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September 27, 2024 • 31 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, Luck and load. Michael
Arry Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
We are talking with Hollywood after and filmmaker Nick Sercy.

Speaker 3 (00:16):
International film and TV star Nick Seersy, Nick Sercy, Nick Sercy, Ahi,
it's Nick Sercy, rister raiser.

Speaker 4 (00:24):
Guess you didn't believe I was giving myself up.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
Hell, no one did.

Speaker 4 (00:29):
But I also didn't believe all that Blaze of Glory book.
Found all those flight simulators on your computer, and I
remembered that you used on a plane back in the day.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
I figured you were refamiliar eyes.

Speaker 4 (00:41):
I wouldn't do that unless you're rethinking that Blaze of glory.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
Nick Sercy has been in so many movies that you
have watched and loved that you would not believe it.
Most people know his name now, I mean the man
has guest hosted for Rush Limball when Rush was still alive.
That's a pretty darn high honor a guy that's not
even a radio talk show host. He's been a theater actor.
He has his own acting school. You have to go

(01:08):
to YouTube to get that joke. It's good. But mostly
he's a phenomenal actor at the craft of acting. But
more importantly, he's a patriot who couldn't sit by and
watch what was happening in this country without speaking out,
even though he was threatened that it would hurt his career.
Did he hurt his career? No, Because he's bigger than Hollywood.

(01:29):
People want him now more than ever. He taunts, He
heckles those who say you'll never be in another movie,
and yet he is again and again and again because
he's damn good at what he does. Proud to call
him my friend, Nick Sercy, Welcome to the program.

Speaker 1 (01:43):
Sir, Hey Michael, glad to be here with you. Are
you on a speakerphone?

Speaker 5 (01:47):
I'm trying not to be. I'm holding close to my
mouth as I can.

Speaker 2 (01:52):
You know, Ramon said, Heynick Sercy's ready for you. You'll
have to tell him to get off his speakerphone, because
I couldn't tell him because's Nick Cercy said, Wait what
Nick Sercy's too big for you to tell him to
get off a speakerphone. What did we come to? He's
not really it justified just a movie. You understand that, right.
How are you doing?

Speaker 1 (02:12):
First of all? How are you doing?

Speaker 6 (02:13):
How?

Speaker 5 (02:13):
I'm doing really well. I'm busy. I'm loving my new place.
I moved to the middle of the country where people
have common sense.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
Tennessee, right, and.

Speaker 5 (02:25):
Partially Tennessee and sometimes Kentucky. I have a couple of
places here that I go back and forth here.

Speaker 2 (02:31):
And you're originally from North Carolina, if I remember correctly, right.

Speaker 5 (02:37):
Western North Carolina. So we're closer to my White's family.
We're closer to my family. It's it's like being home.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
You're closer to God. You're in Tennessee, you're closer to God.

Speaker 5 (02:48):
That's exactly right. I went to California for thirty years.
I did my time, and now I'm out.

Speaker 1 (02:54):
I was with.

Speaker 2 (02:56):
The Tucker Carlson event was in Houston recently, and I
was with the a production crew with it that was
making the film about it. And one of the guys
was they had eaten at one of our best tex
Mex restaurants here in town, Gringos, earlier in the day,
and he was saying that he wasn't he wasn't going
to eat again because they had had to get to

(03:16):
the set and set up for the whole production and
all that. And he said, I'll probably have an in
and out Burger because it was right next to an
in and out burg. I probably have an in and
out Burger at three o'clock tomorrow morning when God's not watching.

Speaker 1 (03:30):
And I thought that's a great line.

Speaker 2 (03:32):
When God's not watching, that's funny.

Speaker 1 (03:35):
First of all, let's talk about the film.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
We talked to Denesh Desusa earlier vindicating Trump. Why were
you involved and what are your thoughts on the film?
What are people going to see in the film, what's
going to be the reaction?

Speaker 5 (03:47):
Well, I think the film is pretty prescient. I mean
we got this got this film back in March or
no in May of this year. And you know, my character,
the person I playing, is like of behind the scenes,
sort of Sengali that's kind of orchestrating the Deep States
campaign against Trump. And really we were kind of ahead

(04:11):
of the curve and sort of predicting that they would
try to assassinate him. And it's pretty chilling to watch
it now, knowing what I know now and thinking back
to when we got it. The movie is very very disturbing.

Speaker 1 (04:26):
Talk about that. Why is it disturbing?

Speaker 7 (04:29):
In it?

Speaker 2 (04:29):
You're telling a story, but you also know that this
is all a true story.

Speaker 5 (04:34):
Right, Well, you've seen it and we've seen it in
the past, few weeks. You know, the President Trump is
literally the target of an entire government and the government.
The media is on the government side. Everything is poised
to keep him out of office for one reason, and

(04:56):
that is to protect the corruption that the government has
been solved that all of the deep staters are benefiting from.
And if gets in there, their whole game is up.
And that's why they have to take him out by.

Speaker 1 (05:11):
Any means necessary.

Speaker 5 (05:12):
That's why they tried the law fair, That's why they
tried to bankrupt him. They tried every consible way to
make him just throve up his hand and quit, including
now taking shots at him. And they can't. They can't
do it. They can't make they can't break his resolve.
So the only other option they have is what they've
been trying labor.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
How do you convey that in a film? How do
you in your mind as you prepared for that. You
are not just a guy that was a pretty face
and got you know, slept with Harvey Weinstein and ended
up on screen. You are this is your craft. As
you got your mind well, well you do have pretty fast.
But when you got your mind ready to do this,

(05:56):
I know how you are. You're serious about this. This
is truly a craft for you.

Speaker 1 (06:00):
What did you want? What did you want to accomplish?

Speaker 5 (06:04):
Well, you know, I've played you know, the joke I
always tells, I've played all kinds of horrible people. I've
played a lot of Democrats. But the thing that's interesting
about playing someone who's evil is that, of course they
don't think they're evil. They think they're doing the right thing.
And so in order to get into the mindset of

(06:28):
a deep state operative whose entire fortune and career is
at state if Trump gets in, I think I'm doing
the right thing about trying to take him out, And
that is the mindset of you know, a lot of
the people that we portray in the film, and what
Deness did rather well is combined you know, real interviews

(06:53):
with Donald Trump and other people, other campaign people about
what he's been through, and this sort of dramatization of
what must be going on behind the scenes with all
the coordinated efforts to take Trump out, with all setting
up the lawfare cases, you know, messing with the vote,

(07:14):
messing with the polls, telling the media what to say,
all that, and so since criminals, the criminals that do
this kind of thing are good at hiding their tracks.
We had to dramatize it, you know, to make it,
to make it look like it probably looks from the inside.

(07:37):
So the combination of a dramatic, dramatic narrative with the
actual interviews with Trump and other real people, I think
make for a very code mix. And really it's a
remarkable film. I've seen it. It's one of vanessa best
for sure.

Speaker 1 (07:57):
You know, you had this conversation number of times.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
The power of film, you know, from little things like
when you know, when a dog is featured in a movie,
the AKC will tell you that. You know, for the
next year, that dog, which might have been the twenty
most purchased breed in the country, goes to number one,
you know, just overnight and stays there. And another dog
in another movie. People are affected by film. I mean

(08:27):
it gets in every sinew. It causes people to change behaviors,
to change, you know, I'm hopeful this.

Speaker 1 (08:36):
Can make a change. Hold one moment.

Speaker 2 (08:37):
Nick Cercy actor Extraordinariy, he's in the new movie vindicating
Trump our conversation with him.

Speaker 3 (08:45):
Wouldn't the world be a better place if every grown
ass man and lesbian woman pop the top on the
Drive Home.

Speaker 1 (08:52):
You bet it would.

Speaker 5 (08:54):
It's the Friday Drive Home on The Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
Nick Zirsuly as our guest. He's my friend. He's a
fantastic actor. Some of you will remember who's been around
the show for a while. He was once filming a movie.
I believe it was in Canada, but it was a
scene out on out kind of in an abandoned area,
and he was in a car and they were filming
from a distance, and he took my call in the

(09:23):
car and put the phone down on the console beside
him and did the interview while the scene was going on,
and they were coming up to him to film in it,
and he's still talking to us and trying not It
was a lot of fun, a lot of you got
a real kick out of that. He was in Fried
Green Tomatoes, he was in was it three Billboards? Outside
of Ebbing. I discovered him, or at least who he

(09:47):
was by name, in Justified, which one of my favorite
TV shows of all time. He's been in more movies
than you can possibly imagine. If you look him up
on IMDb, you'll.

Speaker 1 (09:56):
Go, oh that guy. Yes, of course, he's fantastic.

Speaker 2 (10:00):
In a new movie that hit studios today called Vindicating
Trump by Danish Desuza, who we just spoke to a
few moments ago. Nick, there has been a whole series
of sort of advocacy movies that have been coming out,
and I would even put Dennis Quaid's Reagan in that that.

(10:22):
I think this is a good trend and I give
to Nesh a lot of credit for that. You know,
when he was at twenty twelve, he did that the
first one he did, and we were involved with promoting that.
I think that really told the money guys, hey there's
an audience for this.

Speaker 1 (10:35):
You might have to put some product on.

Speaker 5 (10:37):
The market, right, Yes, And I think he created this
niche or at least sort of led the way a
lot of people have been making films, you know, for
our side, so to thing ever since the nation did that,
and he's really changed the landscape. The problem that I

(10:59):
see to some of these films is that you can't
get the other side to watch them. You were talking
before about how powerful film is. We'll see them Left
knows that they know how powerful film is, so they
try very hard to make sure that you don't hear
about movies like Vindicating Trump or that if you do

(11:20):
hear about them? All you hear is that they're bad.
You know, they did this to Reagan when Reagan came out.
The audience ratings for Reagan are in the ninety eight percentile,
and the critics it's below twenty percent because they have
to make they have to try to make you not
see the film because they know how powerful it is. Right.

Speaker 2 (11:42):
But also I think that you know the jig is
up because I think people now realize I don't consume
films the same way critics do. Anyway. I don't like
what they like. I don't eat at the same restaurants
they do. I don't live the way they do. I
don't live in the places that they do. I don't
live the life stile and they don't live like me. Right,

(12:03):
they don't go to little league ball ball games. You know,
I remember you and I had some tough conversations. You
were at a different point that I'm now at when Omar,
your son was playing his senior year of high school,
and then you were just I mean you you were
a puddle when when he graduated, and I remember a
tweet you put up and I called you afterwards because
I felt your paint and you said, I'm gonna miss

(12:25):
watching you play basketball because it's what I've done. That's
it's you know, it's a it's as a father getting
to watch you do these things. And so Michael t Is,
you know, just graduating. He's off at ut now, and
Crocketts and Junior. You know, these move these movie critics
and these types of people, these TV people, they don't
live lives like we do. We're we're people that are

(12:46):
weird to them, and they don't share our values, and
therefore they don't appreciate movies or politics in the same
way us as we do.

Speaker 5 (12:55):
Right, that's right, and and our way of life scares them.
You know, they think we're crazy, you know, people who
believe in God and you know, wave the American flag
and you know, and they look down on us because
they're afraid that our lifestyle will take over theirs, that

(13:17):
somehow us being happy and free in the middle of
the country is somehow going to destroy their lives in
the city.

Speaker 2 (13:24):
So, you know, pretty interesting, You know what, Nick, you
have had a pretty varied life, coming from a pretty
wholesome upbringing in North Carolina and then being a Hollywood
star in Los Angeles and kind of getting to see
all the different sides of the country and ways that

(13:46):
the country operates. So what it makes me think, Nick,
going back to COVID and you and I talked during
this time about things like this. It wasn't just that
people rush to get the shot and every boost as
fast as they could, some of them dying as a
result of it, which was ironic, the kind of people
who were wishing death upon us and they died because

(14:06):
of the thing they took to desperately avoid dying. We
don't fear dying because we have a clean conscience. They're
so afraid of dying because I think they're afraid of
where they're going to end up. But they couldn't just
get the shot that was going to protect them. You know,
this was the shield for everything. The shot was going
to protect him for everything. But they insisted that you
take the shot. Well, why do I need to take

(14:27):
the shot? You have the shot now and it's going
to protect you from everything. I am determined that miserable
people desire that everyone be miserable, and nothing is more
offensive to them than that other people be pure and
happy and innocent and content, and that makes them angry.

Speaker 5 (14:46):
Yeah, well, that's why they hate Trump. That's why they
hate him so bad.

Speaker 1 (14:52):
That's part of it.

Speaker 5 (14:52):
They have a visceral reaction to the fact that this
was a You can look at the guy and tell
that he's that he's happy, he's laughing, he's having fun,
he's joking with people. He's smart, he knows what's going on.
He's a successful businessman. He has a beautiful family. And
they hate that. They're just it makes them bitter inside

(15:18):
and they can't stand it. Happiness is like kryptonized to
the left. The movie.

Speaker 1 (15:25):
They want to be equally miserable. The movie is Vindicating Trump.

Speaker 2 (15:29):
Nick Sercy is one of the actors in the movie.
It's a Dineche Desuza film. It is available at theaters,
I believe it's online. You can find it most everywhere.
It's called Vindicating Trump and it is out as of today.
My dear friend, Nick Sercy, it's always a pleasure to
catch up with you, my friend. Let me know when

(15:51):
you're in Houston.

Speaker 5 (15:52):
Next anytime, Michael, I hope to see you again soon.

Speaker 1 (15:57):
Let me close real quick with the trailer for.

Speaker 2 (15:59):
That film, and then you find it, you go see
it and take somebody who's not sure how to vote.

Speaker 1 (16:06):
Take them with you.

Speaker 6 (16:07):
Somebody has to help this country, and if they don't,
the country and the world are in big trouble.

Speaker 1 (16:12):
Someone's got to overturn the tables in the temple Trump
jumping into the presidential race. She's a bit worried of
the apprentice guy do let us feeling the power? Could
you handle that? And wood at the vowel power. They
fear that power. You didn't do an insurrection. Had you

(16:35):
called for one, there would have been one, and there
would be one if you called for one. Now I'm
not sure I want that power.

Speaker 8 (16:40):
I want the power just to make the country better.

Speaker 9 (16:42):
America first, and that scares them a lot about Donald
Trump scarism, let's look at everything.

Speaker 1 (16:48):
Campaign is family. Let's get foreign eyes on him. We
have one target, you know who. He is going after
their companies, their families. That is a dictator at a
very dangerous time for a country.

Speaker 3 (17:00):
The goal is to put him in jail because they're
so afraid of his voice.

Speaker 10 (17:03):
I am your voice is very so deep and legal
bankrupt broke got him in jail right before the election.
That's hard for being that guy. But isn't that election interference.

Speaker 1 (17:16):
It's not interference if we do it. We just want
a free and fair election. Sounds expensive, balloting cheap?

Speaker 2 (17:23):
Wait wait wait, did you actually say the word buy
the ballots?

Speaker 1 (17:27):
We were able to purchase ten thousand ballots. That's terrifying.
They cheated in many different ways. That's all they're good at.
Ready to save democracy.

Speaker 3 (17:35):
We need to stop him permanently, and that person will
be risking his life too bad.

Speaker 1 (17:41):
Is not the succeeds, right.

Speaker 11 (17:45):
It's the wing you survived us getting me a.

Speaker 1 (17:49):
Trump has beaten back to every attack against him. We're
going to fix our borders. So we're going to fix
our elections. We're gonna wins my legacy getting Trump. The
best is yet to come. Baby. This is a stir
of success. Brought up in Range, Texas. Broke ass hole

(18:11):
scholarship his way.

Speaker 2 (18:12):
To two law degrees, including one from her Majesty Quintay
elected three or four.

Speaker 5 (18:19):
Times, a lawyer, a husband, a father, but most of
all are ignat ass asking your seat bell, pop your
coat when they.

Speaker 1 (18:29):
Get ready for more of them, mister Michaelbeer.

Speaker 2 (18:35):
CNN, we'll call him a reporter. That's not what they do.
They're advocates. They're activists. A CNN activists caught up with
the Trump supporter out at the lake and she asked
him what his biggest issue was in his election.

Speaker 11 (18:53):
What's your most important issue is the economy, getting the
interestrace down, getting what we can afford to live in America?

Speaker 8 (18:59):
Right now?

Speaker 1 (19:00):
It's too expensive for me.

Speaker 7 (19:01):
Okay, now, let me maybe ask it like a slightly
imp that question. But you know, if you could afford
a vote, you're not hurting so bad, right because a
boat lost a lot of money and there's a lot
of upkeep.

Speaker 1 (19:13):
Nobody gave me. I earned everything that I've got.

Speaker 8 (19:16):
I'm retired military, retired power plant and I am successful
and retired with boats jet skis because I get it right.
And everybody has that chance, whether they choose or not,
that's up to them.

Speaker 12 (19:27):
I would never try to take anything away from you
in that way. But what I'm asking is groceries are
probably a smaller part of your budget than say, you
know someone who's like a little worse off. I'd think
it's interesting that people who are a little bit more
comfortable are still so concerned about the economy.

Speaker 1 (19:43):
What I I.

Speaker 8 (19:44):
Want my money to go further. I want inflation to
go down. I want interface to go back down. I
want all that that covers everybody in the economy, not
just me, not just a poor, not just a ranchy,
that covers everybody.

Speaker 12 (19:55):
That's something I've heard from some people tell me if
this applies to us, like they are worried their kids
aren't able to for at a house or a cloud.

Speaker 8 (20:01):
I trained my kids and taught my kids properly. They
have great educations and they're most successful in their careers.
Actually they're no better than me.

Speaker 2 (20:09):
Do they ask Taylor Swift that question? Because how much
to groceries affect her? This is the politics of the
third world what she just did right there, The idea
that why are you complaining you're rich, you have a boat.
Unless you're starving, you can't complain. Politics is for the starving,
and that's how Democrats get rich.

Speaker 1 (20:28):
Everybody else is poor, they're rich.

Speaker 2 (20:31):
FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr called out Kamala Harris's forty two
billion dollar broadband initiative for not connecting a single person
to the World Wide Web.

Speaker 1 (20:41):
This is why we have inflation.

Speaker 2 (20:43):
These people raise taxes, they spend billions of dollars on
these big promises that never deliver, and as a result,
you have inflation.

Speaker 3 (20:52):
I've had the privilege of serving as a commissioner on
the FCC for over seven years now. Before that, I
served as the agency's General un After first joining the
FCC as a staffer back in twenty twelve, my primary
focus has been ensuring that every American has a fair
shot at next generation connectivity. In my view, there's no
better way to do a job in Washington than to

(21:14):
get outside the belway and see firsthand that challenges ahead.
That's why I spent time in nearly every state over
the past few years, meeting with broadband builders, local leaders,
and community members alike. Along the way, I've stood on
top of two thousand foot broadcast tower with Tower Cruise.

Speaker 1 (21:33):
I've been a mile below ground to see a fiber.

Speaker 3 (21:35):
Build connecting an underground research lab. I've visited with Cruise
stringing fiber along the Arctic Ocean in Utkiadvik, Alaska, America's
northernmost point. And I've been on the Gulf Coast with
teams as they restored service after hurricanes in Florida. In
every community, I've heard about the opportunity that comes with

(21:56):
a high speed connection. And that's why I was pleased
when a bipartisan consensus emerged to provide the support necessary
to end the digital divide. So the most significant of
those efforts is a forty two billion dollar initiative known
as BID. But unfortunately, BID is a program that has gone.

Speaker 1 (22:15):
Off the rails. Here's how.

Speaker 3 (22:19):
In twenty twenty one, Vice President Harris agreed to lead
the administration's signature forty two billion dollar effort to extend
internet service to millions of Americans. It's now been one thousand,
thirty nine days since that program was enacted.

Speaker 1 (22:39):
After all of that time, not one person.

Speaker 3 (22:44):
Has been connected to the Internet, not one home, not
one business, not even one shovel worth of dirt has
been turned.

Speaker 1 (22:53):
And it gets worse.

Speaker 3 (22:55):
No infrastructure builds will even start until sometime next year
at the earliest, and in many cases not until twenty
twenty six. This makes Vice President Harris's forty two billion
dollar initiative the slowest moving federal broadband deployment program in
recent history, with.

Speaker 1 (23:13):
Vice President Harris at the helm.

Speaker 3 (23:15):
Politico recently reported on the quote frustration in finger pointing
that defined the program's quote MESSI delayed rollout one state
broad bend official describe quote a chaotic implementation, environment dysfunction delays.
She added that the administration quote has provided either no guidance,

(23:37):
guidance given too late, or guidance.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
Changing mid stream.

Speaker 3 (23:42):
The administration, she said, is slowing states down.

Speaker 1 (23:48):
So what has the.

Speaker 3 (23:49):
Administration been doing over the last one thousand, thirty nine days.

Speaker 1 (23:54):
Instead of connecting.

Speaker 3 (23:55):
Americans, it's been advancing a wish list of progress massive
policy goals.

Speaker 1 (24:02):
The forty two billion.

Speaker 3 (24:03):
Dollar program led by Vice President Harris, is being used
to push a climate change agenda, DEI requirements, price controls,
preferences for government run networks, and rules that will lead
to wasteful overbuilding. All of this will leave rural communities behind. Frankly,
it would not be the only time the Biden Harris

(24:24):
administration has left rural America behind. In twenty twenty, the
sec Security commitment from Starlink to provide internet to six
hundred and forty thousand homes in businesses for about thirteen
hundred dollars per location in federal support, but the government
revoked that award last year after President Biden gave agencies.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
The green light to go after Musk.

Speaker 3 (24:52):
The administration is now spending dollars on the penny to
connect locations through its own initiatives. Center A Cruise released
a report identifying entire projects where the administration is now
spending over one hundred thousand dollars per location for Internet.

Speaker 1 (25:13):
So here's the bottom line. Absent major reforms, Vice President.

Speaker 3 (25:18):
Harris's forty two billion dollar program is wired to fail.

Speaker 1 (25:24):
It's time to correct course, get.

Speaker 3 (25:26):
Rid of all the extraneous political goals, and focus on
quickly connecting American It's another work.

Speaker 1 (25:32):
Week in the books. Getting you geared up for the weekend.

Speaker 5 (25:36):
It's the Friday drive home on the Michael Barry Show.

Speaker 2 (25:45):
Well, that means our time together is coming to an end.

Speaker 1 (25:48):
I'm sure to enjoy it.

Speaker 2 (25:49):
Of course, we post podcasts on the weekend. I get
to hear from many of you by email when you
have a moment this weekend. Just take a moment. Don't
don't write a novel, don't go to escue on me,
but just where you listen and what you do.

Speaker 1 (26:04):
Some little thing about you.

Speaker 2 (26:06):
If you were the guy out in front of the
tank at Teneman Square, you know, tell me that.

Speaker 1 (26:13):
While are you there, send me an email, what.

Speaker 2 (26:15):
Station you listen on, where you listen, what time you listen,
Things you like, things you don't get right to the
point because I read a lot of emails, but I
do enjoy reading them. It really helps me fashion a
show understanding you know. I saw an interview that Rush
gave less than a year after he went national. It's
the first to really do it the way he did.
And they said, how different is it for you now

(26:38):
that you have such a big audience, And he said, honestly,
I sit in a studio and I look through the
glass at my producers and that never changed. The difference
is now the President's listening, and I feel the same.
But what I love is hearing from you. How does
the show affect you? What are you going through? People
will share with me. I lost my mom this week.

(26:59):
Just felt like that.

Speaker 1 (27:01):
I love that.

Speaker 2 (27:02):
I love the idea that I'm right there in the
truck with you. I'm right there in your suburban with you.
I'm right there in your car with you, riding along
for a lot of you out there on your tractor
with you. I love that connection and I do the
show with that in mind. And I think that's one
of the things that makes our show it a little different.
I told you that I'm hopeful, and I'm going to
close on something that we've held all week because this

(27:25):
kind of stuff gives me hope.

Speaker 1 (27:26):
This is a good sign.

Speaker 2 (27:27):
The Daily Mail sat down with seven undecided black voters
in Georgia to see who they're leaning forward to, Communist
Kamala Harris or President Trump.

Speaker 1 (27:33):
And you're gonna like this hand out if you think
they is better on the Trump and hands on.

Speaker 6 (27:40):
If you think they's better on the device than Herricks, Well, okay,
it's seven ones.

Speaker 1 (27:46):
That's pretty pretty clear the truth.

Speaker 9 (27:48):
I'm not saying he's like of course, yeah, like I
did say he has best.

Speaker 1 (27:51):
He still has a business mindset.

Speaker 9 (27:52):
I think that linked in somewhat and I think yes
to trickle down whatever previous stuff, not that he just
handled certain things a little better.

Speaker 11 (27:59):
If he does Trump, come let us providing more jobs,
more opportunities and signals. Even though he didn't have any
experience of politics, but he can't even did a much
better job, and you look at the statistics mount so far.

Speaker 6 (28:11):
More words now than working for Firstly, I just lost
the general question about Harris. Th sh uestion back Bullshige's
hesitation about waiting to come of Harris.

Speaker 1 (28:21):
Is she going to be able to do the things
that she says she's going to be able to do?
That's you know what I mean. She is going to
be able to do it. That's my big exersation. Is
she gonna be able to get it past comment freence?
You know what I'm saying. I don't know, you know,
calibulated everything that liters ain't going.

Speaker 13 (28:40):
Very It looks great on paper, but I'm not sure
going to translate to policies and if she'll even be
able to get it past.

Speaker 14 (28:47):
My thing is his strength, and that's my focus for her,
you know. And she's gonna be able to take a
points and give one or two bets. You know, that's
my biggest thing. And it has nothing to do with
her gender. Ladies, Okay, but you have been we're talking
about the hash office in their ends.

Speaker 1 (29:05):
Yeah, yell Obama, I would totally dear. That's what I'm saying.
You can't be weak and hold that.

Speaker 9 (29:13):
Yeah, like people heard next to Michelle Obama, it's like
or Hillary Krink or hear Clinton. It's like there's no
compars and all the strength and I think Michelle.

Speaker 1 (29:23):
Obama usually couldn't wear a jains or did what they
would eat her.

Speaker 6 (29:26):
How did you Harris come across that? How did she
do up against him? Heyward says that you know, a
big personality.

Speaker 1 (29:31):
How did she do? How did she come across? She
kept saying that she's a warrior, She's gonna fight, bro.

Speaker 9 (29:36):
I don't know if you were strong as I mean,
I get it what you feel, but I don't think
you could you are as like a warrior like fire
like she said she is. That's just my opinion, not
that I don't think she doesn't care. And like I said,
she used a lot of appealing to emotion like uh,
anecdotal likes or like yeah, anecdotal evidence instead of like,
you know, she does some facts, but just like to

(29:58):
like appeal to people. Hey, you know, I'm just like
you know, to try to get people on her side.
I don't think the bar was set pretty high when
it comes to that it comes to her speaking.

Speaker 14 (30:06):
I believe the last one, the last debate with Biden,
she said it really low.

Speaker 1 (30:09):
So I believe she did a lot better than Biden.
So that's that's pretty much what I got in there.

Speaker 14 (30:14):
Both old and old tramp was old and we need
to get you young folks in there.

Speaker 1 (30:20):
That knows, you know, having ideas of what you want.
Now that's money.

Speaker 2 (30:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (30:26):
It was several times where he kept like referring to
her as day like he almost didn't even a ddresce her,
Like he kept saying it, she'll.

Speaker 1 (30:31):
Say her name at all. I mean, that's your boss,
that's your boss, like just doing what bid.

Speaker 13 (30:36):
Yeah, it does make you wonder, right because it's kind
of like he's saying stuff like y'all just ousted him,
and I'm like, this is not what happened. But in
the back of my mind, I'm like, what if that
is what has now? She could figure it, you know.
So it's difficult to jump on board one hundred percent
because you do kind of like you've seen it. We've
lived through now, you know, multiple elections that we've seen
how they turned out. So as a person, I do
think she's a better person than he is overall character wise,

(30:58):
and that's why you know, more people I think are
leaning towards her. I don't know if that one hun
to present me, she'll do a better job in the outfice.

Speaker 6 (31:04):
In Harris's debate, done from what you've seen so far,
take your hand off. If you think she's strong enough,
keep your hand down. If you've got doubt whether she's
strong enough, so pick your hand up. If you saying
Harris is strong enough, yes, I.

Speaker 1 (31:18):
Think she's strong enough. Yeah, just like enough. Yeah, you
blood come back.

Speaker 14 (31:28):
I don't know how ned to see it, but when
you had to face the other leaders from the other countries,
you know you gotta have what it kicks to stand
there and throw bunches like they throw her.

Speaker 1 (31:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (31:39):
Yeah, I'm hearing more that scene from those Yeah, thank
you and good night.
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