider the
(26:40):
fact that we could not train our Navy seals there
because they were getting violently ill, that tells you something
in a big way. And and I think that's a huge, huge,
huge win. Oh, thank you, Yeah, you're very welcome. Absolutely.
I mean that's a that's a big that's a big,
big issue. It's a huge issue. So I want to
go back to that last to that last segment we
(27:02):
were talking about about the ideas of jobs and disruption
and things like that that occur. Right, So let's go
back in time and remember what happened with the economic
and the social impacts of COVID nineteen, specifically in North Carolina.
The COVID nineteen pandemic caused significant damage to North Carolina,
(27:28):
affecting both its economy and the well being of its residents.
Job losses and economic disruption. North Carolina experienced a loss
of five hundred and seventy one thousand, five hundred jobs
between March and April twenty twenty, The leisure and hospitality
industry saw the largest decline, with two hundred and forty
(27:54):
five thousand, three hundred jobs lost just in that one
month period. The unemployment rate peaked at twelve point nine
percent in April of twenty twenty. It was to be
honest and fair lower than the national average. Small businesses,
(28:19):
particularly in areas like Charlotte, faced significant challenges and revenue decline.
Industries like manufacturing and accommodation and food services experienced negative
employment growth between quarter three of twenty nineteen and quarter
(28:40):
three of twenty twenty one, according to the quarterly Census
of Employment wages. So when you go there and you
start looking at the numbers, as of October the eighth,
twenty twenty one, there were one million, four hundred and
twenty five thousand, sixty two confirmed COVID nineteen cases and
(29:02):
seventeen one hundred and four deaths in North Carolina. You
had the virus disproportionately affecting certain demographics, older people, minorities,
and disadvantaged populations. One in six North Carolinians have experienced
long COVID, a condition that can seriously disrupt daily life.
(29:27):
And remember and remember you have not heard much about
this in the intervening years. Strains on the healthcare system.
Hospitals facing shortages of personal protective equipment, ventilators, beds, and treatments.
The pandemic resulted in lost revenue from elective procedures and
(29:50):
increased expenses, leading to substantial financial losses for hospitals nationwide.
In the early months of the pandemic, staffing shortages impacted
the provision of services, including substance use disorder treatment. That's
a huge point that has never really been addressed by
the way, everybody getting drunk and high at night and
(30:12):
not going anywhere, not being able to go to work,
having to sit behind the zoom, all that sort of
stuff that was not a normal economy. Despite taking taxpayer
funded COVID relief, some large hospital systems experienced record profits
(30:33):
during the pandemic, raising questions about accountability and resource allocation
within the healthcare sector. Who is the governor? Then, yeah,
I was Roy Cooper. Social and educational consequences school closures
(30:54):
disruptions impacting students learning and well being. The pandemic highlighted
inequities in access to support resources for students, particularly in
areas with higher COVID nineteen case concentrations, meaning those who
could least bear that challenge in their lives. Low income
(31:20):
households and minority renters experienced higher rates of employment, income loss,
and difficulty paying rent, Food insufficiency, and anxiety levels were
increased among certain demographic groups those who could least bear it.
(31:41):
So when you think about all of this stuff, and
when you think about a person who wants to run
to be the senator on the Democratic ticket in North Carolina,
you have to kind of ask questions, difficult questions, questions
that may not be popular, questions that may result in dodging,
(32:02):
not saying what really happened and how things went. In fact,
it could be argued, I think in a very very
easy way. I think it could be argued that it's
not just going to be about vetting Roy Cooper's efforts
as governor, but it's also got to be Mandy because
(32:24):
because Mandy was, that was that was, she was the
genius behind all the policies. I think these are all
the folks, these are all the folks that that are
going to have to be vetted, and we're going to
have to figure out, well, what made you think that
this was going to be a good outcome or a
good policy. And I think it's important to vet in
(32:46):
that way, because what's to say and who's to say
that China doesn't decide that perhaps maybe one day they
want to deploy something against us again. Are we gonna
lock everybody down? Are we gonna take everybody's keys? Are
we gonna make you stay in the house where they
where they take the they take like they did in
(33:08):
China and they were hammering people's doors shut so that
they couldn't leave their homes. There's a lot that needs
to be answered. There's a lot, especially when you're somebody
who was right there in the thick of it. Obviously,
Donald Trump was right there in the thick of it.
He was he was the President of the United States,
and he was doing the things that he felt were needed.
(33:32):
But we should also vet governors, governors who were right
there in the thick of it, Governors like Gavin Newsom,
Any Twosome, Newsom, Roy Cooper, that's an important person to vet.
Those are very important people. And I would I would
hope that if you see him walking around and he's
(33:53):
maybe trying a campaign or doing that, you asked the
questions about the COVID, and you asked the questions about
all the people that died, and you ask the questions
about how how can we do better? Because are you
going to go into the United States Senate and and
say lockdown, lockdown, lockdown. I don't know. I don't know.
(34:14):
But these are the things that need to be looked
at because past is prologue. What has happened in the
past is what has happened. To quote Kamala Harris in
the future, but differently I made that up. Here's talk
(34:50):
eleven ten, not a nine three WBT. Julane Maxwell is
asking the Supreme Court to overturn her conviction, and they're excited.
On CNN, we've got a CMPD investigation at a homicide
at an apartment complex over on Coronado Drive. That is
the big story that is moving here locally and over
(35:13):
on the Fox machine. How does E US EU trade
benefit Americans? I think it is a beneficial sort of
a thing when you when you really dig into that.
But look, here's here's something that I think is a
very important thing. I'm going to go to the phones
very quickly, So please don't don't sweat, don't stress. We
(35:33):
got it. We're going to take all your calls seven
oh four, five, seven oh eleven ten, or you can
send us a note. The WBT text line, driven by
Liberty Buick GMC, illegal food vendors in Uptown and South
End are leading to safety concerns. Wait a minute. Illegal
food vendors are raising health concerns in Charlotte's night life scene,
(35:58):
with Mecklenburg County Public Health citing one hundred and eighty
four individuals for unlicensed vending since last year. This is
reporting coming out of sc The Health Department has identified
these vendors as serious risk, noting that many operate without
(36:18):
permits are not subject to inspections that ensure safe food handling.
I don't know about you, Isaac, but I'm nervous when
somebody's handling my food, especially without a without a without
a go say so, you know what I'm saying. If
I'm if I'm eating, if I'm eating a sandwich and
(36:41):
someone puts their hands in my sandwich, now it's a
handwich and I can't eat that anymore. I mean, that's
just that's no good. But what if they're manufacturing the sandwich,
and maybe they're applying the mayonnaise, the mayonaise with their
hands and the mustard with their hands.
Speaker 4 (37:02):
They can't be doing.
Speaker 1 (37:03):
And then you put you grab the handful of chicken
and you put that right on the sandwich. And I mean,
this is what goes on. You don't know.
Speaker 3 (37:11):
You don't know.
Speaker 1 (37:13):
This is why they invented vending machines. This year alone,
fifty complaints feels a little light. Fifty complaints have been
filed regarding these vendors, who often sell food from trucks
during late night hours. You know what a great name
(37:34):
for a band, late night hours. Reynard Washington, public health
director from Mecklenburg County, highlighted the risks associated with these vendors,
including you may not want to hear this, food born illnesses,
and the transmission of diseases like hepatitis A. Here's the thing, though,
(37:59):
that could happen in any restaurant like that. That's not
just because you're making salami sandwiches in the back of
the truck and you're putting the mayonnaise on your hand.
That could happen anywhere. That could happen, I mean just anywhere,
but it's probably more likely if it's like in the
back of a truck that's not licensed, that doesn't have
(38:21):
a name on it. That I mean, it could happen.
It's not good. Hayley Johnson, another resident, noted, I have
not even thought about the health risk behind it, So
that's a great point. Actually, actually I just see it.
I'm like, oh, they're just selling food. Yeah, got to
(38:45):
rethink that a little bit. Gotta rethink that a little bit.
I'm not trying to put people out of the business,
but I mean, come on, you want to be careful.
There's a reason why we have these people who are
out there, you know. Max Fletcher, alone, local resident, express
concerns over the vendors, saying it's kind of hard to
tell like what they're using to cook with, Like, you know,
(39:10):
if they're even lost in their hands, I don't know
what that means. That might have been a late night
I don't know. So just be careful. The vendors are
often setting up pop up tents. Yeah, I'm not getting
it out of a pop up tent. I need something
that's got a platform, and I don't mean a political platform.
(39:33):
Pop up tents and parking lots equipped with grills and
cooking equipment. I don't know that I'm eating in a
tent that's got cooking equipment. In the tent, you might
get a little hazy, crazy, weirdo kind of a thing
going on in there. It raises concerns about the sanitary
conditions under which the food is prepped. Well, think about that,
(39:57):
where you washing your hands to make your sandwich.
Speaker 4 (40:02):
There's a pawn down there, just over there, all right,
wash them over, they wash them.
Speaker 1 (40:09):
Hold on. I think what you need is like some felt,
like a felt apron, and you just you just go,
just a man, catch up mayonnaise. This hand is for ketchup.
This hand is for mayonnaise. These fingers are for twirling
the faetes.
Speaker 4 (40:30):
Dude, I bet some of that food's good.
Speaker 5 (40:32):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (40:32):
I'm sure it's delicious. I have no doubt about the
deliciosity of the food. I'm worried. Can we just invest
in some gloves that we throw away and put new
ones on in between the in between?
Speaker 6 (40:47):
It's one of those new cool restaurants. You gotta bring
your own gloves for them. You want to made with gloves,
you gotta bring.
Speaker 1 (40:52):
Them, bring your own gloves. Ye buy buyyog Yeah, Hey,
what happened? Well? A bunch of people got sick. What
do you think happened? Biog? They didn't buyog. They didn't buyog.
Whose fault is that? Everybody knows? Everybody knows. If you
(41:13):
want to clean sandwich, you buyog.
Speaker 4 (41:16):
If you want to clean sandwich at the tent restaurant.
Speaker 1 (41:20):
If you've had enough Jaeger, then you know what you're
gonna do. You're just gonna lay in the bog. You're
gonna be like, I'm in the lay bog right here.
I'm just gonna lay down here eating a cheese sandwich.
That's all I can do. Anybody got any byogs.
Speaker 6 (41:36):
You just gotta chase the tint sandwich with a little
bit of yegger, it'll clean you.
Speaker 1 (41:40):
No, you don't. You don't do any of that at all.
That is not to be handled in that way. We
need air conditioning, We need flushing toilets, we need we
last thing we need right now, ladies and gentlemen, is
is woodstock ninety nine.
Speaker 4 (41:56):
For the love of God, Just get a thing of germs.
Speaker 1 (41:58):
You'll be right. The germs could perfect. Yep. You get
it at any barber shop. You put your hand in
there and it adds a little Flavor Dudes Talk eleven
TAD not nine three WBT. Let's jump out, Jim, Welcome
to the program. What's on your mind? Jim?
Speaker 7 (42:20):
Thank you, thank you for having me on again. Yes, sir,
it's good to be on probably one of the most
impactful radio shows in the country.
Speaker 1 (42:29):
Well, I appreciate that very very much, sir.
Speaker 7 (42:32):
That's the word of the day. But I was listening
to that guy called in about the on the water
that you want a water sewage thing, yes, sir, and
he was trying to lay some blame at the feet
of the president President, and I'd like to enlighten him
(42:53):
a little bit about how this whole thing lined up.
The thing to remember is that the federal government has
had the plans that training facility for the Butts team,
the Butt's training down there for a long time, and
they could not hold their breath any longer. So they
put the pressure on the City of San Diego, the
(43:13):
city Council, the city manager of the city attorney system
to expedite the drainage pipe. They got it mean this
pull referendum to give Tija wan of the money for
the pipe. That has the money though the money the
sewage coming out of the Rodriguez River that flows into
the United States and then it gets treated. It gets
(43:35):
treated as a treatment plant. The treatment of plant was built,
and the federal government went ahead and built the facility,
the BUTS Facility, nine hundred and seventy five million dollars
training facility, with the anticipation that they was going to
be expedite and erectified. What happened is the city of
San Diego turned over the money for the drainage pipe
(43:56):
to the Tijuana the government Tijuana, the deep Municipal basically
runs a lot of the everything in Tijuana d I
F municipal. It's it runs the welfare office, or runs
the city sewer, electric a lot of stuff like that.
So they are so corrupt that half the money just
(44:16):
went out the window to the officials, and then they
handed to the contractors what's left, which is about half
at the time, it is about half, and they tell them, okay,
go ahead and build it with this right and the
contractors have no choice. Plus it's a nationalized concrete system too,
that that yes, that's absurd, came apart in two seconds.
Speaker 1 (44:40):
Basically, oh see, this is what happened. So then so
then you got you got, you got the setup, getting
getting to where it's need needing to go. And I
have to I have to issue a disclaimer here because
we're not talking about Tijuana Brown, Okay, because I know
you're hearing from you know, from our esteemed caller talking
(45:00):
about the city of Tijuana, the area of Tijuana. That's
not that's not Tijuana Brown. Who's on the City of Charlotte,
you know, city council. So that that's that's the thing
that's important.
Speaker 7 (45:11):
I just don't know which one is more of vile.
Speaker 1 (45:15):
No, no, no, it doesn't matter. You don't have to
you don't have to clarify in that regard. But that's
great stuff. I do appreciate you being out there, Jim,
thank you very much for that. Let's go to Robert next. Robert,
Welcome to the program.
Speaker 8 (45:26):
Hey Brett, it's always a challenge following Jim, and he
was as usual, he was exactly right. Your your show
is very impactful. I know that's the word of the day,
and he brought it as he always does. Yes, sir,
I just wanted to Brett. I just wanted to be
one of the first to welcome Roy Cooper. As you
(45:46):
probably saw he likes, he likes it to.
Speaker 7 (45:48):
Be called Cooper Cooper.
Speaker 8 (45:49):
It's never a good start when you have to explain
how to say your name.
Speaker 5 (45:54):
He said that.
Speaker 8 (45:54):
He said, the eastern North Carolina Indians use that, oh
like you would in the word look, So it's Cooper anyway,
kind of like Kamala. He has to explain how to
say his name, which is not a good start.
Speaker 1 (46:07):
But I think, I mean, it's his right to, you know,
call himself how he wants to call himself, So I
mean I'll grant him that.
Speaker 8 (46:15):
Well, yes, and by the way, by the way, on
the flip side of that, he says that if you
want to call him Cooper, that he's not offended by it.
So that's that's very big of him. I've I also
saw where the a couple of Californians have already given
Governor Cooper a thumbs up, Adam shipp and and Alex
(46:36):
Jose Padilla. Yes, I really hate those guys come down
here and get arm in arm with with with our
interrupted two term governor of North Carolina.
Speaker 1 (46:48):
So so if somebody was you know, there's there. We
have people moving in every day, you know, in in
North Carolina, South Carolina. Right, you have people moving in
every single day. If you were to sum up the
performance of a governor a Cooper, who, how would you
How would you sum up the two term up policy there?
How would you? How would you agrede it? How would
(47:10):
you adjudicate it?
Speaker 8 (47:15):
Brett, I'm normally I'm usually not at a loss, but
in my in my mind, Governor Cooper was kind of nondescript.
Now I certainly remember him. I certainly remember him. And
I know you you've already you've already brought up Mandy Cohen.
Speaker 7 (47:30):
Uh.
Speaker 8 (47:31):
Those lockdowns were were they were that, they were a
big problem. And uh, and I think he'll be remember
remembered for that. I think he was covering his butt
on that more than he was anything else. And of
course Pete Pete did a very good job laying out
some of his some of his pluses and minuses. I
(47:53):
just kind of see him as someone who was not
very visible. And I guess if you're if you're Democrat,
you probably saw him as a success.
Speaker 1 (48:03):
I see. I think from the little that I know, Okay,
I think you have to get out there and you
have to shake hands, you have to participate in debates,
you can't the days of running away from being accountable
in any way, shape or form, though those are good,
those are long gone. That was that was the lockdown days,
right where you weren't allowed to ask anybody a question.
(48:24):
You got to wear the mask, you got to be
ten feet away from everyone. And I think that's you know,
I think it's important for people to understand what the
policies would would be championed. I mean the idea of well,
we want to be more prosperous. Okay, everybody wants to
be more prosperous. We we want to protect the middle class. Well,
how are you protecting the middle class when you spend
(48:44):
seven trillion dollars in the in the in the in
the Green New Deal and all that. These are the
questions that have to be answered. And you know, we're
going to have a great opportunity to ask these questions
among Republicans, Democrats, somebody who's independent, maybe getting in the race.
I mean, who knows. And that's that's the that's the
best job that we can do, no doubt about it.
Speaker 7 (49:05):
As I'm sure you.
Speaker 8 (49:06):
Know, Brett Cooper is in his late sixties and Chairman
Wattley is in his late fifties. I just don't see
Governor Cooper as particularly likable or charismatic, and that's that's
the kind of thing that you can't really learn. So
I think Wtley right as we sit today is the favorite.
Speaker 1 (49:27):
Well, we'll see what happens. There's a lot of ebbs
and flows. And I do appreciate you calling in on
the show today. I always get I get smarter when
I talk to you, Robert, Thanks so much, my friend.
Speaker 8 (49:36):
Thank you, sir. I really appreciate it.
Speaker 1 (49:37):
You're very welcome. I mean, this is what this is
all about. This, this is what this is all about.
We have to be able to figure out, you know,
what's happening. Did you see this story? Very shocking story.
Dion Sanders has revealed the details of the mystery health
scare issue that he's got he's been ailing him all
off season. Dion Sanders announced during a the University of
(50:00):
Colorado press conference on Monday that he had surgery to
have his bladder removed after being diagnosed with cancer. The cancer,
which Sanders said was an aggressive form, was cured thanks
to an alternative procedure that involved removing his bladder and
creating a new one with his own intestines. I'm sorry
if that's a little bit sensitive in the car, He's
(50:39):
talk eleven ten three WBT, it's the Brettwitterble Show. I'm
still trying to figure out what what went on in
Cincinnati with the people beating each other up. This is
a very confusing story. I'll try to figure that one
out as we get moving on down the road. Seven
oh four five seven zero eleven ten. All right, I
(51:01):
am I'm gonna I'm gonna just detour here into something
that has nothing to do with politics, because we get
a lot of politics stuff, right. This is a story
that I mean, honestly, I can't even explain, Like I
tried to explain it to myself and I got confused.
So you have to help me out here. You know
(51:23):
what an a raknid is? Do you know what an
iraqnet is? Are you familiar with araknids? What is an iraqnid?
Speaker 4 (51:30):
Spider?
Speaker 1 (51:31):
Okay, it's a spider? Thank you? Okay, I'm reading this
article and this is from like a real science journal.
Spiders didn't come from the Earth. Five hundred million year
old fossils redefines their origins. What that's the story scientists
(51:59):
have uncovered words striking new evidence that suggests spiders and
scorpions may have come from somewhere else, not from land.
In a fascinating study, by the way, you got to
see this thing is this thing is just next level scary.
(52:24):
Ooh yes, he's got like seven eyes on his head
and all this.
Speaker 4 (52:28):
Whenever spiders have hair run yeah.
Speaker 1 (52:30):
Yeah, big time. In a fascinating study published in Current
Biology gets current as in happening now as opposed to
current like jelly biology, researchers have turned our understanding of
a racknid evolution on its head. For years, scientists assume
(52:52):
that spiders, scorpions, and their kin evolved from land dwelling ancestors. However,
a fresh announce palysis of a five hundred million year
old fossil suggests that the creatures might have actually come
out of the oceans. So this thing is called Mallsonia simiterica.
(53:20):
The star of this groundbreaking study is a fossil called
what I just said, Mallusonia cymiterecrea, a Mid Cambrian anthropod
that lived over five hundred million years ago. Previously thought
to be an ancestor of horseshoe crabs. This fossil's neural
(53:41):
structure has caught the attention of neuroscientists. Researchers from the
University of Arizona and King's College London, like those are
legitimate schools, right, used advanced microscopy to study its brain,
feeling a striking similarity to the brain of modern rechnids.
(54:07):
This wasn't just any fossil fuel find the neural layout
Mollusonia matched that of today's spiders and scorpions in a
way that suggests marine origins rather than land based evolution.
So that means like you could probably eat them, right
(54:33):
if they came from the sea. You can eat stuff
out of the sea. I'm not eating spiders, like, I'm
not a spider eater.
Speaker 4 (54:40):
Right.
Speaker 1 (54:41):
You might be wondering why does a fossil brain matter
so much, Isaac, Just ask joe byten Well. The organization
of an animal's nervous system provides crucial clues about its
evolutionary lineage. So it's like an history but for vermin,
(55:05):
not vermin spiders. In the case of mollusonia, which sounds
like a drug or maybe a deliciously beautiful place, it's
nervous system I'll say it again, or it's a deliciously
succulent place. Its nervous system showed a unique pattern of
(55:28):
neural centers that are characteristic of marine anthropods see sea spiders.
What do you think lobsters are lobsters? That's a great poem?
What are lobster? What? What are you ever get? Crabs?
Lobsters and crabs sea spiders? Is it possible like horseshoe crabs?
(55:51):
I mean, this is I got to rethink this now.
And so what they're what they're saying is like that
they have they drew pictures. There's these there are pictures
here that clearly are are convincing. No, yeah, you see
you got all the bits in the parts. I mean
that's I don't like that's but that's what they look like.
Speaker 6 (56:12):
I think we should send them back to the oceans.
You're gonna drown them all, hope. So they're gonna come
back with a vengeance, with a.
Speaker 1 (56:20):
Vengeance for sure. How did they make the jump from
sea to land? I don't know. Maybe they walked. How
hard is that got them? No, the cartels didn't take them.
Stop it. With the new theory on the table, the
next natural question is how did these marine ancient marine
(56:41):
anthropods make the leap to land? The answer might lie
in the way their neural systems adapted over time. So
we're gonna keep an eye on this very interesting, fascinating situation.
I think that this is this is this could be
the big This could be the big reveal that been
waiting for. Yeah, everybody was saying, like remember qing on
(57:04):
and all that stuff, like we know what's going on.
This could be the big reveal. I can't. I can't believe.
So you would not if you knew for a fact
that you could eat these things? Wouldn't you eat the
spiders and the scorpions?
Speaker 4 (57:22):
Absolutely not.
Speaker 1 (57:23):
You eat shrimp? Those are like little tiny lobsters. No
meat there. It's just God love you.
Speaker 8 (57:32):
What am I talking about?
Speaker 1 (57:33):
I wish I knew news Talk eleven ten, I didn't.
(57:59):
I three WBT. Good to be with you guys, seven
oh four five, seven oh eleven ten. You know it's
you know, it's interesting. Uh, it's interesting. So we came
in with that song, right. Clem Burke just he passed
away in the in the last number of weeks. He
was an amazing drummer. He was an amazing drummer. That
(58:22):
was a little bit from Blondie. Let's go out and
talk to Reid. Hello Reid, Welcome to the program.
Speaker 9 (58:29):
Hey Brian, how are you doing? This is Reed Listeners
is nineteen fifty seven.
Speaker 1 (58:33):
Good to be with you.
Speaker 9 (58:35):
Oh yeah. My wife went to Vietnam with her aunt
on a Viking river cruise and they eat local cuisine
as are going by, and they actually had tarantulas for suffer.
Speaker 1 (58:45):
No gosh, really, oh.
Speaker 9 (58:48):
I'm not kidding. She wouldn't go near it, but her
aunt tasted it. She had grown up with it, and
a couple of the other people tried it. There were
these nasty little black spiders and.
Speaker 1 (58:57):
No, oh gosh, okay, I can't do it. See, I
just can't. There's so much. Look, I'll take the prime rib,
I'll take I'll take, you know, the other stuff I can't.
I can't. I just can't. I can't eat the I
can't eat the bugs, the bugs.
Speaker 9 (59:11):
I think it takes it like chicken, ugly chicken.
Speaker 1 (59:14):
There you go, great stuff. Thank you very much, read
for calling it today. I appreciate it. I's just see,
I can't do that. That's that's just something that's no,
it's no good, just can't. I did really look, I
feel like the beginning of every summer and the end
(59:35):
of every summer, they ought to just crop dust all
of us, just to hit us with all kinds of
just put everything out there because I don't want I
don't want to get like ticks. Ticks, ticks are scary.
Those those and you guys know what I'm talking about
right there are there are certain bugs that really bug you.
(59:59):
And I know it sounds like I'm making a joke,
but I'm not. It's like ticks, fleas, bed bugs. There
used to be a time. I don't know where this
came from, but there used to be a time where
you could actually check into a hotel and not have
to check the corners of the bed for bedbugs. And
(01:00:21):
if you get like an infestation of bed bugs, it
is awful. I've known so many people that have had
to deal with that, especially people who might have picked
them up at like an Airbnb. I'm not trying to
slag anybody, not making fun of any of the companies,
but you know what I'm saying, You have a bunch
of people that are coming in and going out and
(01:00:42):
you just don't know and then sometimes and you're gonna
not believe me, but I bet you there's people out
there that have done this. There are people who will
hire dogs to search out bed bugs. They have dogs
that are able to sniff out bed bugs if you
get an infestation, and so like that's I can't even imagine.
(01:01:04):
That's why I say, you know, this is not advice
for anybody. Really, we gotta I think we just gotta
like make sure. It just would be great if you could,
like you see how hot it is out today, just
use that heat, like bring that heat into that house
(01:01:27):
and lock her down for about two days, because then
you're like, Okay, I got rid of everything. Everything is gone.
I don't want it, I don't need it, don't care
about it. I mean that's but it's like like infestations, bugs, mosquitoes,
all that kind of stuff. It's like Cardinal does all
the good work they do. But I mean, I'm just saying,
(01:01:49):
so this, this is this is the thing, this is
this is the thing that we have to understand. And
when you finally realize like, oh okay, this is this
is kind of this kind of the thing, it's just
very it's very frustrating, Like I don't. I can't go.
I'll swim in salt water. I don't like swimming in
(01:02:11):
fresh water because I don't want to get like leeches
or harpies or whatever the heck is out there. I like,
I'm really good with the just with the seawater is
good for me. I like the seawater. You know, it's
you feel like, Okay, nothing's gonna get me except maybe
a shark. But you're gonna see that. You're gonna understand
(01:02:32):
that I don't like the ticks. I wouldn't go camping
in the summer. I'm not gonna go lay in a
in a in a lean to someplace in the summer.
That's that's no good for me. I don't I don't
want to come home. Then they gotta they gotta make
you go, well, looking through your hair and stuff, what
what what did you get? I didn't get anything. In fact,
(01:02:53):
I slept in the car the entire time. That's that's
that's sort of the position that I that I assert there. Okay,
But but there's a lot of people that like to
go do that sort of stuff. And if you like it,
then that's that's good. Just make sure you check yourself
and make sure everything is really cool and you're gonna
(01:03:14):
be fine. That's that's one of the big issues here.
If you're just joining us. By the way, welcome to
the program.
Speaker 3 (01:03:21):
Well.
Speaker 1 (01:03:21):
Former Democratic Governor Roy Cooper, or as I was instructed earlier,
Roy Cooper is going to be running for the US
Senate seat in North Carolina in twenty twenty six. Making
an announcement earlier today, Pete played the announcement itself. The
former Democratic governor will run for the US Senate in
(01:03:42):
North Carolina, giving Democrats a proven statewide winner in an
open seat race that is expected to be one of
the most competitive twenty twenty six contests. Cooper made the
announcement on Monday with a video release on social media
and his camp Pain website. The former two term governor
(01:04:02):
will immediately become the front runner for the Democratic nomination
in the race to succeed retiring Republican Senator Tom Tillis.
We're still expecting an announcement from Michael Wantley. Republican National
Committee Chairman Michael Wattley plans to run for the GOP
(01:04:22):
nomination with President Donald Trump's blessing, according to two people
familiar with his thinking who are not authorized to discuss
the matter publicly before an official announcement. That's the associated press.
So you have people that are that are going to
be looking at at at all that sort of stuff,
and they're gonna say, listen, how do we how do
we get over here, how do we get to that place?
(01:04:46):
How does any of that? How does any of that happen?
You know, I mean just and and so you know
it's I'm just I'm just look. These are these are
the these are the challenges that that we have. But
the question I have about Roy Cooper, and I'm serious
about this. If we've got all of these people that
(01:05:08):
are running for a variety of positions, If we have
all of these people that are running, we have all
of these people that are doing their thing, what are
the people talk about all the time. We need to
have a youth quake. We need a youth quake. We
need a situation whereby we can reach out and make
the connection with younger voters. That's what you hear. But
(01:05:31):
if you look at the way the parties are split,
it's very interesting to note that, you know, you have
a lot of females that have come out on the
Democrat side, and you've had a pretty decent number of
females coming out for the Republican side, but males are
(01:05:51):
pretty much, you know, moving in a very stark way
into the Republican camp. And if you're looking for young
people to come in and be a part of this,
then how do you do this right?
Speaker 3 (01:06:05):
Like?
Speaker 1 (01:06:05):
How how do you pull all this stuff uh to
get to get this stuff done? I don't know. But
if you want to be a younger person, you want
to and you want to see a younger candidate, well,
I mean why where?
Speaker 8 (01:06:18):
Where?
Speaker 1 (01:06:18):
Where is the bench of possibles that could be running
over in the Democratic Party? I mean, you know there
there there are a number of people in the Democrat
side of the ledger who could probably run for the position,
but on the Democrat side, but you know, they're gonna
they're gonna go back to the uh, to the well
(01:06:39):
trodden uh sort of pathway, and that's what you end
up with. But you know what, it's not over until
there's a declared winner, So there still may be people
who want to come in and be a part of this.
Coming up in this next hour, Steve Molloy's going to
join me. We're gonna talk about this huge energy deal
(01:07:01):
with the Europeans. Did you see uh Ursula vender Lavin
very excited to consummate that trip with President Trump on
the topic of energy News Talk eleven ten, ninety nine
(01:07:28):
three WBT. It's the Brett winerbul Show. It is great
to be with you. Seven o four five seven zero
eleven ten. Everything is fair game. If we have not
talked about it, you want to raise it, go ahead
and do it. Seven oh four five seven zero eleven ten.
Yesterday I'm gonna go with cut number three. President Trump.
He was a little frustrated yesterday dealing with the Europeans.
(01:07:49):
This is what it sounded like yesterday. Cut three.
Speaker 2 (01:07:52):
We've had a hard time with trade with Europe, very
hard time, and I'd like to see it resolved.
Speaker 1 (01:08:01):
One of the things that the President is frustrated with
is going to be cut number seven. President Trump is
very disappointed in Vladimir Putin not coming to the table.
Cut No. We don't have the one. Okay, give me
cut number eight. Donald Trump on six Wars without him,
go for it.
Speaker 2 (01:08:18):
Go, Yeah, she's fires possible, but you you have to
get it. You have to end it. You're talking about
with Israel's you're talking about there because we have many
seas fires going on. The whole world is. If I
weren't around, you'd have right now six major wars. India
would be fighting with Pakistan. You see what we just
did yesterday with two nations that were trading with and
(01:08:40):
during the trade I said, I'm not going to do
any trade deal unless you got to settle your differences,
and we got it settled in twenty four hours. I
mean they just announced it was settled, which is a
tremendous thing. But Serbia Kosovo is another one. We have
many hotspots that were at war. I think a very
big one was India and Pakistan because that's you're talking
(01:09:02):
about two nuclear nations. That was a very big one.
But now we get help from the UK. The Prime
Minister's helped. We have cases where we specifically need to
help because somebody comes from here that you're aware of,
and you know when you come from a country you
can do things, and why call up the Prime minister
and all of a sudden he's able to do things.
(01:09:22):
True also with other presidents and prime ministers, but we've
done it. Nobody's ever done what we've done. We have
six different major looker, if you take a look at
Rwanda and the Congo Republic of the Congo, they've been
fighting for thirty one years, eight million people dead. It
(01:09:44):
was going on. Nobody could go to that part of Africa.
They were being killed. If to even walk there, you're
being killed with machetes. And it was a violent situation.
And I was able to they like Trump. They wanted
to make a trade deal with Trump. They wanted to
to take their rare earth. They want to give us
their rare earth. And I got to know the leader
(01:10:06):
of the Congo. I got to know both of them indirectly,
and I called him. I said, let's end the war.
I don't want anything until the end of the war.
And we ended the wars. You know, the foreign ministers
came up two weeks ago and the leaders are going
to be coming very shortly to Washington. Rwanda and Congo.
I mean, that's another one that we did. So we've
(01:10:26):
done a lot. It's an honor to do it. It's
not hard for me to do it. And I used
not in all cases, but I use a combination of
knowing them a little bit or in some cases knowing them.
Speaker 1 (01:10:38):
A lot so that's a little bit from the sound
from today. Yesterday, we had a back and forth that
was taking place, Lindsey Graham talking about the new evidence
in the twenty sixteen reveals. This is cut number one.
Lindsey Graham, go for it.
Speaker 10 (01:10:54):
This this new evidence. This is something I didn't know.
Speaker 1 (01:10:56):
You didn't know that.
Speaker 10 (01:10:58):
In twenty sixteen, Obama suggested, I don't like the outcome
that there's no evidence Russia was involved. Well, now we
all say Russia was involved, but in twenty sixteen they
said Russia wasn't involved.
Speaker 1 (01:11:10):
What's gonna happened? I mean, this is continuing to proceed Accordingly.
Mike Johnson, Speaker of the House of Representatives, he says
he wants the Epstein files to come out cut number two. Please.
Speaker 11 (01:11:27):
I'm going to say this is clearly and plainly and
repeatedly as I can over and over, we are for
maximum disclosure. We want all transparency. I trust the American people,
I and the House Republicans believe that they should have
all this information to be able to determine what they will.
But we have to protect the innocent. And that's the
only safeguard here that we've got to be diligent about I.
Speaker 1 (01:11:49):
Mean, so this is one of the things that he's
looking for. Earlier today, I mentioned on the program the
fact that Julene Maxwell wants to challenge her conviction at
the Supreme Court. I don't know if that's possible. I
don't know how that's going to go. But there's also
the NFL getting geared up as they get ready into
(01:12:13):
this next month. Jayde and Daniels, was was this cut
number four? Jayden Daniels, He's got a really great, level
headed sort of approach to the game.
Speaker 12 (01:12:25):
Cut four, please, I just think that's just who I
am as a person, and I want to be the
best version of myself when it all said down. I
want to have no regrets in my career football. So
wherever God takes me and how I end up with
this game is how he does. But I want to
look back at the end of my current and say,
man I gave I gave him off.
Speaker 1 (01:12:44):
There was a historic victory yesterday at Indianapolis, Bubba Wallace
winning in the in the late stages. This is this
is what the call sounded like. Cut five plays here
they come. The brickyard belongs to Bubba Wallace. Wimsday and
(01:13:08):
he's going to the SOD. We had the bracketing there, right,
So we've got the bracketing. We've got We've got Jayden
Daniels talking about Washington and what he's expecting. We also
got a very interesting clip from Tom Brady with advice
for young NFL players. This is cut numbers six. Please.
Speaker 13 (01:13:28):
Biggest problem I see with a lot of the young
players today, you guys are making it too much about
IAI because of social media. Because when you have fifty
three guys on the team and you think it's about
you and about you, it's about us. And the biggest
problem I see with a lot of the young players today,
you guys are making it too much about Iami because
of social media, because of branding and all that.
Speaker 1 (01:13:48):
This vine you're gonna win.
Speaker 13 (01:13:49):
There was a difference between being a star and being
a champion.
Speaker 1 (01:13:53):
There's a difference between being a star and being a champion.
I'm curious from the folks out there what that exactly
would be. What is the difference between being a star
and being a champions. That's the big question, because a
lot of people just want to be stars. They don't
want to be champions or a lot of people want
(01:14:15):
to be stars and they don't want to do the
work to become a champion. And then you've got a
guy like Tom Brady who certainly got stardom, fandom, and titles.
It's pretty cool all the way around. What does it take?
Talent takes talent. It takes putting in the reps when
(01:14:40):
you don't feel like doing the reps. Am I am,
I am? I wrong, Eyac. I don't think that's it.
You have to do the hard work every day. I
lovingly begin with a blank sheet of paper, and by
the time three o'clock rolls around, it's no longer blank.
(01:15:01):
It is communication. Isaac's not believing it. President Donald Trump
announced a sweeping trade agreement with the European Union on Sunday,
(01:15:22):
setting a baseline fifteen percent tariff on European imports, including automobiles,
while keeping existing fifty percent duties on steel and aluminum
in place. As part of the deal, the EU committed
to purchasing seven hundred and fifty billion dollars in US
(01:15:47):
energy products. That is huge. Joe, welcome to the program.
What's on your mind, Joe?
Speaker 10 (01:15:56):
How are you doing?
Speaker 1 (01:15:57):
Brett doing great things?
Speaker 5 (01:15:59):
I wanted to get your opinion on Senate Majority Leader
Thoon with the deciding to not take a recess but
not necessarily keep everyone in town in regards to Trump's
appointees and sitting there thinking about it. Right when you
were playing Brady's comments about do you want to be
(01:16:21):
a star or do you want to be a champion
and made me think, well, is still going to be
a part of this overwhelming conservative team trying to straighten
some things out or is he just going to be
a star. But what's your take on this whole whole
agenda the tunes refusing to take up.
Speaker 1 (01:16:41):
So what you've got going on here is one hundred
and thirty five people need to be confirmed. The desire
is to get them all confirmed with the Senate being
operating in that way. But he's also got another problem.
A President Trump wants people to go out and tout
(01:17:03):
the big beautiful Bill, And so what you need to
do is get these people back out into the countryside
answering questions, talking about the great, big beautiful bill. But
at the same time, you've got to do the hard
work of getting these these folks confirmed. My guess is,
(01:17:23):
and I don't know anybody there I'm not in talks
with anybody there or anything like that. What I would
say about it is, I would guess that after a
couple of weeks of them being at home doing town
hall kind of things, Trump's gonna call him back. That
would be my guess. That would be my guess. But
(01:17:44):
I don't know, and I don't know how they're going
to square that. If I'm if I'm able to, you know,
make contact with a couple of people, I'll see if
I can, if I can divine it. But you know,
John Thune is he's a he's an institute a list,
you know, is kind of how you look at him.
He's he's sort of he's not certainly as as as
(01:18:06):
awful as Mitch McConnell, but he's one of those guys
that's the go along, get along guy. But at some
point he has to understand that these these deals need
to get confirmed because you have to have the player
personnel for for the for the rest of the term.
Speaker 5 (01:18:24):
Do you think he fears the backlash if they were
to recess and Trump just did the recess appointments, that
you know, he would just get a get branded as
doing what Trump wanted to pass. Everything through.
Speaker 1 (01:18:35):
Yeah, I mean that's that's a possibility, right, he could.
He could certainly do a recess appointments and sit there
and sign all those sheets meaning Trump, meaning President Trump.
You know, I think there was a a confirmation bias
that took place last week when people were saying, oh,
they're only just trying to do it so that they
(01:18:57):
don't have to deal with the Epstein stuff. Well, the
Epstein stuff is in the House. The Epstein stuff is
not in the Senate, and the Senate can can I
can obviously do the work that they have to do.
But the question is how do you how do you
get enough people in there to be those those folks.
And again, he could he could recess, they are in recess.
He could just go sign. He could just auto patit.
Speaker 8 (01:19:15):
No, not really nice, You're welcome, good stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:19:20):
Thanks, Joe.
Speaker 5 (01:19:21):
I appreciate you.
Speaker 1 (01:19:21):
I appreciate it. Stay cool out there, man, Okay, Hey,
I'm gonna be shady. Yes, I'm gonna stay in the shade.
That's what I gotta do. That's my my shady Catholic
friend who likes to call in on the program. Now,
I will say I will say this if if he
does go in there and set up a situation where
you have the recess appointment. It's not the greatest way
(01:19:47):
to go, but it's certainly not not the most horrible thing.
I don't know when you look at him other than Bovey,
because they're making a big deal at a Beauvet being
a person going elevated to the uh to the courts
and being potentially a person that could become a Supreme
Court justice. Uh, I know, that's that's one of the
(01:20:09):
sticky wickets that's underway here. But what what we don't
know and we don't know how this is all gonna
play out, is what about all these other people? Because
there's a there's a bunch of people that need to
be confirmed that are kind of like generic sort of
just people that you would you would put in the
position because somebody's got to administer, somebody's got to run this,
(01:20:32):
somebody's got to run that. But but it's hard to know,
uh what what the impact of that is? Do you
have that that clip? Okay, this is this is something
that I think you'll, uh you you'll find very very interesting.
Let a rip go.
Speaker 14 (01:20:50):
Say, yeah, this one was a surprising one to me,
given everything that's going on in Russia, what happened in
You say, yeah, this one was a surprising one to me,
given everything that's going on in Russia, what happened in Iran,
what happened in Gaza. But the bottom line is Democrats
in the American voters' minds cannot hack it. What are
we talking about? Party trusted more and foreign policy? Well,
the GOP holds an average six point leading the month
(01:21:11):
of July. Look at this. Fox News came out last
week plus three points four Republicans on foreign policy over
the Democrats. You think that number is not high enough
for you? How about the Wall Street Journal GOP plus
eight points when they match congressional Democrats up against congressional Republicans.
The bottom line is this, despite everything that's going on
in the world right now, Republicans are more trusted on
(01:21:31):
Democrats when it comes to foreign policy and the world
at large. How has this changed or how does this
compared to during the campaign. Yeah, again, this to me
was a surprising number. Since Donald Trump said he'd come
in and broke all these peace deals. And while he's
brokeered some, he hasn't obviously brokered one between Ukraine and
Russia and obviously the situation in Gaza. But take a
look here trust more and foreign policy. You go back
(01:21:53):
to twenty twenty four, Trump had a six point advantage
over Kamala Harris. Again, look at the average right now.
It hasn't moved despite everything that's going on in the world.
You see Republicans plus six points here. And this goes
back to a larger issue that we have discussed over
and over again here in the Mornings. Despite any misgivings
that the American public might have about Donald Trump, when
(01:22:15):
you match up Republicans against Democrats, donald Trump against Democrats,
still at this particular point, they are doing significantly better
than you might expect. And it comes to the issue
of foreign policy. Again. What you see is in the
American voters' minds, Democrats, simply put, can't hacket more. Voters
trust Republicans on foreign policy very much like they did
(01:22:37):
back during the twenty twenty four campaign. What about the
strikes on Iran, Because while they were being contemplated, they
were not universally popular. No, they were not universally popular,
and in the immediate afterma they were not universally popular.
Look at this net approval rating US air strikes in
Run in late June, the net approval rating, look at
that minus eight points underwater. But as the American people
(01:22:59):
learned more and more about it, look at this a.
Speaker 1 (01:23:02):
Ten point rise.
Speaker 2 (01:23:03):
Now it's in the positive.
Speaker 14 (01:23:04):
The American people like the move that Donald Trump put
on Iran. The US air strikes in Iran a plus
positive plus two net approval rating. So again the bottom
line is this, as the American people learn more about
these air strikes, as the American people compared Donald Trump
and the Republicans against the Democrats, they see them far
more favorably.
Speaker 1 (01:23:22):
Than you might expect.
Speaker 9 (01:23:24):
Interesting and notable that the president is overseas today foreign
policy maybe an area that is stronger for him, Harriett
and thank you, thank you.
Speaker 15 (01:23:31):
Mire.
Speaker 1 (01:23:32):
Yes, yes, it's because it's tariffs. He's meeting with these
people to talk about tariffs. He's not going on like
a luxury tour. He went to Turnbury and then he
went and he met with Keir Starmer, one of our
most important by the way, allies. And oh, by the way,
(01:23:53):
let's not forget something that I heard earlier today by
Nigel Faraj. You know what he said. He said, isn't
it interesting that the European Union has not subsumed the
efforts to get England back into the EU. And remember
(01:24:18):
when Trump had the opportunity, what did he do. He
pushed for the EU to get off the back of
the Brits. The Brits decided they were going to go
and do that sort of thing. That thing was the
first big w for Trump for all intents and purposes.
And now what do you have. The reason why the
(01:24:41):
people are on his side is because he said he
was going to secure the border. He secured the border,
he was going to try to make the efforts to
stop the wars. It was going to try to make
the effort to get all of the stuff that has
been done done, tariffs deals, all of that sort of stuff.
That is a big deal coming up. I got a
great guest who's going to be joining us in just
(01:25:04):
a matter of minutes, Steve mlloy, Senior Energy and Environmental
Legal Institute fellow and former Trump EPA transition team member.
We're going to talk about this energy deal. News Talk eleven,
(01:25:28):
ten ninety nine to three WBT. It's the Brett Winter Show.
It's great to be with you, and I'm really happy
to Welcome back to the program, Steve molloy, Senior Energy
and Environmental Legal Institute fellow and of course former Trump
EPA transition team leader, and he's joining us now. Thanks
so much Steve for being back here.
Speaker 16 (01:25:48):
Hey, Britt, thanks for having me.
Speaker 1 (01:25:50):
Talk a little bit about this energy deal that we
saw that came about earlier today with the European Union.
This seems to be a game changer.
Speaker 16 (01:26:01):
Yeah, so it looks like we're going to be selling
i think like seven hundred billion dollars worth of gas
to Europe. Of course, Europe is gas strapped, they won't
allow fracking, their own fracking, and with the you know,
Ukraine Russian War, of course, they want to avoid buying
Russian gas. So the only place to get it from
(01:26:23):
is the United States. And you know, President Trump is
trying to open as many liquefied natural gas terminals and
the US is possible to ship as much of that
precious stuff to Europe and Asia, where you know, they'll
pay three times more force i'm sorry, six times more
for it than a US utility will. So it's you know,
(01:26:46):
it's all cash.
Speaker 1 (01:26:48):
So great. So when we look at this, right, one
of the things that the president, as I mean, he
has gone on and on about this and it's not
necessarily a negative, but it is something that is stuck
in his craw and it's the idea of these windmills.
And he just does not want to see any more windmills.
Did he did he have one accidentally erected on his
(01:27:10):
property somewhere? I mean, because he he hates these windmills.
What is the genesis of this?
Speaker 16 (01:27:16):
Well, so he started hating them because you know, he's
got this beautiful Turnberg golf course in Scotland, and you
know he fought them from being built off shore. He
lost and said, you know, he's been complaining because I
guess on the eighteenth Green you can see windmills in
the distance. He absolutely hates them, and he has brought
that back to America. He just hates windmills, dumps on
(01:27:38):
them any time he can. And he also has the
chance to take action against him, which he is doing.
He did it in the One Big Beautiful Bill. There's
been an executive where after that's just going to bury
windmills in paperwork. And you know, for all I know,
we're never going to see another new one in the
United States.
Speaker 1 (01:27:58):
And look, and we have talked about this before, especially
you know the blight that it is, especially off the
East coast and all the nastiness that goes on there.
We're harming the sea wildlife. Once upon a time, I'm
old enough to remember maybe you are as well, that
we were supposed to protect, you know, the species, and
(01:28:18):
this has just been a massacre for these species.
Speaker 16 (01:28:21):
Yeah. I mean they're an environmental disaster. I mean the
offshore wind kills whales, onshore kills, migratory birds. On shore,
these you know, the massive concrete rebar foundations for these
wind farms. They're permanent, so they're a permanent blight. They're ugly,
they have other environmental effects. The offshore stuff is really bad.
(01:28:43):
They have the cables that bring the electricity. Those things
run at at like one hundred and forty degrees, which
means that they're heating up the water.
Speaker 1 (01:28:51):
Oh my god. Wait wait wait wait, we're supposed to
be saving the climate and we're heating it up like
a like a giant blast.
Speaker 16 (01:28:57):
Yeah yeah, yeah, well yeah, and just you know, keep
in behind you. Fifty years ago it will save the whales.
Now the environmentals are like killed the whales with windmills,
So yeah, and plus plus they only make electricity more expensive.
They you know, they don't do anything. They're not changing
the weather or changing the climate much less improving them.
They just made electricity really expensive. And you know now
(01:29:18):
that we have we're going to reindustrialize America and we've
got AI more AI coming online. We need more power,
let windmills and solar just to do it.
Speaker 1 (01:29:27):
So when you when you look at this, and this
is the question that I have. Right, we know about
the shutting down of nuclear power plants that have happened.
I think we've got one left on the on the
West coast and maybe a couple of others obviously around
the rest of the country. Are we going to see
that we can get that kind of energy for AI
(01:29:49):
for all that that new industrialization that's going to have
to happen. Are we going to turn towards nuclear power? Uh,
in a in a full strong way, given the fact
that it's it's really the cleanest thing you can do.
Speaker 16 (01:30:03):
Well, Uh, you know we're gonna try. You know, President
Trump is trying to get the permitting process straight. There's
some bad science and bad risk assessment going on that
he's trying to fix so that we can You know,
the first nuclear plant built in America was constructed in
less than four years and ran for thirty years. And
(01:30:25):
of course you can't do anything close to that today
just because of all the regulations. So we need to
deregulate a little bit. But in the meantime, you know,
President Trump is going to get as much oil and
gas based load power online for AI and reindustrialization and
we'll have the best of you know, all three worlds coal, gas,
(01:30:45):
and nuclear for electricity.
Speaker 1 (01:30:47):
Are we going to Are we going to see at
any point? Are we going to see hydrogen come on,
come online as zone.
Speaker 16 (01:30:52):
As Sorry, no, all these bogus you know when sol hydrogen? Sorry.
So the President of Trump, you know, he sometimes he
says that he has some hope for solar but well,
I mean, you know, maybe in California there's more sunshine
than like Minnesota, but generally speaking, I think all this
(01:31:14):
renewable stuff is just going to get the way the.
Speaker 1 (01:31:16):
Dinosaur that's gonna be. And listen, I'm not I'm not
against it. I lived out there in California. I still
have the stupid button on my on my jeep where
I where at idols, you know, I have to turn
it off every time where at idols, at the intersections.
Speaker 16 (01:31:28):
I mean, I just get rid of that too.
Speaker 1 (01:31:30):
Oh thank god. It's the worst thing ever. I mean,
it is just the worst thing ever. It just turns
your car off and then you have to turn it
back on at every intersection. And when you're when you're
driving in six mile an hour traffic on the four
oh five, you just want to absolutely rip your air out.
I'm sorry, I just had to editorialize on that one.
Speaker 16 (01:31:50):
Yeah, no, no EPA Lee's Elden e p A chief
has said that he's he's getting rid of you know
that requirement. Yeah, so automakers will be free, not that
you know, who knows what the automakers will do, but
they wouldn't have to assert it. They would just be
an option for fools.
Speaker 1 (01:32:05):
I feel like I feel like Pete Bodhacheg, he should
he should have the car like that, Like we don't
need the car like that. We need a regular car.
Speaker 16 (01:32:11):
I don't need a you knowhere.
Speaker 1 (01:32:13):
Oh gosh, yes, please please, yeah, but you can't go
to Costco that way, Steve, where do people go to
find out more information on all the stuff.
Speaker 16 (01:32:21):
You guys, you could follow me every day on X
at Junk Science.
Speaker 1 (01:32:27):
At Junk Science, there is nothing junkie about you. You
are awesome. We always appreciate your conversation and thanks for
being here today. Sure bye, you got it. Absolutely, that's
Steve malloy at Junk Science. Drive slow.
Speaker 15 (01:33:06):
Slower, waita now, look around so hot?
Speaker 12 (01:33:25):
Wait a little girl.
Speaker 15 (01:33:26):
You know how they won't bonger?
Speaker 4 (01:33:30):
Are you lady in the City of nine?
Speaker 15 (01:33:35):
Okay?
Speaker 13 (01:33:36):
No asting City and Night.
Speaker 1 (01:33:42):
News Talk eleven ten nine nine three w BT it's
the Brett Winter will show final segment of the program.
If you'd like to opine seven O four five seven
zero eleven ten. If you do not want to opine,
I have a number for you seven O four five
seven zero one one one zero. We can also catch
up with us at the WBT text line driven by
Liberty Buick GMC, which is fantastic, Which is fantastic. I
(01:34:06):
keep wondering about a number of different sort of stories
that are out there moving here.
Speaker 3 (01:34:11):
Right.
Speaker 1 (01:34:12):
So we just told you about how it was that
the Americans are trusting Republicans on foreign policy. Okay, I
think it makes a lot of sense because the President
has has kept his promise about dealing with that with
that issue, right, the stuff, that's all that's all going
on in that regard. But then there are a couple
(01:34:33):
of other things here too, Right, And one of the
headlines that I thought was really particularly interesting another weekend
of winning Trump victories on trade and peace for such
a long period of time that the knock on Republicans
or conservatives is the idea of, well, no, we can't
(01:34:56):
be part of peace. We have to be the butt kickers.
We have to be the people that are gonna go
around and straighten everybody out, and we're gonna have to,
you know, do all these sorts of things. You have
got this hybrid. Now, if you think about the trade issue,
trade is wonderful and everybody gets to get to be
(01:35:18):
a part of these deals, and that's a really wonderful thing.
But what about peace? What about the notion of peace?
Like when you sit back and you look at the
way this stuff goes, like, all you have to do
is go back to twenty seventeen when the institutions of
(01:35:45):
the Obama administration decided they were going to go to
war with Donald Trump, and what they were attempting to
do like if we boil this thing down. They were
trying to draw Vladimir Putin off sides and Donald Trump
offsides so that we would get into a war. That
(01:36:07):
is what the Obama team was trying to do. Obama
and Biden were trying to get us into a war.
And what did you get. Well, after the second term
of the Obama administration, they were basically calling out Vladimir Putin,
but they weren't giving the weapons to the Ukrainians.
Speaker 3 (01:36:30):
Right.
Speaker 1 (01:36:31):
But for some reason Barack Obama and his vice president
were in the business of creating a new war. They
must have taken the lesson from Hillary Clinton and the
killing of Kadafi in Libya. So why would you want
(01:36:54):
Do you want your son or daughter, grandson, granddaughter? Do
you want them to go and fight in Ukraine? Do
you want them to go and fight in North Korea?
Do you want to see them go and fight in Iran?
Do you want to see that? None of you? Nobody,
(01:37:14):
nobody wants to see that. Nobody wants to see that.
But what's so incredible is the warmongers are on the left,
not on the right. How do I know? Because the warmongers,
the people that are really advocating for war. They're the
people that support the OAZ on the college campuses. They
(01:37:39):
are the people who are agitating for more wars. They
want more wars. Why should your son or daughter die?
Should your grandson or granddaughter die? Absolutely not. Why are
we supposed to go and fight wars that leave us
only with body bags? Why should we want to be
(01:38:00):
those people that are gonna sit there and are gonna say, well,
you know why we're fighting over there in Libya, you
know why we're fighting over there in Ukraine. You know
why we're fighting this place, that place, the other place.
And yet what's so incredible is you have cartels that
have taken up positions in on the other side of
(01:38:22):
the border in Mexico, and if Donald Trump proposed for
a half a minute that we need to go to
war with the cartels, they'd impeach him. What's the difference, Well,
the difference is we get to go blow stuff up
halfway around the world, but nobody wants to see stuff
(01:38:42):
getting blown up right there on the border. Because there's
a lot of politicians that line their pockets with those dollars.
So they'll send your kid to Africa, they'll send your
kid to Asia. They'll send your kid to the to
the darkest places you could possibly imagine to go fight.
(01:39:05):
But they won't do it. They won't fight for the
United States. They're not going to take battalions or any
of those people. They're not going to line them up
on the Mexican border to stop fentanyl from coming in.
That's not worthy. What's worthy is to go halfway around
(01:39:26):
the world and get your kids butt shot off, right.
Isn't that exactly what we're looking at. Isn't that weird?
Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Comy Brennan, the Five Eyes, all
of those people wanted to get us in a war
with Russia. It's why they were getting so hot and
(01:39:47):
bothered about Russia. Russia, Russia, Russia. They were hoping you
were going to get World War three with Donald Trump
and Donald Trump but four, but four the COVID coupdaeta,
which is what I think we can call it, the
(01:40:08):
COVID coudeta, where that virus comes into our country and
suddenly everything's off the table. When you when you look
at at all of that stuff, Donald Trump was going
to be finished, And isn't it interesting he could have
come back, and he could have said, I'm going to
settle all the scores, I'm gonna take everybody out, I'm
(01:40:31):
gonna do all this kind of stuff. All he did
was keep his promise about the border. All he did
was keep his promise about doing deals with the Europeans,
even the Europeans that that don't like him, but they
have to because they're bought seven hundred and fifty billion
dollars in three years of energy from the United States.
(01:40:52):
You have, you have a group of people who don't
want peace, they're agitating for more wars. And the guy
that's holding the helm here is him. He's not going in.
He blew up the nuclear facilities in Iran. Not a
single American casualty. That's judicious. That's not a madman. That's
(01:41:20):
not somebody who has to act like they're gonna be
a tough guy, like the guy who was saying back
in twenty twenty, I'm gonna take him behind the shed,
I'm gonna take him behind the gym. I'm gonna beat
him up. I'm gonna do That's what I'm gonna do. No, no, no,
that's not toughness. That's not toughness. That's recklessness. He's being
(01:41:41):
targeted in the best possible ways because he's trying to
get better deals and bigger piece instead of a bigger
piece of war News Talk eleven, ten ninety nine to
three WBT, Oh God, oh.
Speaker 3 (01:42:00):
God, no thing.
Speaker 15 (01:42:02):
Yea, it is no, it is night.
Speaker 5 (01:42:10):
It is nice
Speaker 1 (01:42:13):
Nice, wow wow