Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio, the George
Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong, Joe Getty arm Strong, and
Jacket and he Armstrong and Yetty. I did see some
(00:29):
MSNBC hosts last night calling it the f around and
find out election result, which I can see if you
don't like Trump, is kind of a funny one. I
couldn't hear you. What Hello, who fked around and found
out America? The voters America. The lefty view was, oh,
(00:50):
stop it. Well, I'm comfortable with the results. I'm happy
with the results. It will be interesting to see who
Trump picks to be around him this time around. I
was thinking about this with Elon too. There aren't many
examples of relationships Trump's had with people that didn't at
(01:10):
some point turn sour and then he incredibly bad mounts him.
I mean, there are many examples of that true. In fact,
can you think of any of his great character flaws him?
Can you think of any I can't think of any
right now outside the family. Outside of his own family,
people that were with him he liked, and then when
things went sour, he really really really bad mouths them,
(01:33):
like in the worst way and I mean, he's done
that with a ton of people. But anyway, I'll be
interested to see who he puts around him. Is Tucker
Carlson gonna be Secretary of State, Steve Badden Secretary Defense?
I don't know. Wow, that would be uh surprising And
good lord, although our pledge to you and you know
him in it, if he does stupid stuff, will say, hey,
that was stupid. I am and those of you who
(01:55):
ate that. Sorry. I'm way more optimistic about a Trump
second term than I was the first term. Actually, I
think I think the reception of the media to this
election is so much better than last time around. They're
taking it as real and America has spoken and blah
blah blah, he's the president. That's not the way it
(02:17):
was in twenty sixteen. It was seen as a joke
and something went wrong and we'll figure it out soon
and he won't be president. But I mean, this is crazy.
That's not the way he's been taking this time around.
He's a Russian agent. It's illegitimate. The race did and
then the way it did, and then four years later,
when Trump was in a complete a hole about losing
an election, they were just a gas at election denial.
(02:37):
I swear I don't know how to even deal with
these people, speaking of which she makes it clear later
in the clip. But this woman is a professional political analyst.
I do not know her name. And this was posted
at five pm election night. Listen to this, would you?
Speaker 2 (02:56):
Okay, So we're closing in on almost five pm Eastern time,
and I've been trucking everything that's been going on across
the country today.
Speaker 3 (03:05):
And my most.
Speaker 4 (03:06):
Important encounter was when I went out to get my champagne.
I was talking to the guy in the store, of course,
asking him did he vote, and he said he did
early voting, and he asked me if I early voted,
and he asked me.
Speaker 1 (03:25):
You know why I was.
Speaker 2 (03:27):
Getting the champagne, and I said, because I'm going to
be toasting Madam President tonight. And he just looked at
me with kind of like a smirk on his face,
and I said, you know she's going to win this,
right He said, oh, well, it's very very close. And
I said, no, it's not. He says, well, what do
you mean. I said, no, it's not. The women of
America are making their voices heard. Reproductive rights is what
(03:50):
it all comes down to, and the women are voting
in numbers relative to men that are unbelievable. She's won this.
And I said to him, she's going to take every
one of the swing states plus o TuS Iowa. And
he said, oh, but the numbers are so close. I said,
I'm a political analyst. I'm telling you right now, the
numbers are there. She's taking this election.
Speaker 5 (04:12):
I've said to.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
Him, you realized, And he didn't tell me who he
voted for, but of course I knew, and I said,
you do realize you wasted.
Speaker 1 (04:19):
Your vote, right, And I didn't care.
Speaker 4 (04:25):
I walked out with my bottle of champagne and happily
walked home, Bye bye.
Speaker 1 (04:34):
Bye bye. So that that wasn't that, It's the end.
So where was he she getting her information? She's a
political analyst, stupid idiot. And I wonder where she was
getting her info, because we did. We talked about how,
like Drudge's headline yesterday, was world shocked by trump reelection? Why?
(04:56):
Why was anybody shocked? I saw so many headlines of
the shocking. It is shocking. The overall arc of the
story is beyond shocking. I mean, it's the most amazing
thing ever that Trump has come back and president again.
But in terms of the result on Tuesday night, after
months of the election being tied, and every Polster in
America saying it's a coin flip, how can you be
(05:18):
shocked by a coin flip? That makes you crazy? I
did see some speculation about, well, if turnout among women
is acts, and they often turn out more than men,
blah blah blah. But to have that sort of like smug,
contemptuous certainty of it, I mean, that says more about
her character than about the statistics. I can't remember which
(05:38):
of the great thinkers it was who said, when you
lose the capacity to say I might be wrong, you've
lost your humanity, and she clearly has, as have so
many people. My favorite piece I read was a column
in the New York Times last night, how should we
talk to our kids to ourselves about America? And this
(06:01):
person discussed how they have a three year old girl
and they were watching the election results, and they were
waiting till it was called for Kamala Harris, and they
were gonna go up and they were gonna wake up
their three year old, but they're gonna hold her hand
while she was sleeping, and saying, a woman has just
become president. But then when it turned out what happened,
what happened. I'm on the edge of my seat when
it turned out Trump won. This soft headed, simpering, overly
(06:28):
emotional but has a job writing for The New York Times,
which is one of the coolest jobs in the world.
As a writer, went up and held the hand of
his sleeping three year old girl and cried softly and said,
I will protect you from this. That's what he wrote
in The New York Times. He could have said, it's
significantly less likely you'll be raped by a Venezuelan gang member.
(06:49):
Could have said that to her, could have said, your
dad is a soft head who's gonna raise you in
a like distorted view of reality, so good luck to you.
I could have said that all right. I could have said,
you practically do have two mommies. Well that's not fair.
(07:11):
Funny but not fair. Who are you people?
Speaker 5 (07:15):
I mean?
Speaker 1 (07:15):
I I swear if Kamala had won in a landslide,
and I thought, wow, that's what America wants. I don't
know that's about it, just how yeah, yeah, her pitch
succeeded with a hell of a lot of people. I'll
be damned. I really. It's been said that the most
terrifying journey you could ever take is into somebody else's mind.
(07:38):
And I really I mean that guy for instance. I
suspect very strongly that he is just the sort of
person who is ruled by his emotions and enjoys the
sensation of being afraid because then he can bond to
other people and they can be afraid together, and that
feels good, and it must feel like really really crazy
good or something, or they've never had any real other
(08:00):
than that, so they don't even understand what they're doing.
But I am honestly mystified at their inability to assess
a loss and try to come up with an explanation
for it that might well include them having been wrong
or misperceived the electorate. And I don't mean a yeah,
(08:21):
I misperceived. I thought they were only kind of racists.
Turns out there just about the country of klansmen. Just
good luck, y'all. Good luck. Life is hard with a
grasp of reality. I can't imagine it is how difficult
it is when all you see are fairies and unicorns
dancing around your head and scary evil demons as well. Yeah,
(08:45):
I don't imaginary klansmen haunt your dreams. Uh. I'll be
interested to see how this shakes out over time. Oh,
my lord, No breaking news California. Gavin Newsom calls special
(09:05):
legislative session to quote protect California values. What. I don't know,
but I'm sure it's idiotic. Wow, talk about you know,
the very sort of people we were discussing. Wow, California
(09:27):
was a purple state not long ago, the war in
Iraq and in a huge wave of Hispanic people who
bought the enforcing the border as racist thing. How long
will it last?
Speaker 2 (09:47):
So?
Speaker 1 (09:47):
I just saw that Iran's currency has hit a low
over concerns about the Trump presidency. I do think we
are about to era, return to an era where our
ad was are more worried about us escalating than us
constantly being worried about them escalating. I think that is
pretty much guaranteed to be true, one hundred percent. And
(10:10):
I love that. I was talking to one of my
kids who who tends to vote the other way, which
is fine. Again, I'm not offended or hurt by that.
Thanksgiving Oh absolutely not.
Speaker 5 (10:21):
No.
Speaker 1 (10:22):
They can eat outside on the porch in the gold
but they had Uh, and and many people have this
view of Trump that he's crazy and belligerent and warmonger
or whatever because he's crazy belligerent. Well, oh yeah, he's
those things. But if I could teach one thing, if
(10:43):
I could teach like a foreign relations class or something
in a college, there'd be one lesson weakness Invites Aggression,
I would say, class number one. That will be on
the test. In fact, that's the hire test. I'll see
at finals. Go get laid or drink beer or whatever
(11:05):
y'all do these days. We're done play video games, right exactly,
except I'd make them come to class, and they'd come
to class the next time, and I'd say weakness invites aggression.
We're through here, and then the next Tuesday they have
to show up again. That's interesting. That's an interesting idea
(11:30):
actually of teaching a class, because there are a number
of classes where there is one overpowering thing you should know,
and if it gets lost in all the other stuff,
then you wasted your time. Yeah, I took I think
I took like one class on the law in my
whole college career. But the guy said, like every class
period you can settle at any time, And he said
(11:53):
it every class period and it did stick in my head.
And if you're ever any centered sort of situation, you
can settle it anytime, which was his point. Yeah, I
have the details. Presidential candidate. Governor Gavin Newsom, I put
in the presidential candidate part. Today issued a proclamation convening
(12:13):
a special session of the California Legislature to safeguard California
values and fundamental rights in the face of an incoming
Trump administrative That's all crap you nailed at the beginning, though.
I heard somebody say yesterday because Pete Buddha Jeedg is
given a speech either today or tomorrow, and they said,
that's the first shot fired across the bow of the
twenty twenty eight primaries. This is Gavin Newsom heard that, WHOA,
(12:37):
Pete's in already, they're already talking about Pete. He announces this,
This gets attention. That's absolutely one hundred percent what this is.
This is the first shot from Gavin Newsom of I'm
going to be the nominee in twenty eight. The special
session will focus on both string California legal resources to
protect civil rights now if you want a productive freedom,
climate action and immigrant families now if you want to
(12:58):
hold us both down, sit in our chest and pluck
out our eyes with spoons. For bringing up for bringing
up the twenty eight primaries already, I don't think we'd
be getting off light. I want your side on this,
but I think that's absolutely what this is. Well, that's interesting.
Enjoy that, Democrats. I'm not paying attention to it for
at least a couple of years. This is the first
(13:19):
of several actions by the newsomb administration in partnership with
the legislature, as the governor begins shoring up California's defenses
against an incoming federal administration that has threatened the state
on multiple foots. He wants to plant his flag as
the leader of the resistance. You're gonna be hearing a
lot about that. Gonna be constantly tweeting, texting, and speech
(13:41):
to find about Trump as he becomes the resistance. Oh
my god, that's gonna be tiring. Which the history of
planting his flag.
Speaker 5 (13:46):
Hum, wow, We're all human. We all fall short sometimes.
Speaker 1 (13:51):
I know I do more on the way. Stay here.
The country's a little bit tipsy. Tetra elections. Why are
young men turning toward or away from really there's a
difference between toward and away from Why are young men
turning away from the Democratic Party? Great piece by this
(14:14):
Australian guy that I just came across. Maybe we'll read
that Coming to the bottom kind of fits in with
what I know, the way my kids feel, my two
boys an Aussie. That's interesting. So Judy and I were
kicking around last night doing our thing and I came
across an article on the Internet that amused the heck
out of me. What does that mean? You're saying you
and your wife doing your thing? You're talking what we're
up to specifically, has nothing to do with the story
(14:36):
and would merely bog us down like you just did.
I didn't know if you met beast with two backs
or I don't know what you meant. Yeah, we were
having sex and I was looking at the Internet and said, hey, honey, anyway,
So the headline is forty escaped primates from South Carolina
Facility Scientific Facility something like that, and why Monkey's got
(15:00):
forty forty primates was the headline. And I'm like, well,
are they human beings? Are they eight hundred pound lowland gorillas?
Are they tiny little cakes? I mean that this factor's in.
You got like eighty full sized mountain gorillas rolling around
South Carolina, run for your efing life, or if eighty
(15:21):
Homo sapiens escaped, you got to ask why did you
have them locked up in the first place? What are
you doing two of them? Exactly? No, But it turns
out it's forty three little my caqus who are part
of a some sort of research facility, young females, and
they're trying to entice them with food at this point.
But if the people of the Carolinas have been terrified
(15:44):
by this story, I'd like to update you and let
you know it'll be fine. They're like six to seven
pound little female monkeys. I'd be pretty shocked if I
saw a monkey in my neighborhood though, where you don't
normally see monkeys. Oh, there aren't many neighborhoods in America
where you normally do see monkeys. Oh, there aren't.
Speaker 5 (15:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (15:59):
I went to a zoom not terribly long ago when
we were visiting our daughter, and uh, I could stand
there and observe those big old silver back gorillas, the
big eight hundred pounds, you know, the mountain gorillas, lowland gorillas.
I think they're called. I could watch them all day.
The awesome power of those things. I mean, they would
tear you in the half and not break a sweat.
(16:24):
Thank god, they don't have like super intelligence, or you'd
end up well yet with a Planet of the Apes,
well you you probably haven't seen any of the newest
Planet of the Apes movies, but they are really good,
so it gives you a pretty good idea of what
it'd be like.
Speaker 6 (16:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (16:40):
I saw it like the very dawn of the New Ones,
I think where they take over San Francisco. Yeah, yeah,
but I haven't seen the last couple of which actually
is an improvement for the way it looks now less
less crap in the streets. Yeah, ironic monkeys are more discreet.
They're not doing drugs. They're riding around on horses and
(17:02):
slaving humanity, but at least they're not doing drugs. So
a young male journalist with why young males are turning
away from the Democratic Party in a way that they
haven't before. I think you'll recognize it. Armstrong and getty.
I do know some people that are pretty far out
there on the right, but man, not near as many
(17:25):
of the I don't know how I'm gonna go on
if Kamala had won, I don't know how I'm gonna
make it through the day. How many people do you
know like that on the right that would not have
been able to go to work or school, or don't
know how they're gonna function or need to be held
or whatever. It just seems like it's a thing of
the left to that point. Here's Jimmy Kimmel on his
TV show last night. He breaks down, can barely keep
(17:47):
it together emotionally over this fanciful view of how awful
things are. This is ridiculous.
Speaker 3 (17:53):
Let's be honest. It was a terrible night last night.
It was a terrible night for women, for children, for
the hundred of thousands of hard working immigrants who make
this country go, for healthcare, for our climate, for science,
for journalism, for justice.
Speaker 1 (18:14):
For free speech.
Speaker 3 (18:15):
It was a terrible knight for poor people, for the
middle class, for seniors to reliance, social security, for our
allies in Ukraine, for NATO, for the truth and democracy
and decency. And it was a terrible knight for everyone
who voted against him. And guess what, it is a
bad knight for everyone who voted for him too. You
(18:36):
just don't realize it yet.
Speaker 1 (18:37):
And Mica because they're so stupid. It is a bad
night for the National Football League and for turtles and
for slurpees for turtles. What the hell? And he keeps
breaking down the crowd. Yo, you're so brave, Jimmy, Oh lord,
what are you talking about? What in the hell are
(18:58):
you talking about? The women? One is because you think
abortion is going to be taken away? The kids? One,
I guess is because you think trans kids won't be
able to get their operations anymore. What Yeah, poor confused
adolescent girls won't get their breasts cut off anymore. That
is a tragedy hard working immigrants. I'm thinking it's because
of the deportations, but the majority of Hispanic males voted
(19:23):
for Trump, so try a new LA one through, and
huge majorities of the American people want illegals, particularly those
who commit crimes, to be deported. For journalism, you really
believe the journalism was better and more fair and gave
you more truth on the left than on the right
through this really wow? Wow, what are you freaking talking about?
Speaker 5 (19:46):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (19:47):
How do you even reel in somebody that out there
to even have a conversation with them, so I got
to send a couple of things in the last five minutes.
These are posts from college professors. This one is that
the University of Tennessee. I'll read that one second. I'll
(20:07):
read this one from California, a University of California campus
from this professor. Dear all, I understand that things do
look very bleak today, and I hope you're holding up. Okay, yim,
I'm doing fine, O her fine. Thanks. As Stephen Thrasher
wrote during election night eight years ago, now is the
time to hold tight to the ones we love, please,
(20:30):
because all we've got is each other. I believe the
best way to resist the toxic rhetoric from the top
of the winning ticket is by practicing kindness, tolerance, and
support in our everyday interactions and to build strong networks
of solidarity for what it is worth. From someone who
is older and has lived in a very repressive dictatorship, Wow,
so you came from another country through repressive dictatorship and
(20:53):
you're still buying all this crap. Last night was a
massive backlash, no doubt, but progressivism, progressivism, tolerance, finess, feminism,
anti racism, environmentalism, etc. Are not defeated we will weather
the next four years, and ultimately we will be okay,
especially if we take care of each other. Mike, anti racism,
that's the modern racism. Yep, he didn't cancel classes, though.
(21:14):
My courses will meet today and tomorrow. We will take
it easy and watch a movie that is on our syllabus.
Consider bringing snacks to share. See you all soon. Oh
and this at the end. This is great, considering the circumstances.
I will grade your revised second essays generously. Some of
them give you easier grades because you're so traumatized by
(21:36):
the election results. This one's even better, though. This is
from the University of Tennessee. No class today from this woman.
Dear students, I'm canceling class today to grieve the presidential
election results. As a queer immigrant woman of color, I
cannot in good conscience go on about my day like
everything is all right. This is a major historical event
that we are witnessing. I hope you take this time
(21:57):
to take care of yourself. Hey, ca Cuckoo, when you're
just fine in two years, will you come on the
air with us and say, you know what I was wrong?
Everything's fine, I'm great. I'm still doing what I was doing.
Nobody cares that I'm a and she is like the
intersectional queen of the universe, a queer immigrant woman of color. Wow.
(22:18):
So gay marriage still exists and women can still get abortions,
and they didn't deport anybody other than illegals. And I
guess none of that stuff I was worried about happened,
So never mind. Anyway, Her last paragraph is a good one,
having said that, please know that, no matter your political beliefs,
you're welcome in my class and won't be discriminated ast Oh, okay,
Having just describe how it's a horror so awful that
(22:42):
you can't even work today, then you say, but if
you voted for him, you know it's perfectly fine. I
won't hold any grudge against you, Okay, And that's unbelievable.
I don't even know what to think of you people.
You're crazy? Do you realize you're crazy? Jimmy Kimmel, You're nuts.
You are so badly misperceiving reality. It has led you
(23:04):
down a road of madness. He delighted to talk to
you about it.
Speaker 5 (23:10):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (23:13):
And then this this is from a guy I don't know,
journalist in Australia. Dude, Nobody on the left knows how
to speak to young men because every five seconds this
has had why so many young men voted for Trump
and are moving away from the Democratic Party where the
younger people used to all flock to the Democrats. Nobody
on the left knows how to speak to young men
(23:34):
because every five seconds at a leftist meeting you have
to either do a land acknowledgment, or go around in
a circle and pay homage to the power of queer
joy or some crap. He actually says, yes, it's brief.
I know this because I used to be a socialist
and this is how all these organizations act. I saw
all this with my own eyes. You have to literally
be self flagellating to be in the left as a
(23:57):
young man these days, and this is probably the understanding
and ext experience in perspective of ninety percent of young men.
The feeling is that you have to always constantly apologize
for effing existing and just the crime of being born.
And this is why the right is so effective at
hoovering all these people up, because the experience of constant
self flagellation and self criticism is effing exhausting and annoying,
(24:17):
and nobody wants to wake up every day feeling like
they are an s person just for the crime of
being born like that. Amen to that, he also goes on,
we have to fix this because I hate watching young
guys fall into the Andrew Tait masculinity, and then he
goes through a couple of examples of that. Because they
got nowhere to turn to, They're going to these like
(24:38):
super over the top extremist weirdos just to find somebody
that's you know, appealing to them and not criticizeag Yeah,
not criticizing them for being a man. This is an
existential threat for the Left and even an existential threat
for humanity itself, because the end result if we don't
fix these gender warfare dynamics is South Korea style gender
(25:00):
hyper war and a total fertility rate of point four
and humanity just gets wiped out. That is absolutely I mean,
that is absolutely true on the left, if you're going
to continue to make males feel bad about even being born,
you're not gonna win a lot of elections or ever
get that crowd. My heart bleeds for the little boys
(25:23):
in public schools or are continually treated as if their
maleness is a defect. I know, it's horrorbies, it's horror energy.
They're boundless. Energy is a misbehavior. Oh, I just you
want to get me going?
Speaker 5 (25:39):
God.
Speaker 1 (25:40):
I came across some schoolwork the other day and my uh,
my son is homeschooled. But so much of the teaching
material out there is put out there by publishing companies
that are so left I mean, you really have to
work at getting the right stuff. But anyway, this particular
thing was all about how women can be doctors. Yeah,
(26:00):
no freaking kidding. At the point in my life when
somebody says the doctor will see you, I assume it's
going to be a woman. I'm surprised if it's a man.
So what are you? What are you talking about?
Speaker 4 (26:11):
You won?
Speaker 1 (26:13):
Wow? That's just again a head scratcher. What wow?
Speaker 3 (26:18):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (26:22):
I thought I would feel differently after the election. I
thought there would be at the very least fairly widespread
recognition to some of the simple realities of the thing,
which is that Kamala Harris was a weak candidate, always
was weak candidate. Is that putting out before hapes? You
all rejected her, as I said, like a rabbit raccoon
(26:45):
when she was in the primary. Was that sexism and
racism when you did that? Well, I haven't know. Okay, Well,
then when the same thing happened the presidential election, why
is your explanation completely different? That is funny that that
has never really been put to anybody. Your party rejected
her when she ran before, not like right wingers your
(27:08):
own party, like the most active people in your party.
Primary voters said no to her before she even got
to the first contest. So wow, how is it shocking
that she got rejected by a larger group of people?
And it's become a so oft observed fact. It's a truism.
(27:30):
It's working his way toward being a cliche that when
Kamala Harris on the View then Colbert was it Colbert
or Kimmel, it doesn't matter. Could not say how she
would be different than the extremely unpopular Biden administration. That
(27:50):
that was one of the most pivotal political moments in
any campaign. I mean, that is so widely discussed right now,
there's no point in bringing it up. Everybody knows it.
But as I was reading the long yeah, top tier
editorial writer, editorial writers of the Washington Post dialogue about
what happened? How did we get this result that didn't
come up. I haven't seen any criticism of Kamala Harris
(28:17):
as a candidate from the left at all. Maybe that's coming.
I don't know. But I have seen more than I
have ever seen before and more than I expected of
people saying we have democrats have gone too far down
the road of progressiveness in the culture wars. I have
seen a fair amount of that. Yes, yeah, yeah, your
(28:38):
old school liberals are finally finding the courage or the
cover to stand up and say, hey, y'all, all that
stuff is madness, which, by the way, is the way
you win the political arguments. That's when you've won. That's
a good Other side of it would be on gay marriage,
where you know, if you're old enough to remember this
(28:59):
whole back discussion in America, it got to the point
to where Republicans realized we got to stop being anti
gay marriage. It's just a losing issue. I mean, we
just can't be I mean, you stop talking about it.
And hopefully that's going to start on the left with
the you know, boys playing girls, sports are all kinds
of different things, where they realize this is we're gonna lose.
(29:20):
We nobody wants to hear this, or not enough people
want to hear this, right right, Our academic left wing
is just completely wildly out of touch with Americans. That
LATINX and herstory, Herkstreet and that sort of stuff is insane,
absolutely insane. I loved that paper we talked about yesterday.
(29:41):
I think it was ear the other day where a
Harvard professor did yet another story that showed that no
Latinos want LATINX men women, nobody. Everybody thinks it's stupid,
and it's white people lecturing brown people on how to
refer to themselves. And the professor's conclusion, if you didn't
hear the conversation, was that we need shame brown people
into accepting this because they're race, because they're sexist. So
(30:06):
we just haven't done enough work shaming the stupid brown people.
This is your white elite academia. I seriously hunger for
the day that is over. But they are there by
the millions, your college campuses, your high schools, your middle schools,
and elementary schools. I did a tiny little focus group
(30:29):
yesterday of just a handful of people who were happy
Trump won, said a couple of things I thought were interesting.
Maybe I'll squeeze those in. We will finish strong, stay tuned. Shot.
Speaker 5 (30:40):
A few weeks ago, three weeks ago, somebody who's going
to be voting for Kamala Harris came up to me
and said, oh my god, Trump's going to win. I go,
why is that?
Speaker 1 (30:50):
He goes?
Speaker 5 (30:50):
I just I went to the grocery store. Butter's over
three dollars. I kind of laughed and I said, I said, well,
that's kind of reductive, isn't I said it to my him.
I smile and I said, good point.
Speaker 1 (31:03):
But it actually what.
Speaker 5 (31:05):
Everything we're hearing after the election is.
Speaker 1 (31:08):
I'm the seven what's at the seven dollars?
Speaker 5 (31:14):
Butter is seven dollars? Yeah? What he's it framed in gold? Okay?
Speaker 1 (31:22):
Anyway from where you go?
Speaker 5 (31:24):
Okay, well yeah, okay, it looks anyway interesting.
Speaker 1 (31:27):
Mica brasil what Mica Brazilski apparently actually does the grocery
store shopping in their household. That's something. But yeah, she
said seven dollars, like depending on where you go, but
lots of places and the reason for this, what I'm
about to tell you is racism. In twenty twenty, Biden
won Tim Wallace's home county fifty one forty six, four
(31:53):
and a half points. Trump just won that county bye
point and a half because of racism. Okay, Tim Walls
lost his own time the seven dollars. But Charlemagne the God,
it's tha Charlemagne, that god admits Trump speaks to people's
(32:15):
grievances better than Democrats. Yeah. I was just reading a
piece in the New York Post about how on the
economy is what it is and people are paying what
they are being sung to by superstars and everything like
that is just not the thing, and uh and they
they wrote, I thought it was pretty good. Kamala Harris
did win. With everyone who's ever attended a vanity fair
(32:36):
after Oscars party?
Speaker 6 (32:39):
Yeah, look for the bairncessities, the simple fair necessities like
final thoughts to and an other show. I mean the
bairncessity mother age recipes, like final thoughts.
Speaker 1 (33:03):
From our host Jack and Joe. Here's your host for
final thoughts, Joe Getty. Let's get a final thought from everybody, Michael.
Keep in mind, my final thought is going to be
clip number seventy one. Get it ready, please, But what's
your final thought? M Dog all I can think about
is we have a lot of really really weak people
out there.
Speaker 2 (33:23):
I'm sorry, but the election doesn't affect me that much emotionally.
Speaker 1 (33:27):
Yeah, weffing up, buttercup. Let's get a final thought from
our esteemed newswoman, Katie Green. Katie final thought along that line,
I appreciate a man who's in touch with his emotions,
but Jimmy Kimmel is a woosy. But it starts with
p Yeah, no kidding, Jack. Final thought. I was explaining
that to my kids. It's it's pretty simple. If you're
(33:48):
a person of the left, you want government to be
in all parts of your life and be in charge
of everything. And you see the president is the leader
of your family and all this crap. And if you're
on the right, you don't. You want as little government
as possible. You want to never hear about it, so
of course you react differently. My final thought, these are
the cadets at the Virginia Military Institute, the legendary v
(34:10):
m I. Let's go. That's the dorms at v m
(34:30):
I on election night when the elect and the anast
was made. Wow, that means something. All. They don't need
a long cry when things don't go their way. Those
kids almost entirely young men. Yep, I'm strong. You get you.
Wrapping up another grouling, grueling, four hour workday. We'll see tomorrow.
(34:52):
God bless America. I'm strong and get you. This is
a message for the people of America.
Speaker 5 (34:57):
Only when it is dark enough can you see the stars?
We're gonna be okay.
Speaker 1 (35:08):
Well, is anyone else humping a meltdown that we're gonna
f around and find out? Bye bye, Armstrong and Getty