Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
David might be there.
Well, I don't know, they mightsegregate, so being the hands of
the paler variety you'll be inthe special.
You know, darker, the melanatedpogrom.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
Oh for sure, yeah,
they put in all them.
Yeah, you know me and all myother fellow Black and Patriots
will be on the work releaseprogram, where we never get
released, but we do all the workanyway.
Speaker 1 (00:24):
Yeah Well, you know
you'll be picking up trash.
You'll be like over, uh, workno ma'am, we will be.
Yeah, we will not be picking uptrash, we will be picking up
cotton picking up cotton,picking up strawberries, since
there's no more immigrants,you'll be working in the chicken
coops, or maybe that's what thewomen will do.
Maybe we'll be in the sweatshop, the sewing factory yeah
(00:46):
y'all be in the factories.
Making MAGA gear.
Speaker 2 (00:53):
I'm glad we have so
many things to look forward to.
One, two, three, four.
Hey, this is D-Night.
Speaker 4 (00:59):
This is Ty.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
And the Jewish lady
is already in a concentration
camp and you're listening to thepart of the Insurrection
podcast.
I'm kidding.
No, I'm kidding, carol's gotthe night off, but Too soon D
Too soon, God damn.
You're listening to the part ofthe Insurrection podcast where
we voted for the nice black ladywith the pantsuits that were
(01:21):
even more fire than HillaryClinton's, but alas, it wasn't
enough.
Speaker 5 (01:24):
You think it was the
pantsuits.
Speaker 2 (01:27):
Hey, I actually you
know this sounds absurdly
ridiculous, but I feel like ifHillary Clinton had been able to
wear her pantsuits the wayKamala Harris did, she probably
would have won by even a largermargin in 2016.
Yeah, because, yeah, kamala wasout here.
Kamala was out here on fire.
But, in case you somehow missedit, democracy is over.
(01:49):
We reelected the first fascistdictator, the president of the
United States, who's going tobring forth the Fourth Reich and
end it all and possibly startWorld War III.
Hope you all are excited forthe future to come.
This is what you asked for andnow you got it.
But before we get to thediagnosis of everything that
(02:11):
happened here, what the problemis and what the future holds,
we've got a clip from KamalaHarris and what is practically
her concession speech earliertoday.
Practically her concessionspeech earlier today.
Speaker 5 (02:25):
The outcome of this
election is not what we wanted,
not what we fought for, not whatwe voted for, but hear me when
I say, hear me when I say thelight of America's promise will
always burn bright, as long aswe never give up and as long as
(02:56):
we keep fighting.
Speaker 2 (03:03):
Ty, have you ever
fumbled a bad bitch?
Do you know what that feelingis like?
Speaker 1 (03:08):
I have, I'm not even
going to lie, I have.
Oh my God.
Speaker 2 (03:15):
So yeah, in case you
missed it, kamala Harris lost
the election.
Trump has been projected to bethe winner.
All the votes aren't countedyet.
We'll get to be the winner.
All the votes aren't countedyet.
We'll get to that momentarily.
But as it appears currentlyspeaking, donald Trump is on
track to take the White House inJanuary.
He'll be inaugurated and thenit will all be over for
(03:36):
democracy from there.
But over the course of the pastcouple of days, I'm sure if you
watch the results of theelection pour in, you might have
noticed that Trump seeminglyoverperformed with the number of
demographics.
We won't dive too deep downinto the details.
Speaker 1 (03:53):
Yeah, I mean what's
done is done, so I don't want to
go into.
You know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (03:58):
It's just like I'll
talk about that as we wrap up at
the end, but it clearly led tohim slightly overperforming to
some degree with certaindemographics and an electoral
college victory and what appearsto be a popular vote victory in
terms of just.
We'll compare to, you know, thelast two times he's run for
(04:19):
office where he lost a popularvote to the last two times he's
run for office where he lost thepopular vote.
It appears as though he's ontrack to hit somewhere around
the number he hit in 2020, whileKamala Harris is on pace to hit
a number slightly higher thanwhat Hillary Clinton did in 2016
, which was a recipe fordisaster, and disaster struck.
(04:40):
But we have yet another clipfrom Kamala Harris on the state
of America.
Speaker 5 (04:47):
To the young people
who are watching it is I love
you.
To the young people who arewatching it is OK to feel sad
and disappointed, but pleaseknow it's going to be okay.
(05:08):
On the campaign, I would oftensay when we fight, we win.
But here's the thing.
Here's the thing.
Sometimes the fight takes awhile.
That doesn't mean we won't win,mean we won't win.
That doesn't mean we won't win.
The important thing is don'tever give up.
(05:28):
Don't ever give up.
Don't ever stop trying to makethe world a better place.
You have power.
You have power and don't youever listen when anyone tells
(05:51):
you something is impossiblebecause it has never been done
before.
You have the capacity to doextraordinary good in the world,
and so, to everyone who iswatching, do not despair.
This is not a time to throw upour hands.
(06:11):
This is a time to roll up oursleeves.
This is a time to organize, tomobilize and to stay engaged for
the sake of freedom and justiceand the future that we all know
we can build together.
(06:33):
Look, many of you know Istarted out as a prosecutor and
throughout my career I sawpeople at some of the worst
times in their lives, people whohad suffered great harm, some
of the worst times in theirlives, people who had suffered
great harm and great pain andyet found within themselves the
strength and the courage and theresolve to take the stand, to
(06:59):
take a stand to fight forjustice, to fight for themselves
, to fight for others.
So let their courage be ourinspiration, let their
determination be our charge.
(07:22):
And I'll close with this there'san adage, and historian once
called a law of history, true ofevery society across the ages.
The adage is only when it isdark enough can you see the
(07:43):
stars.
I know many people feel like weare entering a dark time, but,
for the benefit of us all, Ihope that is not the case.
But here's the thing, america,if it is, let us fill the sky
with the light of a brilliant,brilliant billion of stars.
(08:07):
The light, the light ofoptimism, of faith, of truth and
service.
Speaker 1 (08:33):
All right, we missed
out on one of the best women.
We fucked up, okay, yeah, she'sincredible, just the, the sheer
, the class, the dignity, whichwhat she carries herself is so
incredibly.
And of course, she could havejumped up and down and oh, this
is you know and gone down thatroad, but she cares about
(08:54):
America too much for that.
She's like, okay, let themwhatever, but we're gonna, as
she said, roll up our sleeves.
This is not the time to throwup our hands, but to roll up our
sleeves.
That petty motherfucker justdragged this out like he.
There's nothing in him.
I mean, jeffrey epstein said hehas no moral compass.
(09:16):
Yeah, you know, I hate that ifthe biggest pedophile on the
planet is like so there'ssomething wrong with you.
Speaker 2 (09:22):
Yeah, like the
biggest pedophile on the planet
is like there's something wrongwith you.
Yeah, the biggest pedophile onthe planet was like hey, man,
something's wrong with this guyyeah, and we voted for that.
Well, not we, they voted forthat over one of the.
Again, they chose that over oneof the greatest women of our
generation for the second time,yeah.
(09:45):
But so just one thing I wantedto highlight from what you said.
There is that only in thedarkest of times can you see the
stars.
Well, we're about to enter thedarkest of times in American
history, at least since theCivil War.
So you know, be prepared forthat.
I know that's not what a lot ofpeople want to hear.
I apologize to you for tellingyou the truth, but that's the
(10:08):
reality is the situation we'rein.
We're about to get facing.
We'll have another podcastabout just exactly how dark it's
going to get.
I'm going to dive into that infairly specific detail for you,
but you know I'm sure you'realready down enough as it is.
You'll save that for next time.
Specific detail for you, butyou know I'm sure you're already
down enough as it is.
We'll save that for next timeUnderstatement.
(10:30):
Dean.
Yeah, but you know, just forcomparison's sake, you could
have had that.
And here's a candidate.
Oh God, I haven't seen thiseither.
We got instead.
This is the level of genius ofthe candidate who actually won
the election.
Yes, ordinarily unsurprising.
Speaker 4 (10:50):
And hopefully they'll
be able to get these expensive
computers going.
The reason you use computers isto make time, so that it's like
fast.
You don't use them so that youhave to come up with an answer
three days later and that's alittle scary when they say what
are they doing.
You use a computer because itcalculates quickly and you use
(11:11):
paper because you save costs.
But the paper turns out to bemuch quicker than the computer.
There's something wrong withthat, so we don't like that.
Speaker 2 (11:22):
You use computers to
make time.
Yeah, thanks guys.
You use computers to make time?
Yeah, thanks guys.
Um, appreciate you signing usup for four more years of that,
that'll be exciting.
I mean the guy from drip,basically you know, practice for
his future job at mcdonald's oras a garbage man, considering
he couldn couldn't handleMcDonald's man there's too many
(11:45):
buttons and shit Not qualifiedto do either.
And yet he's going to be thepresident of the United States.
And if you're wondering how wegot there, well, I have the
perfect encapsulation of themedian voter in America, and it
pretty much explains everything.
Speaker 6 (12:03):
And I like that.
He didn't actually plan to banabortion, he just brought it
back to the States.
Speaker 2 (12:10):
All right.
So this is the unfortunatesituation that we're in in
America, where, generallyspeaking, half the population is
so dumb that they don'tunderstand that there was no
abortion ban whatsoeverpreviously, at least up to the
point of viability, and then atthat point it was a decision
(12:34):
made solely based on the healthof the mother.
And now in numerous states,including most of the former
Confederates well, all of theconfederate states minus maybe a
couple, of access to abortionand health care in that regard
is nearly impossible to get.
So congratulations, uh, to, toall of the idiots.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
My cousin graduated
from there and she got in and
(13:19):
she doesn't.
She doesn't.
Speaker 2 (13:21):
Well, she got in, but
she clearly hasn't gotten her
degree yet, otherwise you'd beat a point where she could
understand the faulty logicthere.
But yes, so numerous states hadabortion on the ballot.
In terms of stateconstitutional amendments, a
number of well, I think all ofthem in large part voted
(13:42):
majority in favor of access toabortion rights.
Florida had this quirky littlekink where Republicans rigged
those ballot measures in orderto make sure they didn't pass by
requiring a 60% minimumthreshold.
I think they reached somethinglike 55%.
56% in Florida.
(14:07):
So just short.
Yes, 43% of the populationensured the lack of access to
abortion rights in Florida.
For all Floridians, that's likethe total opposite of democracy
.
It's very similar to thefilibuster in the Senate in that
regard, but you don't have toworry about the filibuster in
the Senate for much longer,because I'm absolutely sure
(14:27):
Republicans are going to abolishthat.
The second.
They take control of the Senateand the White House.
Beyond, just beyond thedisappointing fashion of which
you know, American voters haveshown themselves to be
unreliable in making sounddecisions.
Here's a little taste of whatyou're going to get from future
(14:51):
Trump administration staff.
In this particular instance,RFK Jr.
Oh geez.
Speaker 7 (14:58):
You say clearing out
the corruption.
In your terms, would that meanclearing out the top level
federal service workers?
That mean clearing out thetop-level federal service
workers.
Speaker 3 (15:05):
That Currently at the
FDA and CDC, some categories I
would say.
What does that look like?
Yeah, in some categories ofworkers, their entire
departments, like the nutritiondepartments, that FDA that are,
that have to go, that are arenot doing their job.
They're not protecting our kids.
Why do we have Froot Loops inthis country that have 18 or 19
(15:28):
ingredients and you go to Canadaand it's got two or three?
Would you eliminate any of theagencies?
To eliminate the agencies, aslong as it requires
congressional approval, Iwouldn't be doing that.
But I can get the corruptionout of the agencies.
That's what I've been doing for40 years.
I've sued all those agencies.
(15:49):
I have a PhD in corporatecorruption and that's what I do.
And once they're not corrupt,once Americans are getting good
science and are allowed to maketheir own choices, they're going
to get a lot of help.
Speaker 1 (15:59):
Great, we're going to
let, but you make your own
choice when you go to thefucking grocery store.
I don't buy Fruit Loops well,congratulations, america.
Speaker 2 (16:07):
Now you've got a
former hero and addict making
choices about your health andhe's going to fire and he's
planning to fire everyone at theFDA.
We're all going to die.
And if you think that'sabsolutely moronic, I mean
obviously I couldn't possiblydisappoint you by showing you
(16:28):
it's worse than you couldpossibly imagine.
Speaker 3 (16:32):
The vaccines were not
going to protect against
transmission, because I wasactually reading the monkey
studies, but you would not havetold the FDA to block the
authorization.
I would have been honest withthe American people and so you
wouldn't have blocked it.
I would have been honest withthe American people, so you
wouldn't have blocked it.
I wouldn't have directlyblocked it.
(16:53):
I would have made sure that wehad the best science and there
was no effort to do that at thattime.
Speaker 7 (16:58):
And if there was
another pandemic that were to
strike, why should the Americanpublic have confidence that you
would allow a vaccine to be madeavailable through the market,
even if it's an emergency.
Speaker 3 (17:08):
Let me point this out
.
They should not have confidencein the people who are managing
our pandemic.
We have the worst record of anycountry in the world.
So we had 16 percent of theCOVID deaths in the United
States of America.
We only had 4.2% of the globe'spopulation.
So whatever we were doing inthis country was the worst of
(17:31):
every country in the world.
Speaker 2 (17:32):
So in order to do
that, you say that is your
former future health czar,telling you that the United
States had the worst COVIDoutcomes in the entire world,
and he will solve that byensuring that we didn't get
vaccines.
We're all going to die, ty.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
We're all going to
die my brain.
I think I got his worm, or?
Speaker 7 (17:59):
what was left of it.
Speaker 2 (18:03):
Yes, we're going to
have a hell czar whose brain was
eaten by a worm, like somethingout of a scene from Dune it's.
It's incredible, man.
I just look, man.
This is what the Americanpeople chose and this is the
future we're all going to besubject to, and I hope that it's
.
Speaker 1 (18:23):
They fucked around
and now we have to find out.
Speaker 2 (18:24):
Yes, we're in the
find out phase of the American
experiment that we formerlycalled democracy, but it is what
it is, because they were asingle-issue voter, and that
single issue revolved around thefate of Palestinians in this
(18:48):
war in Gaza.
Well, I have a little presentfor you.
Speaker 4 (18:53):
President, we will
deport the foreign jihad
sympathizers and we will deportthem very quickly, and Hamas
supporters will be gone.
We will remove the jihadistsympathizers and Jew haters.
We're going to remove the Jewhaters who do nothing to help
our country.
They only want to destroy ourcountry and we will never let
(19:16):
the horrors of October 7th berepeated here on American soil.
We will not let that happen.
Unlike liberal Kamala, I willsupport Israel's right to win
its war on terror.
You will not let that happen.
Unlike liberal Kamala, I willsupport Israel's right to win
its war on terror.
You have to support that.
Got to win, Got to finish itall.
And instead of pandering to thejihad sympathizers and
America-hating radicals, we willdeport them.
(19:38):
We will deport them veryquickly.
Speaker 2 (19:42):
Yeah, so everyone
whose sole issue was free
Palestine congratulations.
You're going to be joining themin Gaza.
It was nice knowing your buddy.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
Which he plans on
letting Bibi wipe off the map.
So thank God they haveprinciples.
Speaker 2 (19:57):
Yep Sayonara to all
you watermelons out there.
It's unfortunate.
I'm going to miss you guys.
You guys were the worst thingthat ever happened to the left.
I hate you fuckers.
Even though president biden wasthe only individual responsible
for any sort of ceasefirebetween israel and hamas yeah,
and trump stopped it and theyignored.
Speaker 1 (20:19):
See, that's the thing
that kills me is that this
information is information thatwas out there and they weren't
even hiding shit.
But Trump knew that his base,he could say something and then
just put out a truth or tweetand say the exact opposite five
minutes after he said out loudthe opposite, and then they
(20:41):
would go with that versus andit's it, it's.
I'm just tired of thembullshitting devoted for him
because he's racist, just likefucking you.
Speaker 2 (20:51):
That's it, yep I mean
that's if ands are both out,
it's no, that's it and, ofcourse, jared kushner, future
middle east peace czar, willcreate peace in the middle east,
uh, by annihilating everyPalestinian and turning Gaza
into beachfront property andbuilding condos on their graves.
Yeah, congratulations, patyourselves on the back, guys,
(21:15):
you did it.
So obviously, again dark timesare ahead.
Obviously, again dark times areahead.
I'm sure everyone listening tothis podcast in all likelihood
is extraordinarily downtrodden,and I can't blame you for that.
If you want to give up on life,it's totally understandable.
I won't try and stop you, butof course, we here on this
(21:37):
podcast will not be giving upthe fight.
Obviously, you know Trump isgoing to do horrific things.
Starting on day one, I imaginehe will be organizing the
National Guard, in some regardat least, from red states in
order to round up numerousHispanic, muslim, et cetera,
people and having them placed insome sort of concentration camp
(22:00):
style accommodations.
I would imagine that's going tobe horrifying for a lot of
American people who didn'tactually take him seriously.
Well, you're going to quicklywake up to the consequences of
your decisions to either votefor Trump or to not vote at all,
and you know, just again,consequences of your actions.
Speaker 1 (22:24):
Elections have
consequences and this one is
going to be huge, not just forus but for the world.
But if I can just have one wish, it is that mexico closes their
border and bans ted cruz nomore can't go.
Speaker 7 (22:39):
That would give me
joy that would give me joy.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
Every single maga
that likes to go go to Mexico
for dental care after they votefor the people that deny them
having dental care here.
No, do they not realize thatclosing a border, that shit
works both motherfucking ways?
Do they not understand thatthose prescriptions they go over
there to get for cheap, notunderstand that those
(23:05):
prescriptions they go over thereto get for cheap?
And so, okay, you think thatyou're going to pop over there
and get your birth controlbecause you live on the border?
If they, you know, ban it here.
No bitch.
No birth control for you.
No, you know, since trump saysthat he wants to, uh, anybody
that wants to come to thiscountry.
They have to pass a patriotismand ideological test.
Well, I think the othercountries should do the same.
Who did you vote for Trump?
(23:27):
Yeah, no, give them the CandaceOwens treatment all day, every
motherfucking day.
Kick the motherfuckers out thatare down there in Mexico City
causing problems, going downthere, ramping up the drug war
and shit in in uh cancun becausethey're they're trying to buy
cocaine.
(23:47):
Then they got a drug turf wargoing on like just get, get,
just get rid of them all.
I mean, I love mexico to death,but I would gladly just to see
them suffer.
Speaker 2 (23:58):
Right now I'm feeling
that motherfucking petty oh, it
is what it is, um so they'regonna need that dental care with
no fluoride thank you, rfk jr.
Yeah, you're gonna make sure allof your supporters lose the
rest of their teeth.
Um, so, quick diagnostic hereon what went wrong in the 2024
(24:18):
election for the, the harriscampaign.
I know a lot of people outthere are going to be digging in
the numbers and demographics in, like county by county changes
from 2020 to 2024, and trying tocome up with, you know, reasons
why the Harris campaign failedor didn't reach a certain
demographic of voters or whythey are seemingly out of touch
(24:42):
with the American electorate.
They are not.
Kamala Harris was a fantasticcandidate.
She ran an awesome campaign.
She did not fail us, we failedher.
And what?
What really happened here?
Just to sum it up in four quickpoints three of them I will I
will handle myself.
The fourth I will I will sendover to Rachel Maddow for you.
(25:02):
So first of all, white women.
Of course, let us down again.
They voted for Trump in amajority for the third straight
election in a row, despite thefact that the Trump
administration policies areobviously against their interest
, or at least that's the way itseems on the surface.
(25:24):
Of course, you know there's apoint at which you have to
understand that a majority ofwhite women in this country are
going to regularly choosewhiteness over womanhood.
So that was.
That was one failure on theirpart.
Also, latinos, generallyspeaking, are assuming that the
(25:44):
racism won't come for themspecifically, but they're fine.
It's fine, it's okay if it'sthe other latino parts of the
population or the afro latinos.
Speaker 1 (25:54):
uh, like, you know,
like puerto ricans or this, you
know the cubans and some of theyou know mexicans.
They think that they have aproximity to whiteness?
Now, motherfucker, becausethey're gonna see your last name
first and that's going to beall.
They think that they have aproximity to whiteness?
No, motherfucker, becausethey're going to see your last
name first and that's going tobe all they need, and they don't
care about collateral damage.
They don't care about.
Oh well, you supported us, yeah, but we just can't take that
chance.
Speaker 2 (26:14):
And if you think,
because you're a naturalized
citizen, that that's going tobail you out, I've got news for
you Trump doesn't care whetheryou're a citizen or not and,
with absolute immunity, there'snothing that can be done to stop
him from sending you out of thecountry.
So good luck to you.
I'll be rooting for you outthere in Mexico, colombia,
wherever you'll end up.
Good luck to you.
(26:35):
And then, third and final well,at least on my part, third here
.
So there's a psychologicalhurdle that comes with people
voting for someone they nevervoted before.
And you took an extraordinarilysuccessful presidential Well,
extraordinarily successfulpresident who won 81 million
(26:56):
votes in America more than anyother presidential candidate has
ever gotten in the history ofAmerican elections and you
stabbed him in the back and youkicked him off the ballot and
there was absolutely no one thatyou could have replaced him
with, especially three monthsbefore a presidential election
that could have won thiselection, when people also have
(27:16):
just like.
There is a lack of frictionwhen it comes to voting for
someone you just previouslyvoted for and Trump voters
previously voted for, and Trumpvoters have voted for him in two
previous elections and he wason the ballot, and they're just
used to voting for Trump, andit's just.
You know there's.
It would be too much frictionto not press the Trump button.
On the other hand, forDemocrats, we just voted for
(27:38):
President Biden.
A lot of people were expectinghim to be on the ballot for
three and a half years,no-transcript.
(28:14):
All of a sudden just gotmassive votes go back to a woman
.
Similar performance is 2016.
There's a pattern there.
You don't have to look too deepinto this.
These are the things thathappen.
And then, of course, there'salso the fact that in 2020,
there were 81 million votes castfor President Biden, and in
2024, it looks as though KamalaHarris is going to get 10 or 11
(28:38):
million votes less than DonaldTrump.
We were supposedly going onpace for record turnout.
I don't know where 13, 14, 15million votes disappeared to.
You can speculate about that ifyou'd like.
I'm not a conspiracy theoristper se.
I'm absolutely sure there wassome foul play involved, just in
(29:00):
terms of voter suppression, butthat's nothing new.
Republicans have been doingthat for the past three
elections, so you know who knowswhy that number was, why
there's such a discrepancy withthat number.
But we'll have Rachel Maddowgive you something to think
about in terms of well, why thiselection might possibly have
(29:21):
gone awry.
Speaker 6 (29:22):
Well, why this
election might possibly have
gone awry, and I like that hedidn't actually plan to ban
abortion.
Speaker 2 (29:29):
He just brought.
Oops, that was the wrong video.
Let me try that one more time.
Speaker 7 (29:38):
But let me also point
out something more strange
which has been happening at thesame time and hasn't had as much
attention.
The day before Trump made thoseremarks on Friday, on Friday,
he said you're never going tohave to vote again after you
vote for me this one time.
The day before that, onThursday last week, he didn't
(29:59):
say that people wouldn't have tovote anymore once he was
elected this November.
Now, the day before that onThursday, he told his supporters
not that they're not going tohave to vote again, but that
they don't have to vote thistime, that they don't need to
vote for him this November.
Speaker 4 (30:23):
My instruction.
We don't need the votes.
Speaker 7 (30:24):
I have so many votes.
My instruction we don't needthe votes.
I have so many votes.
He said that on Thursday lastweek and it turns out this is
something when you look.
He says this all the time now,but my instruction.
Speaker 4 (30:39):
We don't need the
votes.
I have so many votes, we don'tneed votes.
I tell my people I don't needany votes.
We got all the votes we need.
I don't need votes.
We don't need votes.
We got more votes thananybody's ever had.
You don't have to vote.
Don't worry about voting, thevoting we got plenty of votes.
Speaker 7 (30:55):
Don't worry about
voting.
Speaker 4 (30:57):
Don't worry about
voting.
Speaker 7 (30:59):
Of all the weirdness
around this campaign, this is a
truly strange thing to tellpeople right, don't vote, I
don't need your vote, I don'twant your vote.
I mean all the surface levelweirdness is, you know, worth
noting.
Having a new position onliterally anything you can think
of as soon as any random richguy tells you to, that's a weird
(31:19):
thing.
Picking the eccentricbillionaire's intern for your
running mate, even though youapparently had no idea who he
was or what a disaster he is ontelevision, all of this is weird
.
But telling voters, do notbother to vote for me, it
doesn't matter if you do, Idon't need your votes that is a
thing that should prick up yourears, because what that means is
(31:40):
that he doesn't think he needsto win the vote to win the
election.
He doesn't think he needs towin the election in order to
take power.
He thinks something other thanvotes is going to determine
whether or not he gets back inthe White House so Rachel Maddow
(32:03):
has a point there.
Speaker 2 (32:03):
in an election where
we were projected to have record
turnout and you know we were onpace to something close to 2020
with the early vote and recordin-person voting somehow we
ended up with nearly 12, 13, 14million fewer votes than the
2020 election.
I don't know how that'spossible.
You you can ask all thequestions you want.
I suggest you hop online if youvoted in a swing state, and
(32:24):
track your vote and see if it'sbeen accepted or counted at this
point.
If you voted by mail early,that would be my suggestion, but
we've got a couple of weekshere before elections are
certified in these states tofigure out what it is exactly
that was going on there.
But yes, it's extraordinarilystrange that Donald Trump, for
(32:46):
weeks and weeks, decided to tellhis voters not to vote, that he
already had the votes, hedoesn't need any more votes Not
that they wouldn't ever have tovote again, but specifically
this election.
Speaker 1 (32:58):
Yeah.
That's true, yeah, so, yeah, ty,I'll uh, let you give us your
closing thoughts yeah, um,because the republicans and maga
, for the past four years, havejust took the whole stolen
(33:18):
election thing and and like, ranit over with a truck, buried it
, dug it up, backed over itagain, like it.
It's not something we canreally say in that way.
And the lack of intelligenceamong so many people.
(33:45):
It's like we tried to get themto understand when he would say
these things, but the mediawould just not amplify it.
They wouldn't say it in thereal time.
To where anything that we wouldtry to say?
Now they're like oh, where areyou getting this from?
Well, we've been saying thisfor like a year but because
(34:06):
legacy media let us down.
They were complicit.
They wanted to Shane, shane,washed Trump, because they
wanted to turn this into a racebetween two quote unquote normal
candidates, when it wasn't sothat they could drive ratings
and oh, oh, it's a nail biterthis, that or the other, and
they would gloss over or justignore all together these things
(34:26):
that he was saying.
That was putting us on alertthat if people had had that
knowledge and they would couldsit back and say you know, a
minute this motherfucker wassaying this for this long and
this, that and the other aboutthe votes, and you know you only
have to vote this one time andthen to say, oh, we got the,
(34:49):
which he started saying a whileback, you know.
So I don't know.
I don't really know how we'regoing to combat this.
But my main concern is that sheinspired so many new voters.
She inspired so many people andI feel like they are going to
fall into the apathy categoryand they're not going to want to
(35:12):
.
It's like your first love tobreak your heart and you don't
want to love again.
I feel like this election isgoing to be that for them.
So even when somebody comesaround that inspires that again
in them, they're going tohesitate and they're not going
to want to take a bite of thatapple again, which is what they
(35:33):
wanted.
They wanted to do that, which iswhat they've been doing to
Black people for years.
And Jeremy London had did apost and it really made me cry
where he said he was inMississippi, there were these
three Black guys and he was like, yeah, either he was going or
coming from voting for KamalaHarris and he goes, and they
gave him a look like why are youvoting why?
But not because, like why areyou voting for her?
(35:55):
But why are you voting at atall?
And that he could see in themjust the that they had just
given up, like what's the point?
And that's what they have, andmississippi has the largest
black voting population in thecountry, but that's what they
have done to us for you and theywere fine with that.
Speaker 2 (36:14):
yeah, if every black
person in mississippi voted, and
then the white population votedlike the west rest of the
country mississippi voted.
Speaker 1 (36:18):
And then the white
population voted like the west
rest of the country, mississippiwould be a blue state it would
be a blue state and louisianatoo yeah because, louisiana, I
was watching this tiktok and theguy that was talking, he was
saying that because at first itcame out gangbusters and then
all of a sudden it juststagnated.
(36:39):
And then all these republicanvoters and he goes there's still
like 500 000 black folks thatare eligible and they have not,
that are registered and theyhaven't voted yet, you know.
And so that breakdown of thatmental fuckery is is what
(37:00):
they've done.
And so now how are?
How are we going to get them?
You know, these young people,because the older people, they,
you know, they've been fightingforever but they're already
facing so much.
That's just been fucking themleft and right in every aspect,
(37:23):
from education to jobs, finances, the ability to own a home,
move forward.
Their health is in danger,reproductive rights being taken
away, but kamala gave them hopethat she could give that back to
them and to see what we were upagainst.
Like, are they going to fallinto that category of those
(37:46):
three black guys in Mississippiwhere they just are like what's
the point?
And that I know that.
Well, what's the point is thatwas exactly the point of the
Republicans.
They wanted to take that so youdon't ever find that fire again
.
Speaker 2 (38:03):
They spent.
Mississippi specifically spentso much time making it nearly
impossible for Black people tovote that, even though they have
the largest Black population,is one of the reddest states in
terms of elected officials inthe country.
And now they've killed offpeople's will to show up to the
polls and you know you give yourrights away.
(38:23):
It's nearly impossible to getthem back.
So what we've got coming for usin 2025 is going to be one of
the most horrific experiencesmost Americans alive have ever
seen.
As we get further and furtheraway from the civil rights era,
the 50s and 60s, fewer peoplehave seen the atrocities that
(38:46):
this country has afflicted uponminorities and underrepresented
groups like the LGBT community,the Jewish population.
They stay extraordinarily closeto their heritage and their
predecessors' experiences inEurope from, you know, the last
(39:07):
90 years.
They're slightly more in tunewith that than you know.
Unfortunately, some of us Blackpeople are here in America, but
especially far more in tunewith what history could provide
for us, should we choose toignore all of the warning signs,
than absolutely every whiteAmerican here in the United
States.
But I got to tell you so justfor a refresher.
(39:31):
You know Hitler attempted a coup.
You know the Beer Hall fire.
It went poorly for him.
He ended up getting convicted,received a five-year prison
sentence.
I think they let him out afternine months because they didn't
take it seriously enough.
And by the time, you know, 1933came around, he had amassed
(39:52):
enough support and power and agame plan based on his
experiences from his firstfailed coup on how to take over
the government by winning with aminority of the vote.
And the Nazi party never lookedback.
Well, not until you know WorldWar II, the massive
extermination of the Jewishpopulation in Europe.
(40:13):
But you know people keeptelling us that.
You know that'll never happenin the United States.
Well, at that point in time noone had ever considered the
possibility of it happening inGermany.
You know Germany was one of theyoungest democracies in Europe
and you see how horribly a riotwent there, blaming immigrants
(40:33):
and, you know underrepresentedpeople for all of the country's
problems.
You know underrepresentedpeople for all of the country's
problems and blaming them forthe economic turmoil in the
country, even though largely theeconomic turmoil in 1920s and
30s Germany was beingexperienced by most of the world
and not unlike this issue ofinflation the world is dealing
(40:54):
with now.
And it was also largely in partdue to just the allied powers
from World War One not settingup Germany in a position to be
economically sustainable, andthat is just a recipe right for
disaster.
Even though Biden did his bestin America, he's got a booming
(41:16):
economy, job market numberswe've not seen in our lifetimes.
People, just at this point,ignore facts and go with
feelings, and Trump tookadvantage of that and now he's
on a position to bring us intothe Fourth Reich.
(41:37):
So I know people don't take himseriously about his plan to
deport people.
You know, start the massdeportations on day one.
He's absolutely going to dothat.
He's going to hollow out theJustice Department.
You know Jack Smith at thispoint is looking at how to wrap
up the criminal prosecutionsagainst Donald Trump before he
takes office in January.
So he's not going to be heldaccountable for his attempt to
overthrow the government, thestealing of classified
(41:58):
information, even though JackSmith revealed to us that he
knew what Trump's motivation was.
In that regard, it matters not.
Because Trump won the election,the Supreme Court is likely not
going to let him be sentencedto prison, regardless of what
happens in New York here laterin November.
So he basically got away withshooting people in the middle of
(42:21):
Fifth Avenue and he got morevotes than he did the last time.
And I know if you're watchingthis, you're probably
downtrodden and distraught andyou're wondering how we're going
to survive the next four years.
If we'll have the opportunityto win in 2028, I would say
likely not, and that's if we'relucky enough to have an election
in 2028.
So what is there to do?
I would say I hope that it'sbad enough under the course of
(42:45):
the Trump administration earlyenough that it wakes up a lot of
Americans so that we decide tojust have him removed from
office in this nightmare.
And hopefully it's bad enough,but not so bad, that we don't
completely lose our democracybefore Trump is out of office.
(43:06):
We're going to be here fightingto make sure that doesn't
happen every day.
You can't rely on themainstream media at this point.
You've seen what they've doneover the past decade to enable
them and see what they're doingnow after the election
absolutely.
They're absolutely normalizing.
Speaker 1 (43:20):
They're taking no
responsibility.
Speaker 2 (43:22):
None whatsoever,
pointing the blame at everyone
but themselves.
So you can't rely on themainstream media to protect you.
They've already decided they'regoing to roll over and give up.
So you have to support yourindependent media at this point.
There's us here on part of theinsurrection.
There's my guy, tony Michaels.
There's the Minus Touch Networkmy boys over there Shout out to
(43:45):
Ben.
There's the Moleshe RoadNetwork.
Shout out to AG Go, subscribeto all of your people that are
out here fighting the good fightand doing it with the least
amount of financial support.
We don't have billions ofdollars behind us, like you know
, msnbc or the Washington Postor the New York Times but at the
(44:08):
very least we come here, we tryand give you the facts, we try
and tell you the truth, we trynot to sugarcoat it, but we try
to make it digestible for you inevery way possible, and we're
going to continue to do that,digestible for you in every way
possible, and we're going tocontinue to do that until Trump
is sworn in and even beyond.
And look, trump doesn't planahead, he's impulsive, he's
(44:28):
extraordinarily stupid.
So of course he's going to makesome mistakes and there will be
an opportunity to capitalize onthem if we're already
unprepared, and we plan to be inthat position.
As long as you help us do that,make sure you share this
podcast with your friends.
Subscribe to us on your youknow, your audio services.
Subscribe to us on youtube, ifyou haven't done that already.
(44:50):
Make sure you send this podcastto everyone you know, because
we're going to be fighting fordemocracy where no one else is.
Speaker 1 (44:57):
I'm not going
anywhere until I'm taken away
and put in a potato sack.
So I will be here because I Idon't feel we have a choice at
this point?
we absolutely don't.
We don't.
We absolutely don't, becauseright now I am fighting for my
lgbtq plus daughter's survival.
I'm fighting for Christopher'ssurvival.
(45:18):
I am fighting for my own and Iwill do everything I can until
the fucking day I croak I hopeit's later rather than sooner.
Rest in peace, knowing that mychildren have a chance at a
(45:44):
better future and are going tobe safe in this country.
You know, I, I, just I reallyI'm not gonna say I don't know
if saying that like I'm morefired up than ever is the right
way, but it really has.
Like I, I don't know, I, I Icalled resolve.
(46:07):
Ty, you have resolve I needclosure, man, I need closure, I
need, I need, I don't know, youknow we're gonna get it.
Speaker 2 (46:16):
And if it's any
consolation to you all out there
, he's going to die within ourlif.
If it's any consolation to youall out there, he's going to die
within our lifetimes.
No-transcript.