Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to the Jonathan and Kelly Show. Jonathan Rush, But
as it pertains to the neighborhood that I'm raising my
family and my wife and I you know, it is
one of the most violent neighborhoods in the entire city.
Kelly Nash. You know this might sound a little heavy handed,
or maybe perhaps a little bit of audacious, but I
would argue though, that no one thinks about public safety
(00:20):
more than I do. Jonathan and Kelly Show, it's fascinated
with Democrats speak because they got like a million That
was only thirty seconds worth of talking. I got thirty
more questions. Number one, how's your wife feel about you
as the mayor living in the most crime ridden area
of the city.
Speaker 2 (00:39):
Did you choose it specifically because it was the most
crime Did you ask your realtor to bring me here?
Speaker 1 (00:44):
And you're saying to yourself, I know this is one
of the reasons why South Carolina so saw it. After Hey,
I want to raise a family, where's the most crime
ridden area I could possibly raise them in. How do
you kids feel about it?
Speaker 2 (00:57):
Well, it seems like they love it, right, I mean, otherwise,
why why else would he be fighting the National Guard?
We don't want him here. Right I'm in the most
crime ridden You're going to ruin it.
Speaker 1 (01:08):
And I have no doubt, sir that, because you do
live in the most crime ridden part of the city
of Chicago, that no one thinks about public safety more
than you. Because you're probably wondering will I be able
to walk out of my front door and make it
all the way to my car without getting my ass shot?
Speaker 2 (01:26):
And he said, this is going to come off as
heavy handed.
Speaker 1 (01:29):
Come off a little heavy handed.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
What are you talking? Do you understand what the words
mean that you're bringing out of your mouth?
Speaker 1 (01:34):
That was question number twenty seven. Do you when you
say this might come off a little heavy handed, do
you understand what that term means? See, I have more
cut every time they speak, I have more questions. I
can't even watch him as NBC without having to stop
and write down questions I have. If I ever have
an opportunity to speak with the man who has the
(01:54):
strangest haircut of any mare in America. He looks like
he was just born. It looks like his hair just
came out of the Plato Factory of life, because he's
got that little swoosh at the top.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
I'm good at gardening because I have a lead foot.
That's the kind of statement.
Speaker 1 (02:12):
I don't. And that's suppose that's what leadership looks like.
Speaker 2 (02:18):
Greatest freaking city in the world.
Speaker 1 (02:20):
He must be smart because when he talks, we have
no faing idea what he's saying above us.
Speaker 2 (02:26):
We just not long and act like you know.
Speaker 1 (02:30):
So now we got and then are one of our
favorite senators from Illinois yesterday was admonishing our favorite President
Donald Trump. Now it sounded like Dick Durbin was actually
asking to build a wall.
Speaker 2 (02:46):
Big Dick wants a wall.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
Around the entire state of Illinois, because he said, we
got to stop these guns from coming into our state
from states like Indiana.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
I mean, that has been the constant theme from Chicago
and just liberal mayors in general, but specifically Chicago, is
that there is the what they call liberal gun laws,
which are actually we just allow the Second Amendment to
work in Indiana. So Indiana, Now that's why we have
(03:18):
a crime problem in Chicago. Is Indiana sells guns. Why
doesn't Indiana have a crime problem. Is there a reason Indiana,
the source of the guns, doesn't have a crime problem.
Speaker 1 (03:29):
Is it because they took all the guns out of
Indiana and it moved them to Chicago.
Speaker 2 (03:33):
Why don't the suburbs of Chicago have a crime problem?
Why is it only Chicago. They've never been able to
answer that.
Speaker 1 (03:41):
I don't know. What is it like in Champagne? Is
it nice in Champagne?
Speaker 2 (03:44):
I've never been.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
But it's got a great name, isn't that the state capital?
Probably the only reason I would know there was a Champagne,
Illinois because it was part of a test in the
third grade. Name all the capitals. I believe it's Champagne, Illinois.
Speaker 2 (03:56):
Could be I'm not going to say it's not.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
I think that's the case. That's where Pritzker lives, right JB.
Speaker 2 (04:03):
Fa. I don't know where Fa Pritzker lives. Whatever he
lives in.
Speaker 1 (04:07):
It's where the governor's mansion would be, right.
Speaker 2 (04:10):
Oh, do you think he lives in the governor's mansion?
I thought that that would be a step down, wouldn't it.
That's what I'm thinking. I mean, Pritzker is a billionaire
because was it his grandparents who launched the what was
the hotel chain, the Hyatt?
Speaker 1 (04:25):
The Hyatt?
Speaker 2 (04:25):
So they own the Hyatt, and so him and his Well,
then he's got is is it his brother who became
his sister, or his uncle who became his aunt, or
somebody who looked just like JB. Pritzker.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
Yeah, whatever, I just know this and the end of it,
he was his own uncle, which takes us back to
a country song from nineteen eighteen. Oh my gosh. Okay,
hold on, we have those questions, and now we have
I have other questions. Maybe Kelly can help me with
with a first amendment get into some of that coming
(05:01):
up here. But first look, it's the double Secret probationary
hotline ringing, Kelly Nash. Well, come on the phone. Our
State Attorney General, Alan Wilson.
Speaker 3 (05:11):
Good morning, Good morning.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
You know, I know your office has like sixty employees
and you need it, probably need more because we've always
got some battle going on, and in this case i'm interested.
Well i'll tell you what. Let's just start at the beginning.
So there was a ruling that you issued, actually you
reaffirmed yesterday for state employees.
Speaker 2 (05:28):
Well, this is an opinion that you wrote to support
one of the legislators who is basically trying to rewrite
the law to make it crystal clear that when we'd
say paid parental leave. What we we still include people
who had stillbirths?
Speaker 3 (05:43):
Correct, that is correct. The question to us was posed,
as you know, do the parents of stillborn children, you know,
children who you know you delivered a child who is
deceased receive the same paid leave benefits as parents who
deliver a live birth child. And the legislature does not
exclude still birth children. And they while they do not
(06:04):
exclude them, we felt that there should be more clarification
that we felt that the law would cover the parents
to go through that very, very traumatic event. So the
opinion is not binding, but it is instructive and we
believe that it should cover people who receive this paid
benefits going through something traumatic like that.
Speaker 1 (06:23):
Now, what is not identified in the article and I'm
hoping someone will identify what school district in the state
of South Carolina by guy decided that because the child
was still born of a teacher, they're going to make
the teacher come back to work the next day. Who
is that callous? And how do they ever? I just
want to know who they are so the constituency understands
who they're voting for.
Speaker 3 (06:43):
Well, I can't tell who that is.
Speaker 2 (06:46):
Representative Neil Collins, Republican Pickens, who brought it forth, and
he said that he had learned that there was three
school districts in the state that were doing it. He says,
since filing this with you, two of them have already
changed that policy to cover this. Apparently there's just one
left in South Carolina. But this, if he gets his
law passed clean rewritten, it will include still births, and
(07:09):
so there'll be no opportunity for people to deny that
in the future.
Speaker 3 (07:12):
And I do agree with you, it would seem pretty
heartless for someone to challenge that. But my goodness, some
of the cases I'm involved right now with guys, you know,
like you know, Candas state prohibit children at ten years
old from being transgendered, you know, and surgically altered, you know.
Should we have laws that prohibit that. Well, apparently we do,
because there are people in the world that just have
crazy ideas about life.
Speaker 2 (07:31):
But you were touching on the transgenderism issue in the bathrooms,
and you made some news this week with that as well.
Speaker 3 (07:37):
That's right, about two weeks ago, the Fourth Circuit Court
of Appeals stayed a law that South Carolina passed this
year that prohibited schools from allowing transgendered children to go
into the bathroom of the opposite sex. And so that
law was basically said, you could lose twenty five percent
of your funding if you don't prohibit it. The Fourth
(07:57):
Circuit stayed that law while we debate it, and while
we argue it before them. I'm going to the Supreme
Court along with Superintendent Ellen Weaver, to ask the US
Supreme Court to allow the law to remain in effect
while we argue the case through the court system. And
so right now, that law or that court ruling only
applies to one single child down in Berkeley County, in
(08:20):
that school. But I'm concerned that it could incentivize other
lawsuits for other individuals. And at the end of the day,
I believe that ninety nine point nine percent of the
privacy rights of other kids should be respected just as
much as the individual transgender child. I think that child
can be accommodated by the school without compromising the privacy
and public safety of all of the other children.
Speaker 1 (08:41):
So the first step is to get a stay on
the stay. Now, how long are you think it had
taken play this out?
Speaker 3 (08:46):
Well, obviously, we just asked the Supreme Court to stay
the injunction, which means allow the law to stay in effect,
you know, protecting children's privacy. We expect the Supreme Court
to rule on that this month, on that narrow ear issue. Remember,
the Supreme Court is not weighing in on whether they
agree or disagree with the merits of the case, only
whether the Fourth Circuit was right to stay or to
(09:08):
stop the law from going into effect. Well as far
as the merits of the case, we still have to debate,
debate and argue that before the Fourth Circuit, which could
be months from now, and then if that gets appealed
to the US Supreme Court on the merriage, that could
be a year from now. So, no matter what happens
this month, we're still a year out from any major
resolution to this issue. But rest assured we will descend
(09:29):
it to the Supreme Court.
Speaker 2 (09:31):
All Right, we're talking with Attorney General Alan Wilson, and
so I'm not going to ask your legal opinion on this.
This is not you as the Attorney General. I'm Donald
talking to Alan Wilson, father of a teenage girl. And
if I understand this correctly, at this moment, thanks to
the Fourth District or the Fourth Circuit at this moment,
(09:53):
if she is in a bathroom and a boy who
feels like he's a girl decides to join her in
the restroom that is legally allowed at this moment, what
would you advise your teenage daughter to do at that moment.
Speaker 3 (10:08):
Well, that's a great question, but let me clarify this
particular ruling by the four Circuit only applies applies to
that individual student. No other students in the state. So
it's only the female down in Berkeley County that wants
to go in the boys' bathrooms would be allowed to
and so the ruling is only on that. But other
people could bring a lawsuit on behalf of other children.
(10:30):
And again, I don't think ten year old kids are
going calling law firms and asking them to go to
the you know, to file lawsuits. I think parents are
doing this and left leaning groups are doing this, and
I think the kids are being used as pawms. But
to your point, if there were to be if we
were to lose this case and this law were to
be gutted, and children were to be allowed to go
(10:52):
into the bathrooms and shower rooms and locker rooms of
the sex that they identify, with not the sex that
they are biologically grounded in. I would tell my daughter to, obviously,
if she sees someone going in there and she feels uncomfortable,
just to remove herself and to go to another bathroom
to be polite, but to remove herself from the situation.
You can't control what other people do. You can only
(11:14):
control how you react to it. And that's the advice
I would give my daughter.
Speaker 1 (11:18):
South Carolina Attorney General and proud father, thank you for
spending time with us and sharing some of your fatherly
wisdom for other parents who may be having this conversation.
Unfortunately still again in our state of South Carolina.
Speaker 2 (11:31):
And I'll point out, proud Gamecock ready for the big
game today? Are you excited about that? My man?
Speaker 1 (11:36):
I was waiting on. I know Kelly's got at some
point going to have to bring in the game.
Speaker 2 (11:41):
I mean, we had a huge win to start the season,
where now in the top ten. It's game day, Alan,
Are you going to be down there tonight?
Speaker 3 (11:48):
Oh, look for the obnoxious Gamecock fan with brown hair
and a garnet shirt. That'll be me there.
Speaker 1 (11:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (11:53):
And I know you were pulling for Clemson last week
because you're a state official and you went up to
the game. Where was it a little disappointed to be
in Death Valley for that loss?
Speaker 3 (12:02):
Hey? Look, I was up there as the guest of
Clemson and a lot of the Clemson boosters, and they
gave me a great time. It was an electric atmosphere.
I did cheer for Clemson again. If they ever play
against Carolina, I will be one thousand committed to my
game Cocks. But I actually left before the game ended,
so I never actually got to, you know, see them
actually lose because I had to get back to Columbia
(12:23):
before two am.
Speaker 1 (12:24):
You decided to avoid that awkward moment where you want
to stand up and cheer, but you did not eliminading.
Speaker 2 (12:30):
Did you post any photos? What?
Speaker 1 (12:32):
What were you wearing?
Speaker 2 (12:33):
Were you in orange?
Speaker 1 (12:34):
That was an orange?
Speaker 3 (12:35):
I cannot remember it. You were.
Speaker 1 (12:42):
The influence and an orange.
Speaker 3 (12:45):
I don't drink, but if I did, I probably would have.
I was up there rooting for the Tigers, hard for
the Tigers.
Speaker 2 (12:52):
Yes, the Tigers were going to win that day no
matter what.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
All right, now, let's go back to oh I have
questions now that we can't answer the questions from the governor,
the mayor of Chicago speaks or the governor of Illinois,
and I am Illinois all the time. Now, so let's
go to the First Amendment crisis that Jasmine Crockett says,
the origin of the First Amendment crisis is the old
(13:16):
man in the OVOL.
Speaker 2 (13:18):
I'm not sure if I'm following Jasmine Crockett's theory.
Speaker 1 (13:21):
I don't know what. Again, every time they speak, I
got more questions. What is it that Donald Trump has
done that has that has threatened the First Amendment?
Speaker 2 (13:31):
Donald Trump's a threat to the First Amendment. Yeah, I
wasn't aware of ye.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
She said the biggest threat to the First Amendment is
the old man in the obol.
Speaker 2 (13:40):
And then she didn't follow it up with an example.
Speaker 1 (13:42):
Not that I saw, And maybe that was maybe that
was a tease and they were going to give me
the rest of the audio after the commercial, which I
could not sit through fifteen pharmaceutical commercials on MSNBC to
get to that.
Speaker 2 (13:55):
I am now googling First Amendment, Jasmine Crockett. I'm not
sing it in the.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
News put in. I haven't look for it on Twitter.
I could find the audio. I wanted to use that
in our introduction, and then I went back to the
other stupid Democrat statements, and that would be from from
our friend the mayor of Chicago.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
Yeah, I don't see any comments from Jasmine Crockett and
saying anything about well now, I'll just put in old
on Twitter, so you can't find it either.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
I can't find it either.
Speaker 2 (14:24):
All right, so we don't know. But look, Jasmine Crockett
soon to be replaced, so you know her her political
career is apparently crashing and burning as we speak because
she won't have a district to represent. So it was
good knowing you.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
She's gonna displace hot wheels in the governor's office.
Speaker 2 (14:41):
Is that what's happening?
Speaker 1 (14:41):
I'm sure it's okay.
Speaker 2 (14:43):
I mean, hey, look, I if she's.
Speaker 1 (14:44):
A hot mess, certainly she could swoop in and clean
that up.
Speaker 2 (14:49):
What is Texas right now? As far as plus minus
with the Republicans?
Speaker 1 (14:54):
Oh, with their House seats?
Speaker 2 (14:56):
Well, I know, I'm just saying, like in voting, oh
oh percentage wise, Yeah, I'm trying to think if I
remember right, they are like a plus twelve, we're a
plus eighteen. I think here there's some that are even bigger.
There's like a I was reading about one the other
day it was a plus thirty for the Republicans. So
I mean, you're not going to have a Democrat governor
(15:19):
in the state of Texas. Well. I won't say in
my lifetime because things can change, but for the foreseeable future,
and things for Democrats are getting worse, not better, for
two reasons. One, you're on the wrong side of the
whole women in sports thing. You were on the wrong
side of COVID. I just retweeted Jonathan a twenty twenty
(15:40):
two survey and it's shocking to look at it through
the lens of today. So you've had three years of
living to know that the COVID vaccine was actually dangerous
for some people to get. It actually did not stop
the spread of COVID. Know these things to be these
(16:01):
are these are not even like up for debate anymore.
Did people die because they got the COVID vaccine? Yes?
Were there people injured because they got the vaccine?
Speaker 1 (16:09):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (16:10):
Did it slow the spread? I guess some on the
left will still continue to try to make that argument
that it slowed the spread that though there's no data
that would indicate that it slowed anything. I guess the
only upside that I can think of of the vaccine
were was. What we've always said was that if you
have what they call the comorbidity, is that somebody who's
(16:32):
going to you've got the you've got the high blood pressure,
you got the diabetes, you got the high sugar, you
got the you're morbidly obese, or you're older than sixty five,
you should consider getting the COVID vaccination, which is not
a vaccination, but it's a it's a shot. You should
consider it. Otherwise, don't get it. That's now the recommendation
(16:54):
of Madernah and Fizer. Don't get it unless you're one
of in that category. Democrats surveyed twenty twenty two. This
is January twenty twenty two, so it's pretty early. Still okay.
Should you find the unvaccinated? Fifty nine percent of Democrats
(17:14):
said there should be a fine if you refuse the vaccine.
Should you lock the unvaccinated in their homes till they
get it? Sixty percent of Democrats say yes, Wow. Should
you send the unvaccinated from their homes to a quarantine
(17:36):
unvaccinated camp forty eight percent said yes, good lord. Should
you take children from the homes of an unvaccinated parent,
separate the children from their parents. Thirty two percent said yes.
And finally, should we in prison and or fine people
(18:03):
who criticize or question the vaccine? Fifty one percent of
Democrats said yes. And January of twenty twenty two, in retrospect,
do you regret your vote? Now? Do you regret the
vote that fifty one percent of you wanted people who
questioned the vaccine to be put in prison? That's where
(18:25):
you were as a party three years ago. So how
could you ever get back in power? You can't be back.
You can't be trusted with power.
Speaker 1 (18:32):
You're on the ten of a ninety ten issue there.
Speaker 2 (18:35):
Absolutely, you're in the.
Speaker 1 (18:37):
One percentile congratulations of a ninety nine to one percent
on crime.
Speaker 2 (18:42):
That's true too.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
Now, we found a judge yesterday for the Democrats who
actually said, kith Lord Jesus help me that Donald Trump.
Now that was a video that was mocked up. It
was a not true video. Donald Trump face. No, did
not blow the Trendiago members out of the water with
(19:07):
the video gamer controller that he didn't do that. We've
found a Democrat judge yesterday who now is taking up
for Trendiagra for God's sake. What's his angle is that
you know you you do not have the right to
blow that boat out of the water. Just again, ombre,
(19:28):
don't have the right. You might have the right to
arrest them their due process. No, because international water.
Speaker 2 (19:35):
They are now a recognized military force against us, same
as isis Isle. Any of those what were some were
called regional gangs hamas. They are now recognized by our government,
not just by me. I didn't vote on this, the
government did. We recognize them as a terrorist organization and
they will be treated as such. As such. I can
(19:57):
now order military strikes upon them.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
Now. The Democrats are on the tempercon I don't even
know what the polling is. I'm gonna I'm gonna say
us at eighty twenty. Okay, they're the ages eighty twenty
of standing up for as Kelly mentioned, international gang related
terrorist organizations moving fentanyl into our country or attempting to
at this point moving finanyl into our country. They're on
(20:23):
their side, for God's sake. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (20:26):
The Democrats, because they're so adamant about going against anything
that's Trump's doing, they're going to if they're not careful,
they're going to remove themselves as a party, and I actually,
I mean, and I say this genuinely, I don't want
that to happen. I would actually like a robust debate
in the political.
Speaker 1 (20:46):
Scumbles with you. And I'm with you partly here, but
I do think the Democrat Party. Democrat Party needs to
go the way of the Buffalo. You got to rebrand
the whole thing. Kick out the damn idiots, make sure
sure a Crockett doesn't ever have an opportunity to get
into the governor's mansion in Texas. Take all those people
(21:06):
and push them out of the conversation. For the future
of this country it come up with a new name.
Speaker 2 (21:13):
Possibly So I mean, you know, I've told the story
I think to you privately but publicly. Glenn Beck was
a program director of a radio station I worked at.
I was his assistant, and Glenn Beck was high on
cocaine and drunk most of the time on Jack Daniels,
and he came up with a theory that if you
tested music and asked people, is there any songs you
(21:36):
haven't heard on the radio lately that you'd like to
hear again? If you got the same answer twice, then
we should start playing that song in rotation. And so
in nineteen ninety three on Top forty radio station where
we were playing Ace of Bass and Snoop Dogg on
the regular, those were the kind of Nirvana that would
have been like the mix of music that was a
regular Top forty rotation. In nineteen ninety three, we began
reintroducing led Zeppelin and Elvis Presley songs Wow, and Glenn
(22:01):
told me that I was crazy and small minded because
I didn't see the bigger picture that people are going
to want to be able to have a bigger variety
of music in which is hysterical.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
I had the same conversation with a guy in the
upstate of South Carolina, and he insisted on doing that
once an hour, and to make the conversation even more idiotic,
he named that category of music image Records. Image.
Speaker 2 (22:27):
I said, it's not our IMAGEE.
Speaker 1 (22:30):
We're a Top forty station.
Speaker 2 (22:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (22:33):
Yeah, we don't go back and play out in the
country by three dog night.
Speaker 2 (22:39):
I mean we would have. It was nineteen sixty nine,
But anyway, I had a conversation with the woman who
ran the radio station and I said if, and she
fired me. And even after she fired me, I said
to her, if you're not careful if you allow Glenn
to continue down this path. I would say, if he's
allowed to go more than six months, the number one
(23:03):
Top forty radio station in Connecticut will be so badly
damaged by this that you will have to change format
and lose those call letters.
Speaker 1 (23:13):
Forever, and you have to change voice to a totally
different genre. You can't even go adult contemporary. No, you
gotta go gospel. Yeah, and you need something.
Speaker 2 (23:20):
You can't have any of those current letters WKC and
I don't put any of it in call letters. Yeah, yeah, exactly.
But thank god they fired him five months into it.
So five months into it, she pulled the plug on it,
and then they got Scott Shannon, who said, no, no, no,
we're tightening it up and we're going Top forty again,
and they saved the radio station. But you're right, the
(23:42):
Democrats have gone so far down a path that it's
becoming toxic to say you're a Democrat in Democrat friendly
areas of the country. It's always been, well, I shouldn't
say always, the twenty plus years I've lived in South Carolina,
it's been toxic to say you're a Democrat in this state. Yes,
but in states that I've come from, Connecticut, New York,
(24:06):
those places, it's still okay to be a Democrat, but
there is a building resentment towards the party in those markets.
They don't like what the Democrats are doing because even
they can't tolerate this women being abused by having men
in their sports and in their locker rooms and in
their it's it's insane. We're standing up for the criminals
(24:29):
where we're taking people for drug dealing, terrorist organizations. It
had always been previously a robust debate between we all
agree on the goal. The question is how do we
get to the goal. That is no longer the debate.
The debate is now, is it right and just that
people can rob because they feel as if they don't
(24:52):
have enough? If I don't have enough, that was the
AOC introduction into the argument. I then then why are
what the police need to know? What is the backstory
before you charge somebody with robbery?
Speaker 1 (25:06):
If I were hit by a bus suddenly and my
entire life perspective changed and I found myself closer to
being a Democrat old school than current conservative Republican just
based on and you would be the same way, just
based on our previous experience in marketing, we would absolutely
(25:27):
insist in the first new party meeting or a party
meeting at the Democrat Party, the first thing we have
to do is drop the word democrat. Period. Well, you know,
I damaged it so bad you can never bring it back.
It can't recover.
Speaker 2 (25:44):
It's interesting how marketing works because remember it was Ronald
Reagan who took the term liberal and turned it against them.
Liberal was what they created, and then Reagan used it
in a negative connotation, and he became so popular that
they didn't want to be called liberals anymore.
Speaker 1 (25:59):
That's right.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
They've gone back to embracing it. That's like a new thing.
It's kind of like, you know when black people use
the N word as a positive, but you still can't
say it, right, but they can't, Or women use the
B word as a positive to describe each other, but
you can't say it. That's the way they feel about
the word liberal right now. And I'm wondering, like, is
(26:24):
there is there a term that they use amongst themselves,
like democrat socialist, which is obviously just a socialist who
happens to be.
Speaker 1 (26:33):
A moderate socialist. Yeah, is there such the shortest list
in the world, moderate socialist who rose to prominence. But
there's no way that you'll be able to ever bring
the Democrat Party back. That won't be more evident until
the midterms. The midterm elections could bury the Democrat Party.
(26:54):
And I'm one of those people that says, when your
opponent is drowning, shove a guard hose in their mouth
and hold their head down.
Speaker 2 (27:02):
Oh you don't step back, you don't step back, and
just let them drawn on their own. Jonathan Rush participates
in the murder of their own hole.
Speaker 1 (27:10):
I say, pour water in it, shove a garden hose
in their mouth, and push their head down further. That's
because it is a cancer that will only continue to grow.
We've seen it grow before.
Speaker 2 (27:21):
Well, if if your theory about the midterms comes true,
then I would I would have I would be forced
to agree with you. If there is a red tsunami
and in the midterms and we see blue seats turn
red that have not turned red in forty years or something, yeah,
then it's a wrap. And then then then you know
(27:44):
it's over. And but they'll still be a Democrat Party.
I guess it'll be like I guess, like I wasn't
around like when the Whigs were here, but the Republican
Party was coming out and kind of addressing the way
Abe Lincoln's like the first republic and so like they're like, look,
this Wigs thing is a rap. We got to move on.
(28:05):
And so for a while you had three parties.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
That's right.
Speaker 2 (28:08):
And so I think for a while you'll have three parties.
They'll be the Republicans, Democrats, and whatever the old Democrats become.
Speaker 1 (28:15):
I won't be happy until the Democrat Party is dead
on the operating room table and I see another doctor
walk in with a kitchen knife and shove it in
its chest. Okay. And then all the remaining heads of
the current Democrat Party, Gavin Newsom and all of his
ilk okay, Pelosi and even the younger ones like Mendami.
(28:40):
All these guys see that the not only is are
we dead as a party, will never ever regain any power,
and they pack up and move to Costa Rica. It'll
be the island of misfit toys.
Speaker 2 (28:54):
I mean, Bernie Sanders left the Democrat Party what fifteen
twenty years ago and said I can't trust the Democrats,
and he was right, And you know, I don't know.
Does AOC consider herself a democrat anymore, or does she
consider herself a socialist? Mom Donnie is a socialist.
Speaker 1 (29:10):
Yeah, she's aist.
Speaker 2 (29:11):
And so, I mean, we have a lot of people
calling themselves socialists now now apparently in their minds or
they're hoping in the voter's minds that you won't go
and look at the success rate of socialist governments, because
if you were to look at the success rate of
socialist governments, you would see that it turns into a
brutal dictatorship. Usually a couple of years into the thing,
(29:35):
it doesn't take very long for it to get real
ugly because all incentive is removed. There is no way
to get rich, there is no way to better your
station in life. We're all going to be reduced to
the lowest possible common denominator. And that's why you've got
Mom Donnie making these suggestions. Just insane. I can't even
(29:59):
imagine that you can say this without being booed off stage.
But he wants to remove all misdemeanors from the yes
from the ledgers, like you cannot be convicted of a
misdemeanor in New York. They won't even charge you. So
anything that's currently a misdemeanor, which I guess some of
us would call it a nuisance crime, like a pickpocket.
So I could pickpocket you in front of a cop.
(30:20):
I could tell you, I could tell the cop watch
me grab that man's as the lady said on our
show This Morning, bill Fold, I'm gonna take his billfold.
There's nothing you, as the cop, can do, and anything
he does can't do. If he attacks me, now you've
got to arrest him. He's incited violence.
Speaker 1 (30:37):
If Man Doni wins this election in New York City,
Mom Donnie, excuse me, m am.
Speaker 2 (30:42):
I call him com Donnie.
Speaker 1 (30:43):
He's a comedy cop. That's even better. I have to
worry about saying it right. If Tom Donnie wins this election,
I swear if I lived anywhere in and around New
York City, I would insist on living into the city.
I would announce my campaign the day that I changed
my name, and I would one is snake Pliskin. Snakeskin
remember the movie Escape from New York from What's his
(31:06):
name was the Russell Russell?
Speaker 2 (31:08):
Not Crow Russell, uh krus.
Speaker 1 (31:13):
Snake Pliskin is the only guy that could come into
New York City and what is left only as a
den of thieves. Straighten it out, kick some ass, and
then somehow right the city snake pliskin from Mayor.
Speaker 2 (31:27):
I mean, you're gonna have to win the MS thirteen
vote at that.
Speaker 1 (31:30):
Point, Great state plisk from mayor. Oh, thank you Lauren
for giving me that flashback to one of the worst
motion pictures ever produced.