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July 30, 2025 • 104 mins

Tune in here to this Wednesday edition of the Brett Winterble Show! 

Brett kicks off the program by talking about Jerome Powell’s hesitation to cut interest rates and the broader state of the U.S. economy. He criticizes Powell for keeping rates high, arguing that it's stalling opportunities for homebuyers and creating unnecessary stagnation in the housing market. Brett asserts that the economy is actually performing well—driven by private sector growth, decreasing inflation, and rising GDP—and contrasts this with what he views as excessive government spending under the Biden administration

We're joined by Coach Matt Doherty from Doherty Coaching to talk about the recent tragic shooting in New York City and the growing concerns over national security and mental health. Coach Doherty, reflecting on the events, emphasized the alarming failures in building security and the importance of addressing mental illness—particularly in relation to CTE in former athletes. The conversation shifted to political corruption and transparency, as Brett and Coach discussed Cash Patel’s discovery of sensitive Trump-Russia documents hidden in FBI burn bags.

Listen here for all of this and more on The Brett Winterble Show!

For more from Brett Winterble check out his YouTube channel.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
Here's talk eleven ten at nine three DVD. It's the
for at whatever show. It's great to be with you
seven h four five seven zero eleven ten in case
you missed it. Powell, Jerome Powell. He's not moving anything
on the rates. He doesn't want the rates to go down.
He doesn't want you guys to be able to go
buy a house or any of that sort of stuff.
But you know, eventually, maybe we will finally get somebody

(00:39):
who's gonna get in that position. Maybe maybe Jerome Powell himself,
he'll decide that he's going to be the guy who's
going to make you happy around Christmas time, which is
you know, I mean, that's very possible, that could be
what's happening here. But this guy. You look at this guy,
and you saw how deviled he was talking with Donald
Trump a couple of last week, the end of last week,

(01:02):
and he's just is so over his head. It's incredible.
The economy is doing really well, and people are freaking
out about how good the economy is functioning. And I
know that sounds like a weird thing to say, but
it's it is true. The economy is doing well. And
if somebody wants to try to tell you that it's not.

(01:23):
They don't know what they're talking about. You are seeing
a massive move that is happening here in the country.
You are seeing prosperity taking root. You are not seeing
the days of inflation, which is almost always brought to
you by the Democratic Party. I mean, all of that stuff.

(01:44):
The stuff that they have got going on here is
absolutely incredible. So let me give you an example of this, Okay,
just to prove to you that the economy is doing well,
that things are good, that things are not just good,
they're very good. This is cut number seventeen EJ and Tony.

(02:08):
He's an economist, he understands the way the markets work,
and this is his take under what's happened with Donald
Trump and the different policies he's pushed Cut seventeen.

Speaker 2 (02:19):
So this is entirely private sector growth this year. The
government hasn't grown at all. So that's absolutely phenomenal news. Again,
all of the growth that we have seen this year
is coming from the private sector. What a stark contrast
that is to the Bind administration, where it was disproportionately
reliance on excess government spending that drove us deeper and

(02:40):
deeper into this massive debthole. So there's that huge takeaway. Also,
the fact that we are seeing inflation not go up
but go down another great great sign. That's not to
say price increases have stopped entirely, but the rate of
increase has slowed pretty dramatically. And then finally, just that

(03:00):
really really good headline number. We already have a three
handle three point zero percent, phenomenal news.

Speaker 1 (03:07):
The economy is not.

Speaker 2 (03:09):
A losing steam, it is gaining steam. Really great news
to see that we're already having an acceleration of growth.
And that's before you get an investment surge from the
big beautiful bill. So we can anticipate even better economic growth,
I think, in the months and years ahead.

Speaker 1 (03:26):
And so what's going to happen. This guy Jerown Powell
is going to come out and he's going to say
something like it's too hot. The economy is too hot.
This guy Goldilocks, right, this is too hot, this is
too cold, This is just right. There are people who
want to go out and buy a house, but the

(03:47):
rates are high, and you've got a whole bunch of
people who had those rates at a low number. In
the aftermath of the COVID situation and things like that
where they sat back and they said, no, I'm not
gonna sell my house. I'm not gonna sell my house
and then go pay another two or three percent to

(04:08):
go get into another house, Like why am I going
to do? That? Doesn't make any sense. So it stagnates.
It's just sitting there and it's stagnating. And you've got
people that want the greatest opportunities that they possibly can have.
And this is the problem. When you have a man
standing behind a podium with smart guyglasses who looks like

(04:32):
he's positively lost in the sauce, you just have to
sit back and say, Okay, well, at some point, maybe
we'll get somebody in here. I will give you somebody.
I will give you somebody that I think would be
a very good person to hire in the job of
the of the Federal Reserve. And it's Kevin Hassett. Kevin

(04:54):
Hassett is great, Kevin Hassett is a smart guy. Kevin Hassett,
this is cut number nineteen. Listen to him talking about
the economy. Two of all people, CNBC Cut nineteen.

Speaker 3 (05:12):
Prices have been following month after month, and the CPI
has surprised on the outside five months in a row
while everybody's you know, whaling or shallie saye squawking about
what's going.

Speaker 1 (05:23):
To happen to the crisis.

Speaker 3 (05:24):
The bottom line is that if you have an inelastic supply,
then the supplier's got to sell his stuff. And the
way he sells his stuff is that he eats a
lot of the tariff. And that's what we're clearly seeing
the data. Again, think about this really blockbuster GDP release
with massive income growth and one hundred twenty seven billion
in tariffs, and we cut seventy thousand federal workers and

(05:44):
so everything that Donald Trump is saying about how you
make America great again is being has proven true in
the data. I think it's a really exciting day for
American to see the fees.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
Okay, and so do you how do you know that
this is a really good economy? Anybody, just anybody knows
seven o four five, seven eleven ten. You can hit
me up in the at the WBT text site or
anyplace else you can reach out to me and you
can answer this question for me. You know what, I'm
gonna make it easy on you because it's hot outside
and I don't want to make a sweating in the

(06:14):
front seat of that car. So here's the thing. You know,
darn well the economy is going well because you don't
see the Schlepper, Chuck Schumer, the Schlepper going around and
talking about how bad the economy is, how bad the
economy is. Now, remember the Democrats were the people who
said that this economy was on fia fy iah faya,

(06:39):
back when you had inflation, massive inflation, stupid inflation, spending
on dumb things that we did not need, like oh,
I don't know, seven trillion dollars for the green new scam,
all that kind of stuff. This is organic. We are
taking money out of the pockets of the euro people

(07:01):
and of the rest of the people that are trying
to give us jazz. And you know what, you know
what this is organic. This is money coming into the
United States of America as a cover charge to be
available in our marketplace.

Speaker 4 (07:18):
What did Joe Biden never do? Don't don't don't that's
all job I'd never did. That's all you ever did.

Speaker 5 (07:29):
Don't.

Speaker 1 (07:31):
I don't know who I am, where am I? I'm
shaking hands with the tin man. I mean, this is
a world apart from the economy that you sat through
low those four years when your president went on television

(07:51):
and screamed and yelled at you and threw military people
out of the military because they wouldn't take the faucho.
You know, fouch right, The faucho was the guy who
was pushing it, and you had to get the faucho
like the for the yes, may I, may I purchase
some eggs? No, you can't because they're ninety thousand dollars,

(08:14):
because there's no eggs that are available under the Biden administration.
This is a good economy. You're seeing it. And the
way you know you're seeing it is that the biggest
story in the country right now is a young lady
getting assailed by the people that don't like her jeans.
What man, This economy turned around quick seven o four

(08:40):
five seven zero eleven ten on the text or off
the text, News Talk eleven ten nine three WBT. It's
the Brettwinnable Show. WB has text line that you can

(09:01):
reach us seven oh four five seven oh eleven ten
driven by Liberty Buick GMC, and it is great to
be with you guys taking a look at some of
the big stories that are out there moving and we've
got lots of great stuff coming up later on in
this next hour. We'll be joined by the coach Matt Doherty,
and of course we'll take your phone calls as well.

(09:21):
Seven oh four five, seven zero eleven ten as we
look at some of the big stories. So let's go
out and take a peek at what I think is
a very interesting sort of a development. And this is
Tom Homan who did a media avail earlier today and
he said something that I think is worth hearing again.

(09:43):
This is cut number twenty on the cartels, go cut twenty.

Speaker 6 (09:48):
Hold look, fanos seazons down over half. Why we got
a secure border. When you have a secure border, every
board chode, it's on the line doing their job. Can
I changing diapers, making baby for him, making house runs,
making airport runs. Everybody's online and vigiling and the cartel's hurting.
Look under Biden, the cartel has made more money than
ever made smuggling aliens, sex trafficking and women and children

(10:12):
smuggling don't across the border. Now we have a secure border,
cartels are going.

Speaker 1 (10:16):
Bankrupts, okay. So one of the things that is becoming
very very clear and this is something that I saw
in a couple of places, but most recently over at
zero Hedge, and it is the impact of border enforcement

(10:36):
as it relates to people driving around. Auto accidents have
fallen ten percent in major cities amid reports of lighter traffic.
A few weeks ago, reports began circulating that thanks to
immigration and Customs enforcement roundups in major cities, the notorious

(10:57):
parking lot traffic in Los Angeles was suddenly cleared out,
allowing people to jet around like the quote old days.
And you can look at the travel maps and all
that sort of stuff, and you can see that there's
a lot of green out there. There's a lot of
green where people are able to move. They're not stuck
in these situations. But here's the question, why is this important?

(11:23):
How many illegals were really in Los Angeles, California. I
don't know a lot. This is the one to one freeway, right.
You can look at it at eight o'clock on a
workday morning and you're not seeing crowds on the roads.
But of course, let's think about this for a moment.
It also means that if those people who were illegal

(11:47):
drivers driving their vehicles clogging up the roads. It also
tells you that when accidents happened, they were likely to
not be held to account. They probably didn't have any insurance.
Now Newsweek wants to try to debunk it, saying the
the insurance claims adjuster and LA resident Jason Limas said

(12:13):
that the misinformation about this stuff is nuts. There has
been no significant impact when it comes to Los Angeles.
Then why are people complaining about people who are not
going to pick your crops? Any Twosome, Newsome all these
people that are that are sitting around and looking at
this stuff. But the numbers bear this out. Los Angeles

(12:37):
LAPD traffic collision reports from January twenty of twenty twenty
four to March fourteenth of twenty twenty four two two
hundred and eighty nine reported collisions. From January twenty twenty
five to March twenty twenty five, only two thousand and
seventy six were reported collisions. That's a decrease of nine

(13:02):
point three percent. New York a differential of ten point
four percent. They had forty six thousand reported collisions. Now
they went down to forty one thousand reported collisions. It's
not gonna come to pass overnight. But one has to
wonder what the impact is when Joe Biden was smuggling

(13:23):
people across the border to come into the United States
and tell them that they could live in a house,
and they could live in a hotel, and we're gonna
pay you all this stuff and everything is gonna be great.
It's gonna be wonderful. Trust us, trust us, trust us.
But I mean the idea of people who get deported
who may have been driving around in illegal circumstances. You

(13:47):
don't have insurance, you don't have a registration, you might
not have a you know, even a license. What about
what about that? Now the question becomes this, at what
point are we going to see this trickle into the
airline que because you know, you had a lot of

(14:11):
people who got those magical papers from the DHS under Biden,
right Majorcis Biden Harris. All those folks were just letting
you put people on airplanes. They didn't get screened, they
didn't get looked at, they didn't get concerned. None of
that stuff was going on. It went away. One has

(14:34):
to believe that this has an impact in a variety
of ways, and it doesn't necessarily mean Remember, it doesn't
necessarily mean, it's about the idea of going in and
rounding them up, right, Alex Padia trying to confront the
DHS secretary in Christinome. We're gonna round them all up.

(14:54):
Remember what Christy Nome spearheaded. And remember what the president
was pushing as well, and that was you can repatriate
yourself back to your home country, will give you some money,
and will let you try to come back the right way,
the legal way. There are people who took advantage of that.
And some of the people that took advantage of that,

(15:16):
by the way, we we're in southern California. They were
in Texas, they were in New Mexico, they were in Arizona.
Probably you know, large numbers of folks decided that they
were just going to go back and no harm, no foul,
and they're giving us money so that we depart the country.

(15:38):
But these are all the things that are factors here,
you know. And economy is more than the housing starts.
It's more than only the inflation issues and things like that.
The economy is about whether or not you can afford
the things you did once upon a time, and what

(16:00):
is the block for that, How does that stop Why
does that stop? Why does suddenly everybody get it? Why
did it all get expensive all of a sudden. Right
A lot of people are complaining, I'm watching Swalwell, the
poster boy of the month. He's in there. Did you
I don't know if you saw this, Isaac, but he was.
He was pumping iron at the gym. Now, I don't know, Isaac,

(16:25):
you're in a pretty good shape guy. I don't. I'm not.
I don't ogle you or anything like that, but I
see you're in pretty good shape. You're able to lift,
you know, you know how, you know how to work
out and all that stuff. Did you see Swalwell? Not
only is he working out instead of doing the work
at the Congress, he is filming himself. He's got a

(16:46):
you know, some kind of a GoPro as he's doing
all of his reps. Now, I did look. I froze
the camera shot because he's a big defender of all
things Biden and illegal. But when when you see what
he was pomping, he had two plates. There's two plates, Isaac.
I think it was two twenty five's or maybe two fifties.

(17:08):
But that was about what he was doing, and he
was he was pushing it out and bringing it back
and going up and bringing it back. I didn't see
anybody as a spotter with him. I don't think he's
a popular fellow. I'm not trying to judge. They are
desperate for the young male vote. Is that going to
win you over? Isaac Asi, you're a young man. Are
you going to be won over by the the musings

(17:32):
and the videos that you could put up in your
room while you're working out of Eric Swalwell working out?
I would? I think we could throw this open to
some folks. It is is Eric Swalwell the man we
need for the country we live in now? Is he?
Is he possibly the next man up to take it

(17:55):
over here? I'm gonna go ahead and throw it in
the ring seven h four or five sevenho eleven ten
four five seven oh eleven ten, because I'm gonna tell
you this right now. I could see a Swallwell Crocket
ticket or a Crockett Swallwell ticket. I think it would
be great. No, no, why are you screaming it? Why

(18:17):
are you screaming? Why are you screaming at me about
that possible matchup? All right, fine, all right, Hu, I'll
go Crockett Newsome sounds like a law firm, but you
never know. I mean, it's you know who you're calling of,
Crockett Newsom where we get things done. Just ask us
about our speed train news Talk eleven ten, not a

(18:53):
nine to three WBT. It's the Brett Winner will show.
It is great to be with you. Seven oh four
five seven oh eleven ten is the telephone number. And
by the way, if I haven't talked about something, it
doesn't mean that I'm only gonna be talking about what
I'm talking about. If you've got a question, you got
a comment, you've got to concern, you are more than
welcome to be a part of the back and forth.
I always like that. Also, as I said earlier, we

(19:14):
are available over at the WBT text line.

Speaker 7 (19:20):
Right.

Speaker 1 (19:20):
We got the WBT text line driven by Liberty Buick GMC,
and you can reach us very easily there seven oh
four five seven zero eleven ten. I love This note
came in from Drew. Drew is reaching out from Granted Falls.
He said, I can tell you how good the economy
is by the fact that we are busier than ever

(19:42):
In my line of work. I work for one of
the furniture companies in Hickory, and we were slammed with orders. See,
you can't deny, you cannot deny that the folks, that
the folks are getting out there and spend it. It's
just it's not deniable. You See. I see people getting

(20:03):
deliveries to their houses. And I'm not talking about door dash.
I'm talking about people or people are doing construction. They're
doing a number of things in that regard, which I
which I think is which I think is pretty good
because it means that people are actually doing the hard
work that they've got to do. And in court he
came in out of South Carolina asking me, wasn't swallwell

(20:27):
the guy dating a Chinese spy for years? How does
he still have a government job? Well, first of all,
he gets elected. He gets elected, and so he's very
popular with the people who vote for him. He's in
a very very super blue area in California, number one,
number two. I don't think he was dating a Chinese

(20:48):
spy for years. I think that's a cloudy kind of
a thing. I don't know exactly what the relationship was.
Maybe they were just good friends. You know, I don't
wanna I don't want to cast dispersions, because you know,
when when you cast aspersions, you gotta be careful because
the aspersions can come back at you. Whatever an aspersion is,

(21:08):
I don't I don't know what an aspersion is. I mean,
it's just one of those things that you you have
to kind of you know, you just gotta surf carefully.
By the way, how freaky was last night with the
eight point nine or the eight point eight uh terrible
earthquake that hit the uh that hit the Keemchatka Basically

(21:29):
for those of you who played risk as a kid, uh,
I mean, they they they got hammered, and then all
of a sudden you saw all of this real estate
that was in jeopardy down in uh In, you know,
on the West coast, but also out in Hawaii. And
that was that was pretty wild. That that size of

(21:52):
an of an earthquake. That's one of the biggest earthquakes
that we've got on record, the one that happened in Kimchatka.
There was that thing was that thing was unbelievable. And
as I was reaching out to Isaac and parties unknown,
I was sending him the messages saying, you know, when
you have an earthquake like that, and it goes like

(22:15):
it's a it's a two. Now it's a three, or
it's a six. Now it's a seven, or you go seven,
now it's an eight, or eight it's a nine. You know,
those are factors of of thousands of percent as you're
going up that run. And it's what I have never understood,
and I'm not a geologist as you as you can

(22:37):
probably tell, is why do we stop at ten? Like
is it possible we could have a twelve? Is it
possible we could have you know, nine, nine becomes a
ten becomes a ten point one. I mean that that's
incredible and that sort of power that was out there.

(22:57):
I was always looking at one of the players that
was going to be effected very early on. There's this island,
it's the furthest Uh island that is out in the
Northern Pacific U for the United States, and it is
it is uh Atu Attu and it's not inhabited anymore.

(23:24):
We we used to we used to have you know,
habitation there. We used to have a Coastguard uh set
up out there. You could look up Attu Attu uh
and and look at this. It looks like a really
pretty place. But we haven't been there in I don't
know how long, like maybe you know, twenty years. We
don't go over there. It's very hard to get to it.

(23:45):
It's hard to to be able to spend time to
go birding or anything like that. And whenever I see
something like Atu, which is you know, abandoned, well, how
do we know the Russians aren't gonna grab it? And
who's going to know that they grabbed it by the way.
That's that's the problem, right there was there was a
bunch that was a massive battle there during World War

(24:06):
Two up way way out and over and you just
like you think about that sort of stuff, and you
you look at where that was positioned, right the camp
chatkit thing, and then you just go south and you're
looking down. Uh you're starting to get closer and closer,
not not that close, but you are getting closer and
closer to Fukushima. Fukushima was that was that was a

(24:30):
very scary situation. But uh, it doesn't seem like anything,
but but stuff was damaged. You didn't see a big
body count that was coming through, uh in that regard.
So you know, as when you when you check those
things out, you just gotta ask yourself, what are we
what are we gonna do? How does how does that get?
How does that get? You know, how does that go?

(24:53):
You know when you're when you're doing that. Look, I
have somebody obviously, somebody with a tremendous sense of humor.
I wish I knew what their name was. This is
a message coming in over the transom via the text line.
And he said, I'm probably one of five that caught
the reference to a mighty wind Fred Willard's catchphrase, Hey

(25:14):
what happened? I don't know what happened there? And I
don't know why we gave up territory. You know, Isaac,
we should be able to just go reclaim that territory,
like if if the government's not going to use ATU,
we should just be over there and putting it up.
Just set it up. Let's do something over there. Let's
let's see what that's about. I'll go check out AL two.

Speaker 5 (25:38):
D two.

Speaker 1 (25:40):
What I went too far? That was not right, that's
party foul. I gotta go over to Pam the jam
Warner because I just uh, I just hit the lights.
News Talk ELEVENWBT, It's the Brett Wintererble Show seven O

(26:02):
four five, seven, zero, eleven ten. Great to be with you.
Let's jump out and grab some calls. Let's go to
Ray Ray online. One is joining us. Welcome to the show, Ray.

Speaker 8 (26:14):
Event. I mean, excuse me, Brett, Sorry.

Speaker 1 (26:18):
No worse, no worse.

Speaker 8 (26:21):
I had a question, well, a couple of little things.
First off, I'm ast if we assume that the race
for Senate will Bequely against Cooper. I know it's early,
but a lot to get your assessment of if that
race was held today, who do you think would win it?
And Also, as far as Donald Trump goes, I think

(26:46):
a lot of people, including me, a lot of times
he does things that you don't like and you get
a little feed daddy, but they always seem to come
back home to him on election day. I was wondering
if you think that is a pretty fair assessment of Trump.

Speaker 1 (27:07):
Well, I think I think when you look at President Trump, right,
he is uh. First of all, he's not going to
be on the ballot on his next go round, So
the fight will be along the merits if it's uh,
if it's you know, Roy Cooper and UH and Michael Wattley, right,
So it's going to come down onto who did a
better job in their capacity, how they comported themselves, how

(27:30):
they can connect to people, and especially what's interesting is
you do have, you know, a lot of people who
are influxing into the state of North Carolina from the northeast.
So it means you have a lot of Liberals that
are moving in. You also have people that are conservative
that want to be a part of this as well.
I can't forecast, uh, the the matchup today because it's

(27:52):
we only have one side who's on the on on
the line right now, right which is which is Governor
Cooper awaiting to see what uh you know, the RNC
chair has in mind, what his priorities are going to be,
and these sort of matchups, these sort of matchups absent
a presidential run, can be very interesting and very squirrely

(28:16):
at the same time. So I do think with the
economy picking up the way it is, the border uh
being handled, election integrity being an issue, and things like that, uh,
you know, Chairman Wattley was not burnt by the COVID
stuff that went on. Roy Cooper was definitely up to

(28:37):
his eyebrows in having to deal with the COVID stuff
and lawlessness in the streets and all that sort of stuff. So,
you know what, as of today, I can't forecast it.
These are just a couple of things that are coming
to my mind at this stage of the game, and
we'll be watching it, you know, uh here and there
and and trying to see what the first poll set's
going to look like.

Speaker 8 (28:56):
Well, thanks for taking call.

Speaker 1 (28:58):
I appreciate you calling very much. So it's always good
to talk to you, and thank you for being out there.
Let's go to Ralph next. Ralph, welcome to the program.

Speaker 7 (29:07):
Hey Brett, you know old Roy Cooper and everything everybody
needs to remember. You know, these wineries that had food
trucks they could stay open, but your local bar had
to closed.

Speaker 1 (29:23):
That's true. Look, elites, you know, elites are going to
do elite things, and you know that's that's one of
the big challenges that you've kind of got looking at
at how this stuff is going to move. And there
are a lot of people who are still very very upset,
not not the least of which with with the shutdowns
during COVID, but also we have a you know, we

(29:45):
have an issue involving hurricanes that have come through here,
how they have been treated, how they have been adjudicated
all that sort of stuff, and I think, you know,
you're going to see people with a lot of different
reasons voting for a lot of different people.

Speaker 5 (29:59):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (29:59):
And so I think that's what we're gonna have to
wait and see again that first poll, that second poll.
That's that's going to tell you what's important to the
people who are out.

Speaker 7 (30:07):
There another point and everything. Did you see Tom Holman
offering a fifty thousand dollars signing bonus for u ICE agents?

Speaker 1 (30:17):
Did I see him do it?

Speaker 5 (30:19):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (30:19):
I played the clip yesterday and we were talking about
it late in that very late in the day. It
was like it was like almost like forty five pasted
or I'm sorry, fifty five passed the hour. But yes,
he is offering fifty thousand dollars as a signing bonus
for the folks that want to make make the country
safe again. But you know, they do have the one

(30:43):
issue that's that's going to get in there, though, is
the idea of how old you have to be to
age out of the of the deal. Because you know,
you got a lot of experienced law enforcement officers and
I think they're expecting to be able to get some
of that some of that money. Uh, but I don't
know you know what the what the cutoff point is.

(31:04):
I'm trying to run that down good deal and you know,
own small well and everything.

Speaker 7 (31:10):
You know, he might be afraid he might be getting
ready to be indicted for uh, you know something and
he's trying to uh, you know, go to the gym
and everything. But you know he he might need to
be sized up for soap on a rope too.

Speaker 9 (31:23):
No, we don't know he was.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
We're not gonna go there. And and look, the reality
is that I know nothing. It's it's a quote Schultz,
I know nothing about anything that you've alluded to. We're
gonna we're gonna stand on its on its on its race,
you know, on on the race for this next position
that he's going to try to get. So that's what
it all. That's what it all comes down to in
that regard. Thank you so much for joining me here,

(31:46):
my friend.

Speaker 5 (31:47):
All right, have a good day.

Speaker 1 (31:48):
You got it, absolutely, Tony. Welcome to the program. What's
what's on your mind, Tony?

Speaker 10 (31:54):
How you doing?

Speaker 1 (31:55):
I'm doing well? Thanks?

Speaker 10 (31:58):
Yeah, I was. I was calling about the SYS that issue.
Are you familiar with that?

Speaker 1 (32:05):
Yes, I've I've been. I've been watching it over the
last couple of days.

Speaker 10 (32:08):
Indeed, right, so have they told have you have you
investigated how that whole situation started?

Speaker 1 (32:18):
Uh? No, I mean I'm not in Cincinnati, so I've been,
I've I've been looking at the coverage and uh some
of the stuff that's been talked about online, but I
don't have any uh you know, knowledge of of what
what may have sparked it.

Speaker 10 (32:30):
Go ahead, Yeah, so you know that the coverage is
that it's just that a bunch of black folks jumped
on some white folks for no reason and brutalized them. Right,
that's the coverage, right, would you agree?

Speaker 11 (32:47):
Uh?

Speaker 7 (32:48):
Sir?

Speaker 1 (32:48):
Yes, sir, yes, I would say that that's what the
coverage has been, uh since the since the weekend.

Speaker 10 (32:54):
Okay, So now I've gotten some information as to where,
uh that was started by a violent altercation by two
white guys MC and a gentleman that had down syndrome,
which kicked off the whole brawl.

Speaker 7 (33:14):
HM.

Speaker 10 (33:15):
And so now they have only indictments and a restaurant
warrant for these black people that defended a gentleman that
was assaulted.

Speaker 1 (33:28):
Do you know the name of the man who was assaulted.

Speaker 10 (33:32):
Uh, they have a nickname for him. I don't know
his real name, they have a nickname for him. But
the thing about it is, I'm trying to figure out
why the media and they saying in the media that
I'm hearing and you're part of the media, that we
don't know what kicked this off yet we just.

Speaker 7 (33:52):
Know that it was brutal. Yes, it was.

Speaker 1 (33:57):
It was. There was brutality going on for sure, especially
punching somebody in the face, knocking them down, and then
of obviously the the woman that was h that was
punched to the grounds as well. Uh, this is this
is a challenge that Cincinnati is going to have to
figure out.

Speaker 11 (34:13):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (34:13):
Have you reached out? It may be helpful for you
to reach out to the authorities in Cincinnati to see
if you can if you can divine what it was
that that set this thing off. Uh, you might want
to start with the police department, because apparently the police
department did not know. The police department did not know
what was going on until they got one call. Yes,
I'm listening to you. I'm we're having a conversation.

Speaker 10 (34:36):
They know what was going on, but the media, which
is you which is your radio station. Yeah, I'm not
I'm not putting out that information.

Speaker 1 (34:47):
Okay, so what go ahead, give me the information, give
me the guy's name, give me the information. And I'm
I'm certainly not gonna withhold any any facts from from
the audience. And let's go ahead. Let's hear it from Tony. Tony,
give us the name of the guy who was assaulted.
What was his name? What was his nickname?

Speaker 7 (35:07):
You know what?

Speaker 10 (35:07):
I wish I could just blunt it out to you
right now.

Speaker 1 (35:12):
Okay, Oh well then I think, look, I think to
go do some digging for me. Let me know, and
I'm certainly happy to to go ahead and spread and
spread that name. That's important. Perhaps we can get some
folks to reach out to them and see what happens.
They're in Cincinnati. I'm in Charlotte. If it was in Charlotte,

(35:32):
I'd be running it down. But I'm in I'm not
in Cincinnati. I appreciate the call. A great hour two
more straight ahead Hour number two. It is the Brett
winterfle Show.

Speaker 5 (35:50):
Good to be with you, guys.

Speaker 1 (35:51):
Seven oh four, five, seven oh eleven ten. You can
hit us up on X. You can hit us up
on the on the text line and you can pick
up the phone call smile and dial seven oh four
five seven zero eleven ten. It's great for you either way.
You can go to either of those locations and uh
spend time with us. And you know, we really like

(36:12):
taking in the messaging. We like to listen to you all.
It's really a great blessing to have this, especially for
each and every one of you who you might be
driving around. You're just trying to sort of focus and
think about what you want to say, and then boom,
here you go. You say it, and now you know,
now you've you've been able to share with the class,
whether it's us on the mic or or us on

(36:36):
the mic with a message. I mean, this is what
is fully interactive. And we couldn't do it without you.
I mean we we just we could not do it
without you, and we could not do it without of course,
of course, the great sponsor of our of our program
here and and don't forget that we are driven by
Liberty Buick GMC. Good to be with you seven oh

(36:59):
four five seven h eleven tens. Okay, if you are
going on a trip in the next couple of months,
you may want to be aware of this. If you're
going to the Southwest, if you are hiking or camping
in the arid Southwest and West in the next few months,

(37:23):
get ready for what could be the experience of a fright,
or of a lifetime. Across the United States in California, Colorado, Kansas,
New Mexico, and Texas, tens of thousands of tarrentiulas we'll
be crawling out of their burrows in search of females,

(37:49):
making for a fascinating, if little creepy display of the
wonders of nature. I'm not a spider. I'm just I'm sorry.
I know everything's been put on this earth for whatever reason,
but I am not a spider guy.

Speaker 7 (38:10):
It's not me.

Speaker 1 (38:11):
Especially tarantulists, especially since we learned last week or earlier
this week that they came out of the ocean. Like
this is a whole there's a whole, big deal here.
You know, when you when you when you look at
this and you really you sit back and you say
to yourself, tarantualists, that's something that's something that causes me
to want to run away. If you're lucky enough, you

(38:33):
can sometimes see them in hordes, Lonnie. You can sometimes
see the tarantulism in hordes crossing the roads at certain
times of the year. It's like it's like it's like
one of those things where you're like, oh, what is
that over there? Is that some dust? Oh no, it's
forty seven thousand tarantulists.

Speaker 7 (38:56):
Uh no, no, thanks for me. You know what the uh?
You know what?

Speaker 1 (38:59):
The advice is this when you run across, when you
run across these people, these are these these monsters, leave
them alone. Don't touch. Somebody gave you the idea, and
it said, it's a wild animal. It doesn't want to
be picked up and loved and hugged.

Speaker 7 (39:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (39:15):
I think I think that gives you the When they
hiss at you, I think they kind of gives you
the hint. Right they hissis hiss, Yes they do, no, okay,
but but listen, listen. In general, the species is very docile.
They want to be your friend maybe, but they could
bite you. I see. I don't like I'm not a

(39:35):
spider guy. I used to be very, very bat phobic.
I've learned to understand that the bats are really important
for the everything. You're not going to get me with
a hairy, big old spider running around down the road. Well, well,
the idea of thousands of hairy baseball sized spiders picking

(39:56):
their way through parks and campgrounds might give many people
the hebgb's. That's not giving me the hebgb's. That's giving
me the reason to get in my car and drive far,
far away. That is, I'm not going. But you know,
the baseball sized spiders picking their way through the parks

(40:17):
and the campgrounds might give many people the hebgb's. Oh
you know what, Here's here's what I'm gonna say. Here,
here's what I'm gonna say right now. Okay, today is
the baseball the deadline for baseball, right we got the
baseball trades this tonight today. So here's here's what I
want to say about that. This is important to think about.

(40:39):
I would much rather, I would much rather spend time
with a bat made out of wood as opposed to
an animal, then go around with the spiders like I don't.
I don't need that. That's the spiders are not going
to help me out. And I know people are going, Okay,

(41:00):
point has been made. It has been made. But we
have to also understand that you got to respect all
the property, uh and and the stuff that they do.
They do a lot of stuff they do. They they
they kill the bugs that you won't kill. They're doing
their job, you know, they're they're doing They're doing their job.
And that's that's what goes on here. So just you know,
just just be aware, be aware, and uh, you know,

(41:24):
it's just one of those things. It's one of those
things that we run into. Okay, uh, forty seven thousand tarantulis.
I don't think did I say forty seven thousand tarantelists.
I don't think I said forty seven thousand, But it's possible,
could be forty seven thousand.

Speaker 7 (41:38):
You know.

Speaker 1 (41:38):
It's it's a it's a pretty interesting when you look
at this. See I got people Carl from Fort Mill,
he's he's not about to spiders. Spiders are you know,
kind of freaky.

Speaker 5 (41:49):
You know.

Speaker 1 (41:50):
That's that's that's that's one of the things that we're
dealing with. But you know what, we got other things
to talk about, and let's let's dive into a couple
of things here right now. Out of the box. I
told you in the beginning of this last hour that
the economy is on Faya. It's on Faya. And one
of the things that you can believe in, is what

(42:10):
they were saying over at CNBC. CNBC, I think is
a very fair outlet. They really do call balls and
strikes in a pretty good way. When it comes to
looking at economic numbers, the US economy grew at three
percent rate in the second quarter of this year, a
better then expected pace, even as Trump's tariffs hit. I

(42:34):
don't see any damage coming from Trump's tariffs, just it's
my opinion. I have not seen I have not stopped
buying something in the store because of the tariffs. The
gross domestic product jumped three percent for the second quarter,
better than the two point three percent estimate and reversing
a point five percent decline in the prior period. Consumer

(42:57):
spending has risen one point four percent over the zero
point five percent of the prior and while exports declined
one point eight percent during the period, imports fell thirty
point three percent, reversing a thirty seven point nine percent
surge in quarter one. Well, that's because you've got the

(43:18):
tariffs happening. President Trump responded to the GDP report with
a fresh demand for the Federal Reserve to lower the
interest rates. They're not going to do it, he is
saying he's not going to do it. Jerome Powell and
his whole crew of folks there. It's Jerome Powell isn't
the guy that makes the decision. It's all of them together.

(43:38):
They make the decision. And they're saying that they're they're
they're they're happy with where this is sitting right now.
A lot of people want them to be cut. It's
going to make your debt, your public debt cheaper, it's
going to make your credit cards cheaper. But they don't
want to do it. And despite all that, Microsoft their

(44:02):
stock popped six percent on earnings. They're doing great. How
are you doing? How are you feeling about this economy?
Coming up? At the bottom of the hour, we got
the coach mad Doherty a little something for Ozzy. It

(44:31):
was buried today, The funeral was today. Ah, have a
good ride, my friend. Seven h four five, seven eleven ten.
All right, Kamala Harris, I can't do it Justice, I
gotta play the song let's hear it, one of the
most popular songs we ever played on this entire program.

(44:51):
What do you got there? My friend? Tell us? Right now, Hello, Wall.

Speaker 11 (45:00):
Things go for you today.

Speaker 1 (45:03):
It's not going gonna be good for him. It's not
gonna be good for him, sir.

Speaker 7 (45:09):
Said she A.

Speaker 5 (45:11):
Then wal.

Speaker 11 (45:14):
Yes, sde b new Spend a Nuther onlyhad with me, Happy.

Speaker 1 (45:25):
Walls, I'll keep you. I look, it looks very bad
for Walls if he wants to run for the presidency
of the United States. Because this bit of news has
now come out, Kamala Harris will not run for California governor,
clearing the way for a possible twenty twenty eight White

(45:47):
House bid. Wholely cow, there's a problem here. Does anybody
see what the problem here is? Vice President Harris. Former
Vice President Harris announces she will not run for the
California governorship, which is what everybody was counting on, clearing

(46:09):
the way for a possible twenty twenty eight White House bid.
Former Vice President Harris announced Wednesday she's not gonna seek it.
She's gonna keep her Powder draft. I love this state,
its people, and its promise, Harris, aged sixty, said, in
a statement. It is my home. But after deep reflection,

(46:31):
I've decided I will not run for governor this election.
Wait wait a minute, I thought Newsom Toosome Newsome, any
Toosome Newsom I thought that Toosome Newsom was set to
run as the president of the Unit. I thought he
was gonna run, and Kamala Harris was gonna be here
his his wingwoman, and she would be, uh, the governor.

(46:57):
What happened here? How did this happen? So now on
that stage, you've got two choices, and I will take
exactly free calls on this, exactly three calls. If you
came down and you said, I gotta pick one of them,

(47:18):
who do you want to be the nominee for the
Democratic Party? Do you want it Gavin Newsom or Vice
President Harris? Now here's the problem. Here's the problem. You
cannot have the president and the vice president the nominations
from the same state. Remember they did that with Dick
Cheney and he had to leave Texas and go set

(47:39):
up shop back in Wyoming so that Bush could run
with Cheney. But you can't have two people from the
same state running together, which means one of them is
going to be done for, or both of them will
be done for, and you'll have somebody else entirely different
who's going to be coming in there and trying to
be a part of the thing. You think for a minute,

(48:03):
be honest with me. You think for a minute seven four, five, seven,
eleven ten, You think for a minute, Gavin Newsom is
gonna seed the field to her? And do you think
she's going to be She's historic, right, She's a historic
vice president. She's not gonna surrender to Gavin Newsom.

Speaker 5 (48:21):
Hack.

Speaker 1 (48:21):
My advice to Vice President Harris's go get him, go
get him, go right after news and take him down
to that part of town. That's what you gotta do.

Speaker 12 (48:35):
M M.

Speaker 1 (48:38):
Now here's the problem. Who's gonna run for governor? Now
I do know that the British guy who's on Fox
all the time, he's very excited about running as a Republican.
Problem is, you only got forty percent of people in
the state of California that are gonna, you know, vote
for a Republican at best. So this is this is

(48:58):
a lot of drama. Prior to the announcement, Harris was
widely believed to be contemplating three potential options for her
political future, a run for governor in twenty twenty six,
seeking the presidency in twenty twenty eight, or remaining on
the sidelines. She spent months consulting various close confidence activists, donors,

(49:27):
and political allies about the decision. Crowded race for the
governor's mansion will be wid open. Incumbent Governor Gavin Newsom,
speculated as a twenty twenty eight contender, is term limited,
and boy am I happy to say that. But you

(49:49):
got other people. Oh, you got some real winners. You
got some people that are going to be running for
that seat. I'm telling you this right now. I'm warning
you right now, if you have any desire ever go
to California for any reason, you gotta go now, because
if any of these three people wins the race, California
is effectively finished. You've got Representative Katie Porter. Katie Porter

(50:18):
no good. You've got former Health and Human Services Javier
Besera no good, and only marginally better, you have the
former Los Angeles mayor Antonio via Regosa. Now, you guys

(50:41):
have a connection to Mayor Antonio via Rigosa. Do you
guys know? Do you guys know you have a If
you live in Charlotte and have lived in Charlotte for
a number of years, you have a connection to Antonio
via Ragosa. Antonio Villa Ragosa was the guy who in

(51:03):
twenty twelve when Barack Hussein Obama and Joe Biden were
were running for that second run. It was Antonio Villa
Ragosa who was unable to gavel down the booing of Jesus,
the booing of God. Remember when remember in twenty twelve

(51:24):
when they booed God, when they said I'm ready, we
love the country, we love her, our Lord, and it
was like boo boo, they booed God at that convention.
Antonio via Ragosa was the guy with the big mallet.
Then he couldn't he couldn't gavel it down fast enough.
And he is that guy who's going to be running.

(51:47):
Ladies and gentlemen, get to California while you can and
get right out because ain't gonna be around for a
long time, especially if these folks are injured. This is
my recital. I think it's very vital.

Speaker 7 (52:06):
That's right.

Speaker 1 (52:11):
Around, that's right on. Tom's tricky. It can be very tricky.
It can be very tricky, especially if you don't know
what you're doing. Luckily, we've got somebody who knows exactly
what he's doing. And we always appreciate the coach Matt
Doherty joining us here on the program. Coach Doherty it's
good to have you back.

Speaker 5 (52:33):
Oh, it's always good to be on the show, Brett,
thank you very much.

Speaker 1 (52:37):
Oh yeah, look, it's it's our pleasure. And let me
let me start with something obviously, we saw something very
very ugly take place in the last couple of days
in New York City, a city that you love, a
city that I love, and and uh we we we
certainly always uh enjoy the opportunity to get to spend
some time there. Can you react to what we saw

(52:59):
taking place? Uh, with this maniac going in and threatening lives,
killing people. I mean this, this is this is something
that is just still such a shocker.

Speaker 5 (53:12):
Yeah, it's scary that a guy can drive from Las
Vegas all the way across the country, enter into New
York City park his car, walked across a plaza with
a AK rifle exposed and gain entry into a building

(53:36):
and start shooting. It's it's uh, it's really really really
sad on a lot of fronts.

Speaker 1 (53:43):
Yep, this this is a failure, I think on a
variety of levels that are going to have to be
looked at. And certainly, you know, you're very familiar with
people who have to do after action reports and what's
going on and and how we do better, Because if
you can walk into that building with that weapon and
and be heading your way to attack the NFL or

(54:07):
or Blackstone or whatever it is, UH, that that that
was going to be in his target, in his way
in that in that regard, UH, a lot of stuff
messed up and then that that's got to be fixed immediately.

Speaker 5 (54:21):
Well, you think of the security that has taken place
in across the country, but especially in New York City
since nine to eleven, and accessing buildings you have to
go through security.

Speaker 7 (54:37):
UH and and sign in and show I D.

Speaker 5 (54:40):
And then you get to possibly go through up to
the elevators, but you still have another line of defense
or somebody has to come down and get you. But
when you walk in with an a k UH and
you take somebody out, then you can obviously bypass the

(55:00):
security protocols.

Speaker 8 (55:02):
And it just leads me.

Speaker 5 (55:05):
You know, there's a lot of people say, oh, we
gotta we got to eliminate guns. Then other people talk
about mental health, and then there'll be people that talk
about you know, they be funding the police or or
now maybe funding the police more. You know, I don't
think you're ever going to you know, if you outlaw guns,

(55:29):
the only people that have guns are the outlaws. That's right,
and and and so.

Speaker 7 (55:36):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (55:36):
And it's a big part of our constitution because you know,
I'm still my guard is still up towards socialism slash communism.
And once they we we give in uh to our
constitutional right to bear arms. Uh, then we are just
giving a government more power and control over us. So

(56:00):
I think it has to go towards funding the police
and really funding mental health because obviously that person had
some serious issues and you know what I've read them from,
you know CTE, you know some of the head injuries

(56:20):
that he may have suffered as a football player in
high school and beyond.

Speaker 1 (56:25):
Yeah, no doubt, no doubt about that. And obviously we'll
certainly get more informations as the investigation continues. Everything that
is old is new again. Uh. The FBI director Cash
Patel found a trove of sensitive documents related to the
origins of the Trump Russia probe buried in multiple burn

(56:47):
bags in a secret room inside the FBI's bureau. Sources
told Fox News Digital that the burn bag system is
used to destroy documents designated as classified or higher. This
is the thing that continues to boggle my mind. They
are continuously trying to set up another way to cover

(57:12):
up for what they did in that twenty sixteen election, Coach,
And the fact of the matter is we may never
get the truth. What about your thoughts on that with
Cash Ptel and the efforts that are being made by
the administration is trying to get to the bottom of
this once and for all.

Speaker 5 (57:27):
Well, first of all, you know you and I are
both Cash Pateel fans, and you know I love the
work that he's doing. He just wants to find the truth.
The thing that comes to mind, you know, sarcastically, is
somebody didn't actually do what they were supposed to do
and burn the bag, right? I mean why is the

(57:51):
first thought is why is a burned bag not burned?

Speaker 7 (57:54):
Right?

Speaker 5 (57:54):
Like those documents have been in there for almost you
know what eight or nine years, and why didn't they
do check the last box, which was burn the bag?
But you know, somebody didn't drop the ball. And now

(58:14):
they're getting exposed. And you know, here here's the deal.
You know, like Obama, his name is just a constant thread.

Speaker 1 (58:27):
Through all this.

Speaker 5 (58:28):
Him and the Clinton's right, and he's had a weak response.
If he really was aggressive, he would do something like
Trump has done in the pass and sue like, if
you really are strongly feel like you're wronged by this
White House and this administration, sue right because you know,

(58:52):
his name is getting dragged through the mud, and it
sounds like rightfully so. And I think that the Democrats
and the supporters will be just looking inwards saying, boy,
this is embarrassing. This is obviously egg on our face.
And we trusted this man in this administration. But the

(59:13):
whole deal with the burn the bags, the Russian hopes,
you know, and even the EPA. You know, you look
at the news about the EPA and how they weaponized
the EPA to to you know, have wind energy, and
you know, all the green initiatives that really haven't benefited

(59:39):
our country. Matter of fact, they have set us back.

Speaker 1 (59:42):
Indeed, Oh absolutely. And one of the things that I
think we have to investigate at some point of the
game here is was this a way to launder money
to get it out to Ukraine or any other place
like that under the guise of the Green New Deal.
This had seven trillion dollars fly out of the cupboard.

(01:00:03):
And who the heck knows where it went, coach.

Speaker 5 (01:00:06):
Yeah, and then you know, all the tax breaks like that,
the only people benefited from it. That that we can
really know of the of the companies that had the
tax breaks, right, and you know, and and and you
know who was on their board? Who were the investors?

Speaker 7 (01:00:22):
You know?

Speaker 5 (01:00:23):
I mean I would I would assume Nancy Pelosi invested
in these wind turbine companies. These things are they're they're ugly,
they're dangerous, they're not generating enough you know, electricity energy
to support us. And and then what do you do
with them?

Speaker 13 (01:00:43):
Now?

Speaker 5 (01:00:44):
You know, what do you do with them? How do
you get rid of these things? So it's really a
black guy. And the only thing that Dems have right
now is to continue to try to attack Trump, and
it's really weak. I mean, Schumer is fighting for the
release of the Epstein files, Okay, I mean that's all

(01:01:06):
they got. Then Schumer when the Fed Reserve, when the
numbers came out, the economic numbers, he just hung his
hat on, you know, look behind the curtain, and business
investments were down three percent, like that's all he had
from all those positive news that the business community has

(01:01:28):
not invested. And my initial reaction was, well, if Powell
would drop the FED rate a half a percent, a
quarter of percent, businesses would invest because.

Speaker 7 (01:01:41):
They are waiting, you know.

Speaker 5 (01:01:43):
And I have clients that construction banks. You know, they're waiting.
They're waiting for some stabilization of interest rates. And once
you drop the rate even a quarter of percent, it
would show good faith and business investments would take all off.
So my counter to that that negative it's not a

(01:02:05):
huge negative of three percent, uh you know, down is
that uh, you know, drop the drop the US interest rate.
Drop it dropping a quarter.

Speaker 1 (01:02:15):
Percent hugely important.

Speaker 5 (01:02:17):
I don't think I don't think poulpe Powell is a
is a real fan of Trump, especially after he gave
Trump to tour the basement of the Federal Reserve construction site.

Speaker 7 (01:02:31):
Right on.

Speaker 1 (01:02:31):
Yeah, it's true. Coach, Where do people go to get
coached by you? The coach? Where do they go?

Speaker 10 (01:02:37):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:02:37):
Yeah, I'm an executive coach. Do keynote talks. Go to
my website Darty Coaching dot com. That's d O H
E R T y dot com. And mister Wooterble, I
have one favor of you. Can you in your terrific
Spanish accent say Ragosa's name.

Speaker 1 (01:02:57):
Again, Antonio via Rigosa.

Speaker 5 (01:03:02):
Oh that's awesome. That's awesome, awesome, thank.

Speaker 7 (01:03:06):
You very much.

Speaker 1 (01:03:07):
You don't forget to don't forget to vote. Vote. Okay,
my friend, I'll talk to you soon. News Talk eleven
almost almost Yes, that's right, I'll take to please. Here's

(01:03:30):
Talk eleven ten WBT. It's the Brett Literable Show. Okay,
I want to talk about this for a quick moment.
I will be taking your phone calls though. Seven oh
four five seven zero eleven ten. You can hit me
up either on the text line or you can join
us here on the phone. How about the Great Socialist Swindle?

(01:03:53):
It is a takedown for the ages. I want you
to picture this. You're standing in a bread line. You're
the shoes are falling apart, and the guy in front
of you is muttering about how equality is worth starving for.
Welcome to socialism, folks, the economic system that promises utopia

(01:04:13):
but delivers a dystopian yard sale where everyone's equally broke, bored,
and begging for scraps. Socialism is like signing up for
a group project where nobody does the work, but all
you do is get an f Anyway, and the roobs
who buy into this. Oh, they're the kind of folks

(01:04:33):
who try to fix a broken spaceship with a paper
clip and a dream. Socialism's pitch is simple, Let's take
all the money, throw it in a pile and split
it evenly. Sounds cute, right, like a kindergarten snack sharing circle, expect,
Except in practice, it's giving your paycheck to a shady

(01:04:58):
landlord who burns it for the co and good while
your stock eating government issued sawdust. Soviet Union tried this,
Venezuela tried this, Cuba's trying this, and their cars are
older than your grandpa's war stories. But New York City
they're excited for a socialist to try to come in

(01:05:21):
and fix it once and for all. The misery of
socialism isn't just theoretical. It's a historical greatest Hits album
of empty shelves, secret police, and dream crushed under the bureaucracy.
Let's talk about the rubs who fall for this. These

(01:05:41):
are the folks who think free stuff grows on trees,
not realizing the tree has been chopped down to print
propaganda pamphlets. They wear the shay Guavara shirts made in
capitalist sweatshops. Ironically enough, while preaching awareness from their iPhone sixteens,

(01:06:04):
they're so naive they would trust a used car salesman
with their life savings. That's not really fair to say,
because car salesmen are good people. Socialists are not good people.
Socialism sells a noble sounding lie, we're all in this together,

(01:06:27):
but really the government's playing robinhood, except it keeps the
loot and calls it administration fees. The misery is tangible.
Venezuela used to be rich in oil. Now it takes
a wheelbarrow of cash to buy half a potato. Soviet

(01:06:49):
Union waited years for a car that broke down before
it left the lot. Central planning means one guy in
a gray suit decides how many socks you need, and
spoiler alert, he's bad at math. What you get ration cards,
long lines, soul crushing senses that your life isn't yours anymore.

(01:07:12):
It's not equality, it's equal misery. Now, contrast that with
the Judeo Christian tradition, not just stacking cash like Scrooge McDuck,
but a stewardship, responsibility and building something meaningful. The Bible's
full of folks who worked hard, took risks, created prosperity.

(01:07:34):
Like Joseph, who didn't wait for Pharaoh to pass out grain.
He managed Egypt's resources like a boss, saving the nation
from famine. That's the vibe. Work hard, earn it, bless others, family, community, church.
Capitalism is messy, but it's reward and hustle and ingenuity.

(01:07:59):
You start a business, you give to charity, you do
good things, and at the end of it, you can
eat a very nice steak. The point is it's not
your call. It's not some bureaucrats call socialism stomps on
that freedom. It says you don't know how to spend money,

(01:08:21):
Give it to us, and we'll make sure everyone else
gets an equal slice of nothing. Why work hard when
your reward is a pat on the head and a
coupon for state approved toothpaste. This is what it's all about.
Ladies and gentlemen. They think that you're gonna buy into it.
Don't buy into it. It's a lie. It's a murderous lie,

(01:08:46):
and it's one thing that you can guarantee yourself. You've
been warned by the Winter Bowl Show News Talk eleven

(01:09:09):
ten at ninety three WBT. Every once in a while
you think back to your younger days. I'm sure you
do that, and you probably remember a period of time
in which you had people that would call you up
and would say things like, Hey, can you help me
move out on Saturday? Hey, can you help me move
out on Sunday? Can you come by? I'll pay for

(01:09:30):
the pizza and the beer, and can you help me
do this sort of stuff. I only bring this up
because I think this is an important thing to think about.
You have people who are doing really important work in
the world today. And for the people that I think
are doing really really important work, I would look at
Tom Holman is doing really important work. He's trying to

(01:09:50):
make the streets of America safe, He's trying to get
dangerous people out of the country. That sort of stuff.
No doubt, you have a number of people who were
work looking very hard to keep the economy on the
right pathway, to continue to build relationships with people around
the country. But can you give me one single solitary

(01:10:13):
person that stands out in the Democratic Party in an
effort to try to build something, to try to improve something,
to try to do any of that. And the answer
to your question, I'm going to give it to you
is no, they're not doing that. They're not doing that.

(01:10:34):
There is something that is going on that is so
typically swamp and it's this. You have a bunch of
people who are waiting for nomination or waiting to be
confirmed so that they can operate certain parts of the government.
There are one hundred and thirty five people who are

(01:10:56):
you know, tasked with certain difference and jobs that need
to be confirmed by the United States Senate, and those
one hundred and thirty five are not being confirmed in
a way that has stood the test of time. People
are allowed to appoint somebody and those people then go

(01:11:21):
take that position. But the Democrats have decided they're not
going to do this, and it's gotten even worse. If
you were looking on at a Fox Feed in the
last couple of days, you saw Corey Booker yelling and screaming,
doing one of his you know, rants and raves, yelling
at the American people because they are in the minority,

(01:11:41):
the Democratic parties in the minority. And one of the
things that's hugely important is the idea of the president
gets to pick the person for the position. Now, I
understand that there have been some people who have maybe
not been particularly popular when they've been nominated. But there's

(01:12:05):
just a couple of those people who are like that.
The Democratic Party has decided they're just gonna shut it
all down. They're just going to go as slow as
they possibly can, and they're going to make these positions
not tenable at this stage of the game. But number
two is even more important, and it's this. They're using

(01:12:26):
the blue slip joke. The blue slip? What is the
blue slip? The blue slip goes all the way back
to a senator named Eastland, and he was a guy
who decided, here's the deal. If you don't want this
person to become a member of the US Attorney's Office,

(01:12:50):
and he's from your state, you can stop him by
just putting in a blue slip and not debating, not discussing,
not doing any of that sort of stuff. That was
Eastland who was responsible for that. And so as a
consequence of this, you have a whole bunch of US
attorneys right, a whole bunch of them that are not

(01:13:13):
getting confirmed. And Chuck Grassley, god love him, God love him.
He's one hundred and ninety seven years old. I mean,
he was he graduated with Methuselah, you know, all that
sort of stuff. He is not being much of a help,
and the President of the United States is very angry
because we're not getting confirmations for US attorneys. Now, US

(01:13:36):
attorneys are important jobs. It's a very important job, and
the fact of the matter is we are not getting
the staffing that needs to go on. So here's what happens.
You have a blue slip. The blue slip is the
thing you put in and you say, yeah, I don't
want this particular US attorney from my state to serve,

(01:14:01):
so I'm going to just block it by putting my
name on it and giving them a blue slip, and
then they're just frozen. They're frozen. So you're not able
to put those US attorneys in and that is a
huge problem because you've got people who need to go
and prosecute human trafficking, You've got people who need to
go out and prosecute murders, you have people that need

(01:14:21):
to go take on terrorism cases, whatever those things are.
And you're basically dealing with a much deformed system because
you don't have those US attorneys in place. Same thing
with the people who are waiting to be confirmed on
the Senate floor to get their people in there so

(01:14:44):
these agencies can function. But we're told all the time
that the Republicans are the meanies, are the bad people,
all that sort of stuff. Not one, not one Republican
nominee to the positions that get filled, Not one has

(01:15:06):
sailed through without an objection. That has not happened before,
that has not happened before. Like, who could you think
that you could look at and say, this is a
slam dunk, this is somebody who's really smart, very capable.

(01:15:28):
Who would that person be? I could think of about
three or four people right off the top of my head.
Scott Bessant. Scott Bessant did not make it through unscathed.
Marco Rubio did not make it through unscathed. Duffy did
not get it through unscathed. These are people who are
trying to be vindictive. And what you have to understand

(01:15:51):
is when the things start to come apart and the
riots start to begin, you know, when we get closer
and closer to twenty twenty six, because you know, there's
gonna be a bunch of people are gonna be marching
around saying you know this, that and the other thing
for whatever reason. Just understand that they are sitting on
nominations for these folks, and unfortunately, Chuck Grassley is one

(01:16:16):
of the people who is responsible for this. He's a
guy who bent to the Democrats. It's despicable, it's absurd,
but this is how the game is played. So what
I would say is when those folks come around and

(01:16:37):
they ask for help, or when they come around and
they ask for a favor, I would just point them
to Padella and Spartacus and the rest of the folks
and say, no, no, no, go handle that inside your
own caucus. We have nothing for you because you've held
us up way too long. Sorry not so can you

(01:17:14):
feel the rage? He was talk eleven three WBT nutjob.
Nutjob spotted in New York City with a long rifle,
actually had what do you think he had, Isaac? What
do you think he had? Lonnie? He was walking around

(01:17:34):
with a long rifle, but he actually had a paintball
gun and he's still under arrest. The career criminals seen
casually carrying what appeared to be a long rifle around
a Bronx neighborhood was actually carrying a paintball gun and
he's still going to face charges though. According to the cops,

(01:17:57):
this is the day right after you had the attempt
to kill all these people. You lost four people there
in New York City. Rodney Lance, who's forty two years
old and should know better, was seen strolling around the
Mount Eden area around twelve thirty pm holding the apparent
firearm in his left hand while carrying a backpack. Coined

(01:18:21):
to the cops and a photo obtained by the New
York Post, the shocking sighting briefly caused a nearby school
to be placed on lockdown after a report of an
ar style rifle that looked like the guy who stormed
into the buildings in New York City. Lance was arrested

(01:18:46):
about two hours later by the NYPDS Emergency Service Unit.
Those are like the guys that are responsible for very
dangerous situations, and that is actually the group of those
people that that Mom Dami does not want to exist anymore.
They don't they don't want to have anybody anybody doing

(01:19:08):
anything that's going to be special and protective people's lives.
The weapon, which sources said was an air pistol, specifically
some kind of a paintball gun, was found in the building.
After the cops executed a search warrant. Lance was charged
with criminal possession of a weapon, menacing, and harassment.

Speaker 5 (01:19:30):
I see.

Speaker 1 (01:19:31):
I think we need more of those charges. I think
we need more of the charges of menacing and harassment.
That not enough people get put in the pokey for that,
and I think we need to We need to do
that because if you're going around you you're trying to
threaten people, you know, do this crazy stuff, then why

(01:19:52):
why are we why are we wasting time with you?
Just send them up in front of a judge. Oh
you can't. You know why because most of the judges
these blue cities, they won't do what needs to be done.
They won't arrest people. By the way, this is a
shocking story. And I have no idea what this is

(01:20:14):
about in Virginia. I mean, this is this is gonna
be headline news. I think in Virginia. A man was
charged after setting a city councilman on fire. Like the
guy's a city councilman, and the guy came in and

(01:20:36):
doused him with one of those five gallon you know
things of gasoline and lit him on fire in his office.
A man has been charged after setting a city councilman
on fire in Virginia. On Wednesday, twenty nine year old
Shatzi Michael Buck Hayes that's the guy's name, Tatzi Michael

(01:21:01):
buck Hayes was arrested for setting Danville City Councilman j
Lee Vogeler on fire. Vogeler is currently being treated in
a hospital. Hayes has since been charged with attempted first
degree murder and aggravated malicious wounding. According to the Danville
Police Department, Hayes allegedly barged into Showcase Magazine, a local

(01:21:27):
monthly publication, and dumped a five gallon bucket of gasoline
on Vogeler at around eleven am. The statement said that
the councilman managed to escape the office and ran to
the front of the building, but Hayes followed him and
lit him on fire when he was trying to get away.

(01:21:51):
Vogeler was airlifted to a burn center, where he remains
in critical condition. Authority said Vogeler and Hayes knew each other,
but the attack was motivated by personal reasons unrelated to
the councilman's official position or political affiliation. Vogelers first elected

(01:22:12):
to the Danville City Council in May of twenty twelve,
making him the youngest person ever elected. He was took
that office at the age of twenty four. See this,
this is where like all the norms come apart, right,
This is where all the norms come apart. This is
where people decide, Okay, I'm just gonna do crazy stuff

(01:22:33):
and I'm gonna harm people, and I'm gonna harm this guy,
and I'm gonna harm that guy and all that and
all that kind of stuff. So it's like you just
sit back there and you say, say, wait, wait a minute,
what is happening here? What is the answer to this question?
How do we fix this problem? Does anybody? Does anybody
have any sort of a thought about how it is

(01:22:55):
you fix this this kind of a problem. I mean, look,
should everybody who's running for office have a mandatory uh
psych evaluation? I mean who who knows? Right? I mean,
but then again, if you go all the way back
to the old old to the bad old days, you

(01:23:16):
had people caned on the floor of the of the
of the Senate and the Congress and and all that
kind of stuff, I mean that that does happen that
that definitely happens. That's a problem. Uh, you know over there,
and when you when you look at at some of
the stuff that that that's that's happening. You know, it's
a it's a major it's a major issue. Luckily, I

(01:23:41):
don't have this particular problem. I don't even really understand
what it is that these people are doing, but kind
of taking you around the around the fence here o
zepic face, maybe driving a cosmetic surgery boom. Two years ago,
celebrity cosmetic dermatologist doctor Paul Jared Frank noticed a new

(01:24:05):
type of patient arriving at his New York practice. Amid
an explosion in the number of Americans losing weight with
drugs like ozepic, He saw a dramatic spike in clients
experiencing unwelcome side effects. Although they felt much better by
losing weight, and in some ways, they felt that they

(01:24:28):
looked older, he said via a voice note, and this
was due because of the loss of volume in their face.
What what are we doing? Frank started to use the
term ozempic face. Hey, Isaac, I'm looking at you. I

(01:24:50):
don't think you have a ozempic face. I think you
look okay, there swallowell kind that looks like ozempic face
a little bit. Frank starts to use the term ozempic face,
a label that he coined to describe the phenomenon. It
has since become a social media byword for sagging skin

(01:25:10):
and hollowed out appearance that can accompany the use of
GLP one medications like semigluc glutide, the active ingredient in
the branded drugs like ozempic and we go v. They
should just name it something else anyways. Usually with people
from their mid forties and above, once you start losing

(01:25:32):
ten pounds, you can get this kind of deflated look.
Oh my gosh, okay, but aren't you happy you lost
the weight? Aren't you feeling good about losing the weight
and not having a deal with all the stuff that
the people are doing. Now you're thinner, you're probably healthier.

(01:25:53):
I mean, I don't know, I would recommend you know, PhDd.
I mean those are the people that I would talk to,
because that's who I went with and they were great.
Usually with people in their mid forties and above, once
you start losing ten pounds, you can get this kind
of deflated look, said Frank. Frank is last name. It's
not just it's not just like Hey, it's Frank, who

(01:26:13):
is the founder of the esthetic healthcare brand p F Frank, MD,
whatever that is, and the author of the pro aging playbook.
You can only refill a deflated balloon so much, and

(01:26:34):
often surgical intervention is necessary. Why are you doing this?
Grow beard, Grow two beards? It is the Brett Winnable Show.

(01:27:04):
Seven h four five seven zero eleven ten. Hey, be
careful what you're drinking? Is this coming out in the
last two hours? High Noon recalls vodka Seltzers with mistakenly
filled Celsious energy cans. So you think you're buying Celsius

(01:27:24):
and you're really drinking vodka Seltzers. High Noon is voluntarily
recalling select packs of its vodka Seltzer that contain cans
of Celsius energy drinks that were mistakenly filled with alcohol.
The company said in a recall notice. Every college kid

(01:27:46):
is trying to go find those tonight. Why it matters.
Consuming the affected products will result in unintentional alcohol ingestion.
No illnesses or adverse effect have been reported for this
recall to date, per a news release. So this is
one of those kind of problems. So just you know,

(01:28:08):
just be aware of what you're doing and how you're
comporting yourself. You got to behave yourself. But that is
just one of the warnings that's out there. So if
you see somebody knocking back a whole lot of celsiuses,
you're probably like, hey, whoa slow down?

Speaker 14 (01:28:24):
No good.

Speaker 1 (01:28:25):
Microsoft did Blockbuster numbers. A lot of the AI stuff
is happening, you know, a lot of the AI stuff
is being looked at, and people were very very excited
about that. That part of the business and all the
stuff that comes with that. Also came across a very
interesting story about a ready for this an outburst of

(01:28:48):
a sub glacial flood from the surface of the Greenland
ice sheet. So here's what happened. So, you know President
Trump was talking about he wanted to get Greenland right.
They noticed when they looked at this area of Greenland's

(01:29:09):
ice sheet, ninety billion leaders of water punched through Greenland's
ice sheet and nobody noticed it. Ninety billion liters of water.
A build up of meltwater under the Greenland ice sheet

(01:29:32):
back in twenty fourteen resulted in a flood of such
magnitude it burst upward through tens of meters of solid ice,
fracturing the surface and spilling water into the open air.
Why do I always talk about these kinds of stories
because we are told by the people that are smart,

(01:29:53):
the scientists that are really smart, that we can control
our climate, we can control earthquakes, we can control all
of this stuff. Just in this week, what have we
talked about? We talked about nuclear hornets or nuclear wasps.
We talked about that. Yesterday, we talked about all the

(01:30:16):
bad stuff that that could possibly go wrong. What do
we have happened? Last night? You had an earthquake, a
massive earthquake off of Russia. And by the way, I
was up late enough last night that there was a
lot of speculation that from the Russian perspective, that somebody
had maybe tried to set off an atomic bomb in
the in the ocean that caused that. That is absolutely

(01:30:38):
positively insane. That that was not what was what was
happening with that deal that was that was just an
ugly vulcan, not a volcano, an ugly earthquake that that
took you know, a massive amount of energy out. But
when you look at all the stuff that that happens
on this planet, right, nuclear nuclear wasps. We've got this

(01:31:03):
thing that's coming our way that they don't nobody wants
to talk about because you know it. Who knows. Maybe
it's the space aliens coming. It's only gonna they're only
gonna one hundred and fifty million miles away from us,
So like, who knows what's happening there. We also know
we've got this ice sheet that just split, and you
got this stuff happening. All of this stuff happens absent us,
absent us, and if you think about like what's going

(01:31:26):
on in Gaza and Hamas and all that sort of stuff,
you can't even fix that problem. Whatever that problem is,
you can't even fix that problem. So we're gonna control
the climate and we're gonna control all this stuff. When
you see these people like Pete Bootage Edge say I
got to ride a bike. I have to ride a
bike to work because I'm gonna save the planet. You're

(01:31:47):
not saving the planet. You're just you're just virtue signaling
to everybody who sees you in the short shorts as
you're driving down the road. I mean, this is this
is the problem. People think they have control over way
more than they don't. I absolutely, I got a total plan.

Speaker 9 (01:32:07):
Man.

Speaker 1 (01:32:08):
This is all gonna work out until it doesn't work out.
A lot of people went to work four days ago
and went to work and tried to do the right thing.
And what happened. A madman from Las Vegas, not even
somebody from New York went in and tried to did
murder people and tried to murder more people. This is

(01:32:29):
the chance that we take just getting up and being alive.
This is the chance that we take every every single day.
And we don't really have a lot of control over this.
We barely have control over our government. When you think
about that revelation that we were talking about with the
coach just about forty minutes ago, that they opened up

(01:32:54):
burn bags that had evidence of the documents that the
Obama administration and Brennan and all those people were relying
on to push the Russia Russia Russia hoax. That is unbelievable.
Burn bags from like eight years ago, burn bags from

(01:33:21):
eight years ago that never got burned. The headlines are moving,
and they're moving across the whole world. This is the
times of India. I get it at my house every day,
burn bags. Cash Patel uncovers hidden room with classified Trump
Russia probe documents. Declassification is underway here. I want you

(01:33:45):
to play a clip for me, Isaac. I know we're
due for a break, but I want you to play
this clip. I want you to go to cut number fifteen. Please.
This is Clapper talking about Obama in which he's giving
it up. Cut fifteen.

Speaker 12 (01:34:04):
We might not have done the intelligence community assessment that
we did. That set off a whole sequence of events
which are still unfolding today, notably a special counsel Moeller's investigation.
President Obama is responsible to that, and was he who
tasked us to do that intelligence community assessment in the
first place.

Speaker 1 (01:34:24):
That's a problem. Cut number fifteen, Cut number sixteen. John
Solomon on the dementia here that's going on. Cut sixteen.

Speaker 14 (01:34:33):
Up about this in our interview last week on justin News,
No Noise, Would you be willing to release the classified
annex of the John Durhamer Report?

Speaker 1 (01:34:41):
He said absolutely.

Speaker 14 (01:34:42):
He told John Radcliffe go declassify the classified NIX and
John Radcliffe is in the process of doing that. It'll
come out through D and I and through Chuck Grassey.
Senator Grassey, who like me have been fighting for this
annex for several years. Here's what it's going to show.
We already established that Barack Obama and John Brendan knew
it in early July twenty sixteen that Hillary Clinton was

(01:35:02):
concocting a fake Russia collusion story to try to harm
Donald Trump's chances of winning. We're now going to have
absolute emphatic evidence that the FBI, the people who open
up on Donald Trump on Carter Page, on George Papadopolis,
they also knew that Hillary Clinton was pulling this dirty
trick and they were playing into it. They were using

(01:35:24):
the Steele Dassi, a direct product of the Clinton campaign.
They were using people like an Australian ambassador named Downer
who was a good friend of the Clintons. All these
people were part of that dirty trick, and the FBI
knew before they opened up, and as they were opening up,
and as they were continuing that Hillary Clinton was behind this.
That is what that innus is expected to show all

(01:35:46):
of us. I think it'll be out as early as Sursday.

Speaker 1 (01:35:49):
There we go early as Thursday, and the reality is,
what do you have the burn bags with documents in
them that were never burned, get ready for a unbelievable ride.

(01:36:10):
It's all about the technique. It's all about the technique.
I don't disclose how much I can bene because you
know it's you gotta be careful. Gets around. People want
to try you, people want to ask you, you know,
all that kind of stuff. So I will review. I
may think about revealing it. I get a news and

(01:36:31):
Bruce at some point, but not but not now, not now.
Isaac was asking me for some you know, lifting advice,
maybe helping out Swallowell get get get those reps a
little better, get get those get those reps. Those reps
are you know, those reps are important. Got to get
those reps. I don't think he's helping I don't think

(01:36:52):
he's helping to confirm anybody. I mean he's not. He's
not doing the work that they get they send him
up there to do. They don't. He does not get
that work is not happening, and unfortunately, you know, this
is what ends up happening here all the way around.
Scott Bessant had a very interesting take. He is the
Secretary of the Treasury, and he said the bottom fifty

(01:37:15):
percent of the people in the country got crushed under Biden.
Speaking with Breitbart News, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent broke down
how official inflation numbers underestimate the economic pain felt by

(01:37:37):
working class Americans, pointing to steep price hikes in essentials
like rent, used cars, and insurance under the Biden administration,
and how they laid out the Trump administration's plans to
reverse the damage that had happened. So Bessant called Trump

(01:37:58):
the most transformative political figure of the century and said
in a policy event with Brightbart News that Trump's first
term delivered real wage gains for working Americans. But when
you get into the to the nuts and bolts here, right,
you get into some stuff that's very interesting. The reason

(01:38:18):
why Trump won was because the bottom fifty percent of
working Americans got crushed. That's bestn't doing the analysis. If
you go by the standard inflation numbers PCE CPI. During
the Biden years, inflation was guess the number, ISAAC, guess

(01:38:40):
what the inflation number was. During Biden's years, the inflation
number fifteen percent eighteen to twenty one percent is what
Biden put into the system. Reported wages were three percent

(01:39:02):
below the eighteen to twenty one percent he says, But
that isn't the real story. Besson explained because working class
Americans have a different basket of goods and services than
everyone in this room. They're dependent on used cars, insurance,

(01:39:22):
and rent. They don't have assets by and large, so
they probably experienced inflation. This is heartbreaking to even say this.
They probably experienced inflation between thirty two and thirty five percent,

(01:39:43):
with wage growth at only sixteen percent. They had a gigantic,
gigantic loss of purchasing power under Obama, I mean under
Biden and Harris. Besson outlined the Minute Stration's plan to
fix the affordability crisis, highlighting two key goals. One bringing

(01:40:06):
down inflation, which has already shown signs of improvement. In May,
they had the best inflation number in four years. Best
noted two raising real wages. Just like during Trump's first term,
hourly workers did better than supervisory workers. He stated, the
bottom fifty percent of household net worth went up by

(01:40:31):
more than the top ten percent, and it was great
for working Americans. That's bessin't breaking this down. He's a
guy who's been in the economics business for the last
forty five years. In fact, let's see I think I
have one from him from earlier today. I think I

(01:40:51):
have a comment from him. Let me see here. Okay,
it's uh thirteen cut thirteen go.

Speaker 9 (01:41:00):
Job for thirty five years as a macro investor was
when policy makers met to kind of have my ear
up against the door, try to figure out what was
going on in the room, what they were saying, what
they could do, what they would do, what they should do,
and how the market would react. Now I'm in the
room and I think, okay, what can we do, what

(01:41:23):
should we do? What's possible? How will the market react,
how will the economy react? And I tell you that
the more ideal with the Europeans that they've just given up.
It is a regulatory morass. Mario Drogy, you don't have

(01:41:44):
to read his I think it's three hundred page report
the ft about two and a half months ago, did
a summary of the report, and he came out and
said that the EU internally taxes themselves one hundred percent
of services and fifty percent on goods. The EU was
supposed to create economic get rid of economic friction, whether

(01:42:08):
it's in finance, whether it's in technology, whether it's in energy.
All the EU wants to do is overregulated.

Speaker 1 (01:42:18):
I mean, is there a more damning thing than that
that you could possibly hear when you look at that.
That's crazy. And so what's the response to this. The
response to this is cutting number eighteen. Donald Trump talking
about opening markets. Cut number eighteen.

Speaker 13 (01:42:36):
The European Union was essentially closed to doing business with
the United States. You couldn't really get in. They didn't
take cars, they didn't take agriculture, they didn't take very much.
And they've opened up entirely and we'll be able to
sell a full complement of cars, trucks, a SUVs, everything,
and ultimately it's going to be good for them. And

(01:42:56):
I think they're also going to come over and build
plants in the United States. And when you do that,
you don't have to pay the tariffs, and they'll be
paying a fifteen percent tariff and everything.

Speaker 1 (01:43:06):
That's a massive that's a massive reveal, right there. Number one.
Number two, you're actually importing your stuff. The United States
is sending their stuff into the EU so that people
in the EU don't have to drive these little Reynolds
wrap sort of cars. They actually can they can buy

(01:43:27):
a truck, they can buy a big truck, they can
buy multiple vehicles if they want. They don't have to
look at these little, tiny, weirdo cars that you expect
fourteen little people to jump out of the car. You
get to be able to go out there and go
tear it up a little bit, all right. Coming up

(01:43:47):
next Breaking with Brett Jensen and then TJ. Ritchie. Thanks
to Isaac and Alani Anna and Pam. We'll do it
again tomorrow starting at three News Talk eleven ten, not
A nine three
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