Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Well, after waiting for weeks and weeks from Kamala Harris,
who has been in hiding, we now have some of
her agenda.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Where did she find it?
Speaker 1 (00:12):
Apparently from the USSR and places like you know, Venezuela.
She is now announced a socialist price control idea fresh
out of the Soviet Union and Venezuela to sell the
American people on lowering the.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
Prices of food.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
Now, I'm going to play for you what Comrade Kamala
had to say, but let me say this first. Please
take our podcast and share this because we're going to
give you all of the history and the facts on
socialism and what they did in the USSR and what
happens to supply chains when it comes to food when
(00:54):
you do these type of government regulations.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
Share it everywhere.
Speaker 1 (00:59):
Now, let me just give you some of the headlines
that have been written by the liberal media after other
countries have done what Kamala Harris is proposing for the
United States of America. CNN Business had this headline when
it came to France.
Speaker 2 (01:18):
France announces more food.
Speaker 1 (01:20):
Price caps, takes aim at multi national firms.
Speaker 2 (01:25):
Wall Street Journal.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
Russia imposes anti hoarding price control measures on food. Another
headline from CNN, Think corporate greed is the leading cause
of inflation. Think Again then writes an article about what
happens with all of these issues with mandating prices on food.
(01:48):
Another one, Chavez threatens to jail price control violators with
Venezuelan food shortages, some blame price controls. Another headline Newsweek,
the high cost of price controls. Bahamas to introduce price
controls on dozens of key food staples as major shortages
(02:09):
hit the island.
Speaker 2 (02:11):
Here's another one from CNN.
Speaker 1 (02:13):
China imposes price controls to save off inflation. Reuters corporate
greed not to blame for price pressures. FED study shows
the Associated press. North Korea wants more control over farming
amid food shortage taking from their citizens. Now, those are
(02:35):
just some of the headlines that have been written after
different places. Do what Kamala Harris is now wanting to
do in America, it's never been successful by the road way.
Reuters had this headline, Cuban government imposes price controls as
it seeks to keep lid On out of control inflation.
Price control forced Venezuelans to turn to the black market
(02:59):
for milk and toilet paper. Here's another one, food fight
and the failure of price controls. Food prices cap will
not make a difference. Retailers say this coming from Europe
with the BBC. China imposes price controls as citizens look
desperately for food.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
And here's another one.
Speaker 1 (03:22):
Venezuela sets new price controls with eggs costing more than
a month's wages in Venezuela.
Speaker 2 (03:29):
It's very clear that this is not working.
Speaker 1 (03:32):
It's very clear that this has been a disaster everywhere
that it's been imposed.
Speaker 2 (03:38):
So why did Kamwa Harris do it?
Speaker 1 (03:40):
She did it because this is what she believes in
that the government should have total control over everything. There
was even an article that was written at CNN and
here is the headline. Should the government control the price
of food and gas? This is something that she's proposed.
What did they say about it at the time. Well,
(04:00):
take a listen to this.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
Despite a cold December, inflation was red hot. Consumer prices
grew at the fastest annual pace since nineteen eighty two,
seven percent year over year and up point five percent
last month.
Speaker 2 (04:18):
Who can budget? You just have to pay the price.
Speaker 3 (04:21):
Americans on average paying about two hundred and fifty dollars
more for the same things they were buying a year ago.
Gas topping the charts, up nearly fifty percent from a
year ago. Same for furniture up just over seventeen percent,
and food up six point three percent.
Speaker 4 (04:37):
Well, what I used to buy, let's say last year,
that would cost me around fifty dollars dollar week almost
doubles right now.
Speaker 3 (04:45):
And at the pump price is soared to over four
dollars a gallon in some states, prompting President Biden to
release fifty million barrels of oil from the nation's Strategic
Petroleum Reserve in November. Last month, gas prices drun zero
point five percent. But for this lift driver, he's still
burning through gas to find customers and burning a hole
(05:07):
in his wallet.
Speaker 5 (05:09):
On this mobeusiness, you have to drive too many miles
to make less money. You spend too much on gas.
The gas is like double. Now you know what I
used to buy is not double.
Speaker 3 (05:20):
And the higher prices are even scaring some drivers away.
Tommy Hondros owns this gas station in Lower Manhattan and
says he used to have a line of cars one.
Speaker 5 (05:31):
Hundred and fifty, not how many I have, no nothing,
one it's insane.
Speaker 2 (05:37):
I used to have people come and fill up. Now
they're just let me get five dollars, let me get
I've seen two dollars on a vehicle.
Speaker 3 (05:45):
Used car sales rose by thirty seven percent year over
year as there were less new cars coming to market.
Speaker 6 (05:52):
Court shutdown credit shortages of all kinds of things, from
vehicles to lumber to clothing, and that causes prices to rise.
Speaker 3 (05:59):
And that trick go down to the cost of food.
Groceries rose by six and a half percent.
Speaker 4 (06:05):
It's a constant rejuggling a budget to try to keep
up with the food prices. Lately, meats especially are increasingly expensive.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
But let me just stop there.
Speaker 1 (06:16):
The reason why I played that is because I wanted
you to understand what the American people are saying. They're
saying this is insane, and this inflation was caused by Bidenomics.
Speaker 2 (06:27):
Kamala Harris very much a part of that.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
Now she's saying, let's just move to government control and
then apparently everything will get better. I mean, I don't
know what else to say, but you now have a
woman running for the presidency who is saying, I want
America to live like it is the USSR. She wants
(06:54):
to go back to the style of government where the
people are begging. Okay, where they're begging for food, they're
begging for water, they're begging for toilet paper. Now she's saying, look,
I'm going to cover the cost here. The problem is
everyone knows this isn't going to work. Everyone who's tried it,
(07:16):
it's been a failure because the immediately the black market happens,
then people start getting arrested. Then the people that are
being arrested for they say charging too much have to
shut down their companies because they can't afford to raise
their price because the government won't allow And then you
have shortages to the point where in Venezuela, a dozen
(07:39):
eggs is a month's salary.
Speaker 2 (07:41):
Right, this is a massive problem.
Speaker 1 (07:44):
Now here's the other thing that I think is also
very interesting. Even CNN is now saying that this is
something that won't work. CNN, after she proposed it, came
out and said they caused the problem. Now they're telling
they want to fix the problem with communism and socialism.
Speaker 7 (08:07):
Listen, two things I think Number one, she had took
a lot of far left positions during her first run
in twenty nineteen twenty twenty, she has, you know, temporarily
kind of moderated these through some anonymous quotes from AIDS saying, well,
she doesn't really want to be in frackymore. She doesn't
want to do this, doesn't want do that. This new
program that she's me it is pretty far left. Twenty
five thousand dollars price controlled essentially, that's number one. But
(08:28):
the other thing is, you know, kind of conveniently forgot
she was vice president for the last four years when
a lot of the housing market crisis was at its worst,
when inflation was at its worst, So.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
There's a lot of memory holding that.
Speaker 8 (08:40):
But look, when it comes to the twenty five k,
I mean, you just added twenty five thousand dollars into
every price on every home price in the country, because
if you're giving that away essentially for free, people will
add it into the price.
Speaker 1 (08:51):
By the way, what she's mentioning there, what he's mentioning
there is that she also said, oh, by the way,
I'm going to give you twenty five thousand dollars on
the price of your first home. What with what money?
Where is this coming from? That's what I want to know.
Where is this coming from? Where are you getting all
of this money? Well, she doesn't care where she gets
it from. If she bankrupts Americans and raises their taxes,
(09:13):
she controls your entire life. That is now where we are.
Just so you know, I think she really screwed up
on this one. When Kama's economic plan is total trash,
to the point where CNN didn't just destroy it with
a clip I played for your second ago. They then
had other experts on and they said this after her speech.
Speaker 9 (09:36):
Listen, Catherine, I hear I read your piece, and I
heard you just mention it, the federal ban on price
gouging for groceries. You are skeptical of this, why.
Speaker 10 (09:48):
Well, first of all, nobody can explain what price gouging means.
It's like that old line about pornography. I know it
when I see it, in the sense that what does
it mean to have in sessive price or an excessive
profit margin that seems to be shorthand for a price
or a profit margin that bugs me that seems too high.
(10:10):
So you know, it's very hard to pin down what
this would actually mean. If you look at the legislation that,
as I mentioned, is already in the Senate led by
Senator Senate Warren and Senator Bob Casey and a slew
of others. The particular way that this is written, which
is likely to be the template for any proposal that
(10:31):
Harris would eventually embrace, is especially bad in that it
just bans excessive prices, grossly excessive prices, grossly excessive profit margins,
and says that the Federal Trade Commission can use any
metric it deems appropriate to decide what that would would mean,
(10:52):
which basically says like, it's not going to be markets.
It's not going to be supply and demand that's determining
how much your grocery or charges you for milk or
for eggs. It's going to be some bureaucrat in DC,
which seems like totally unworkable.
Speaker 11 (11:07):
First of all for.
Speaker 10 (11:09):
The FTC to deciding, like how much Kroger charges for
eggs in Michigan, but it also would be very bad
for markets. We've seen this kind of thing tried in
lots of other countries before Venezuela, Argentina, the Soviet Union,
et cetera. It leads to shortages, it leads to black markets.
(11:30):
You know, plenty of uncertainty and beyond that, the specific
way this bill is written might actually increase prices because
of some of the other language in it, things like
requiring companies public companies to disclose in their quarterly reports,
their quarterly earnings reports, how they're setting prices, which is
(11:52):
a great way to help them collute, which normally we
don't want them to do so. Anyway, you know, the
devil's in the details. I guess for that bill, but
it's really hard for me to imagine any form of
legislation that preserves the spirit of what she's proposing that
would not be you know, at best, do nothing, at worse,
cause a lot of harm.
Speaker 2 (12:13):
I love how this is on CNN.
Speaker 1 (12:15):
We've seen this kind of thing tried in lots of
other countries before Venezuela, Argentina, the Soviet Union. It leads
to shortages and would cause a lot of harm the
black market.
Speaker 2 (12:26):
She says, right like.
Speaker 1 (12:28):
This is this is something that is not new. This
is not a new idea. Everywhere it's been tried. Everywhere
it's been tried, it has been a failure. Scott Jennings
on CNN as well after this announcement, and again I
play CNN because if CNN is telling you this is
this is the most extreme form of communism, then you
(12:52):
might want to wake up America and realize what she is.
Speaker 2 (12:55):
She's a She's a damn communist.
Speaker 12 (12:58):
Well, the first thing he needs to do, which he
already doing and will continue to do and will ring
true to voters, is continue to point out that all
the conditions in the country that Kamala Harris is complaining about,
with inflation, high rents, cost of living, that's all a
direct result of the policies that she and Joe Biden implemented.
(13:18):
So that's number one. You have to lay the blame
where the blame goes, and it's right at her feet.
You cannot allow her to pretend as though she is disconnected.
Number Two, he needs a clear message on her plan.
I mean, this is a p If you want product shortages,
if you want black markets, if you love breadlines, if
you love hoarding, and if you like, I don't know,
(13:38):
communist style anarchy on the streets of America, this is
the plan for you.
Speaker 2 (13:43):
This is not a serious plan.
Speaker 12 (13:44):
This is a set of pandering from someone who has
no idea what they're doing and doesn't want to take
responsibility of the problems they have caused. She wasn't merely
a bystander. She casts votes that cause the inflation. He
can't trust her to fix the inflationich that Donald Trump
runs on, and I think the American people already believe that,
so it ought to be pretty easy to sell.
Speaker 2 (14:06):
The point he made there.
Speaker 1 (14:07):
If you like shortages, you like breadlines, you like hoarding,
you like black markets, you like total economic anarchy, then
vote for Kamala Harris because that is what she is
giving you right now now in this speech that she gave.
I think it's very clear that she believes us. But
let me go back in time to when she was
just in California. Listen to what Kamala Harris said that
(14:30):
she loved about being an elected official. This is how
you know she's a damn communist for.
Speaker 13 (14:37):
What can be done in the state of California and
by extension in the United States.
Speaker 2 (14:41):
And here's what we did. It was fabulous.
Speaker 13 (14:43):
And this is what I love about being elected because
basically you don't have to ask anybody permission.
Speaker 1 (14:49):
Basically, this is what I'm going to give the exact
quote Kama Harris.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
This is a communists.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
This is what I love about being elected because basically
you don't have to ask anybody permission. Comrade Kamala, the dictator,
that is who she is. You talk about this, and
again I go back to what this is okay? And
this is another example of where you give this woman
(15:17):
a coronation, as the media's done. You give her a
billion dollars in kind donation and good press, and then
she comes out and she's like, hey, here's a communist idea.
And I was like, oh my gosh, what just happened?
CNBC even saying this, Listen, she hasn't.
Speaker 11 (15:32):
Stuck to any very clear set of ideological policies. She's
wavered a bit throughout her years in politics. What was
interesting to me today and seeing this plan is that
it's clearly very progressive. Regardless of what she's saying to
donors behind closed doors, she is putting a progressive bent
to her campaign at this point, and that's not what
a lot of people expected or hoped to see. I've
(15:52):
been talking to moderate Democrats who said she could just
run a vibes campaign, she didn't have to get into
policy details at all. They think the best way for
her to win to do anything to just distance herself
from the far left, regardless of whether or not she
dives into policy details, and she would win. Clearly, she
didn't take that advice. She is diving into policy details
that go more left. She might be saying other things
behind closed doors to make sure corporations are still on
(16:14):
her side as well, but clearly she wants to sort
of have this brand of the progressive candidate.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
The progressive candidate.
Speaker 1 (16:21):
Why do you think she picked her VP Cannate Walls
Because he's even more radical than she is, or at
least at the same exact level. So let's go to
Kamala's words. Kamala says prices are still too high. Okay,
this is what she says, and listen carefully to what
she's admitting about when Donald Trump was president. It's almost
(16:42):
like an endorsement of Donald Trump.
Speaker 2 (16:44):
Listen, shut down and failed.
Speaker 13 (16:47):
But our supply chains have now improved and prices are
still too high. Yes, a loaf of bread cost fifty
percent more today than it did before the pan pandemic.
Ground beef is up almost fifty percent. Many of the
big food companies are seeing their highest profits in two decades,
(17:13):
and while many grocery chains pass along these savings, others
still aren't. Look, I know most businesses are creating jobs,
contributing to our economy and playing by the rules.
Speaker 2 (17:30):
But some are not.
Speaker 13 (17:32):
And that's just not right, and we need to take
action when that is the case. At as attorney general
in California, I went after companies that illegally increased prices,
(17:55):
including wholesalers that inflated the price of prescription medication, and
companies that conspired with competitors to keep prices of electronics high.
I won more than one billion dollars for consumers.
Speaker 1 (18:15):
I mean, this is the most absurd thing I've ever heard.
She's sitting there and telling you, since she became an
elected official, the vice president, a loaf of bread costs
fifty percent more today than before the pandemic, meaning when
Trump is in office, ground beef is up almost fifty
percent since they came into office.
Speaker 2 (18:31):
And then she says it's corporate greed.
Speaker 1 (18:33):
So therefore, I'm going to be a communist and I'm
going to put mandates on companies, and I'm going to
tell these companies that I'm going to find them money. Okay,
I'm going to find them cash or shut them down
if they don't sell you bread or meat or whatever
it is at a price that I demand. Now, let's
(18:55):
be clear about what prices have done. Okay, since Kamala
Harris has become the vice president. Since Harris took office,
car insurance is up fifty four percent, Hotels are up
fifty one point two percent. Gas is up fifty point
fifty percent. Fuel as an oil is up forty nine
(19:19):
point one percent. Transportation is up thirty two point nine percent.
Electricity is up thirty one point seven percent. Baby food
it's an essential, up thirty point one percent. Eating out
up more than twenty three percent, Airfare is up twenty
two point six percent, rent is up twenty two percent,
(19:43):
and groceries are up over twenty one point six percent.
So the woman who's created the problem now says, elect
me as present to then fix the problem I created
by by allowing me to give you communism. And she
says it in her own speech, in her own damn speech.
(20:04):
She goes back in time and tell you and tells
you the prices of what things used to be before
she got in charge.
Speaker 2 (20:11):
This is totally insane.
Speaker 1 (20:14):
Because the economy is stronger, she says, she'll be able
to do this. No, that's not how this works. Listen
to what Larry Couglow had to say on Fox Business
about this after she announced it.
Speaker 14 (20:25):
Kamala Harrison's economic plan released today in North Carolina, command
and control, socialist type central planning, the likes of which
we haven't seen since the nineteen thirties Depression, or for
those who remember the old Soviet Union communists, or for
those I'm lucky enough to visit today's Venezuela.
Speaker 2 (20:44):
Really it's crazy stuff. No one's been taken seriously.
Speaker 14 (20:47):
That kind of ultra far left planning has been out
of favor in the United States for nearly one hundred years.
Democratic autonomous are attacking it. The Washington Post is attacking it.
Early estimates of the cost of her plan are already
running upwards of one point three trillion, and it's going
to get larger. But of course that means more deficit spending,
(21:09):
and that means more inflation, and the unlikely event you
were to be elected, that's what we'd have to suffer through.
The big items so far, the thirty six hundred dollars
Kitty tax credit will cost about a trillion dollars over
ten years. The newborn child credit, and of one hundred billion,
a twenty five thousand dollars Home Morgan subsidy would be
about two hundred and fifty billion. And of course there's
(21:32):
going to be a lot more details, as a lot
more as the details come out. There's new tax credits
for Obamacare, there's another bump up in the earned income
tax credit, some kind of debt cancelation for healthcare costs,
and of course let's not forget the unconstitutional student loan cancelations.
The details of all this stuff so far are unknown,
(21:53):
and the costs of those details are going to mount
higher and higher. You will see, of course, the headline grabber,
which is the first ever federal ban on price gouging
on food and groceries really just price controls dressed up
as price controls. In other words, to quote Churchill, a
sheep in sheep's clothing.
Speaker 1 (22:13):
And President here's the other thing I have to ask, Okay,
Kamala declared that she is going to quote tackle inflation,
and she says it will be a Day one priority
for her. Does anyone in the media raise her hand
and go your Day one was three and a half
years ago.
Speaker 2 (22:29):
Why haven't you done it already.
Speaker 1 (22:32):
That's the question that Donald Trump is going to need
to ask over and over and over and over and
over again. You absolutely have to ask that question. And
if you don't, if you don't bring that up, then
you're a coward. If you are in the media, you
should ask that there should be accountability here.
Speaker 2 (22:54):
The other thing is is Harris going to bring.
Speaker 1 (22:56):
These policies up in the Democrat National Convention after there's
this type of backlash. If she doesn't, then isn't that
a policy flop?
Speaker 2 (23:05):
Right?
Speaker 1 (23:05):
I mean, isn't that It isn't that a policy flop?
Speaker 2 (23:09):
If that happens.
Speaker 1 (23:10):
I want you to listen to CNN's Jeff Zeleny after
her speech ended the initial reaction.
Speaker 2 (23:17):
Jeff on the politics of this.
Speaker 15 (23:19):
There were two things that really struck out to me
with this speech, and I think they were pretty obvious
and deliberate. On the issue of tariffs, which Donald Trump
has sort of made his namesake, going back to his
first run for the White House, Kamala Harris here describing
it as a Trump tax on imports, essentially saying that
Donald Trump wants to tax consumers. And the second thing
(23:42):
she's spent this contrasting herself with Donald Trump. And I
think that the most clear contrast was the fact that
yesterday Donald Trump is giving a press conference outside of
his private golf club, and then you have the vice
president here talking about how excited she was to see
her mom save up for ten years to buy a house,
and then how she worked at McDonald's to put herself
(24:04):
through college and wants people around her struggle to make
ends multiple jobs to do that. So it gives a
sense of legitimacy to this populist argument that she's trying
to make.
Speaker 6 (24:16):
I mean, the contrasts in every respect could not have
been more clear. In terms of the Trump CAREFF, she
really broke it down. She said, it's a Trump a
tax on gas, a Trump tax on food. So what
this is doing by having her finally give a policy speech,
it's shining a broader light on his policies, and there
are gaps in both of them, no doubt about it.
One thing she did not say is how any of
(24:38):
this would be paid for. Of course, that is not
uncommon in a presidential campaign. This is an aspirational level.
He never says how he would pay for his plans either.
But what I did think and This is the point
of it, obviously, is to draw a contrast obviously.
Speaker 2 (24:52):
With him, but on the middle.
Speaker 6 (24:54):
Class and help explain herself. She still is not introduced
that well to the American people's in the public eye.
She's been vice president. But allowing her to sprinkle in
her biography I thought was so interesting, and we are
going to hear more of that at the convention next week.
The housing crisis, I hear it constantly as I travel
around the country talking to voters. You may ask, why
(25:14):
didn't the Biden administration do more on this? It's a
you know, a good thing to ask. They've done some,
but she's focusing on that with a specific of twenty
five thousand dollars that would be certainly not paid for.
But that is something that voters can get their minds around.
So I think drawing a sharp con.
Speaker 2 (25:31):
I love this.
Speaker 1 (25:32):
By the way, did you notice what he just said there?
Like he's giving her this like massive hug. Right, Well,
it's you know, people don't really know her. She's been
the vice president for three and a half years, she
ran president before that.
Speaker 2 (25:42):
We know Kamala Harris.
Speaker 1 (25:43):
And then he says one thing she did not say
is how any of this would be paid for and
then immediately.
Speaker 2 (25:48):
Moves on too.
Speaker 1 (25:50):
But really it's great to get to know Kamala Harris
like are you insane?
Speaker 2 (25:54):
Like are you insane?
Speaker 1 (25:57):
That's the response there is, like, well, I mean, you know,
we we we're getting to know her and getting to
know her is great. Let me also just play something
else for you. A Soviet immigrant went on X after
her speech. Uh, where Kama Harris is laying out her
price controls and what it would look like in reality
(26:20):
USA or USSR ban on food price increases?
Speaker 2 (26:24):
Question market. He put this video up. This is a.
Speaker 1 (26:26):
Soviet immigrant warning America what this looks like if she
does it.
Speaker 2 (26:32):
Oh my good.
Speaker 16 (26:33):
I heard about Vice President Kamal her Is proposing to
band price increases on food. I was surprised because I
said here in the United States, government usually doesn't tell
private businesses would to church for the products service because
copitalism free markets invisible. I am from the Soviet Union.
(26:54):
You've seen this movie before. I know I's singing too
about government controlling the econ. This blend is not yet
this blare this food blowing Soviet style blend.
Speaker 2 (27:04):
That going in here with his five year to blends.
But it's will in.
Speaker 16 (27:06):
This way, So what should the man can exploit food
shortages produce This will make lysts food because it's not
less profited, but consumers will buy more of it because
it's cheap. One, but food cool is if the price
is the same bliss.
Speaker 2 (27:19):
You sell good dumb way that so?
Speaker 16 (27:20):
But them wato which ones do you think they will sell?
Speaker 2 (27:23):
By the way, did you hear what he just said?
Speaker 1 (27:25):
And this is what happened in Russia and a lot
of people were getting sick and malnourished in the USSR.
Speaker 2 (27:31):
He just made a point.
Speaker 1 (27:32):
If it's if quality isn't a matter in the equation,
it's just a price, Like hey, a loaf of bread
has to be a dollar. Are they gonna give you
a quality loaf of bread or give you crap? Are
they gonna give you crap eggs? Or good eggs? Are
they gonna you can kiss? By the way, quality meats
could buy if you have these food prices that are
(27:54):
mandated by Harris. Comrade Harris, I mean you think you're
gonna get a prime steak? Yeah out, okay on the
black market?
Speaker 2 (28:01):
You will.
Speaker 1 (28:02):
They don't have prime or choice or select like you
get crap in these countries. There's no prime there's no
there's no Grade A or double A or triple A
eggs or or or or chicken or certainly steaks in
these countries because you have these mandates, so you do
(28:23):
it as cheap as possible.
Speaker 2 (28:25):
Have you ever seen the videos?
Speaker 1 (28:26):
And this is gonna make some of your stomachs churn,
So I'm just gonna go with it anyway. Have you
seen the videos of the telapia farms where they're literally
loading into the tanks where the tilapia are actual feces
from other animals and rotten food. They'll eat it, by
the way. That's why I don't eat telapia, by the way,
(28:48):
especially farm raised tilapia where they actually feed them feces
from other animals. You think they're not gonna do that
to give you the cheap price they need. That's a
mandate from from from comrade Kamala. She is proposing that
we go into full blown communism with a price control
(29:09):
system that takes away all of your quality food.
Speaker 2 (29:13):
That maybe that's the thing that people need to understand.
Speaker 1 (29:16):
If you if you think of soy lattes nice as
a liberal and you love Starbucks's menu, and you love
all the kumbay a bs. All that is gone, every
bit of it is gone. Say goodbye to it. Make
sure you share this podcast please with your family and
your friends. Share it on social media wherever you can,
(29:38):
and I'll see you back here tomorrow