Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, Thanks Scott chan An hour two Sean Hannity Show
told free you it's eight hundred and ninety four one
Sean if you want to be a part of the program.
So now with Kamala Harris now taking over for Joe Biden,
how interesting that she agrees with me that we need
paper ballots, which adds to integrity to the process.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
Here's what she had to say.
Speaker 3 (00:22):
We are talking with them about the fact that it
is probably best that you do not have your election
system connected to the internet because that will create greater vulnerabilities.
And then look at where we are now in this
year of our lower twenty eighteen. We're talking about paper ballots,
but that actually might be one of the smartest systems
going back to, you know, a day when we could
(00:43):
have something tangible that we can hold onto because Russia
cannot hack a piece of paper like they can a
computer system connected to the internet. Upgrading the infrastructure states
around elections because guess what, as it turns out, for
all that technology has brought us good and bad, the
best and most secure way to conduct elections paper ballance.
(01:07):
Because the way that I say it, kind of half joking,
Russia can't hack a piece of paper.
Speaker 1 (01:12):
Sounds like me. Maybe you'll say it should be a
national holiday. Maybe she'll even support voter ID and signature
verification and proof of citizenship.
Speaker 2 (01:22):
I'm not sure if I believe that.
Speaker 1 (01:24):
Our other top story we're following is the Secret Service
Director has now officially resigned. Let's go back to yesterday
when she's being grilled in the House before the House
Oversight Committee along with the House Judiciary Committee. Let's play
this arrogant exchange on her part.
Speaker 4 (01:43):
The Secret Service has a zero fail mission, but it
failed on July thirteenth and in the days leading up
to the rally. The Secret Service has thousands of employees
and a significant budget, but it has now become the
face of a competence.
Speaker 5 (02:01):
You know what looks like, Director, looks like you won't
answer some pretty basic questions. It looks like you got
a nine percent raise and you cut corners when it
came to protecting one of the most important individual's, most
well known individuals on the planet, a former president likely
the guy's going to be the next president. Looks like
you guys were cutting corners. That's what it looks like
to me. Is that true?
Speaker 6 (02:17):
I am here today because I want to answer questions,
but I also wanted to be quiet, and.
Speaker 5 (02:21):
I want to but you have an answered. I don't
think you've answered one question from the Chairman, the ranking member,
or need so.
Speaker 7 (02:27):
The idea that a report will be finalized in sixty days,
let alone prior to any actionable decisions that would be made,
is simply not acceptable. It has been ten days since
an assassination attempt on a former president of the United States.
Regardless of party, there need to be answers.
Speaker 6 (02:49):
You stated earlier Secret Service is not political. Is that correct?
Speaker 8 (02:54):
Yes?
Speaker 9 (02:54):
Okay?
Speaker 6 (02:55):
Would you say leaking your opening statement to Punch Full News,
politicals Playbook and Washington Post several hours before you sent
it to this committee as being political?
Speaker 8 (03:07):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (03:08):
Or no?
Speaker 6 (03:09):
I have no idea how my statement got out.
Speaker 10 (03:12):
Well, that's so, there's going to be accountability. I understand
you don't want to give us names.
Speaker 2 (03:17):
When you say that.
Speaker 10 (03:18):
Are you telling the committee that once it's concluded, you're
prepared to fire the people on the ground who made
poor decisions that day.
Speaker 11 (03:27):
I'm prepared to take the actions message.
Speaker 10 (03:29):
No, that's nonsense. Okay, accountability. The failure was human. That
doesn't mean they're bad people. It means they failed that
day and a president was almost a former president was
almost assassinated.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
And then she gave the agents in a grade. Now,
in fairness to the agents around President Trump, they deserve
an a grade. They dove on him in record time.
They did their job. They were willing to take a bullet.
Bullets was still flying at that time, and they protected
the former president's life. That does not justify her ridiculous excuse. Well,
(04:07):
the perimeter, this was outside the perimeter. It's not outside
the perimeter if you are within shooting range of a primary,
which in this case was former President Donald Trump. Where
one hundred and four days away from election day, fifty
five days away until early voting begins in Pennsylvania, And
here we are, and yeah, she did resign today, but
(04:30):
that is just the beginning. How could such a historic
failure in this day and age like this ever occur?
And with the election now hovering, I get Kamala Harris
is going to get a sugar high from the very
people that lied to us about Joe's cognitive state, and
that would be the state run media mob and Democrats
(04:51):
all lied. They all knew only bad poll numbers, you know,
forced this coup to push her, push him out, and
bring her in anyway, joining us to discuss Congressman Corey
Mills of Florida, also Gary Byrne, author of the book
The Secrets of the Secret Service, The History of the
Uncertain Future of the US Secret Service.
Speaker 2 (05:11):
Welcome both of you.
Speaker 1 (05:14):
How do you see the change in from Biden to
Kamala Harris. I don't see any policy differences except she's
actually more extreme than Joe Biden is. And I think,
you know, I think pretty much nothing changes and I
don't see any respect on the world stage coming Kamala
Harris's way.
Speaker 12 (05:33):
Congressman Mills exactly right, Sean, And in fact, she actually
pulls beneath what President Biden does. When you look at
her record and what she's done over the thirty nine
months straight that Kamala Harris has been the borders are
where monthly encounters have surpassed the highest months under the
last administrations, it's very clear to see that she is
(05:56):
completely unprepared. When you look at the way that she
handled between twenty eleven and on when she actually was
under the office of being a DA she would refuse
to go after and recommend death penalties for cartel and
gang members, even when they were responsible for killing officers
like San Francisco police officer Isaac Gaespinoza. This is a
(06:17):
woman who had imprisoned over fifteen hundred people, though on
marijuana charges. And so you look at her record and
the fact that she was actually voted the most liberal senator.
That's more liberal than Bernie Sanders from Vermont. So if
you think that her defund the police rhetoric, her Minnesota
Bell Fund that was targeting the people burning and setting fire,
(06:38):
her support of catch and release, soft on crime policies
and an open border is a step up. You need
to get your eyes checked on what's going on here.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
That's a great point, you know, Gary Byrne, I go
back and I look at your book, and you predicted
that there would be failures like this. I wish you
were wrong. I'm sure you wish you were wrong, but
you wore it. How did it happen?
Speaker 13 (07:00):
Well, thank you, John, Yeah, I h one thing I
wish I was wrong. Basically what happened is the Secret
Service is still the same agency that I was in.
It is overtasked, undermanned, and suffers from this enormous layer
after layer of management that make core decisions. You know,
(07:20):
I didn't particularly want the director to resign. I was
hoping maybe she would stick around and actually answer a
question honestly, and some of the first questions that needed
to be asked. And Congressman, I'm not dumping this in
your lab, but you know everybody that was there that day,
the secret Service person and how many hours had they
worked in the last two pay periods? When was the
last time they got a day off. We'll not making
(07:42):
excuses for them.
Speaker 8 (07:43):
And if we.
Speaker 13 (07:43):
Find out that there was an agent on top of
that building and he just walked off like he's supposedly
being recorded, yes, they should be terminated. As a supervisor.
You cannot let this happen. Donald Trump is the most
popular leader to come along in a long time. Like
them or not, he's popular. He's got a lot of
threat against them, and what happened that day is unforgivable.
Speaker 1 (08:05):
Well, I mean the idea, I mean Kim Cheetles said
that they recognized that that roof was a threat, but
they said it was a slope proof. That doesn't fly
with me, Gary, because I used to do roofing. I
fell off a roof of real real slope proof, a
real pitch roof three and a half stories, well about
(08:26):
three stories, And it wasn't exactly the most fun moment
of my life as I busted up my face and
I you know, dislocated my arm and was pretty severely injured.
It wasn't the best day. So I know what a
slope roof is. That's not a slope roof number one.
And if they decided not to put agents on there,
maybe the roof couldn't withstand the weight. Okay, I'm not
(08:48):
sure if I believe that either, but let's go with
their excuse. Why didn't they have sniper eyes all over
that roof, and why would they put them inside the
building and out outside the perimeter so nobody can had
come with a ladder and an AR fifteen and climb
the roof undetected.
Speaker 13 (09:06):
So, based on my experiences, Sean, the officers that were
in the building were the local law offorcement. There's nothing
wrong with that. They're a great partners. But they're basically
sitting there.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
But then, how do you excuse not surrounding the perimeter,
especially having identified somebody as suspicious in a potential threat.
Speaker 12 (09:25):
You can't.
Speaker 13 (09:26):
You can't justify it. They weren't building their job. They
were sitting in there and usually as a break room.
The idea that that building was outside the security perimeter
is complete hogwashed. The problem is is the Secret Service
did not give the Trump Detail the manpower that they needed.
Any building that you can mount, somebody can get up
there on with the rifle. Should have had either town
(09:47):
of sniper or Secret Service agents or a Unicorn Divisions
officer with the local police officer. They completely Again, they
need to name names of who was in touch of
the advance. Let's see either check They all have checklists.
Everybody in the Secret Service that doesn't advance has a checklist.
The magnetometer guys, the counter sniper guys love to see
their checklist. And the idea that there's no recording of
(10:10):
the communications, that's probably not likely. The Secret Service is
not in charge of their own communications, white house communications walking.
That needs to be questioned about what the kind of
recordings they have.
Speaker 12 (10:21):
Well, but I would just go ahead and add to that.
You know, as someone who was with the State Apartment,
who had run counter sniper teams and I had done advances,
I'd like to see the advanced sheet where they actually
had conducted surveillance and laid out the perimeter lays. I'd
like to have seen where they had actually identified all
of your high risk areas and the mitigation measures they
had put in place. I'd like to see the counter
snipers what they had as far as their range card
(10:43):
and range fan, where they would sketched out exactly where
and have already marked the distances of areas that they've
seen as a high threat potential environment. And so when
you look at this, I want to see the COMMS
planned security plan, et cetera. That in itself will set
you up to understand whether or not a proper security
plan had been conducted. And I can understand what's being
said regards to work hours, but we signed up for this.
(11:03):
I can remember working eighteen hours. I can remember working
months and months on end. I wore the uniform in
the military. I wore the uniform of you know, kind
of contracting out with the agencies. So we understand long days,
long nights, but end of the day. They said originally
that President Trump's surveillance team and Secret Service team had
not requested more assets for over a year. They're now
coming back and saying, oh, well, actually they have, as
(11:26):
recorded by a secret Service senior member requested these assets
and resources and it wasn't given to them, much like
what happened with RFK. And so when you're looking at this,
it makes me question and I have to put it
on the actual table because I can't remove anything until
the facts are provided. Is it negligence? Is it a
dereliction of duty or was there a sense of intent here?
(11:46):
When you talk about that slope roof, My colleague who
I'm good friends with, former Navy seal and Congressmount of Arizona,
Eli Crane, was on that roof just yesterday. It had
the minimal slope. We had a seventy year old, Carlos Jimenez,
who was able to get on that room. If you've
got a seventy year old able to get up and
walk around on that roof, you're gonna tell me that
a secret service or a local law enforcement agent with
(12:06):
their coordination couldn't have done it. And I'll go to
one final point on this, which is even if you
had coordinated everything with our local law enforcement, the law
enforcement officers said that he approached the shooter and he
had turned his rifle, and he descended, why wasn't there
a centralized emergency communications channel that could say sniper and
the roof sniper on the roof that will allowed the
Secret Service team to have grabbed the president prior to
(12:27):
the first shot going off.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
Well, I got to tell you something. All of this
makes sense. All of this is in hindsight, and I
just can't believe in this day and age that's such
a basic, rudimentary, fundamental mistake like this was made. Donald
Trump came within a millimeter or two of losing his life.
All right, quick break more with Congressman Corey Mills and
(12:52):
author and former Secret Service agent Gary Byrne on the
other side.
Speaker 2 (12:56):
We'll get to your calls as well.
Speaker 1 (12:58):
Eight hundred and ninety four to one show is on
number as we are only one hundred and four days
until election day and only fifty five days away from
early voting in Pennsylvania and then other states roll out
thereafter best election coverage as we continue.
Speaker 2 (13:13):
We continue now.
Speaker 1 (13:14):
With Congressman Corey Mills and Gary Byrne is with us.
But Gary Byrne, author of the book The Secrets of
the Secret Service, The History and Uncertain Future of the
US Secret Service Pennsylvania police. By the way, congressmen are
saying that they were banned from the Secret Services command
center during the Trump rally. Now, they tried to blame
local police, but it's not the job of the local
(13:36):
police to protect a primary like this.
Speaker 2 (13:39):
That's their job. That's what the Secret Service is there for.
Speaker 12 (13:42):
Well, that's exactly right, Sean. And in most cases, when
you coordinate with your local law enforcement, they provide what
is the outer court on of security. We utilize those
to help with funneling in individuals. We helped to put
off certain areas off limits. And that's why I question
if it was a resource issue, you could have reached
out to other local law enforcement officers in the surrounding
(14:03):
areas to request more additional assets. And you could have
taken one car, sewan one car and put it in
the parking lot of AGR with the doors locked and
the lights running as a deterrent for anyone to even
come in there, and could have coordinate it with the
owners of that business to say, we don't want the
rally that that's going on to impede or impact your
business or have people parking your parking lot. We'd like
(14:23):
to put officers there. They didn't do it, Sean, they
did the very minimal And I look back and I
say it again, was it gross negligence? Was it intent?
Or was this something else? And so until we get
the true investigation that should be done in the House
and a J thirteen style commission, I think that we
leave everything on the table possibilities.
Speaker 1 (14:44):
I appreciate both of you. Gary Byrne, thank you. Congressman
Corey Mills of Florida, thank you. Eight hundred and ninety
four one. Shawn is on number. If you want to
be a part of the program, we'll get to your
calls coming up. I mean, so much news to get
to it today, it's hard to get all of this
in and absorb this all. If you look at the polls,
the polls are just not favorable to Kamala Harris, They're horrible.
(15:07):
I mean, if you look at these numbers that we have.
For example, you have a Harris x Forbes poll that
came out and this is through the twenty first and
have found among registered voters, Trump has a nine point
lead likely voters, which is more indicative of what where
the race is.
Speaker 9 (15:24):
Well.
Speaker 1 (15:24):
Trump has an eleven point lead now, I'm going to
tell you, right now, these numbers are going to change,
and it's going to the medium mob is going to come.
The same people that lied to you about Joe's cognitive state,
the same people that covered it all up, the same
people that lied about mar Lago's valuation, the same people
that lied about fifty one former Intel officials, the same
(15:47):
people that peddled the conspiracy theory about Trump Russia collusion.
The same people that bought into Hillary Clinton, you know,
had no problem you know, deleting thirty read thousand suboena emails.
All these people had no problem with Piza Warrence. They're
going to now so rally around Kamala Harris like never before.
(16:11):
They're gonna circle the wagons. Republicans often create circular firing squads,
And you're going to read polls and the polls are
going to tighten, and you're going to get nervous. But
I'm going to tell you right now, it's not going
to be real. None of this is going to be
real because most Americans know little to nothing about her
except that she's more radical than Joe Biden, and she
(16:34):
giggles a lot and has been ineffective as vice president
and more Americans, you know, prefer Biden over her, and
like Biden over her, and Biden didn't particularly have the
best approval ratings and and and the best likability scores.
Speaker 2 (16:51):
Let's put it that way.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
So you know, it's she was definitely a part of
this entire you know, effort to get rid of Donald Trump.
But now everybody's falling in line. She now has enough
delegates to be the person. But you know, it's just
it may get frustrating, but this sugar high is what
I call. This is going to diminish. But the media mob,
(17:17):
they are giddy, they're excited. They for the first time
in a while, are not depressed, and they finally they
think they have hope. And you could hear it in
their voices.
Speaker 14 (17:27):
Listen, David, you pointed out while she was speaking, the branding,
it's Kamala like Hillary. I mean, she doesn't have a
VP pick yet. But what struck me most was that
is fighting Kamala Harris. She is coming out guns blazing.
She said this quote, I know Donald Trump's type.
Speaker 2 (17:50):
Wow, Iannicol, bear with you.
Speaker 4 (17:53):
I'm jumping out of my seat over here watching this.
People have been thirsting for this.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
Have been thirsty for this.
Speaker 10 (18:02):
Tim I'm jumping out of my seat high then you,
my brother, I'm just gonna say that.
Speaker 11 (18:07):
Wow. You know, there was a twinkle in her eye,
there was a kick in her step that you know
when you're vice president. You know, I don't You're not
loops you can't. You know there's somebody above you, there's
somebody you don't want to overshadow them. You want And
this was quite the coming out.
Speaker 2 (18:23):
I was blown away.
Speaker 11 (18:24):
I was like, I kind of fell in love with her.
I thought she was smart, engaging, She's funny, feisty, twinkle
in your eye, punch you in the gut, I mean,
everything you want. And I just thought it was a great,
great opening act.
Speaker 13 (18:38):
I came home yesterday to Brooklyn and just walking through
the streets, every other conversation on.
Speaker 15 (18:46):
The street was who should be her?
Speaker 9 (18:47):
Running me?
Speaker 2 (18:48):
What do you think people are throwing out names? Aren't
the excitement is Palpa Bala.
Speaker 15 (18:52):
She caught a rocket ship of enthusiasm and hope and
just pent up desire for something not the future that
looked like it was going to be inevitable. We are
passionate about stopping Donald Trump, and she has pulled together
an unbelievable movement behind her. This is not a campaign,
is a movement.
Speaker 1 (19:10):
And that's your media mob. I mean, just just diving
in the greatest things in slice bread. All right, let's
get to our phones. Mike in Pennsylvania, Mike High, how
are you? Glad you called?
Speaker 2 (19:22):
Sir?
Speaker 8 (19:23):
Hi?
Speaker 9 (19:23):
Sean, how are you?
Speaker 2 (19:25):
I'm good, glad you called good. Hey.
Speaker 9 (19:28):
I've been listening to you for quite a while. And
every day you go through your list, like you say,
of the radicals, and I always try to think of
something that may have been missed. And one of the
one was from twenty sixteen how the Democratic National Committee,
in part with the Hillary Clinton Foundation all cheated Bernie
Sanders out of the primaries in Iowa. So I even
(19:50):
kind of think, well, geez, well, what happened before that?
And then I even thought about during Obama and Mitt
Romney during the debate that they had when Romney accused
Obama from not admitting till almost thirteen days after Benghazi
was attacked that that was a terrorist attack, and the
(20:12):
I can't recall the moderator of the debate, but she
spoke up, oh no, you know, about a week later
he said it on the eastern lawn at the White House,
you know, and met Romney was just standing there like
with his teeth in his mouth, and Obama just had
this smirky look. It's like, so I just wanted to say,
(20:33):
I added that to your list. And then when you
find out about the whole thing behind Hillary Clinton with
what they did, how she took over the DNC funding
and ran with that and controlled the money and who
spoke and did well part of.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
That money paid for that dirty Russian disinformation. Darcia, You're
one hundred percent correct.
Speaker 9 (20:55):
Correct, And I just sit and watch this and now
as you're saying, let's let's see, I'm just sorry jumped
to the shooting Butler. I'm from Western Pa. I'm not
too far from Butler. In fact, we go down there
with friends to the Jeep Banham festival, since that was
Butler was known for the Banna Atto. They were the
(21:17):
first ones to build the jeep after prior for World
War one or two, sorry, world War two. So we
got down there and like you said, I've seen those
roofs and that's not a slope roof I've got I've
got slope proofs on my house in my barn that
I have to throw rope over to hold on to them.
So I agree with you, that is.
Speaker 1 (21:37):
I I've been on those two in my life. Not fun,
not exactly. I remember being up on scaffolding. It was
three and a half story you know, uh, you know,
row Home in Queens, New York doing sighting and I
was on a two by twelve a scaffolding. Yeah, honestly,
I just I just I remember at one point and
(22:00):
I said to the contract I said, this is just
not safe.
Speaker 2 (22:03):
And he looked at me.
Speaker 1 (22:04):
He goes if he goes, well, if you don't want
to do it, just you know, you can leave. So
you know what I did. I got down the ladder
and I left. Yeah, I didn't feel like dying that day.
Speaker 9 (22:14):
I've seen people do that to, like you say, the
old slate roofs, to refurbish those antique or historical buildings
on churches and all. And I'm like, you know what,
I'm not afraid of heights, but I wouldn't do it.
But like I said, those roots are narrow. I was
in the Air Force three years and I even saw
some things, even though I wasn't part of security. But
(22:38):
simple things if somebody is supposed to report to a
site and that individual doesn't show, and let's say I
was there and that individual doesn't show. I'm not going
to stand there and twiddle my thumbs. I'm going to
have somebody go and find out what do we do
and keep an eye on that location because that individual
was not there. You know what I'm saying, you.
Speaker 1 (22:59):
Just the story's eventually going to come out. And believe me,
I'm being fed a lot of information that I'm not
bringing out publicly yet because I can't confirm it. But
a story is now beginning to emerge. And it's not
a pretty story, and it's not even it's not even
(23:21):
mistakes that were made.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
It is just a dereliction of duty. It is. It
is way beyond mistakes in my mind.
Speaker 9 (23:29):
Right, And I'm right with you, Sean, and I hate
to be a conspiracy theorist, but it's just I just
sit there and think, no twenty year old is going
to have the mindset if you watch it off the
field one time. He says, even a twenty year old's
mind isn't done developing. There's nobody gonna figure that out
unless he had a tip or something. And it just
(23:51):
it just kind of gets you. And and one last thing,
so I go, you.
Speaker 1 (23:54):
Got to we're not looking for conspiracy theories. We're looking
for how did something a failure of historic proportions?
Speaker 2 (24:02):
How was that able to happen? You get the last word?
Speaker 9 (24:05):
Go ahead, correct, Well, I was just gonna say. The
only reason I'm looking at that is also one other
thing that reminded me. Donald Trump asked for help and
even offered help on January the big j six, you
know issue. He offered troops and they were denied. So
you know what I'm saying, it's kinda I hate to say,
(24:27):
your good friend there, Dan Begino said, like somebody told
him they can't get him legally, they can't get them politically.
Before long, they're going to have to try one other route.
And somebody did you know. And it's a shame. It's
a real shame. I wish our country would just focus
on what's necessary, use common sense.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
They have so dehumanized this man. And I have had
this warreum in the back of my head for a
long time. It's not something that I want to talk
about or put ideas in people's heads. But when you
dehumanize somebody to this extent, and you take something as
simple as you're willing to allow a court to value
(25:06):
mar Lago at eight million. May not sound like a
big deal, but that's one of so many other things
that I mentioned. You know, the fact that no Democrat,
nobody in the medium mob set a thing. They don't care,
They don't care what they have to do to get
them because they think they're doing God's will. They've demonized him.
Such quick break, right back straight to the phones we go,
(25:28):
eight hundred and nine four one, Shawn on number. If
you want to be a part of the program, as
we continue three hours a day of red, white, and
Blue America Proud.
Speaker 9 (25:44):
This is the Sean Hannity Show.
Speaker 1 (25:50):
All right, let's get back to our busy phones. Eight
hundred and nine one Sean, if you want to be
a part of the program. Michael in Iowa next on
the Sean Hannity Show. Hey Michael, how are you?
Speaker 8 (26:01):
How are you sir?
Speaker 2 (26:02):
I'm good? What's going on?
Speaker 12 (26:04):
So?
Speaker 8 (26:04):
First thing we got to do is we got to
get you a date and a stage set up at
the Iowa State Fair.
Speaker 13 (26:09):
You just got to play there.
Speaker 2 (26:12):
Man. When is the Iowa State Fair?
Speaker 8 (26:14):
It's in August. Usually, I got, I got.
Speaker 2 (26:17):
I'll tell you what I love the most.
Speaker 1 (26:19):
I like Pride, oreos, Pride twinkies, and I like fried
pork chops.
Speaker 2 (26:24):
Those are my favorites.
Speaker 13 (26:26):
You come to the right place.
Speaker 2 (26:28):
I'm coming to the right place. And I like corn
on the cop last thing, Yeah, that's last thing.
Speaker 8 (26:33):
So what I was calling about is the day, the
night of the debate, the day after the debate. These
people have got to have been sitting down putting out
different scenarios, coming to a conclusion to doing this scenario.
And I have yet to figure out why they haven't
invoked the twenty fifth, why there isn't a vice president involved.
(26:55):
I still have suspicions on whether that's going to actually
go through. Except for what happened last night getting the delegates.
Speaker 1 (27:01):
Let me tell you what at least the New York
Post is reporting is that there was It was not
It was not a happenstance. That they had the earliest
presidential debate ever. They set Joe up to fail, and
then a series of well organized elitists you know, had
(27:23):
a back room deal. They planned all of this out,
and the and frankly, the Democratic primary voters be damned
disenfranchisement never crossed their mind. They didn't care. If anything,
they probably didn't imagine that Kamala would get the support
as quickly as she did. But now they've had to
get on board. There's not a lot of time left.
(27:45):
There are state laws now and deadlines that they're running
up against. So she's their candidate, and she's going to
be a weaker candidate than you think. Right now, they're
on a sugar high. It's not going to last. If
you've ever had a sugar high or had a kid
with a sugar high, it goes away, it evaporates.
Speaker 9 (28:03):
So I kind of believe that the delegates are also
forced themselves in the saying we have to go this route,
this is a plan.
Speaker 1 (28:09):
Just you know, wait till I show up at the
Iowa Fair and needed a couple of fried Twinkies and oreos.
I'll have my own sugar high anyway, my friend, appreciate
the call, Thanks for the invitation.