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August 13, 2024 • 34 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. So
Michael Arry Show is on the air. We were going

(00:27):
off the air last night.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
Donald Trump and Elon Musk were preparing to sit down
to have a conversation. Not exactly a radical notion, is it, unless,
of course, you're the Democrats and their media when you

(00:51):
are suppressing the people, and that's what we're witnessing now,
the people are being broken. Will there be a revolution,
Will there be a change in government?

Speaker 1 (01:05):
We shall see. Not everyone is.

Speaker 2 (01:08):
Prepared to throw off the yoke of tyranny under which
we are currently subjected.

Speaker 1 (01:14):
But it is that, it is that.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
The idea of Elon Musk and Donald Trump sitting down
to have a conversation on a platform that is free
to the public to review was so frightening to Cleave
Woodson of The Washington Post that the question was asked,
is the White House going to do something about it?

(01:43):
Because you see, you label everything you wish to control
and destroy, You label it something that everyone first agreed
was a good thing. Misinformation is bad, right, Yes, we
all agree misinformation is bad, okay, And if it's misinformation,
we can kill you to prevent it. For yeah, why

(02:04):
not it's bad. Just I just won't engage in misinformation.
Oh everything you say that questions anything we do, that's misinformation. Wait, yeah, gotcha,
that's racism, that's hate speech, that's all of it.

Speaker 1 (02:20):
That's the game, checkmate, they got you. Listen to this.

Speaker 3 (02:25):
Elon Musk is slated to interview Donald Trump tomorrow tonight
on on X. I don't know if the President is
going today appepriate to say if he is or not,
But I think that misinformation on Twitter is not just
a campaign issue.

Speaker 1 (02:41):
It's a you know, it's an America issue.

Speaker 3 (02:44):
What role does the White House or the President have
in sort of stopping that or stopping the spread of that,
or sort.

Speaker 1 (02:53):
Of intervening in that.

Speaker 3 (02:54):
And some of that was about campaign misinformation, but you
know it's a wider thing.

Speaker 1 (02:58):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:58):
No, I mean you've heard us talk about this many
times from here, about the responsibilities that social media platforms
have when it comes to misinformation disinformation. You don't have
anything to read out from here about specific ways that
we're working on it, but we believe that that they
have the responsibility. These are private companies, so we're also

(03:19):
mindful of that too. But look, it is I think
It is incredibly important to call that out as you're doing.
I just don't have any specifics on what we have
been doing internally as it relates to the interviews and
not something that I'm tracking, and I'm sure the President's
not tracking it either.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
President's not tracking anything. I mean, he's barely alive. They've
got him sprawled out, him or someone that looks like him,
a close enough fac simile to him. They've got him
sprawled out at the beach. See there he is over

(04:00):
like he's some zoo animal. Oh can we No, no, no,
don't get close to him. Don't get close to him
and make him nervous. He's old and in bad shape.
So we want to go back to this question we're
gonna get. We're gonna spend the show a lot of
the show today on Elon and Donald Trump, because I
think it was it was an important exchange, and I

(04:23):
want to amplify it because, as you heard, the Washington
Post is asking the government. The White House is the government.
It's not a campaign. That's the government to shut down
this conversation. And do you hear how he leads her.
This is not just a campaign issue. This is an
America issue. They're out there, they're talking about things freely,

(04:45):
and that's scary and that's dangerous. Are you gonna do something?
I hope you'll do something about it, because it's scary
and dangerous. Oh, Cleeve, did you skip therapy this week?
You little powder puff? Did mommy not send your caprice

(05:05):
son with you today to the White House Press briefing room?
Are you having a tough time? Did you not get
pegged properly last night? Cleave?

Speaker 1 (05:17):
Bless your heart. You're scared of those two mean men.
Those two mean men, and they're talking.

Speaker 3 (05:26):
Elon Musk is slated to interview Donald Corum tomorrow tonight
on on X. I don't know if the President is
going today feel pretty safety as or not, but I
think that misinformation on Twitter is not just a campaign issue,
it's a it's a americiece.

Speaker 1 (05:44):
Oh please give it up. Shut out of the White House,
Just shut up?

Speaker 2 (05:47):
Or the president have President Trump and Elon Musk in
their conversation. Elon started the conversation with what I think
Trump needs to get back to summoning the courage and
the leadership that he did a month ago.

Speaker 1 (06:02):
Today, I love this as the opening.

Speaker 5 (06:04):
Maybe we could sett off with. I mean the assassination attempt,
which was an incredible thing. And I have to say that,
you know, your actions at that nest, that that assession
national attempt were inspiring. You know you instead of shying
away from things, instead of locking down, you were pomping

(06:26):
your fists in the air and saying, fight, fight, fine.
And I think that's I mean, you know, the President
of the United States represents America, and I think that
is that is America, that that is strength under fire,
and so that's you know, a big you know, part
of the reason why I was excited to endorse you

(06:49):
as the President of the United States for having enough
time here is that was that was just incredibly inspiring.

Speaker 1 (06:57):
But I mean, what was it like for you?

Speaker 6 (07:01):
Not pleasant? I said, it was blood. I had more blood.
I didn't know.

Speaker 7 (07:07):
I didn't know I had that much blood. The doctors
later told me that the ear is a place that
is a very bloody place if you're going to get
a hit. But in this case, it was probably the
best alternative you could even think about because it went
at the right angle, and uh, you know, it was
it was a hard hit. It was very I guess

(07:29):
you would say surreal. But it wasn't surreal, you know.
I was telling somebody, you have instances like this or
like a lot less than this, where you feel it's
a surreal situation, and I never felt that way.

Speaker 6 (07:42):
I knew immediately that it was a bullet.

Speaker 7 (07:46):
I knew immediately that it was at the ear, and
because it you know, it hit very hard, but hit
the ear. And I also heard people shout bullets, bullets,
you know, get down, get down, because I you know,
I moved down pretty nicely, pretty quickly, and we had
bullets flying right over my head after I went down.

Speaker 6 (08:05):
So I'm glad I went down.

Speaker 7 (08:07):
The bigger miracle was that I was looking in the
exact direction of the shooter and so it hit.

Speaker 6 (08:12):
It hit me at an angle that.

Speaker 7 (08:13):
Was far less destructive than any other angle.

Speaker 6 (08:17):
So that was the miracle that was for those two.
I don't believe in God.

Speaker 7 (08:21):
I think we got to all start thinking about that.
You have to, you know, I'm I'm a believer now
I'm more of a believer, I think.

Speaker 6 (08:29):
And a lot of.

Speaker 7 (08:29):
People have said that to a lot of great people
have said that to me.

Speaker 6 (08:32):
Actually, But it was it was amazing that.

Speaker 7 (08:35):
I happened to be turned just at that perfect angle.
And well, because I put down a chart on immigration
that showed that the numbers were so great.

Speaker 6 (08:44):
I love that chart.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
Maybe that's a sign remember me, I can't remember.

Speaker 2 (08:52):
Scott Out amplifying and reviewing the conversation between Elon Musk
and Donald Trump last night Elon posted combined views of
the conversation with real Donald Trump and subsequent discussion by other.

Speaker 1 (09:15):
Accounts is now a billion people.

Speaker 2 (09:21):
It has far surpassed that today. This was last night
they posted on x The site itself posted that between
seven forty seven and ten forty seven pm Eastern, so
thirteen minutes before it was supposed to start. It started
a little late, I believe, thirteen minutes before it was

(09:44):
supposed to start three hours of full time. President Trump's
Space post received Space is the for those of you
not on Twitter. Space is the the program within Twitter.
As I understand it. I've not done it where you

(10:04):
can host something and it's like hosting a radio show
or hosting a conference and people.

Speaker 1 (10:10):
Can join on there.

Speaker 2 (10:12):
President Trump's Space received seventy three million views. During the
same period, there were four million posts about Elon Musk
and President Trump's conversation on x generating a total of
nine hundred and ninety eight million views. What this means

(10:36):
is that people are hungry to learn more. What does
President Trump have to say? What is Elon going to say?
Some of those people who are hungry to learn more
are independent voters, undecided voters, third party voters. Libertare in

(11:00):
small L Libertarians, maybe some big L Libertarians. They're a
different breed. But the point is the base got to
hear from Trump, but more importantly, voters who The Washington
Post doesn't want Donald Trump to be able to speak

(11:24):
directly to the public. That's why when he's speaking, CNN
and MSNBC silence it because they fear it if he
was an idiot. What do we do with Kamala Harris.
We don't silence her speaking, We share it. The more
she talks, the dumber she sounds. She's radical and she's dangerous.

(11:50):
Ineptitude is not cute. It is not to be easily dismissed.
Ineptitude is dangerous. We had a school shooting here in Texas,
in a town many people outside of Texas would have
never heard of before Euvality, and in Uvality, the shooter

(12:13):
went in and started massacring the kids. The police officers
were cowards. They did not do what police officers always do,
which is go blazing in there to take out the threat.
They waited outside while the children died inside.

Speaker 1 (12:38):
Ineptitude is important. The people in.

Speaker 2 (12:44):
The position to save the lives of those children by
confronting the threat didn't do their job. We cannot afford
a radical, dangerous Kamala Harris presidency. We can't afford it.
We can't survive it. We cannot survive it. There is

(13:07):
a reason that Kamala Harris will not sit with Elon
Musk and do such a conversation. He offered it to her.
My understanding is the offer is still outstanding.

Speaker 1 (13:22):
She can't.

Speaker 2 (13:24):
She's not capable. She's as bad as Joe Biden, but
for different reasons. So President Trump remembers Corey Comparatory, the
former volunteer Fire Department fire chief who was murdered that day.
There were two other men wounded. This is Trump doing

(13:47):
what he needs to do more of remind people that
when Kamala Harris goes down, the things that are being
shot are not a threat to you and me. When
he goes down, it's because he's been hitting the face
and they're trying to kill him. They're very they go

(14:09):
down for different reasons. They're very different people. This is
President Trump being gracious and grateful to the doctors. I
like this Trump right here. I like this a lot.
I applaud this. This is great. This was what people
needed to say. Give us listen.

Speaker 6 (14:30):
That's just that situation. As you know, we lost somebody.

Speaker 7 (14:33):
That was greg Ria, who a firefighter, a great gentleman,
a great trumper. He was just a fantastic family and
a fantastic man.

Speaker 6 (14:44):
And a friend mine came up.

Speaker 7 (14:46):
Elon and said, I'd like to give the family some
kind of help and I said, that's great. He said,
to your mind, I said, I don't mind at all.
And he wrote out a check for a million dollars,
gave it to the wife, and you know, she said,
this is really nice, but I'd rather have my husband back,
which is a nice thing for somebody to say.

Speaker 6 (15:05):
To be honest, she's great.

Speaker 7 (15:07):
The family is great, and we raised a lot of
money for them and for two other gentlemen. Are unbelievable people. Also,
they were hit really badly. They thought they were not
going to make it, and they did the doctors in
the Butler area. I tell you they were incredible. They
saved the two and they were really.

Speaker 6 (15:25):
Hit tough, both of them equally. And we thought.

Speaker 7 (15:30):
My first question was because I heard bullets flying over me, and.

Speaker 6 (15:33):
I said, how many people were killed?

Speaker 7 (15:34):
Because we had a massive crowd there a tremendous thousands
and thousands of people and there was no land. I mean,
it was just it was all people. So I said
how many people had been killed? Because I knew there
were other shots being fired, and they said, we don't
know yet, but some people have been badly hurt.

Speaker 1 (15:52):
I like that Trump, and it is good to remember.

Speaker 2 (16:00):
How Trump responded to something he could not have imagined happening.
He gets shot in the face. Bullets are whizzing, his
face is gushing blood. They try to keep him pinned down.

(16:22):
He stands up and says, fight, fight. That is the
stuff of legends. That is the stuff of legend. Everybody
likes to think that's what they'd do in that moment,
but most people wouldn't. Then he gives credit Donald Trump.

(16:42):
Elon Musk. He gives credit to the Secret Service sniper
who took out the shooter.

Speaker 6 (16:48):
I have to give the Secret Service.

Speaker 7 (16:51):
A sniper they call him, or a shop shooter, but
sniper because he didn't know there was a problem. He's
been he's an extraordinary obviously, and he didn't know there
was a problem and he was able to pick it
all out within five seconds and he used one bullet
from very far away, I guess probably about four hundred yards.
The shooter was one thirty, but he was on the

(17:13):
he was on the opposite side of the field and
the podium, and he saw the smoke and the flame
from the gun, immediately recognized it and immediately took a shot.
And it was one perfect shot from very far away.
And if he didn't do that elon, he would have
I mean, if he would have a lot of people,

(17:35):
a lot more people have been could have been badly
and killed. So I have to take my hat off
to him because that's also a surreal You know, he's
been with them for twenty three years and he's never
had anything like this, and all of a sudden he
has to act, and it's a very tough thing to
act and to be shooting somebody. But he saw the

(17:57):
he saw the gun, saw the smoke, saw the flame
from the gun.

Speaker 6 (18:00):
Very far away.

Speaker 7 (18:01):
Obviously has very good he's got very good vision, which
I assume you have.

Speaker 6 (18:05):
To have in that particular work.

Speaker 7 (18:07):
But he took him very quickly, and it was they
say it was approximately five seconds from long range.

Speaker 6 (18:15):
One bullet.

Speaker 7 (18:16):
If that didn't happen, because the shooter had a lot
of bullets, he had a lot of cartridges up there with.

Speaker 6 (18:22):
Him, so.

Speaker 2 (18:24):
It's amazing more people didn't die. We are reviewing the
conversation between Elon Musk and Donald Trump. It created a
firestorm on the left. Elon posted the headlines that the

(18:46):
left wrote about it. They are so angry. They're trying
to charge that he committed a crime by this was
a political donation.

Speaker 1 (18:56):
To Donald Trump.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
Never the mind, CNN, msnbsay they do this every day.
The point is these people are frightened. Don't let off
the gas. We have got to keep bringing the truth
to people. There was no doubt this morning when we

(19:20):
came in that what we were going to talk about
this evening was sharing this conversation because we want you
to hear it, and now we want it burned into
our podcast, and our podcast will have a whole separate
audience and someone can then share that the truth shall
set you free. It's our job to be conduits of truth.

(19:45):
So Elon musk Donald Trump massive audience for this, and
that will continue into today. I mean, I hope everybody's
doing what we're doing, which is amplifying this conversation, sharing
it with more people. I believe in the power of idea,
and when the left is so upset about it, I
know we're on the right track. So Elon points out what,

(20:08):
of course Donald Trump knows. But what's important to understand
is that he is saying this. This is sort of
burning this into the record. He is sharing things with people,
many of whom will not have heard this yet. He's
pointing out the failings that led to the assassin being

(20:31):
on the roof. And of course you know all these things,
but not everybody does. This is why it's important that
he did this.

Speaker 1 (20:37):
Give us a listen.

Speaker 5 (20:38):
That does seem to be I mean, some pretty significant
failings elsewhere, and there's just no way that a count
on Earth does a shooter get on a roof one
hundred and thirty yards away. That seems crazy. I think
most people like what people are wondering, how on Earth
could such a thing happen.

Speaker 7 (20:54):
Well, you know, I view it as too as there
should have been nobody in the roof. There were people
because there were so many of thousands of people there,
there were people that were seeing him. And there was
one woman with a red shirt and she's.

Speaker 6 (21:10):
Screaming, that guy's got a gun. You know, you saw it.

Speaker 7 (21:13):
Probably it's a guy with a gun.

Speaker 5 (21:16):
It's like, I'm just I'm just I guess I mean,
for my part, and I think probably many members of
the public all wondering, how the heck are you know,
basically people wondering by pointing out there's a guy on
the roof of the gun there, seen it, but somehow
it's not being addressed that that doesneem crazy.

Speaker 7 (21:36):
Well, they're going to learn from this, the communication between
the local police who sort of had an idea. Then
ultimately a man lifted himself up to the roof, could
barely do it because you know, he was pulling himself
up and he saw the man.

Speaker 6 (21:50):
With the gun.

Speaker 7 (21:52):
The man with the gun pointed the gun. Adam, he
thought he was probably going to get shot. But you know,
he's like pulling himself up and because of that, he
couldn't get to his gun.

Speaker 6 (22:02):
And he fell down actually very badly.

Speaker 7 (22:04):
Hurt his leg, his ankle here very badly, but he
fell down and he did, you know, from what I understand,
he did say, it is a guy up there with
a gun. And the shooting started very quickly after that.
I think I think it forced the shooter to go
maybe quicker. You know, you're supposed to be a very
good shot. Yeah, my son's Don and Eric, they can't

(22:27):
believe what happened. But they said from one hundred and
thirty yards, a bad shot would hit that target almost
every time. They said, it's like in golf, thinking the
two foot butt.

Speaker 1 (22:37):
Yeah, it's it's not a tough shot.

Speaker 7 (22:39):
It's not a long shot. The Secret Service person had
the long shot. He had a you know, triple instance actually,
so you know, it.

Speaker 6 (22:47):
Was a terrible thing.

Speaker 1 (22:52):
Well, a lot of you have commented to me.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
That the President should point out the failings of the
Secret Service, and I understand that from your perspective, that
makes all the sense in the world. It's not lost
on President Trump, the failings that by all rights should
have cost him his life, that's not lost on him.

Speaker 1 (23:21):
Make no mistake of that.

Speaker 2 (23:24):
Attention to detail is something that a person in the
hospitality industry, his entire life, in the construction business, in
the real estate business, in the media business. He knows
good and wealth, the failings. He knows things you don't know.
So when you say that the president should say this
and this, there are two things he's doing. Number One,

(23:51):
he's getting a lot of advice not to be negative,
don't insult people, don't criticize people, don't mock people. Number
two or further to that point. So suba, these are
guys wearing badges. He does not want to be perceived

(24:14):
as at odds with the people wearing the badges. Now
that tubby secret Service agent who could not holster her gun,
by the way, she's assigned to j D Vance. Now,
so I guess they're going to take him out to
What President Trump is doing is commander in chief esque.

(24:39):
This is not lost on men and women who wear uniforms.
He is standing behind them. He is standing in support
of them. When everyone knows good and well that they
were like Kamala Harris, they just blew it in front
of everybody. He is showing support for them. And that

(25:03):
is not lost on the rank and file hierarchical organizational people.
In the country who look to a leader to do
that he knows what he's doing. Rest assured he does.
From number two, he's leaving you to say, and that's

(25:25):
why you did very clever.

Speaker 6 (25:28):
It's o the world as we know that.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
The world.

Speaker 2 (25:41):
We are reviewing and amplifying the conversation between Donald Trump
and Elon Musk. It is important that we share what
we know with those around us. We grow frustrated. Why
are people saying they're going to vote this way? Why

(26:03):
are they not coming down with the same conclusion on
How much.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
Time and effort have we taken to share it with them.

Speaker 2 (26:11):
A number of people will tell me, you know, my kids,
My kids can't even fill the plank. My kids can't
even change a tire on a car twenty years old. Well,
my dad taught me how to change a tire. Wasn't
it my responsibility to teach that to my children? So

(26:34):
if my children didn't know how to change a tire,
whose fault would that be mine? I didn't always have
the gumption to know that it's a life skill to

(26:55):
do the following things that my dad a maintenance worker,
mataining things, fixing things. I have no skill. It's not
intuitive to me. I don't enjoy it. I don't take
pride in it. That's not my strength. But it was

(27:17):
important that you have the basics growing up. If your
child does not have a skill set that you believe
they should have and that you have and that your
parents taught you, fix it. We must all do better.

(27:38):
We have to be the change we want to see
in the world. We have to fix the problems. We
got to stop waiting on the schools to teach our
kids what we're not teaching them, on the schools to
discipline our children.

Speaker 1 (27:53):
Why aren't we doing it?

Speaker 2 (27:55):
People will tell me all the time, you know what
we need to do, Michael Is, and they'll give me
this whole thing.

Speaker 1 (27:59):
Right you start, I'll be right behind you. Oh I can't,
I can't. I can't.

Speaker 2 (28:05):
Well, then why do you expect everybody else to if
you're not going to lead by example? There are very
few people in any society who are doers. Sooner you
learn that, the better, There are very few. Don't rely
on anybody else to do anything. You want it fixed.

Speaker 1 (28:23):
Fix it.

Speaker 2 (28:25):
But you know what, there are a lot of There
are a lot of people who will stand to the
side and criticize.

Speaker 1 (28:33):
When the plumbing.

Speaker 2 (28:35):
When there's a plumbing problem at the family gathering, there'll
be one guy who'll get on there and start working.
There'll be a lot of people stand back and go, well,
I don't know if I do it? Are you sure
you don't do it?

Speaker 7 (28:45):
Like I know?

Speaker 2 (28:47):
Why don't you get down here and do it? Why
don't you fix it? Because everybody wants to crib. Everybody
wants to sit back and complain and offer alternate I
can't tell you how many emails I got today. Trump
sounds like he's lisping or something. Well, what is wrong?
I don't like it? He's why do you care? Maybe

(29:10):
he's got TMJ. A lot of people do.

Speaker 1 (29:14):
I do.

Speaker 2 (29:15):
A lot of people do. Sometimes I make a whistling sound.
People think I'm chewing gum. People think I have a
throat lossage. Does it matter? Is it important? Turn the dial?
The content is what matters. I can tell you some days,

(29:37):
especially by the end of the show, my jaw is
sore from just talking so much. Because we record a
lot of other things in between the shows. My jawstre
I mean it is I can hear when I go
back and listen, I can hear how I sound different. Okay,
I don't know that it's important, But if it's important
to somebody, then I guess that's their deal. Is how

(29:58):
President Trump is speaking, whether he's tired, maybe he had
an ulcer. Is that important? Are you focusing on what matters?
If that's what you've brought up? Know nothing about the content,
just the delivery. I think at some point you got

(30:21):
to stop and ask yourself a question. Am I personally
worthy to live in the greatest country in the history
of mankind? Am I capable of preserving that which was
handed to me by better men and women? And I
think a lot of people, if they're honest, would have

(30:41):
to say, no, I'm not.

Speaker 1 (30:42):
I have to do better. I have to do better.
I want to This.

Speaker 2 (30:46):
Next audio is one of the most powerful of the
conversation last night. You know, ladies will remember decades a
moment when they were in danger and their husband defended them. Now,

(31:11):
they may not remember the three six and forty two
times you took out the trash filled her car up
with gas, which you should be doing for your ladies.
By the way, you should be doing that. You should
treat her like a princess. You should. You may be surprised.
She may turn around and treat you like the king
that you want to be. And well, another subject another time.

Speaker 1 (31:37):
I want to get to this. A lady will remember.

Speaker 2 (31:42):
I've heard women in their sixties or seventies talk about
how some guy touched her inappropriately, said something inappropriately, and
her man came to her defense and knocked that guy out.
You remember things like that. They're important. She knows for

(32:03):
the rest of her life what this man is made of.
He doesn't have to strut around all day every day.
After that, she will never doubt. There will be a comfort.
You learned a lot about Donald Trump when the bullets
started flying. He didn't scream and squeal or none of that.
But what's amazing is you also learned a lot about

(32:25):
the people who were there. And he points this out.
The bullets started flying, the people didn't They didn't run.
That was a revelation of character in that crowd.

Speaker 7 (32:40):
One of the miracles was that nobody ran. I mean,
if a gun goes off, the crowd control people showed
us as when guns go off, and it does happen
in stadiums and a soccer match or some kind of
a match, everybody flees. They call it a stampede like cattle,
but everybody and a lot of people get killed.

Speaker 6 (32:58):
With us stampede.

Speaker 7 (33:00):
We had more people than you'd have it, you know
some of these matches or these games, and nobody left.
You know, you had a small group behind us in
the grandstand and that was full, and you look at
it as it was taking place, and normally they'd be running.

Speaker 6 (33:17):
They didn't live.

Speaker 7 (33:18):
They saw that I was hurt, They saw a lot
of blood, and they saw that I went down, and
it's almost like they wanted to be with me. Well,
out front, you had thousands, tens of thousands of people
as far as the I could see.

Speaker 6 (33:31):
You had people in butler as far as the I could.

Speaker 7 (33:34):
See, and.

Speaker 6 (33:36):
A lot of press too.

Speaker 7 (33:37):
There was, you know, many cameras on watching this. It's
what makes it so different because normally things happened that aren't.

Speaker 6 (33:44):
Good, but you never have a picture of here.

Speaker 7 (33:46):
We have all these cameras shooting it, so, you know,
sort of amazing. But one of the interesting things was
that you didn't have anybody flee. You didn't have anybody stampede, nobody.

Speaker 6 (33:58):
And there were some people behind me. They up and
they're looking like you know I mean.

Speaker 7 (34:01):
I say you want to have you want to have
them in a Fox call with you. I want to
meet some of those people because it's so different from
what you heard.
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