Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
Warning, the Root, The Root, the Roots on fire.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
You're about to experience the most high octane, pedal to
the metal controversial show of your life. Please buckle up
and hold on tightly. This station is not responsible for injuries.
This is Wayne Alan Root direct from the entertainment capital
of the world, Las Vegas.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
What time is it?
Speaker 3 (00:31):
It's time war War.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
Here's your host, one hundred percent raw Truth, one hundred
percent American made the Warrior, Wayne Alan Roots.
Speaker 4 (00:54):
Ladies and gentlemen, Welcome, Welcome, Welcome to day twenty three
of October twe twenty five. No Wayne Allen Root tonight
he's giving a big speech. He will be back tomorrow.
If you don't recognize my voice.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
Shame on you.
Speaker 4 (01:08):
My name is Lee Elsie. I am the Voice of Freedom.
I am the official villain host for Wayne when he
is out. Been doing that, like I said, for about
seven years. So welcome aboard. We've got a great two
hours planned for you, a couple of guests rolling through here.
Of course, you can watch what's going on at the
Gateway pundit dot com. You can also go to Patriot
dot tv, which is Wayne's newest partner. And I've been
(01:31):
on Patriot TV myself at one o'clock every single day.
Also stream through Rumble every day my entire morning show,
which is broadcast right here in Connecticut, out over Connecticut,
Rhode Island, and Long Island. Of course global online you
can listen to just about anything online.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
Also Root for America.
Speaker 4 (01:47):
You can find it at Wayne's Getter, on his ex
and all these other places. So hopefully you are in
for the entire two hours, and I would appreciate that
very much.
Speaker 1 (01:57):
Thank to Thanks to all the folks behind the scenes
to make it it go.
Speaker 4 (02:01):
So I know this isn't necessarily politics, but I have
to start with this.
Speaker 1 (02:06):
I got it in a world, in a world where.
Speaker 4 (02:11):
Heroes are nearly impossible to find, do not, for even
one minute look to the sports fields for any heroes,
because you're not going to find many, if any. So
I stand before you, or I stand before this microphone.
I'm a former professional athlete. I'm a man who earned far,
(02:37):
far less in my entire career than today's rookie baseball
player makes him one single at that. Yet I can
say with complete sincerity that I play with pride, I
played with sweat, I play with heart.
Speaker 1 (02:53):
I believed in the game.
Speaker 4 (02:56):
I believed in athletics, I believed in the athletes that
were the uniform, and I believed in all of it.
I was all in for the longest time in my life.
But that belief has been shattered again because you've got
athletes who are making thirty forty fifty million dollars a
(03:17):
season that no longer can be trusted to give you
their all, cheating, scandals, lack of hustle, lack of desire.
I've watched Superstar after Superstar, jograph first Base Coast through
the fourth quarter, fake injuries, and now manipulate betting lines.
Speaker 1 (03:38):
So I don't know you know where to turn now
in this.
Speaker 4 (03:46):
Now we've seen rig poker games backed by organized crime,
with former NBA stars sitting at that table, not as
players but as bait. If you're just tuning in or
you don't know about this story, it is a doozy
ladies and gentlemen. You've got NBA players and mobsters conspiring
to build people out of money and cheat at poker games.
Speaker 1 (04:09):
And that's just the beginning. You've got NBA players who
now are in.
Speaker 4 (04:16):
A scandal where they've manipulated their play for money. Johncy Billips,
Terry Rozier, Damon Jones, all indicted, arrested, accused of conspiring
with mafia families to defraud victims over seven million dollars.
Speaker 1 (04:33):
Seven million dollars is.
Speaker 4 (04:36):
Chump change to these guys, yep, Why are they doing it?
And they're only getting a piece of a fraction of
a fraction of that seven million.
Speaker 1 (04:44):
It's chump change. Man.
Speaker 4 (04:46):
Some of these guys signed two million, three hundred million
dollar contracts. Why would you risk your reputation for this?
Speaker 1 (04:56):
For this? Is this addiction? Really?
Speaker 4 (05:02):
So they used hitting cameras, they barcoded cards, they preprogrammed shufflers,
and they pocketed payments, laughing at all the people they
were builking out of money on these text messages. It
was very sophisticated stuff to poker games, and the betting
itself was worse. Players were tipping off criminals about fake injuries.
(05:29):
The guy Rosier, he told his friends to bet the under.
And if you don't know what that means, it just
simply means. There's all kinds of different bets you can
make on these FanDuel of draftking apps, and you can
bet how many rebounds or points or assists somebody gets
in a game, you can do a combination of all that.
Speaker 1 (05:46):
He told his buddies, his gangster buddies, to bet the.
Speaker 4 (05:50):
Under, and then a couple of minutes into the game,
he faked an injury, came out, they all cleaned up.
The game was manipulated, not for victory, but for profit.
This isn't competition, it's it's just corruption. And I when
I first thought, when.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
I you know, gambling, this is like my wheelhouse. I
get this. I'm an athlete. I get gambling, right.
Speaker 4 (06:16):
But I always thought that because of the sheer amount
of money that these athletes make, they'd never go down
this road.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
It would it makes no sense.
Speaker 4 (06:24):
Maybe a referee or referees, maybe even assistant of a
coach is something like that. You would see that scandal
popping up, for sure, But not the guys who are
making twenty five million dollars a year.
Speaker 1 (06:35):
How much money do you need?
Speaker 4 (06:38):
Is it just the mentality, that thug mentality.
Speaker 1 (06:41):
I want to hang out with thugs. I want to
be a thug. I want to hang out with the mafia.
I want to be part of the mafia. Cash is king.
I get that.
Speaker 4 (06:51):
The human condition, it can dictate how you act, and
the human condition always finds a way to disappoint. But man,
think about that, all this money that they have, and
I'm sure this is the tip of the iceberg. I'm
sure this is not This is not a single thing,
(07:12):
This is not an isolated incident. I gotta tell you,
I'm never going to buy another ticket. I'm never going
to purchase another jersey. I find it hard to support
a product that has no problem betraying people, right, And
I'm not just a disappointed fan again, I'm a former player.
(07:32):
I know how the game should be played. I get
what goes on in the locker room. Athletes should be
fierce and clean and honest and play for the what matters,
not money. They should play for the roar of the crowd,
and don't make it. Engineered gambling is now legal sports
(07:52):
betting in thirty nine states. The doors wide open, and
apparently the financial incentives are irresistible even to folks who
you know, can swim around in their own money. And
now they are apparently no moral guide guidelines for any
(08:12):
of them. They're all gone, all gone. So now the
leagues themselves, these these websites themselves, if they don't absolutely
crack down on this like today and make this a
zero tolerance issue. I mean, you could lose a lot
of fans because right now what we do is we
(08:35):
we reward apathy. We celebrate fraud here for whatever reason.
But their forty five million dollar salaries not enough. Again,
they have to be part of the mob, the mafia
again mentality, hang out with thugs and gangsters.
Speaker 1 (08:54):
That's it. That's that's the high point of your existence.
Speaker 4 (08:58):
Duping people out of their money in a poker game
was sophisticated equipment.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
You know. I've been you know, backing off sports.
Speaker 4 (09:10):
For a while for a lot of different reasons, but
the most the number one reason is the sheer amount
of money that these players make. Not that I begrudge
people from making what they're worth, but when you're making
when you're making forty five to fifty million dollars a year,
and then the average joe, the you know, the sports
enthusiast who's maybe a bartender or works construction or just
(09:33):
works in a cubicle all day. I mean, he's got
to pay one hundred dollars for a cheap seat ticket.
Forget about taking the family one hundred bucks for a
cheap seat ticket, seventy five bucks at the park. He
wants to have a beer, it's eighteen twelve dollars for
a hot dog. Pardon my language, but essentially, essentially, you're
being raped by these professional sports entities, just picking you up,
(09:58):
holding you upside down, and shaking rea last nickel that
they can get out of your pockets. And these these
athletes not all like this, but these athletes were caught
in this scandal. I mean some of them have made
over one hundred million dollars in their career laughing, laughing
at you, laughing at me and the Attorney General in
(10:23):
New York. I was going to play some audio, but
I'm gonna run out of time. Maybe I'll do it
later on in the show. But they are not messing
around with this. They're going for the juggular, and rightfully so,
because you know, these American pastimes, and this happens to
be the NBA. But we've seen it in other places.
You know, We've seen these scandals in college football, We've
seen them in college basketball, We've seen them in professional sports.
(10:46):
They popped up now on a somewhat regular basis because
of the ease and the excess of how you can gamble.
Speaker 1 (10:52):
You can bet at any time.
Speaker 4 (10:53):
You can bet from your sofa, you can bet from
your bed, you can bet any way you want, as
long as you've got your cell phone. And I'm not
somebody who says, don't bet again. I've been in that
business for.
Speaker 1 (11:05):
A long, long long time. I get it, I understand it.
But I said, when this thing opened up, opening, you're
opening up.
Speaker 4 (11:11):
Pandora's box, and once that genie is out of the bottom,
and you're never putting it back in. So make sure
you do it right. And I'm not sure that they
did it right. All right, I'm gonna take a break.
We're gonna come right back in just a couple of minutes.
A good friend of my show here in Connecticut, the
Sports Doctor's going to join me. He also works for ESPN.
We're going to get his opinion on this whole NBA issue.
(11:34):
Then the bottom of the hour, she is a phenomenal
podcaster extraordinaire, and we'll talk to Elsa Kirk about all
things going on in the news, plus a whole bunch.
Speaker 1 (11:43):
More stick around. You're listening again to the war Zone.
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Speaker 4 (15:03):
Mark this is the war Zone. Wayne Allen rud is
off tonight. You can watch what's going on at the
Gateway Pundon. You can go to Patriot dot tv. Of course,
of course, on Wayne's rumble x Getter root for America
dot Com as well.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
So we are going to the phones right now.
Speaker 4 (15:17):
I get a friend of mine who works with ESPN,
ESPN Productions, and he's a giant sports fan and all
of that, butg in his inside look and what's going
on here. I just want to do one more segment
focusing in on this, this NBA scandal. So we're bringing
on the sports doctor, Keith O'Brien. Keith, you're talking to America.
Good afternoon, how are you.
Speaker 6 (15:36):
Man, I'll welcome America. Le lt you sound great, great job,
and boy, with the bomb went off this morning in
professional sports? Did it not?
Speaker 1 (15:46):
I think so. I think this is a huge wake
up call.
Speaker 4 (15:48):
But we're like, listen, we know sort of the details
are starting to come out now, but what's the ramifications.
Speaker 1 (15:54):
What's the fallout from this?
Speaker 6 (15:56):
I mean, Lee, the fallout is this? You talked about
it earlier than Tiger. The sport, you know, with gambling
online gambling now become its mainstream. It's part of our
culture today. You know, the terriersire thing with the prop
bets and guys pulling themselves out of games. It's you've
really got to question yourself as a fan, as an
(16:21):
owner of a team, as an organization, as a society.
You know, this has been going on a long time
ly and I think it's it's only going to get
worse and stories like this. You know, I'm just gonna
bring it more to the forefront. I mean, gambling going
to shove down our throat. Now, it's part of culture,
it's part of society. And I do think you're right.
(16:42):
This is just a tip of the iceberg. When the
FBI is dealing with these things and digging out some dirt,
they're going to find a whole lot more to the
bottom of the buyo.
Speaker 4 (16:51):
Explain to me how you can be making twenty million
dollars a year and try to griff somebody out of
a few hundred thousand or even less than that ten
twenty thirty thousand.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
What is it about? Is it just the allure? Is
that the danger?
Speaker 6 (17:05):
Maybe ego, narcissism, boredom? I mean, you name it, lee that.
I mean, you can't tell me it's competitive edge because
a lot of people have competitive edge, right and haven't
done things like that. I think it's extremely, extremely narcissistic
and ego driven. I mean we've all got a little
bit that we want more, we want more, we want more.
(17:25):
But you know, how do you do it and how
you go about it is that's extremely unethical. With Chauncey
Billips and the poker games that people, you know he's
lying in the bed with, you know, and even Terry
rose Year and you know, the NBA has had problems
for years.
Speaker 5 (17:39):
Man.
Speaker 6 (17:39):
You know, let's not forget about Tim Donaghey many years
ago as a referee yep, you know, throwing games and
taking money from the mob in Boston. I mean, this
is not something new with the NBA.
Speaker 4 (17:50):
So we may have some viewers listeners across the country.
We don't know what a prop bet is. So if
you can explain to everybody what a prop bet is
like in a sixty seconds or less.
Speaker 6 (17:59):
Yeah, let's just say Lee Elti is the starting point
guard for the Boston Celtics, which you've got the skills
to do it.
Speaker 3 (18:05):
Lee.
Speaker 6 (18:05):
I've seen you on the court and you know you're
all over. Under to score points is twelve, Okay, So
I'm gonna bet fifty bucks that Lee's gonna get twelve
points or more that or fifty bucks under twelve that's
the prop bet well Lee else has control of that
bakes the injury, says, on my legs hurt. He's coming out.
He scores six points in the game, but he tells
(18:26):
all his buddies beforehand that the under it's a lot.
You know why because I'm taking myself out of it. Yeah,
that my friend is dirty pool and just off the
Chaine Buffel.
Speaker 4 (18:39):
All right, So how do they fix it? What do
they do with Janie's out of the bottle? Gambling wise?
How do these sports entities stop what's going on?
Speaker 6 (18:47):
Well, I mean how does the NBA fix it internally?
That's first and foremost. You know, how do they you know,
how do the teams, the organization is the commissioner, I mean,
how do they police these individuals so bad? I mean
it's a lifetime ban, I mean, not allowed on the
court as far as you know, the gambling stuff they
listen to the NBA, Major League Baseball. In the NBA,
(19:07):
they've already jumped in bed with DraftKings and scandal. They're
making a buck that's not going anywhere. I think the
bigger problem is inside the league. How do they police
it up? How do you police players? Your coaches, your assistant, everybody.
What's going on on you? How do you take care
of them?
Speaker 4 (19:23):
I think the only way to do it is a
lifetime band. You can't gamble anymore. You can't certainly can't
gamble on your own sport. If you are caught any way,
shape or form, you're you're done for good. That I can't.
I can't see any other way to handle that.
Speaker 6 (19:34):
Well, what's the same guy, Lee? A guy in the
NBA is sitting around on a Sunday afternoon and has
DraftKings and has scandal and he's not betting on the NFL.
I mean, these guys are for key. They have so
much money they don't know what to do with. And
it's but it's there. It's there for the taking temptations everywhere,
and it's got dentation anymore because it's legal.
Speaker 4 (19:52):
Yeah, Hey, good stuff, buddy. His name is Keith O'Brien.
He's with ESPN. We love talking to him. I love
talking to him on my morning show here in Connecticut.
I appreciate your car out some time, buddy, Have a
great night. All right, you got to keep O'Brien.
Speaker 1 (20:03):
There you go, e s P. And all right, here's
what we got else. The Kirk is coming up next.
Speaker 4 (20:09):
Elsa Kurt is a fantastic podcaster. She is a wife
of a law enforcement officer, and she's got so many
different followers.
Speaker 1 (20:16):
But I had one conversation with her about a month
and a half ago. It was great. Want to bring
it back on to do the national gig with us.
Speaker 4 (20:22):
So stick around you're watching and listening to the war Zone.
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Speaker 1 (21:56):
All right, welcome back to the one. My name is
leelsimd of Freedom. Welcome aboard.
Speaker 4 (22:01):
Wayne Allen Root is off tonight. He's giving I thought,
oh no, he's giving a big speech someplace. I'm not
really sure what he's doing. I mean, last time I
was filling informed he was with the President of the
United States, which was pretty amazing.
Speaker 1 (22:13):
Before we get to our guest, the.
Speaker 4 (22:16):
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That's VR insider dot all right, joining me right now.
Speaker 4 (23:29):
She has a bajillion followers up on social media, and
you know, I ran across her at a big Connecticut
Republican event and we got to talk and had her
on the show.
Speaker 1 (23:41):
And she's phenomenal. Her name is Elsa Kurty.
Speaker 4 (23:44):
She is a dynamic American media personality, podcaster, author. I
didn't realize how many books she has written until I
did a little deep dive today. Comedian outspoken conservative advocate
born again.
Speaker 1 (23:56):
I can tell everybody when you were born.
Speaker 4 (23:58):
But anyway, you come from a deep rooted law enforcement background,
and she identifies as a police wife.
Speaker 1 (24:05):
So let's bring on, Elsa, Kurt.
Speaker 4 (24:06):
Elsa, thanks for coming on. I appreciate it very very much.
How are you today?
Speaker 8 (24:10):
I am doing very well. How are you tonight?
Speaker 1 (24:12):
We're doing good. I need a tan. I look at
myself and this.
Speaker 8 (24:17):
I need a chant. I'm looking at myself.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
I do I'm not.
Speaker 4 (24:20):
I mean, I don't know. I need to be outside
a little bit more. It's getting too cold. But anyway,
let's talk about you grew up in a look before
we get to some issues, let's tell everybody kind of
like who you are and where you came from, all
that good stuff. So growing up in a law enforcement family,
obviously it shaped your fear advocacy for first responders. And
(24:40):
I mean, give me a little background of the thirty
thousand foot view of you.
Speaker 9 (24:45):
Sure, so I actually you know I was. I did not.
I actually did not grow up in a law enforcement background.
Speaker 8 (24:52):
I married into it.
Speaker 9 (24:54):
So this has been like the second half of my life.
Speaker 8 (24:58):
This has been as part of law enforcement family.
Speaker 9 (25:01):
And so you know, hearing that is probably, as you
can imagine, a little bit of a culture shock because.
Speaker 8 (25:07):
We you know, we grew up respecting law enforcement.
Speaker 9 (25:10):
You know, new people in law enforcement, of course, Uh,
but to be that closely connected to it, you get,
you know, you get that entirely different perspective than what
you had before. And uh, you know, the the biggest
thing that you find out very quickly is that there's
a lot of people that don't like you just for
the fact.
Speaker 8 (25:30):
That you exist. That is it.
Speaker 9 (25:32):
That is because you know, you you have associated or
are related to someone in law enforcement, and you are
by proxy, uh a bad person, and that is you know,
that shocked me the most. That was not something that
I could have ever even imagined again.
Speaker 8 (25:50):
Because we weren't.
Speaker 9 (25:51):
It wasn't part of our upbringing, wasn't part of our mentality.
You know, we were just taught to raise law uh
rains to respect law enforcement.
Speaker 8 (26:00):
And that was kind of it. So to see this whole.
Speaker 9 (26:03):
Other side of it was pretty eye opening for sure.
Speaker 4 (26:07):
So Okay, so you weren't in that in the beginning,
but you obviously you've gotten into that, and we had
talked about how once you get into that, that law
enforcement community. It's such a close knit community, right, I
mean everybody is sort of with everybody all the time.
Speaker 8 (26:19):
Correct, Yeah, it's you know, we kind of related to it.
It's like any family.
Speaker 9 (26:24):
You know, you can fight like cats and dogs internally
amongst yourselves, but you know, you are protective and defensive
of your family.
Speaker 8 (26:32):
And you know, that was.
Speaker 9 (26:34):
The position that I found myself in when I met
my husband. You know, we were at one of and
we've been through many cycles of this, but we were
at one of the heights of the anti law enforcement
sentiment going on across the country, and you know, so
that was really a first taste in what that really
(26:55):
looked like. So for me, it was a matter of like, hey,
on a second, I know that these people and yes,
just like any profession.
Speaker 8 (27:03):
And I kind of hate the phrase, but I'm going.
Speaker 9 (27:04):
To use it anyway because it's such a well known phrase.
You know, there's bad apples, bad actors in every profession, right.
We all say that about every profession, at least I
think we do. And you know, and law enforcement is
no different. There are people that never should have been
police officers. There are people who were at one time
great police officers, and became not so great, you know,
(27:27):
more than anyone else. I think really good cops want
bad ones out, you know, So it's to me it
felt like such a no brainer, like, well done, nobody
wants I just reverted back to my nineteen eighty self.
Speaker 8 (27:40):
Did you hear that with the no dah? Yeah, thank you,
very proud.
Speaker 9 (27:43):
Of that one, duh. You know, really, and so I
felt very compelled to defend the good men and women
of law enforcement who really are in it for the
right reasons, doing the right things, and sacrificing so much
for their communities.
Speaker 4 (28:02):
So you just showed everybody a little piece of why
you're so successful because you were funny. Now, so it's
not easy to be funny, right, we all know that
some people try to be funny and it's a complete disaster.
Politicians often try to be funny and it's a total disaster.
So your podcast, let's let's talk about that for a
couple of minutes. So you've got a whole bunch of followers.
(28:22):
It grows every single day, and you know, you sort
of this whole world, this podcast world, this ninety second
clip world where we're in consuming information and information in
these clips.
Speaker 1 (28:35):
How did you you're so successful? How did just give
me that background? How did that happen? I?
Speaker 9 (28:41):
You know, I wish I could tell you that there's
some great formula that I figured out, you know, like
how people say they figure out winning the lottery. I
am a notorious fly by the seat of my pants girl.
I used to call myself impulsive, and I have changed
that mindset and now I refer to it as being
(29:02):
a quick decision maker. Not impulsive, just a very quick
decision maker. And it was when I say, I literally
woke up one morning and said, you think I want
to do a podcast. Yeah, I'm going to do a podcast.
And was you know, getting the equipment and setting up,
you know, probably by that night. That is really the case.
(29:22):
Now did the following all that stuff come overnight? Absolutely not.
I've been plugging away at this for If you want
to count the books as part of the whole process,
will count that. So probably about ten twelve years that
I've been in this media realm, and it's just kind
of evolved and taken different shape. But the podcast really
(29:45):
start off just as an outlet in an avenue to
advocate for law enforcement families in particular, and it just
kind of snowballed and grew.
Speaker 1 (29:53):
And you've written what twenty five books? Is that right?
Speaker 3 (29:55):
Yeah?
Speaker 8 (29:56):
Yeah, yeah, we're right around there. Yeah, it's a combination
of chill.
Speaker 9 (30:00):
I always say, I grew up with my books, so
I started writing children's books, and then it moved into
young adult fiction, and then contemporary like contemporary women's fiction,
and then lastly or latest is nonfiction. So yeah, yeah,
I have to say again, I'm so blessed that I
(30:21):
was just afforded the opportunity to have the time to
be able to work on that the way that I
was able to, you know, tons of credit and gratitude
to my husband for just you know, helping me make
that a reality and just saying, you know what, I
believe in you, and I do it, just do it.
Speaker 8 (30:37):
And it was low and bold who knew that this
is where it would end up.
Speaker 4 (30:43):
So people alluded earlier that people sort of get their
information sometimes from these fifteen second, thirty second, ninety second
clips which you provide and other thousands of other people
provide with less success than you. But this media evolution
that we're undergoing right now, good bad. Your thoughts on
just the generality of it I mean, there's so many
(31:05):
different things going on, so many different places to consume information.
Some of it's not even close to being factual, some
of it is. I mean, but what are your general
thoughts on the new way that we sort of eat
up stuff?
Speaker 5 (31:17):
Yeah?
Speaker 9 (31:17):
You know what, Lee, I think good and bad. I
think just about with anything there is good and bad.
I think the good to come from it is the
independent journalism, the ability for people to seek out and
share their own information rather than just being spoon fed
whatever the I call it, the alphabet media. You know,
(31:38):
whatever the alphabet media is feeding you today. You have
this opportunity now to be an independent journalist and do
that and find out for yourself, and the bad of
that is literally the exact same.
Speaker 8 (31:51):
Thing right where.
Speaker 9 (31:52):
You know, now you have all of these independent journalists,
you know, able to essentially do the same thing that
the national is doing, which is give a slanted perspective,
a bias perspective on a topic or an item or situation,
whatever it might be. And you know, any given number
of people will hear that perspective and either take it
(32:14):
at face value and run with it as absolute truth,
or they'll argue with it. You know, I think overall,
with specific regard to podcasting and independent journalism, I think
it is overall a very good thing because the place
we had gotten to and the place that we're at
with half of the country, you know, the divisiveness is
(32:37):
really wild, and you.
Speaker 4 (32:39):
Sprinkle in AI and that becomes even it becomes a little.
Speaker 1 (32:42):
Bit more chaotic, I think.
Speaker 4 (32:43):
And I don't know how we're going to handle that,
But anyway we're talking, you can you.
Speaker 1 (32:47):
Stick around one more break? Absolutely all right, fantastic. So
we're going to stick around.
Speaker 4 (32:50):
We're going to keep tell us one more break and
we'll come back talk a little bit more about maybe
some of the issues at hand. He interviews people as well,
and I, you know, I'd rather talk about that's the
way I am.
Speaker 1 (33:00):
I'd rather talk about fun stuff. But there's so much
gloom and doom in the world.
Speaker 4 (33:04):
Right now it's impossible to divorce yourself from all of that.
Speaker 1 (33:07):
So anyway, come back. We'll be back in just a
couple of minutes.
Speaker 4 (33:09):
If you want to watch, it's at the Gateway, Pundit
dot com, Patriot dot Tv. You can go on Wayne's rumble,
on his ex, on his getter, go to root for America.
Of course, all of the great radio stations from one
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Keep it right here. You're watching and listening to the
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Speaker 1 (36:41):
All right, everyone, welcome back.
Speaker 4 (36:43):
This is the war Zone. Wayne Allen Root is off.
He'll be back tomorrow. I am the voice of Freedom,
Lee Elsie filling in for Wayne. Our guest has Elsa Kurt,
a dynamic American media personality.
Speaker 1 (36:54):
We are lucky to get a chance to chat with her.
You know else.
Speaker 4 (36:58):
Before we went to the break, I forgot. That's what
I do as I get older, I forget. But I
wanted to give everybody a chance to find out where
you are. Where do they find you? Where do they
find the podcast? Where do they find all the info?
Speaker 8 (37:09):
Let's do that, Thank you, Thank you.
Speaker 9 (37:11):
The easiest way to find everything is elsaker dot com.
It gives you all of my links to all of
my stuff and things, all the different platforms I'm on, Facebook, Instagram,
TikTok x, so you name it, YouTube, all of them
everywhere all the time.
Speaker 1 (37:27):
Well, that's good, all the time, constantly all the time.
That's pretty good. You're doing pretty good. Let me ask you.
We've talked about this before.
Speaker 4 (37:37):
I wanted to ask you about No King's Day and
how did it impact you?
Speaker 1 (37:41):
At all.
Speaker 4 (37:41):
Did you have anybody that you knew that went to
these rallies. Did you happen to stop by or rally?
What were your thoughts on No King's Day?
Speaker 9 (37:48):
Yeah, no, I'm such a recluse. I try to avoid
going to pretty much everything.
Speaker 6 (37:53):
I know.
Speaker 8 (37:53):
That sounded terrible, but it's the truth. I can't lie,
you know.
Speaker 9 (37:57):
I did not know until after the fact that I
know somebody who went. We are on the opposite sides
of the political spectrum there, and she went, and of
course she thought it was wonderful and delightful, and we
did not have much of a conversation about it, you know.
Speaker 8 (38:12):
So I can tell you what I saw from from.
Speaker 9 (38:15):
The tons of video and all of the examples out
there from different parts of the country, And you know,
the best way I can sum it up is to
call it moral rocked on full display, just moral decay.
Speaker 8 (38:33):
It was so disheartening.
Speaker 9 (38:36):
I think that's the mildest way I could put it,
you know, And I try to not get pretty as
much as possible. You know, I'm a Christian, so I fully,
in one hundred percent believe that God is in control
and he will make whatever evil go for good. He
will make it for good. So you know, I try
and keep my head on as far as that is concerned.
(38:58):
But you know, when you see something like and I'll
call her out my name, Lucy Rodriguez, the elementary school
teacher who was caught on recorded simulating Charlie Kirk's assassination
and smiling and just with glee.
Speaker 8 (39:15):
And if that doesn't sum it.
Speaker 9 (39:18):
All up right there, And I know people are going
to you know, are you goes? Oh, there was lots
of peaceful protests. I'm sure there were. I'm sure there were.
But if this is what is representing you, I think
you should probably be rethinking your alignments there. But yeah,
very very hard to watch.
Speaker 4 (39:37):
Yeah, No, I agree with that one thousand percent. And
a couple of things that took away. Either you had
purple hair, blue hair, or gray hair. It was one
of the three. You didn't have. You know, there wasn't
a lot and there wasn't any diversity. That was the
one thing that I noticed too, which I'm sure has
to rub them the wrong way. You couldn't see a
black person anywhere in any of the photos that I
(39:57):
got a chance to watch for any of the videos,
So I don't know where they were, but they certainly
weren't on board with what that progressive movement wants to
push forward here here in Connecticut.
Speaker 1 (40:06):
There was a big Ice issue.
Speaker 4 (40:07):
I'm sure you've seen it where Ice was told that
they they're deplorable and they're disgusting, and they need to
tell the towns when they're coming around up the illegals.
Speaker 1 (40:18):
What are your thoughts on that?
Speaker 8 (40:20):
Yeah, the you know, the absurdity.
Speaker 9 (40:23):
I think we're all so sick and tired of these
blue haired liberals and you know, let's call it what
it is. It's typically these you know, middle aged white women,
white liberal women, you know, waving their Starbucks around and
their iPhone and telling you, you know, about oppression and
your white privilege and.
Speaker 8 (40:42):
All of those things. And it's just become such a caricature.
Speaker 9 (40:46):
But you know, as far as it comes to our
federal agents, you know, that is something that now that
does make me angry. It makes me very angry because
these are people who are calling for you know, the
harm and the injury not only to these agents, but
but doxing them and harassing their families and you know,
(41:07):
their children. Uh, this is a level of just absolute
abhorrence that cannot be accepted under any circumstances. And I
really want to see these people pursued aggressively with the
fullest extent of the law.
Speaker 8 (41:26):
And you know they're there in lies.
Speaker 9 (41:28):
The difference between us and them, uh is that you know,
we call for just means, they call for violence, you know,
And I just want accountability and and I think that's
what we have to insist on. So and we're making
great steps in that, you know, with you know, with
Antifa being designated as a terrorist group, as they very
well should be. The tolerance for this behavior and these
(41:52):
actions has to come to a dead stop. And I know,
you know, we're in a liberal state. I know the
odds of that are slim.
Speaker 4 (41:59):
But yeah, well I listen, we keep fighting, We keep
fighting it out, and I think in this state, in Connecticut,
I do feel like in particular when it comes to
law enforcement, despite their the sum detractors, I think it's
turned around significantly.
Speaker 1 (42:13):
Also, we got to run because the music is playing.
But one more time, tell everybody where they can find you.
Speaker 9 (42:19):
Also, Kurt dot com, confine me over there and that'll send.
Speaker 8 (42:21):
You into all my other links. Thank you so much, Lee,
let's do it again.
Speaker 1 (42:24):
We'll next time we'll just have we'll try.
Speaker 4 (42:26):
To have fun, tell jokes for thirty minutes because sometimes
the news can be overwhelming and depressing.
Speaker 1 (42:31):
But thank you so much for coming on tonight. I
appreciate it very much.
Speaker 8 (42:34):
Thank you.
Speaker 4 (42:35):
All right, coming up after the top of the hour,
I'm going to jump into the deep end of the
pool with the No Kings rally. Talk a little bit
about that. Then the bottom of next hour, talk about
law enforcement. We're going to have law enforcement. Today's Kyle
reyis with us at seven thirty five Eastern.
Speaker 1 (42:51):
What is that four to thirty five out in the
West Coast, So.
Speaker 4 (42:53):
Stick around a lot to get to still sixty minutes
in the book, sixty minutes to go.
Speaker 1 (42:58):
Keep it here. It's the war zone.
Speaker 3 (43:13):
Hi, this is Wayne Allen Route.
Speaker 5 (43:15):
If you're sick and tired of supporting wold companies.
Speaker 3 (43:17):
I have great news for you.
Speaker 5 (43:19):
You don't have to anymore. You could shop where my
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My number one best selling Great Patriot bycotbook is filled
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Speaker 5 (43:38):
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Speaker 3 (43:52):
Month, and you should too.
Speaker 5 (43:53):
And now they've got the beef pasture raised with no hormones,
antibotics or mRNA ever exclusively available only to their members.
Speaker 3 (44:00):
Like Coscor Sam's Club. He needs to become a member.
Go to Great Patriots Store dot com. Fill out the form,
They'll contact.
Speaker 5 (44:06):
You right away and boom you remember, go to Great
Patriots Store dot com.
Speaker 3 (44:10):
That's Great Patriot Store dot com.