All Episodes

July 10, 2024 31 mins

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
It looks like in the last several hours, the Democrats
have kind of started to decide they're not going to
be able to get rid of Joe Biden. Now, Joe
Biden sent strongly worded letters slash notes to top Democrats
saying it's time to stop all the nonsense that I'm
not going to be the nominee. Democrats now seem to

(00:24):
be heading towards that, And if you want to know
what Vegas thinks, the betting markets are now going to
Joe Biden will in fact be the nominee, and he
will be the guy that is going to be up
against Donald Trump on election Day. Also to add to
this background, Democrats, as they're trying to figure out what

(00:45):
the hell they're doing, well, those that are vulnerable are
saying they just need to plan and we don't need
to undermine Joe Biden. If Joe Biden's going to be
the guy, we just need this to be the guy,
and let's just stop all the nonsense. So the couitt
emptied essence to replace Joe Biden as the Democratic nominee
appears to be sputtering because these prominent Democrats are publicly

(01:09):
lining up behind Joe Biden despite deep quote private concerns
documented within the party. Now vulnerable Democratic senators are trying
to win reelection in red and purple states. They are
there and they're saying, we just need the order. Okay,
we don't need all this insanity, we just need some order.

(01:29):
Then you have the squad members who are from deep
blue states, and I talked about this on the show yesterday.
They've now called us behind Joe Biden. What are they
getting in return? We don't know. And then adding to that,
the chairs of the congressional Black and Hispanic caucuses the
have now called us behind Joe Biden as well. So

(01:51):
what does this mean? If you look at it, the
overall party in general seems to be rallying behind an
extremely vulnerable Joe Biden to be at the top of
the tick of this fall because I think they realize
that Joe Biden is not going to step down on
his own. What would that leave us with the twenty
fifth Amendment? And I don't believe the twenty fifth is

(02:14):
going to be used against Joe Biden. And I'm going
to explain that and why I believe that in a moment.
But first let me tell you about Patriot Mobile. For
ten years. Patriot Mobile has been America's only Christian conservative
wireless provider. And when I say only, I mean it.
Patriot Mobile was started because of what Big Mobile does

(02:35):
with your money after you pay your bill. You may
not know that when you pay your bill to Big Mobile,
you're giving a big donation to the Democratic Party at
the local, state, and national level. You may not realize
when you pay your bill the Big Mobile, you're actually
funding Planned Parenthood and other extremists democratic organizations and causes.

(02:57):
That is why I use Patriot Mobile, and I do,
and I travel all the time, and I can tell
you my coverage is perfect because in twenty twenty four,
every company uses now the same cell towers. It's not
like it used to be, where one's much better than
the other. You can switch to Patriot Mobile and get
the same exact coverage you're accustomed to without funding the Left. Now,

(03:21):
when I pay my bill to Patriot Mobile, here's the
best part for me. They take about five percent of
my bill at no extra cost to me, and they
give it back to conservative causes that support free speech,
that support religious freedom, that support the sanctity of life.
Our Second Amendment and they also stand proudly behind our military,
our veterans, our first responder heroes, and our wounded warriors.

(03:45):
Now is switching easy? Yeah, in twenty twenty four. With technology,
it is so easy. You can do it right now
over the phone. You can keep your same number you
have now keep your same phone, or upgrade to a
new one. Call Patriot Mobile, whether it's for you, your fan
or a business nine seven to two Patriot. That's nine
seven to two Patriot, nine seven to two Patriot, or

(04:08):
online it Patriotmobile dot com slash Ben. Use my name Ben,
You'll get free activation as well. Patriotmobile dot com slash
Ben or nine seven to two Patriot. Now, let me
talk about the twenty fifth for a second and why
I believe Democrats at the end of the day, this
is what it came down to. There was a real
conversation that I'm sure happened behind the scenes. Kamala Harris,

(04:31):
I'm sure was asked about it. Cabinet members were asked
about it. Are we gonna overthrow the will of the people,
and are we going to replace Joe Biden using the
twenty fifth? I think they decided against that, and that
is exactly why getting rid of Joe Biden? All that
speculation seems to have really disappeared over the last twenty

(04:54):
four hours. Look, Democrats could have gone nuclear. They decided
not to, and I'm sure many of them had those
conversations behind closed doors. Are we or are we not
going to be a part of this? Are we going
to do this? Are we willing to do this? And
if we did get rid of Joe Biden this way,
would there be enough angry Joe Biden supporters that would
then say, no matter who you choose the Democratic Party,

(05:17):
we're not going to show up and we're not going
to vote for them. I think ultimately that's actually what
it came down to. They understood that if they did
go that way, that there was going to be no
way to undo the damage that would be done to
Biden's supporters. They would lose them, meaning they lose the

(05:37):
election even if they were able to replace Joe Biden. Now,
I also think the second part of this is Joe
Biden has made it very clear I'm not going anywhere
they've said and stuck to their story. Right, I'm having
a bad night. It was a bad night. I didn't
get enough sleep. It was my fault. I over prepared, right,
He said this over and over again. But at the

(05:57):
end of the day, if he's not going to leave,
he's not going to leave. And let me just talk
about some of the proof of how the White House
is dug in. I want you to listen to Peter Doucy.
I've got three clips I'm going to play for you.
This is clip one of him at the White House
Press briefing. Listen to what question he asks.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
Another family member. President Biden has told me before he
and his son don't have any business dealings together. So
what is Hunter Biden doing in White House meetings?

Speaker 3 (06:25):
Are you talking about the meeting where they came together
from Camp David and the two of them walked to
the President's meeting and he was there.

Speaker 2 (06:35):
There's a report that days were struck by his presence
during their discussions.

Speaker 3 (06:40):
Look, I can't I'm certainly not going to get into
private conversations that occur. What I can say is, and
I talked to this, I spoke to this before. Is
that when they came back from Camp David, the President
spent a couple of days at Camp David with his family.

Speaker 4 (06:57):
He is very close to his family.

Speaker 3 (06:58):
As you know, it was the week the fourth of July,
which is why his family members were here last week.
They walked together, and they walked together into the meeting.

Speaker 2 (07:08):
Can you see if Hunter Biden has access to classified information?

Speaker 5 (07:11):
No, So you go back to this core issue, right.

Speaker 1 (07:15):
President Biden has told me before that he and his
son don't have any business dealings. We now know that's
a lie. All of a sudden, Hunter Biden's and these
White House meetings. White House Press Secretary going back to
what she says, as she's always said, I I'm certainly
not going to get involved in those private conversations. Now
we should know why the president son is in those meetings.
I don't think that's crazy to ask those questions. But

(07:35):
notice after Peter Deucy asked that question, something changed with
the media. From what we've been hearing over the last week,
week and a half, there wasn't any follow ups from
the rest of the media. You notice how fast the
media is kind of getting back in line. How all
of a sudden the pounding of the White House Press
Secretary just like stopped right then and there, and then

(07:57):
Peter Deucy asked another question.

Speaker 5 (07:59):
It's an important question.

Speaker 1 (08:01):
This is the question he asked dealing a little bit
with a different issue.

Speaker 5 (08:04):
Listen carefully, this is not you're saying.

Speaker 2 (08:07):
This is not a situation where you would rather just
not know there is. What I will tell you is
if he does get a bad result, it is all
over right away.

Speaker 6 (08:18):
He can't run for reelection.

Speaker 3 (08:19):
First of all, it's a hypothetical, right that you're giving
me a hypothetical. But I will also say, just to
clear this up, the White House Medical Unit, his doctor.
They don't believe that he needs anything more than what
we have been able to provide a full, full, detailed,

(08:41):
very comprehensive physical that he had four months ago. That
is their decision to make. It's not yours, it's not mine,
it's the White White House Medical Unit.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
Notice White House Press again not losing their minds, kind
of getting back in line. And that's an important question, right,
like why won't you guys do this task is dignive
tests and make it public for the public because they
know that it's going to show the guy clearly is
either has Alzheimer's dementia, whatever the hell's wrong. There is
a real cognitive issue here, and that is the reason

(09:12):
why she answered the question the way that she did.

Speaker 5 (09:16):
No, the President's not going to do this.

Speaker 1 (09:18):
We don't feel we need this needs to happen, and
we're just going to keep lying to you because it's
better than the truth. Now, let me also play for
you another clip from the White House Press briefing. A
White House reporter asked Corarine if she would comment on
something that happened back in September, and she instantly cut

(09:38):
that reporter off. Listen to this, and we certainly understand.

Speaker 7 (09:43):
You know, you speak on behalf of the president, and
you defend him, his actions, his positions, his policy positions included.
Can I just ask you about one example just going
back that comes to.

Speaker 3 (09:54):
Mind September in the past, were's are about the last
twelve days?

Speaker 4 (10:00):
Talking about you just went, well, you.

Speaker 3 (10:03):
Just said recently it's been you know, we've been going
back and forth and so in the last you know,
twelve days or so.

Speaker 4 (10:09):
That was how I believe that's how you asked me
the question. I was talking.

Speaker 7 (10:12):
Generally, But if I could just ask you about.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
One example, I mean, look, if you're going to ask
me about something from months ago, it probably would be
fair for me to I probably won't be able to
answer that right away.

Speaker 4 (10:23):
Whatever it is that you're you're going to say to me,
come back to us, and yeah, I'm happy.

Speaker 6 (10:27):
To do that.

Speaker 3 (10:27):
But it's also to say, hey, from September of whenever year, right,
that is that is something that I probably should give
a little space to kind of see exactly what you're
speaking of. Okay, and that's fine, and you know, I
just want to make sure that we kind of give
some contacts here.

Speaker 4 (10:45):
Yeah, and you'll.

Speaker 7 (10:47):
Remember this, this was an event where the President called
out Congressman and Jackie Lauriski looked for her in the room,
even though she had recently died. You told multiple reporters
at the time, and this was awesome.

Speaker 4 (11:02):
She was top right, Yea, it.

Speaker 7 (11:04):
Was because she was top of my Another president, I mean,
would you on that example, would you offer a different.

Speaker 3 (11:09):
Expility, because honestly, I spoke to the President right before
coming out that day, and that is what the President
told me. It's not something that came from me. That
is something that came from the president. So he was saying,
even as he was.

Speaker 4 (11:23):
For her in the moment, it wasn't as she was
top of mine.

Speaker 3 (11:27):
Okay, that is coming as you just said in your question,
I speak for the president, I speak on behalf of
him that was coming from him, and I was delivering
directly from the President what he was thinking at the time.

Speaker 5 (11:39):
I mean, this is incredible.

Speaker 1 (11:40):
If you're talking about months ago, I probably won't be
able to answer that right away. So now the White
House is saying, if you have a question that doesn't
deal with today, if you have a question that deals
with something from I don't know, September or any other
time and his time in office, I'm gonna have to
get it amnesia and google it and then I'll get
back to you and the White House let them get

(12:02):
away with that. Here's something else that I want to
play for you, because again this shows how quickly the
media will get back in line, excluding people like Peter Doocy.
Peter Doucy asked a question about like who's in charge?
We keep hearing about the President being asleep early, the
president sleeping in, having a short schedule. So what do

(12:23):
you have to say about, like who's answering the phone,
who's calling the shots? Is it the first lady that's
running the country. Listen, he's sharpest before eight pm, So
say that the.

Speaker 2 (12:35):
Pentagon at some point picks up an incoming new It's
eleven PM.

Speaker 6 (12:40):
Who do you call the first lady?

Speaker 3 (12:42):
He has a team that lets him know of any
of any news that is.

Speaker 4 (12:47):
Pertinent and important to the American people.

Speaker 3 (12:49):
He has someone or that is decided obviously with his
National Security Council, and who gets to tell him that news.

Speaker 1 (12:57):
I just have to go back to the reality now
of the situation. We have a White House that is
on record and a president who says I can handle
the job before eight o'clock. Now, what Peter Deucy asks there,
I don't think is an unfair question. Okay, I think

(13:21):
that the what Peter Deucy asked, like, who do they
call the first lady? She's still up after eight? She
can still make decisions after eight? Like, how does this work?
How does this work?

Speaker 2 (13:37):
Now?

Speaker 1 (13:37):
The President was at a rally today and one of
the things that he keeps talking about is when I
get knocked down, I get up again.

Speaker 3 (13:46):
Right.

Speaker 5 (13:46):
Might sound like a song lyric, it is actually one.

Speaker 1 (13:50):
But this is there the real like obsession with this
White House, which is, Hey, no matter how bad it gets,
this President keeps getting up. He's getting off the floor.
He falls down a lot, but by gull he stands
back up. He may not be able to make decisions
before or after you know, noon and before or after
eight o'clock at night, but when he is making those decisions,

(14:13):
he's going to do his best. So that's now, like,
really where we are. That's the sales pitch. Okay, that's
the whole thing. That is the sales pitch. So fast
forward to the White House, to the White House Press secretary, like, hey,
you guys are admitting the guys that got problems. You're
admitting there's a major cognitive issue here. You're admitting that

(14:35):
he can't do the job well at certain hours of
the day. We don't know who's running the country. Why
doesn't anybody in the presence family urge him to go,
I don't know, get checked out, especially after we found
out that this specialist from Walter Reed that deals with like,
you know, people falling and cognitive issues is showing up
eight times in eight months.

Speaker 5 (14:55):
Right, we talked about that yesterday. Listen to White House.

Speaker 2 (14:58):
Why doesn't anybody in the president's be virgin just to
go to get checked out, to say the coast is cleared.

Speaker 3 (15:04):
Okay, so just to step back just a little bit,
because I think you were in the briefing room last week.
I don't want to go backwards, but just to share
a little bit about that night. The President said it
was a bad night. He talked about it, he had
a cold, right, he talked about his schedule right being abroad.
And so we've spoke about what that night was like

(15:25):
for him, and we understand what the American people saw,
what you all saw.

Speaker 4 (15:30):
We've spoken to that.

Speaker 3 (15:32):
And I also would say, and I think you know this, Peter,
You've covered a couple of administration at this point, administrations
at this point that the president, every president has a
White House medical unit that is with him twenty four
to seven, that is available to him twenty four to seven.

Speaker 4 (15:48):
That is unlike any other American right, that is not
the norm. That is uncommon.

Speaker 3 (15:53):
Just down on the other side of the colonnade is
where the medical unit is. And I did share in
that the president checks in while he's exercising with his
doctor a couple of times a week, and so he
has he has something that most majority of Americans, all Americans,
I would probably argue, don't have, which is a full

(16:16):
medical unit that is with him at all times, and
he gets a full, full, full physical, annual physical that
we share with all of you. And that is very different,
very different than an everyday American who sometimes they lucky
if they can go get a physical, they have to
get into a car, they have to take public transportation.

(16:37):
The president has again a medical unit that's with him
here at the White House and travels.

Speaker 2 (16:41):
So I guess the question is just this is not
you're saying, this is not a situation where he would
rather just not know if there is. What I will
tell you is if he does get a bad result, it.

Speaker 6 (16:53):
Is all over.

Speaker 2 (16:54):
He has some office right away, can't run for reelection.

Speaker 3 (16:56):
First of all, it's a hypothetical, right that that you're
giving me a hypothetical. But I will also say, just
to clear this up, the White House Medical Unit, his doctor.
They don't believe that he needs anything more than what
we have been able to provide, a full, full, detailed,

(17:18):
very comprehensive physical that he had four months ago. It
is their decision to make. It's not yours, it's not mine,
it's the White White House medical unit.

Speaker 1 (17:28):
So the family, if you think they're going to give
you anything, yeah, they're not. Which brings me back to
what I said at the very beginning. I think he's
probably just gonna be the guy. I think he's probably
just gonna be there and they're not going to be
able to get rid of him. I think it's pretty

(17:50):
obvious that this administration has zero intentions of being transparent
or getting a cognitive test done that the public can see.
I believe they know what the problem is with the
present behind the scenes. I think that's why you've seen
all the cover ups that we've just witnessed. But they're

(18:14):
not doing this, folks like they're just not. Like I'm
telling you right now, they're not going to budge on this.
They're never going to move as long as they can
keep power. And I think this goes back to the
simplistic reason that I said earlier. I don't think Joe
Biden is necessarily like power drunk anymore. I think he
just knows he's got to protect his son, and that

(18:36):
he doesn't want his son to go to jail. I
also think that he knows that the party could turn
on him and the Biden crime family very quickly if
he's out of office, so he needs to protect his
wife and his brother as well from all of the
corruption issues around them, and the best way to do
that is to stay in office. Let me also say

(18:57):
this about Democrats. Want to be clear, not all of
them are falling in line.

Speaker 5 (19:04):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
House Democratic Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar was asked at their
briefing on Capitol Hill today about supporting Joe Biden.

Speaker 5 (19:16):
Listen to what he said?

Speaker 4 (19:18):
Doesn't asked with eight Democrats.

Speaker 3 (19:21):
Jump and the racers said, colleagues too, you are trouble
in the election and the scores I can hear into
ordering the service a conversation.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
With the Democratics.

Speaker 3 (19:31):
Publis privately extremely concerned.

Speaker 4 (19:35):
Is he doing enough to persuasion concerns among the copestpossibility
to win against November?

Speaker 8 (19:41):
You know, I think this is the President has said
himself that he's he's going to be out there, right.
This is about campaigning and and and hustling. My answer is,
you know, we'll see, like let's let's see, let's see
the press conference, Let's see, uh, the the campaign stops.
Let's see all of this, because all of it is

(20:02):
going to be necessary. The President knows that he did
not have a good debate performance. He knows that he
has to be out there in people's districts, out in
the communities, out in these tough states. He knows that,
and that's that's what we'll see in the days. And
we said, thank you so much.

Speaker 1 (20:19):
Now you notice we'll see means we don't believe he
can do it. So you guys watch it and then
tell us if we're right now. There's others in the
media that have already gone one eighty on this.

Speaker 5 (20:30):
Okay. The View had a.

Speaker 1 (20:32):
Disgusting monologue where Whoopi Goldberg is already back in line, like, hey,
we're back in line. Nothing to see here, Joe Biden's amazing.
We love Joe Biden. Here's Whoopy Goldberg in her defense
of Joe Biden's cognitive decline.

Speaker 9 (20:53):
I don't care if he's pooped his pants. I don't
care if he can put a sentence together. Show me
he can't do the job, and then I'll say, Okay,
maybe it's time to go now. He had a bad
night the first time that he went out and debated
with Kamila Harris, and everybody wanted him to quit that

(21:16):
and say you.

Speaker 6 (21:17):
Can't talk to women like this.

Speaker 9 (21:18):
So you're doing this right, not wrong. He came back said,
you know what, I got it and gave four years. So, yeah,
I have poopy days all the time. I step in
so much pool you can't even imagine. Now, I'm not
running the world, but I don't know anybody who doesn't

(21:40):
step in stuff at some point. So I'm just simply saying,
there are two debates, and if he can't do what
he needs to do for the second debate, I'll join
any crew that says get rid of him, but loyalty
to me. If you are doing the job. I might
not like everything you're doing. I don't like it all,
but I'm gonna.

Speaker 5 (22:00):
Stand behind you.

Speaker 9 (22:01):
Let those guys stand behind the guy who should have
been the person people we're talking about saying, yeah, Biden
had a bad day, but this guy couldn't tell the
truth if.

Speaker 6 (22:09):
It's split his lip.

Speaker 1 (22:11):
So your new defense from the media is we don't
care if he poops his pants as long as he's
running the country. It's better than the other guy.

Speaker 5 (22:23):
That's it. Better than the other guy.

Speaker 1 (22:26):
Also, the Parkinson's doctors, they're now making their visits on NBC.
NBC News actually had the park A doctor, Tom Pitts,
a board certified neurologists, and they're now bringing them on
TV to pontificate about Joe Biden. So not everybody again
is in line. There's still a war going on.

Speaker 10 (22:48):
Listen to talk more about those eight White House visits
by the Parkinson's expert. I'm joined tonight by doctor Tom Pitts.
He's a quadruple board certified neurologist. He sees patients with
Parkinson's all the time, he diagnoses it. I want to
be completely transparent here. You've never examined President Biden. From
my knowledge, you've never even spoke.

Speaker 6 (23:07):
Have you spoken yet? That's a President Biden been in
the Yeah.

Speaker 10 (23:10):
And we're just going to use what we have so far,
which is what we've seen, the President's interviews and the
information coming out of the White House. So my first
question to you is, as somebody who's a neurologist, what
you've seen from the president over the last two years,
what you saw at the debate, the last few interviews,
the way he speaks, the way maybe he walks. Have
you noticed anything that gives you a red flag?

Speaker 6 (23:31):
As a doctor? Oh?

Speaker 11 (23:32):
Yeah, I see him twenty times a day in clinic.
I mean it's ironic because he has just classic features
of NERD degeneration. I mean word finding difficulties, and that's
not oh I couldn't find the word. That's from degeneration
of the word retrieval area.

Speaker 10 (23:44):
He's also overcome stuttering though, could that be part of
that too.

Speaker 11 (23:47):
No, this is not a palattle issue or a speech discrepancy,
which is very different from a lemon nod dysfunction actual
word retrieval where you pick a similar question or talk
around the issue. Plus the rigidity monotone voice, Wait, go
back to that. The rigidity, what do you mean, loss
of arms swings standing up lord Dotically, you notice when
he turns, it's kind of nd block turning.

Speaker 6 (24:07):
It's not a quick turn.

Speaker 11 (24:09):
So that's one of the hallmarks of Parkinson's is rigidity
and brady Kinesia's slow movement.

Speaker 5 (24:16):
By the way, I'm playing this for you.

Speaker 1 (24:18):
And if Fox News Channel would have done this segment,
every news outlet a couple months ago would have said,
you know, this is disgusting and vile and Fox News
should be taken off of cable and the Internet and
it should be banned and how sick.

Speaker 5 (24:33):
Are these people?

Speaker 1 (24:34):
But now NBC News is having a Parkinson's doctor come
to NBC and then telling NBC that Biden has classic
features of Parkinson's disease. And the doctor said, I could
have diagnosed him from across the mall. I see him
twenty times a day in clinic, meaning he sees the

(24:57):
same features in clinic from patients every day.

Speaker 5 (25:01):
Keep listening. It gets better.

Speaker 11 (25:03):
And he has that hallmark, especially with the low voices
said as a cold hypophonia.

Speaker 6 (25:08):
A small monotone.

Speaker 11 (25:10):
Voice like this over time is a hallmark of Parkinsonism.
I could have diagnosed him from across the mall.

Speaker 10 (25:15):
Here here are some of the symptoms from Parkinson's.

Speaker 6 (25:18):
We just had him up there on the screen. We
can put him back. What about the movement.

Speaker 10 (25:22):
Some people have pointed out the way he walks sometimes
it's not very fast, small steps. Is that something that
that is common in people were battling a disease like
Parkinson Yah.

Speaker 6 (25:31):
It's a hallmark shuffling gait.

Speaker 11 (25:32):
We call that so little steps, loss of arms swing
from the rigidity when we walk.

Speaker 6 (25:37):
We have a nice cadence.

Speaker 11 (25:38):
He you knows, he doesn't really swing his arms and
ND block turning, meaning he kind of pivots around his
foot if you said, hey, President Biden, he wouldn't go
like this.

Speaker 6 (25:47):
Yeah, but I also know I.

Speaker 10 (25:48):
Also don't tell me if I'm wrong here. It's very
hard to diagnose Parkinson's, isn't it. It's not simple. I
mean I've heard that.

Speaker 6 (25:54):
It can be.

Speaker 11 (25:54):
I heard the one of the easier movement disorders to diagnose, actually, right,
but it's so clinic there.

Speaker 6 (25:59):
There's very little other thing. And I'm a you know,
I'm a Democrat. I always say, yeah, at this right,
It's just like, this guy is not a hard case.
But I've had I've had relatives.

Speaker 10 (26:07):
Who have gone through issues, neurological issues, and I've heard
that sometimes Parkinson's is not very easy to nail it.

Speaker 6 (26:12):
You have to take a lot of tests.

Speaker 11 (26:13):
There's like, I mean, early on, if you're just presented
with like hallucinations, I could be a variety of things,
or just the cognitive problems that could be Alzheimer's versus
parkinson Ism, and that becomes a little nebulous.

Speaker 6 (26:24):
But once you start.

Speaker 11 (26:25):
Manifesting the hallmark motor symptoms, right, slow movement, rigidity, mass faces, hypophonia.
I mean, if a med student did not pick Parkinson's
on the test, they mediated.

Speaker 6 (26:36):
Let me ask you if you had if you hadn't.

Speaker 5 (26:39):
I'm stealing shocked that this is on NBC News. This
is on NBC News.

Speaker 1 (26:48):
This Parkinson's doctor slash expert telling NBC Biden has classic
features of disease. I could have diagnosed him from across
the mall and saying if a med student couldn't do
it what I'm saying, then they wouldn't be a doctor.
And you can hear ou NBC News like, Hey, we're
gonna set you up, bro like, and he says, I'm
a Democrat, but I'm telling you the dudes got Parkinson's.

Speaker 5 (27:11):
They're not done, you know.

Speaker 10 (27:12):
And I know you can't. You have no idea what
happened in the White House. But a neurologist coming eight
times in eight months? Does that tell you anything?

Speaker 3 (27:19):
Is that?

Speaker 5 (27:20):
Is that?

Speaker 10 (27:20):
I mean, I know you're just you're just sort of
speculating here, But does that tell you anything?

Speaker 2 (27:24):
Or no?

Speaker 11 (27:24):
Well, I mean I don't know if they're like the
best of friends or something, but that's a very specific
you know, he's a movement disorder, that's a subspecialist and
exactly what he has. And there's very few young people
like a marine guard. Most people would be med boarded
out for any type of movement disorder at a young age,
like if you had Huntington's Korea early on set Parkinson's dystonia,
that essential tremor, you're usually med boarded out.

Speaker 6 (27:46):
So I highly doubt there's what does that mean med boarded?
I mean the military.

Speaker 11 (27:49):
Would not let you if you have seizures, for example,
you cannot usually be in the military.

Speaker 6 (27:53):
That is you are saying.

Speaker 10 (27:55):
You're seeing you don't necessarily believe and they're not saying this,
but right they said, there's stout of military members that
go to the White House that treated.

Speaker 6 (28:02):
There for health reasons.

Speaker 10 (28:04):
Yeah, you're not buying that that's a random military person.

Speaker 11 (28:07):
No, that would be very odd to just see a
random movement disorder case at the White House, you know,
especially a young guard. There aren't many young people that
have movement disorders that could be in the military.

Speaker 10 (28:17):
And then you know, a lot of people have called
for a cognitive test. What exactly would that entail? What
does that mean?

Speaker 11 (28:23):
Now that's the key, because we're finding retrieval doesn't necessarily
mean you don't know what you want to say? What
I cannot comment on is his ability to make good decisions.
His motor symptoms are degenerating. He has parkinsonisms. That is
a fact. You know he has the generation of the brain.
Show me the MRI. Show me he doesn't. You know,
you put your money where your mouth is. He definitely
has it. But the problem is when you look at

(28:43):
his situation, you can't say, oh, I know for a
fact that because he didn't retrieve the word, he didn't
know what he wanted to say. And that's why both
him and Trump should take the four hour neuropsychological testing,
which is the hallmark test for cognitive performance.

Speaker 6 (28:58):
What do you do in this test? A lot of things.

Speaker 11 (29:00):
So for example, they may have you say, like, say
as many words you can in a minute that start
with F blockbuilding, retrieval, I may I may say cup
and have you recall it three minutes later, trail drawing.
These are done with a profession of PhD in neuros
Psychology has nothing to do with psychiatry.

Speaker 6 (29:16):
And we can tell if you have that four hours long.

Speaker 11 (29:19):
Four hour it's a full day. We tell people bring
a snack, it is a full day. And that so
not the mocha which was a bedside test that President
Trump took. You know, these are tests that are screening tests.
They don't rule in you know, if you do great.

Speaker 10 (29:32):
No, there's no way to sort of lide in this
test to sort of aceit.

Speaker 6 (29:36):
Even though you're saying, oh.

Speaker 11 (29:37):
Way, this one will will it will come out in
the wash. For example, if I do the bedside exam
to an accountant and I asked the once one hundred
ninetus seven, even the worst NERD degenerated patient, if they
worked at a high education level or something like that.

Speaker 6 (29:50):
Is going to get that right.

Speaker 11 (29:51):
But in the four hour test it will come out.

Speaker 10 (29:53):
Finally, I mean, you said you're a democrat, you're a doctor.
You sound like you're frustrated with what the White House
is saying.

Speaker 5 (29:59):
Why carefully this final thing.

Speaker 1 (30:02):
This is a doctor who sounds, as they described, frustrated.
He's a Democrat, and he says, why listen, well.

Speaker 11 (30:08):
Because you know, I'm an American before everything, and I
look at it and say, when I used to see Russia,
Soviet Union, North Korea when they just make out rageous things,
you know, like when North Korea can't keep the lights
on and they say, oh, you know, it was some
faulty power thing, I kind of hate that kind of stuff.

Speaker 6 (30:23):
They had four years.

Speaker 11 (30:24):
My own party had four years to find you know,
this was a reconslow motion, and they had four years
to find out of three hundred and fifty Americans, one
person that could take the place. And here we are
the day before school, trying to do the homework and
replace a guy who's got a neurodegenerative.

Speaker 1 (30:39):
Disease, doctor Pitts, with who's got a neuro degenerative disease.
This is a Democrat who was just given six minutes
to own the President of the United States on this issue.
I don't know what else to say, but they're still trying.
There are some that are still saying, no, we can't

(31:02):
go with him. But at the end of the day,
if they get back in line, and it seems like
the media is starting to do it, Joe Biden's going
to be your guy. Make sure you share this podcast
wherever you can on social media. Please rise a five
star review and I'll see you back here tomorrow.
Advertise With Us

Host

Ben Ferguson

Ben Ferguson

Popular Podcasts

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.