Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to standing round with Jeremy Lahey.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
California probably the most crazyest state. They passed this thing
called slave reparations. California is going to pay slave reparations
to people who are never slaves, to be paid for
by people who never owned slaves in a state that
(00:24):
never had slaves. That's like paying child support for a
child he never had with a woman you never fucked.
Speaker 3 (00:37):
You know, it just doesn't.
Speaker 4 (01:22):
Stuck into a church.
Speaker 5 (01:26):
I've passed along way.
Speaker 4 (01:30):
Where I got down on my.
Speaker 1 (01:39):
Standing ground is a production of Lakey Media.
Speaker 6 (01:57):
We're seeing our first images right now with President Trump
on the left hand.
Speaker 7 (02:00):
Of your screen.
Speaker 6 (02:00):
You see him there deplaning Air Force one after having
touchdown in Elmendorf richardson our joint base here in Anchorage,
just outside of Anchorage, with the Honor Guard waiting for
him there. We know you get some key meetings on
the plane as you waited for Vladimir Putin's plane to land,
including meeting with the Governor of Alaska and the two
Republican senators. The President walking towards that red carpet, and
(02:26):
now we see Vladimir Putin on the right hand of
your screen coming down shuffling down as somewhat of a
brisk pace.
Speaker 8 (02:33):
There there is a stage that.
Speaker 6 (02:38):
Has been set with the title Alaska twenty twenty five
at the end of the Red carpet.
Speaker 8 (02:42):
Okay, here we are, here, I am.
Speaker 9 (02:46):
I was in Maine last week, and I gotta tell you,
for some reason, all the really interesting stuff happens when
I'm okay.
Speaker 8 (03:01):
But I can tell you this.
Speaker 9 (03:04):
Because it was it's material for the program. I was
in an area with people I dearly love, but a
lot of them, most of them are predominantly liberal. And
I can tell you just from my own personal experience
(03:27):
with this whole thing that has developed and is still
extremely fluid, with the situation in Ukraine between Russia and
Ukraine and the United States trying to broker or deal
broker a deal via its chief diplomat, one Donald John Trump.
The people I was around are they they don't want
(03:53):
to talk. They don't want to And this is not
just there, It's pretty much everywhere I've been around. Some
people that are on the left and online or whatever is.
They love peace, they hate war. The appetite for war
is not really there anymore. And this guy is doing
(04:15):
something remarkable, but it pains them to see it because
this is the guy that was gonna get us all
killed and get us into World War three, and he's
doing just the opposite. He is doing a fantastic job.
And as of today, over the last couple of days, okay,
(04:39):
on Monday, the European leaders came to the White House,
Zelensky was there, and now Putin and Zelensky have agreed.
To me, whether Trump is going to be part of
that coven, I don't know my understanding thus far. It
is a bilateral, meaning it's just the two of them.
(05:01):
We're heading in the right direction, and that is ending
this damn war. And it's good. It's a it's a
very positive step. But to the broader issue when when
war ends or when treaties are signed, for the most part,
(05:24):
both sides benefit, but there always has to be concessions.
Speaker 8 (05:32):
It's like it's it's.
Speaker 9 (05:33):
Like going into buy a car, all right, and there's
a used car or a new car, and you're trying
to negotiate the price, and maybe at some point someone's
gonna bend a little bit. That's how it works. But overall,
in Totem it's a wonderful thing. It really is and
he's getting it done. And that's what we've got today,
at least in the first break, and then we'll get
(05:56):
into some other stuff as the program moves along. Okay,
I'm jerremanly he this is standing ground. This is Mojo
Fiber Radio. Follow me on x formerly Twitter at leahy
l e a h y jeremy j e r e
m y at leahy l e a h y jeremy
j e r e m yuh to my friends in Russia.
(06:17):
I think the time of day now, Okay, so I'm
gonna say Vha, good evening, Okay, minyesvut jeremy lay and
uh uh previate that's me day No, No, that's goodbye.
We'll say that at the end. Yeah, brew Vha. Let's
get the show on the road.
Speaker 6 (06:37):
This is Vladimir Putin's first time in the United States
on US soil in about a decade. We understand the
two leaders have not met in quite some time face
to face.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
They have had.
Speaker 6 (06:47):
Several conversations, they have met in passing this face to face.
That will be the longest they've met since that hell
sins me some what we saw in that news conference
that made so many headlines to the leader of the
United States the leader of Russia exchanging hands in hopes
of finding peace in Ukraine.
Speaker 4 (07:13):
From Russia with love, I'd.
Speaker 7 (07:21):
Like to that's wiser since my.
Speaker 10 (07:29):
Goodbye, I've javeeled the world.
Speaker 11 (07:41):
To love.
Speaker 5 (07:43):
I'm switter.
Speaker 1 (07:49):
From Russia with love. You're listening to standing ground with Jeremy, lady.
Speaker 5 (08:00):
And would have been better if you had not informed Moscow?
Speaker 3 (08:07):
How you doing?
Speaker 7 (08:09):
How are you?
Speaker 11 (08:10):
What will what will make a success of the summer today?
Speaker 12 (08:14):
I can't tell you that. I don't know. It's uh,
there's nothing set in stone. I want certain things. I
want to see a ceasefire. This is not to do
with Europe. Europe's not telling me what to do, but
they're going to be involved in the process obviously, as
well as Zelenski. But I want to see.
Speaker 8 (08:32):
A ceasefire rapidly.
Speaker 12 (08:33):
I don't know if it's going to be today, but
I'm not going to be happy if it's not today.
Everyone said it can't be today, but I'm just saying
I want the killing to stuff. I'm in this to
stop the killing. You know, we're not putting up any money,
We're making money. They're buying our weapons and we're sending
them to NATO, and NATO's sending us big beautiful checks.
But I don't care about that. I care about it
(08:55):
was a big factor when Biden spent three hundred.
Speaker 7 (08:57):
And fifty billion and got nothing.
Speaker 12 (09:00):
What I do care about it is they lost last week.
Seven thousand and eleven people were lost almost as soldiers.
Thirty six people in a town which got hit by
a missile, but seven thousand, over seven thousand soldiers.
Speaker 13 (09:17):
It's crazy.
Speaker 8 (09:18):
Okay, here we are.
Speaker 9 (09:19):
This thing is moving relatively in a very very at
a very i'm sorry, at a very rapid pace. This
whole negotiation with Ukraine Russia, you know, via the United
States and the European Union, is moving very very quickly.
My opinion is most likely there is going to be
(09:41):
a peace deal, probably a ceasefire prior to that, but
there will be an actual peace deal or treaty, most
likely by the end of this year.
Speaker 8 (09:50):
I think. I think that is within that is within reach.
Speaker 9 (09:56):
The one thing I want to say, however, is that
I'm gonna play a cut of Hillary Clinton in a
little bit regarding the Nobel Peace Prize.
Speaker 8 (10:04):
But you got to listen to her very very carefully.
Speaker 9 (10:07):
I read a book years ago, and I forget the
title by Henry Kissinger, who is probably well, probably the
well one of the great architects, but brilliant, brilliant diplomat.
And he noted in the book that any time you
go into a negotiation where you're trying to end a
(10:30):
war or make some type of a deal with a
foreign state, you.
Speaker 8 (10:35):
Have to go in.
Speaker 9 (10:39):
Knowing what you want to achieve right away, but in
advance some kind of back and forth as to what
is going to be on the table. I believe that
peace can be achieved, and I believe that we can
get the killing to stop, but it's not gonna get
(11:04):
done with both sides. There's no way that both sides
can get everything they want. There's gonna have to be
Putin's gonna want some certain territory. There may be a
trade deals, the US may offer something. Everybody's coming in
with an idea how to just end it. But Vladimir
(11:26):
Putin is just not going to take his troops and
have a mass exodus and leave Ukraine and say, okay, fine,
sorry I invaded, it never happened, I'll never come back again.
That's not going to happen. He's got to get something
out of the deal. So of course I'm going to
write now, I'm gonna play you a cut of Bill Maher.
(11:48):
This guy has become the voice of reason for me,
and he's kind of speaking to all the real the
Trump haiters here and all that sort of thing.
Speaker 8 (11:57):
As to.
Speaker 9 (11:59):
What Trump is all about and what we're learning about him,
And basically what the press has been saying about him
is that he's this dangerous, evil, war mongering whatever, terrible,
horrible human being who is who's now on the cusp
of endy, a war that Joe Biden screwed up and
(12:20):
putin himself is even said during the White House presser
made a statement that had have Biden been in office,
there never would have been an invasion of Ukraine. May
do you believe him? I mean I do, But anyway, okay,
here's Bill Maher.
Speaker 14 (12:39):
I think it's kind of a zombie lie that Trump
is Putin's bitch, because I mean, he certainly was over
friendly to him for a very long time, considering who
Putin is a thug and a murderer.
Speaker 12 (12:52):
In twenty fifteen, Obama met him, and nobody's said anything
in New York.
Speaker 14 (12:56):
You met him. He didn't praise him. He didn't say
he's the greatest guy in the world. Read twenty compliments
that Trump has given to him. He said he's a
fun got to be with. No, that's Epstein. Look, I'll
say this for Trump. He's got this idea that America
is still the biggest swinging dick in the world. And
we have not used our power as much as we should.
(13:20):
That's what the task are about. Did we have the
power to change of these people's other nations trading practices
with us, some of which were out of line. I'm
surprised that people went along with it as much as
they did.
Speaker 15 (13:32):
So.
Speaker 14 (13:32):
He wasn't completely wrong about that. He said, Look, NATO
hasn't been paying their fair share. I'm going to make
them do that. He wasn't wrong about that. And I'll
tell you this one thing about him.
Speaker 1 (13:42):
That I know.
Speaker 14 (13:43):
I'm not going to tell you how I know, but
a lot of people have seen the same thing. He
really does hate war. He really does not like it
when people die in warrants.
Speaker 8 (13:55):
And that has been the liberal mantra.
Speaker 9 (14:01):
For years, and I think it's ed Mar set himself
the song war what is it good for?
Speaker 8 (14:09):
Absolutely nothing? And here we have this.
Speaker 9 (14:13):
Guy who is trying to stop all this stuff, and
the Left has been they've been shoved into a corner
and they don't know what to say because this is
the guy that was supposed to get us all killed.
Now there are other things going on. There's a situation
in DC with the National Guard and all that.
Speaker 8 (14:35):
Going up, and Clinique Clean.
Speaker 9 (14:40):
Oh that didn't I'll just leave it in whatever clean. Yeah,
that's a new one for me. Hey, take it easy, lady.
Speaker 12 (14:47):
All right.
Speaker 9 (14:49):
Anyway, cleaning up the streets of DC and restoring order
is a horrible thing. And you have these mayors in
these sanctuary cities that are violating the law and releasing
criminals into the streets so they can avoid ice agents.
(15:10):
It's nuts, which we'll kind of get into more a
little bit later. Okay, let's continue with more of Bill Marcus.
I thought this was a great segment.
Speaker 14 (15:17):
Today is the anniversary of Woodstock. This is a fifty
six years ago. And the hippies what did they hate
more than anything else?
Speaker 7 (15:23):
War?
Speaker 14 (15:24):
What is it good for? Absolutely nothing? So the kind
of person who says, you know, you can find some
good in anybody this would be the good in Donald Trump.
He really does not like war. I would say Thailand
and Cambodia, we're having a firing at each other, Rwanda
and the Congo. Most people don't even know about these,
(15:45):
India and the Pakistan, Armenia and Azerbaijan.
Speaker 5 (15:48):
He got involved in all of them.
Speaker 14 (15:50):
He really doesn't really he wants it now the way
he does it as usual, not you know, with the Ukraine,
the solution was well, surrender, give Putin everything he wants,
and even that didn't work. And to think he gave
Putin anything he wanted and it didn't work. But again,
let's not have the zombie lie that he's still backing Putin,
(16:10):
because first of all, he bomb Duran. That was a Putin. Now,
he didn't get out of NATO. He mended fences with NATO,
so and he put sanctions back on Russia. So you know,
you're really coming around, Bill, I'm not coming around.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
There's no coming around. There's just what's true.
Speaker 8 (16:30):
That is great.
Speaker 9 (16:31):
And Bill Maher right on, And I'll tell you right now,
I trust Bill Maher that I trust any networker, any newspaper,
with exception of a few, I would honestly I mean,
he's a liberal. But I mean if if I called
Bill Maher yesterday and I said, I'm reading this story
that Donald Trump was overheard making this comment, da da
(16:51):
da da da, I would not have to worry about
Bill Maher going, well, you know he did. If Bill
Maher knew that that's not what happened and that's not
what he said or did.
Speaker 8 (17:04):
Bill Maher does not drink the kool Aid.
Speaker 9 (17:07):
I remember one of my favorite segments, and he's just
he's one of the only ones out there that you
can really rely on. I don't always agree with him,
like I said, but he doesn't. He doesn't drink it.
Speaker 8 (17:18):
He doesn't. He doesn't drink He doesn't drink the kool aid.
Speaker 9 (17:22):
But that being said, I remember, do you remember, not
too long ago, it was a headline actually got into
the mainstream.
Speaker 8 (17:31):
Well, I don't want you want to call the mainstream anymore.
Speaker 9 (17:34):
But even CNM website had it and it said Donald
Trump threatens to kill Liz Cheney from a firing squad.
And it turned out that Trump was he was giving
a speech somewhere and he was he was citing the
liberal maxim and that is, Hey, you know what you
you powerful rich senators, if you want to continue in
(17:55):
the war.
Speaker 8 (17:56):
Then you pick up a gun and you go fight.
Speaker 9 (17:58):
Okay, And he's saying to and he said, put Liz
Cheney out there and see how she feels with a
bunch of guns staring her down the barrel or something
like that. He so leave it to Bill maher to
Goban saying no, he did not threaten to kill Liz
Cheney with a firing squad. He never said that. It's
it's a total lie. He was saying, why don't you
(18:18):
go and fight more and see how you like it
when the guns are pointing at you. That's what he meant.
So that's that's what That's why I like Bill Martin.
I think he's quite good. Great point there too. By
the way, Okay, I'm German lady. This is standing around.
This is Mojo Viver Radio. Follow me on Twitter at
leahy l e a h y Jeremy at leahy l
e a h y jeremy j e r e m
(18:38):
y and make sure you hit the notification button.
Speaker 1 (18:41):
All right.
Speaker 9 (18:41):
Well, Hillary Clinton has come out and said that she
would nominate recommend President Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize
and that became sort of a headline. And I was
listening to this in the car driving back from Maine,
(19:03):
and they only played a very isolated cut of her
saying it, well, I'm going to kind of do my
best to be Bill Mahers when I can, I really do,
try and play you what she said in its totality,
here you go.
Speaker 16 (19:18):
If he could bring about the end to this terrible
war where Putin is the aggressor invading a neighbor country
trying to change the borders, if he could end it
without putting Ukraine in a position where it had to
concede its territory to the aggressor, had to in a
(19:39):
way validate Putin's vision of greater Russia, but instead could
really stand up to Putin to make it clear there
must be a cease fire, there will be no exchange
of territory, and that over a period of time, Putin
should be actually withdrawing from the territory he sees in
(20:00):
order to demonstrate good faith efforts, let us say, not
to threaten European security. If President Trump were the architect
of that, I'd nominate him for a Nobel Peace price.
Speaker 9 (20:10):
As in the fforementioned, that's what I'm talking about. She's
laying it all out that Putin has to basically conceite
the whole thing.
Speaker 8 (20:20):
That's not going to happen. It would be nice if
it did.
Speaker 9 (20:24):
But she is placing she's placing a very very high
bar on the Nobel peace price for Donald Trump. So
if he, if he gets the war, if he gets
the war to end, in the bloodshed to stop, she'll
come up with some of the media will to guaranteed.
Mark the tape. You're going to hear this. We made
a deal with the devil. He just you know, he
(20:45):
bent over and took it from Putin and all this.
If this, I always say this, I call this the
Obama equation. If this was Barack Obama right now, I
mean they would be they would have the CBS Evening
News would have peace stubs flying around the studio, and
they'd all be wearing ribbons Ukraine and the United States
(21:06):
and Russia. They'd all be, Oh, Obama the Great, and
he'd be on the cover of Time magazine and Obama's
peacemaking magic and that kind of thing. Donald Trump doing
this makes them nuts, all right, Well, here is they
did a joint presser. Putin and Trump in Alaska. Let's
play a little bit of that.
Speaker 17 (21:28):
Not far away from here, the water between rushing the US,
there is a so called international dateline. I think you
can step over literally from yesterday into tomorrow, and I
hope that will succeed in that in political sphere, I
would like to thank President Trump for our joint work,
(21:50):
for the well wishing and trustworthy tone of our conversation.
It's important that both sides are results oriented, and we
see that the President of the US is a very
clear idea of what he would like to achieve. He
sincerely cares about prosperity of his nation. Still he understands
that Russia has its own national interests. I expect that
(22:11):
today's agreements will be the starting point not only for
the solution of the Ukrainian issue, but also will help
us bring back businesslike and pragmatic relations between Russia and
the US. And in the end, I would like to
add one more thing. I'd like to remind you that
in twenty twenty two, during the last contact with the
previous administration, I tried to convince my previous American colleague
(22:37):
that it should not the situation should not be brought
to the point of no return when it would come
to hostilities. And I said it quite directly back then
that it's a big mistake today when President Trump saying
that if he was the present back then there will
be no war. And I'm quite sure that it would
(23:00):
indeed be so, and I can't confirm that. I think
that overall, me and President Trump have built a very good,
business like and trustworthy contact.
Speaker 9 (23:12):
And of course the former Biden officials, I mean, I
haven't seen any of them out there going on about
how great this is. While they were awful. They didn't
handle the situation well. And well, this goes to a
lot broader issue. Well, I mean, we had a president
that was demented. Just it didn't help in an incompetent staff.
But that's a whole other topic for another day. All right,
(23:33):
So here is Trump responding to vlad reason to.
Speaker 17 (23:36):
Believe that moving down this path, we can come and
as suited better to the end of the conflict in Ukraine.
Speaker 18 (23:45):
Thank you, thank you, well, thank you very much, mister President.
That was very profound, and I will say that I
believe we had a very productive meeting. There were many
many points that we agreed on. Most of them, I
would say a couple of big ones that we haven't
quite gotten there, but we've made some headway. So there's
(24:07):
no deal until there's a deal. I will call up
NATO in a little while, I will call up the
various people that I think are appropriate, and of course
call up Presidents Olensky and tell them about today's meeting.
It's ultimately up to them. They're going to have to
agree with what Marco and Steve and some of the
(24:29):
great people from the Trump administration have come here Scott
and John Ratliffe, thank you very much. But we have
some of our really great leaders. They've been doing a
phenomenal job. We also have some tremendous Russian business representatives
here and I think, you know, everybody wants to deal
with us. We've become the oddest country anywhere in the
(24:51):
world at a very short period of time, and we
look forward to that. We look forward to dealing. We're
going to try and get this over with. We really,
ma it's some great progress.
Speaker 8 (25:03):
I mean, I'll go I'll go ahead and say it.
Speaker 9 (25:05):
I mean, it's obvious, but everything this guy's achieved and
in the last nine plus months, as it relates to
things on the international stage and getting treaties and ceasefires
to happen in all this. If and it pinnacled with this,
if he gets the war in Ukraine between Ukraine and
Russia to end, of course he's deserving of the Nobel
(25:29):
Peace Prize.
Speaker 8 (25:29):
Of course he is.
Speaker 9 (25:31):
But the fact is, the odds of them giving it
to him is pretty slim because the nominating committee for
the Nobel Peace Prize is no different than the OSCARS.
They're a political organization. At the end of the Cold
War in the late eighties, when Ronald Reagan forced Gorbachev's
hand to the bargaining table at the Reikievic Summits and
(25:54):
basically the end of the Cold War, they gave the
Nobel Peace Prize to gorbachop and give it to Reagan.
So the odds are they'll probably give it to Zelenskio,
they'll give it to Putin.
Speaker 8 (26:06):
I don't know, maybe they will.
Speaker 9 (26:07):
They the last person they want to see get the
Nobel Peace Prize, even though he's deserving of it, is
Donald John Trump. Okay with that, I'm jerremany, lady. This
is standing around quick break right back.
Speaker 14 (26:18):
One thing about him that I know, I'm not going
to tell you how I know, but a lot of
people have seen the same thing. He really does hate war.
He really does not like it when people die in war.
Speaker 19 (26:33):
On the peace front, President Trump helped deliver an immediate
and unconditional ceasefire between Thailand and Cambodia. The two countries
were engaged in a deadly conflict that had displaced more
than three hundred thousand people until President Trump stepped in
to put an end to it. The President spoke directly
on the phone with the acting Prime Minister of Thailand
(26:53):
and the Prime Minister of Cambodia to inform both leaders
that unless they brought their conflict to an end, there
would be no trade discussions or agreements with the United States.
Almost immediately afterward, a peace was broker that will save
thousands of lives and allowed for trade negotiations with these
countries to resume.
Speaker 7 (27:12):
And they have.
Speaker 19 (27:13):
The President has now ended conflicts between Thailand and Cambodia,
Israel and Iran, Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo,
India and Pakistan, Serbia and Kosovo, and Egypt and Ethiopia.
This means President Trump has broken on average about one
peace deal or ceasefire per month during his six months
in office. It's well past time that President Trump was
(27:36):
awarded the Noble Peace Prize.
Speaker 4 (27:54):
This world.
Speaker 5 (27:57):
Surgeon the darkness of sanity.
Speaker 10 (28:04):
As my sister's auto blasts.
Speaker 4 (28:15):
And melting and stand bappy like some sad.
Speaker 1 (28:22):
The one thing have on her.
Speaker 10 (28:25):
Wessel further, Baptists love her stand Wressel further, Baptist save
her to stay.
Speaker 1 (28:50):
Just standing ground with Jeremy Lady.
Speaker 20 (28:54):
Introducing independence, Independence allows you the freedom to finally think
independently once again, instead of believing everything you hear from
the mainstream media, independence allows for constructive, critical thinking.
Speaker 21 (29:06):
I used to hear people on the news say things
like Donald Trump and the movement he has encouraged are
a threat to democracy, and.
Speaker 22 (29:13):
I instantly believed it.
Speaker 21 (29:15):
With independence, I now realize the media is run by
the Democrat elite, who are a corrupt oligarchy that sensors
free speech, silence is political opponents, supports forever worse, and
abandons democracy by anointing its candidates.
Speaker 5 (29:28):
Independence may not be for everyone.
Speaker 20 (29:30):
If you enjoy being lied to about your president's cognitive abilities,
support or William totalitarianism, or are excited about communist fiscal policy.
Independence may not be right for you. Common side effects
of independence may include an awakening of rational thought, successfully
identifying propaganda, freedom of choice, loss of hatred, anti narcissistic behavior,
(29:52):
and love of democracy.
Speaker 23 (29:54):
I used to blindly hate whoever my party was running
a gift. I didn't care about facts or policy because
I was hopelessly in doct With independence, how much more
interested in policies that uphold democracy, and I truly care
about the health of our country and its citizens.
Speaker 20 (30:07):
Ask your doctor if independence is right for you, and
enjoy your freedoms once again.
Speaker 7 (30:15):
You're listening to Standing Ground with Jeremy.
Speaker 24 (30:18):
Lady, I want to know what is going on here,
and I want to know right now.
Speaker 25 (30:54):
That I'm just curious. Once you left office, how long
before you turned on the news again?
Speaker 13 (31:02):
Months?
Speaker 26 (31:04):
Months? I am, you know, I'm just not into self mutilation,
and I just I am lots of cooking shows. Oh good,
Bakoff and Stuff is one of my favorite.
Speaker 25 (31:18):
Amazing, sure, yeah, yeah, yeah, Well one question on everyone's
mind right now.
Speaker 7 (31:27):
How's Doug Uh?
Speaker 26 (31:35):
He's really well done as well. He's back practicing law
and he's really he's great. He's he's great and thank.
Speaker 7 (31:43):
You for he's practicing law.
Speaker 25 (31:45):
For a second that he said he's backpacking.
Speaker 7 (31:49):
He hasn't turned on the news yet either.
Speaker 25 (31:51):
Yeah, So the election ended one of the challenges for you.
I thought of that last year, or actually it's still
this year. I can't believe it's still this year. It
seems like this thing we're going through right now has
been going on forever. But one of the things I
thought of after the election and before January twentieth, is
(32:12):
that you were still the vice president, right and you
you had to be there on January sixth, twenty twenty
five and count out in those electoral ballots and certified.
First of all, thank you for doing your constitutional duty.
Speaker 4 (32:24):
For that course.
Speaker 7 (32:29):
And I'm just curious.
Speaker 25 (32:31):
I'm just curious, at any point is your ac counting
to go? Anybody want to storm the capital?
Speaker 1 (32:35):
Anybody?
Speaker 14 (32:36):
Nobody wants to, you know.
Speaker 26 (32:38):
But in all seriousness, Stephen, I was fully aware of
what that moment required, not just of me but of
our country. And I talk about it in the book
that was it was a difficult day, to be sure.
And you know, I had been at the Capitol four
years before because I was then vice president elect and
(33:01):
I was a United States Senator. So what I talk
about in the book is that drive to the Capitol
and remembering four years before and what Mike Pence did.
Speaker 8 (33:15):
Okay, welcome back, I'm German, lady. This is standing round.
Speaker 9 (33:18):
That's a cut that that was on with Stephen as
soon to be former Late Show is Stephen Colbert.
Speaker 14 (33:25):
Thank god.
Speaker 9 (33:28):
He did this interview with Kamala Harrish. She's got this
book coming out, and as I'm as I'm watching her,
I agree with Scott Jennings over at CNN a lot
of others, and that is simply, we really dodged a bullet,
uh in the sense that if this woman had gotten
elected president along with that goober Tim Walls the war,
(33:54):
the world would be a completely different place. The the
border would be a free for all, there would be
no crackdown on crime, Everybody in the cabinet would be
would have purple hair, where men wearing skirts walking.
Speaker 8 (34:13):
The White House.
Speaker 9 (34:14):
I'm not kidding. She's that whacked. But not only is
she is she whacked. As New Gingrich once noted, Kamala
Harris's biggest deficit is she's just dumb.
Speaker 8 (34:30):
She really is.
Speaker 9 (34:32):
Dumb, and that laughing mechanism that she has. She has
moments where she's somewhat co I mean, she's not demented
like her ex boss to go.
Speaker 8 (34:42):
I would never say that.
Speaker 9 (34:44):
I'm not saying that she didn't, you know, get good
grades and calculus and things like that, but I mean
there's people that are academically bright. You know, she did
go to law school and all that, and that's not
particularly easy, and passing the bars not particularly easy. But
as far as speak, looking off the cuff without having
to go into a different direction and take us away,
(35:06):
so she doesn't have to talk about the issue at
hand and talk about cooking shows that she.
Speaker 8 (35:10):
Watches and that kind of thing. It's just it's crazy.
Speaker 9 (35:14):
Is to think that she she and yeah, for all
intents and purposes, she came very close to becoming president
of the United States and this, but that we really
we be in a terrible situation right now. I believe
I believe we'd lose the country. I really do. Not
to be overly dramatic, but anyway, here just just as an.
Speaker 8 (35:35):
Example, here you here, here she is talking.
Speaker 9 (35:40):
This is more of the cut with us Stephen Colbert
talking about life and the book and all that and that's.
Speaker 26 (35:46):
Me on a call, so you'll see my phone is
actually on my lap and and you know I so,
I know I've been teased about this, but I like
these kinds of air ear pods that have the thing.
Because I've served on the Senate Intelligence Committee, I have
been in classified briefings that I'm telling you, like, don't
(36:08):
be on the train using your ear pods and thinking
somebody can't listen to your conversation. I'm just telling you
that's a little bit more secure.
Speaker 9 (36:18):
That's what that's what you'd be listening to for at
least four years. Anyway, that that was really that that
was her problem the most is that she just was
not trustworthy and she she wouldn't she wouldn't be able
to do what Trump is doing. There's just no way. Well, anyway,
do you guys know Scott Jennings over at CNN, the
Voice of Reason at the Communist News Network, Well, he
(36:42):
was talking about the Trump base, the Republican base, and
I would e actually even agree with him that it
might actually be certain percentage of the independence too that
are sticking with Donald Trump.
Speaker 8 (36:55):
For a very very specific reason here he is so.
Speaker 15 (36:58):
That, yeah, no part of the republic and base is
presently demoralized. Every single part of the Republican base that
voted for Donald Trump. I'm just telling you if are
as happy as they could possibly be with him, and
they will be that way come next year. This idea
that there's division over this in the party. They're happy
with Trump, trust me.
Speaker 11 (37:16):
No, I think what's a risk here is that Donald
Trump has portrayed himself as a warrior against the elites.
What Jeffrey Epstein files present is an alternative story that no, no, no, no,
he's part of this elite group too. He's been with
the elites. He's been in part of this. You know,
there's you know, and I think that is what could
be So that, weirdly, that's the damage. It's not a
(37:39):
specific allegation. Were you an inside or an outside?
Speaker 15 (37:42):
Are you think it's you're American voters or Republicans that
he is an elite person?
Speaker 4 (37:46):
No?
Speaker 11 (37:46):
No, no, but no, really he was the guy actually
know that the New York League didn't like that, the
Political League didn't like that, the Republican League. He built
an entire brand on being the ungrievance. So no, I
think this is what's at risk for him.
Speaker 8 (38:02):
The reason Donald Trump, it's all really there.
Speaker 9 (38:04):
But the reason he's doing so well is because he's
not beholden to any particular party. He ran as a Republican,
but as a Republican, but overall, Donald Trump is an
independent to me. He's just doing what is fundamentally good
and what's right. And I love him and I think
(38:25):
he's doing a great job.
Speaker 8 (38:26):
Now. As I played in the opening of the.
Speaker 9 (38:29):
Show, if Kamala Harris came in, there would be she'd
be trying to push for reparations for black people and
all that stuff, and the debate always being when is
this kind of well, it's not a debate for me.
When are we going to move beyond this old stuff,
not that it shouldn't be read about and not available
(38:53):
to see on whatever side it is, okay? And that is,
of course the slavery issue. It keeps coming up. You know,
the whole handout thing is getting sorry, We're sorry about
what you're going through. So the government is just gonna
(39:13):
give you a shitload of money here here in Massachusetts.
And by the way, reparations for slavery, I mean, how
many generations go. It's like Rob Scheider said, it's like
giving what did he say, paying child support to a
baby that you never had to a woman that you
never slept with while he used another word.
Speaker 8 (39:32):
But anyway, there you have it.
Speaker 9 (39:36):
Here here in Massachusetts, we have a lunatic governor and
a lunatic mayor in Boston. But we have a lunatic
governor that right now wants to give thirty thousand dollars
to every illegal immigrant family that comes to Massachusetts so
they can buy a home, EBT, cards free, tuition free, everything,
(40:00):
if we ran an even cable TV. She puts in
the list, what is wrong with these people? Okay, here's more,
Scott Jennings.
Speaker 15 (40:09):
Somebody's saying that, my personal view is slavery was a
reprehensible institution. I agree with your words that it was
our original sin. We also fought a war to eradicate
it and to get over it as a country, and
that was a necessary thing that happened, and a lot
of people died and we did eradicate it, and that's
(40:30):
a good thing. I think what he's asking is in
our museums, what defines us? Are we going to be
defined by the worst moment, or the worst institution, or
the worst mistake?
Speaker 21 (40:42):
We ever made, or are we.
Speaker 15 (40:44):
Going to be defined by what we've done moving forward
to get over it and to become the greatest nation
on the earth. My belief is that he wants to
look at these museums not because he wants to do
away with.
Speaker 8 (40:57):
The idea that slavery occurred.
Speaker 15 (40:59):
But that he wants to ask a very simple question,
are we going to present ourselves as being exceptional or not?
And I think he believes there is an effort by
some to continue to try to define us from our
worst moment instead of try to focus and define us
based on our best moments, which started when we eradicated
(41:19):
slavery and began to move forward as the light of
the world.
Speaker 9 (41:22):
Very good, And I've got a cut of Steven Miller
here in a moment where he gets into and I've
been saying this for a while, is the Democratic Party
is no longer a political organization. Well they're a mess
to begin with, but they're just a bunch of crazy activists,
left wing freakin' lunatics, like just b mention with our
(41:46):
governor in Massachusetts. The ideas they come up with. Where
do they get this stuff? But they do? Okay, here
is a White House official Steven Miller. That really lays
it on the line very well.
Speaker 27 (42:02):
The Democrat Party is an extremist organization. Sean, It's not
a political party in any normal sense of the word.
A political party represents Americans, that represents law abiding citizens.
Speaker 7 (42:14):
All you see all day long.
Speaker 27 (42:16):
Are crazy Democrats screeching on TV on behalf of foreign terrorists,
hardened criminals, and violent i legal aliens. A political party
exclusively dedicated to protecting terrorists, criminals, gang bangers, and murderers,
that's what they become. These sanctuary city mayors DOJ's been
(42:36):
very clear.
Speaker 8 (42:38):
They had a.
Speaker 27 (42:38):
Deadline and they violated it. They had a deadline to
comply with federal law and hand over the criminally legal
aliens in their custody, the child rapists, the child predators,
the drug traffickers, the human traffickers. The sanctuary cities like
Boston refused to turn over these menacing threats to public safety,
and so now they faced not only revocation of funds,
(43:01):
not only the loss of taxpayer support, but also potential
criminal charges for harboring and smuggling.
Speaker 8 (43:09):
This is as real as it gets shown.
Speaker 27 (43:11):
The Department of Justice laid out to these mayors, how
they were breaking our laws and they refuse to change
their policy. And Attorney General Bondi is going to see
this thing through to the end.
Speaker 9 (43:22):
And the fundamental question is go up to a liberal
and say to ask them do you want the streets
of all cities around the country to be dangerous or
do you want them to be safer or safe? Whatever
it is it is it is crazy. I remember when
Biden was in office, and remember Binder girl there Korea.
(43:44):
The Press secretary came out and talked about how the
Biden administration was moving towards lessening sentences for individuals in
DC that he committed crimes and.
Speaker 8 (43:57):
It was pretty bad.
Speaker 9 (44:00):
But through it all and Donald Trump gets hit from
every single direction, every every single time. The guy is
a complete survivor and his support remains extremely high.
Speaker 8 (44:17):
Now you guys know who Frank Lunz is.
Speaker 9 (44:19):
Frank Lunz is a Republican political poster and he recently
appeared on sixty Minutes Australia where he talked about what
is it about Donald Trump that just what is it
about him that is able to go through everything he
goes through and accused of almost everything everything and manages
(44:41):
to just walk across the colls.
Speaker 8 (44:43):
Here's Frank Lunz.
Speaker 28 (44:44):
His own voters aren't voting for him because of his character.
His own voters aren't voting for him because he's the
stand up guy. They're voting for him because he'll bring
about the change they want and they need, and frankly
they deserve.
Speaker 5 (45:00):
Look at it this way.
Speaker 28 (45:01):
He was impeached, impeached twice, He was involved in January
sixth for different cases, ninety one felony counts, and.
Speaker 5 (45:12):
He was still elected president.
Speaker 28 (45:15):
Donald Trump is the ultimate survivor, and I expect nothing
different about this current situation. This guy is just a
fucking survivor.
Speaker 9 (45:25):
Prosecutions, assassination attempts, impeachments, I don't know.
Speaker 8 (45:30):
The list is long.
Speaker 9 (45:31):
It goes on and on and on, and this guy
still gets up and does it. And I'm just telling
you right now to end the break like the beginning
of the break, there is no way that Kamala Harris
could ever come close and achieve what this man is achieving.
They say that, They say that even CNN has admitted
(45:51):
has admitted that Donald Trump is the most influential president
of the last one hundred years. Look what he's done
in nine months. Absolutely incredible.
Speaker 8 (46:05):
Love him. Keep up the great work, all right.
Speaker 9 (46:07):
So, like I said at the beginning with Kamala Harris,
oh boy, boy, did we dodge a bullet?
Speaker 8 (46:14):
Be right back.
Speaker 26 (46:15):
I have been in classified briefings that I'm telling you, like,
don't be on the train using your ear pods and
thinking somebody can't listen to your conversation.
Speaker 5 (46:23):
I'm just telling you.
Speaker 26 (46:25):
That's a little bit more secure.
Speaker 9 (46:30):
So, oh Jesus, oh, you kill me, you really do.
Speaker 29 (46:37):
We're not just electing a president. We're uplifting our nation.
We're opening the promise of America wide enough for everyone. Together,
we'd put a lot of cracks in the highest, hardest
glass ceiling. And tonight, tonight so close to breaking through
(47:06):
once and for all. I see freedom from fear and intimidation,
from violence and injustice, from chaos and corruption. I see
the freedom to look our children in the eye and say,
in America, you can go as far as your hard
(47:26):
work and talent will take you, and mean it.
Speaker 30 (47:31):
Good morning. It is five thirty am if you're on
the East coast. It is two thirty am if you're
uplate with us on the West coast. Donald Trump is
on the verge of returning to the White House at
this hour. The former president speaking to supporters earlier this morning,
claiming victory, surrounded by family, telling supporters that they made history.
The NBC decision desk has not yet called the presidency
(47:53):
for Donald Trump, but realistically we can say that Kamala Harris,
the vice president, has no viable path to choose seventy
in terms of Electoral College votes at this point, and.
Speaker 29 (48:03):
The other side of that glass ceiling is Kamala Harris
raising her hand and taking the oath of office as
our farming set president of the United States.
Speaker 13 (48:19):
I have settled up breaking ways.
Speaker 4 (48:26):
Specially and I love I'm even as of.
Speaker 5 (48:33):
Destructions of the.
Speaker 4 (48:47):
Breaking glass.
Speaker 13 (48:56):
I love breaking good.
Speaker 7 (49:10):
Strange standing ground with Jeremy Lahy.
Speaker 8 (49:26):
How's the election made you feel?
Speaker 31 (49:27):
On a scale from one to ten, with ten being
Nazi Nazi not. My name is doctor Nick Peterson, and
I specialize in those suffering from TDS Trump arrangements. Hello,
I'm doctor Peterson.
Speaker 5 (49:42):
How are you well?
Speaker 31 (49:43):
Donald Trump is a felon Nope, I asked how you
were doing. The majority of Americans can mentally handle election
results on both sides.
Speaker 3 (49:51):
Of the aisle.
Speaker 31 (49:52):
However, there's this small, albeit growing group of I don't
want to say Americans.
Speaker 32 (49:57):
But people that are disconnected from reality, fascist.
Speaker 31 (50:02):
And honestly, it makes diagnosing these people a whole lot easier.
I just check their social media. Gone are the days
when you just search your symptoms on web md, even
by yourself. Now they record their symptoms in person them
for the.
Speaker 7 (50:17):
World to see.
Speaker 8 (50:19):
The haircut is also a dead giveaway.
Speaker 31 (50:22):
So what brings you in today?
Speaker 4 (50:24):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (50:24):
I don't know.
Speaker 31 (50:24):
Maybe it's the orange democracy destroying putin love and dictator
all right, so mental illness. They are completely blind to
the fact that their asserted actions and ideologies we're a
big factor in their party's loss. Let me ask you this,
do you even know what democracy is? Follow up question?
(50:45):
Do you know how Kamala Harris became the nominee?
Speaker 32 (50:48):
I know you're a deplorable Nazi fascist bigot okay needs
turns out that calling half the country Nazis for four years,
what's not a winning strategy? And yet somehow not even
CARDIV could save them. Do you realize what I'm going through? Yep, delusions,
(51:10):
I am losing my right to vote on where you
get in your information will be goldberg. Well what's the remedy,
you might be wondering. Well, if you ask me, it's
a history lesson in Jesus. But they pharmacy doesn't offer those.
Speaker 31 (51:23):
I prescribe them a brain and I send them to
trybrain dot com for more information.
Speaker 7 (51:28):
Well, i'll show you.
Speaker 31 (51:30):
I'm moving to Canada. That'd be great, and I'll be
shaving my head.
Speaker 4 (51:33):
Oh that's now.
Speaker 32 (51:35):
And one last thing, I'm going on.
Speaker 13 (51:38):
A sex strike.
Speaker 4 (51:39):
You're a loss.
Speaker 1 (51:42):
Oh no, you're listening to Standing Ground with Jeremy.
Speaker 5 (51:48):
Lady, I'm funny, how I mean funny? Like I'm a clown?
Maybe with you I make you laugh? What do you
mean funny? Funny?
Speaker 3 (51:54):
How?
Speaker 5 (51:54):
How am I funny?
Speaker 22 (52:25):
My wife and I we just went to the door
or the grocery store right by our house just to
buy like junk food and stuff, you know, because we're
really tired, just wanted some sweet treats. And uh, we
were walking down an aisle and there were like two
guys that walked up next to us, you know, Peyton
(52:47):
like walked away and my wife walked away for just
a second, and uh, they were like snickering to their
like to themselves or something, and like, I didn't really
think much of it. So I'm just looking at the candy.
I'll try to decide what candy I want. And he
walks by and gets like inches from me and just
(53:10):
rips one like far like this far from me. That's
disgusting to say. I can't even believe I'm having to
say this, but he did. And about that time, Peyton
walked up like didn't witness what happened, but like seconds later,
and I'm like upset, and I follow after him.
Speaker 5 (53:27):
I was like, is there a reason you were just
so disrespectful to me?
Speaker 4 (53:31):
Please?
Speaker 22 (53:36):
And yeah, never felt so dehumanized.
Speaker 9 (53:43):
Oh dear god, what what has happened to our society people?
Speaker 8 (53:51):
Far now?
Speaker 9 (53:53):
Just to let you know that is not It turns
out that is not a deep fake or someone doing
a a skit or anything like that.
Speaker 8 (54:02):
That is.
Speaker 9 (54:05):
One partner in a gay marriage to too gay women,
two lesbians. And she came home after she was at
the supermarket and she told her whole experience and she
puts this on her Instagram, TikTok whatever, and well, what
she's saying is that she was targeted because she was
a lesbian.
Speaker 8 (54:24):
But we don't.
Speaker 9 (54:25):
We don't know the full story. You know the full story,
but you know whoever it is the you know, the
fart fart zorro or whatever the fart caper.
Speaker 10 (54:35):
Is.
Speaker 9 (54:36):
Look, you've seen videos online of kids going out and
doing this, and they they'll go into a library and
they got like a fart machine or something, you know,
you get it, ha ha, and then to test people's
reactions and then they posted on their YouTube channels or whatever. Well,
she comes home and now she is in need of
(54:56):
major therapy because she's got pe tsd from someone farting
in close proximity. Now, I will say in her defense,
if this happened, it was we don't know if it
was related to her being a lesbian. I kind of
think it wasn't. I think these were just a couple
of obnoxious kids with a camera and a fart machine
(55:18):
or maybe not a fart machine.
Speaker 8 (55:20):
Maybe it was produced el Nachorelle.
Speaker 9 (55:22):
I don't know, but whatever, it's not nice, it's not
it's bad social etiquette, it's mean, it's insensitive. But to
come home like she's been acting like she just came
back from the doctor's office and the doctor told her.
Speaker 8 (55:41):
She's got three weeks to live.
Speaker 9 (55:43):
She was at a supermarket and some guy farted near her.
I think you're gonna be okay, Love, I think you're
gonna be all right. But what it comes down to
is that on on the liberal side, this is what
we are deal with, that they take everything so personally
(56:06):
and so everything is trauma.
Speaker 8 (56:09):
I don't know that it's it's what is it fart trauma?
Speaker 9 (56:12):
Or like I talked about the one with the woman
that got pulled over and the cop asked he if
she has any medical conditions, and she suffers from generational trauma,
meaning like she witnessed on TV January sixth, and therefore
she's got PTSD like my generation saying, you know the
(56:34):
Challenger disaster. You know, I need to claim disability because
I saw that that kind of shit. Get over yourself
and stop being such a baby about it. Okay, the
guys shouldn't have done it, but they were just a
bunch of goofy kids screwing around. But anyway, I got
a kick out of it. And I don't take her
whining or anything like that too seriously. But I end
the show. Wait, what the hell I just thought it was?
Speaker 8 (56:56):
It was very amusing. All right with that, Nice to
be back. I'm Jerman. Dis is Standing Ground. This is
Mojo Fiber Radio. Till next time. Take care.
Speaker 22 (57:03):
I'm just looking at the candy. I'll try to what
candy I want. And he walks by and gets like
inches from me and just rips one like like this
far from me. That's disgusting to say. I can't even
believe I'm having to say this, but he did.
Speaker 4 (57:22):
Step down the streets up everyone.
Speaker 22 (57:55):
In and he walks by and gets like inches from
(58:30):
me and just rips one like far like this far
from me.
Speaker 5 (58:36):
That's disgusting to say.
Speaker 22 (58:37):
I can't even believe I'm having to say this, but
he did.
Speaker 1 (58:41):
Standing Ground has been a production of Lahy Media Set
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