Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Eight five five four zero five eight two five five
the number text d A N five seven seven three nine.
And now Trump under fire this afternoon for simply saying
in a speech that, yeah, that's what the US should
do is send the message we will blow you to
smithereens if you kill a presidential candidate. I don't know
how this nation could function with anything less than that
(00:21):
kind of credible threat, and we have precedent for it
in this country. Glad you're here, so much more to
talk about. I do want to talk about a terrible
story story locally. Unfortunately, it's one that's all too familiar,
where somebody here illegally in Colorado kills innocent Colorado as
it happens to be behind the wheel. But my point
(00:44):
is that this does not get enough attention at all.
I mean, you have the left right now squealing like
smash cats because they say that the reports that folks
in Ohio we're eating the dogs and eating the cats
have not proven true. Blah blah blah. Well, wait a second.
There can be no doubt that some of the people
(01:06):
coming here illegally rape women, kill women, kill children, and
that there are a very large number of deaths of
course the government doesn't track it precisely, but a very
large number of deaths of innocent Americans caused by people
here illegally who happen to be behind the wheel doing
crazy things. But that just doesn't get any attention. Those
(01:28):
people are still dead, those families are still devastated, and
we have yet another horrible story here in Colorado. I've
got lots of stories from my own law practice. I've
been doing this forty years, representing victims, and I've been
talking about it on air for thirty years. You have
this mass killing going on of innocent Americans by people
who shouldn't even be in the country, which is not
(01:50):
a reflection on the broader group of folks who come illegally.
First of all, we should have border control. Nobody should
be coming here illegally. But yeah, you have lots of otherwise
good people coming in here. That isn't meant to brand them.
But the point is, how can any nation morally justify
How can a governor of Colorado, like Polish, morally justify
(02:11):
allowing anybody, anybody in this state to be killed by
somebody who shouldn't even be here. So whenever the left
gripees about oh, we haven't seen any dead cat skeletons
or anything like that. The answer is yeah, but you'll
agree right that these folks comeing in illegally because Harris
led some are raping women and they're killing women, and
(02:32):
they're killing a lot of people behind the wheel. You'd
agree with that, wouldn't you. And what's the response to
that going to be? I can't wait for that in
the upcoming VP debate, which is less than a week
away right now, because JD Vance is going to put
pin walls down on that. You know, of course, the
moderator into or walls are going to go after j
D and Trump for you know, hey, you haven't shown
(02:54):
us any dead cat carcasses or dog carcasses. And as
I've said repeatedly in air, I don't know whether those
claims are true or not. What I do know is
there is deep concern in America over over the killings
that are occurring because our border was left open by
Harris and Biden. So this issue has called more attention
(03:17):
to that, which hurts Harris very badly, and that's why
the left is squealing. But just confronted with that, and
JD will as soon as Walls and the moderator play
the They're eating the cats, They're eating the dogs, They're
eating the pets. I can't get that song out of
my head. We played that song on this show, and
maybe we'll play it again. But the point being this,
you know JD will flip that on him in a
(03:39):
heartbeat and say up, but you'll agree that they're raping women,
They're murdering women, they're killing children, they're killing lots of
people behind the wheel. Yeah, and what is Waltz's response
going to be to that? Eight F five for zero
five eight two five five the number text d A
N five seven seven three nine. So we'll get to
the latest Colorado tragedy where we're folks here have been
(04:01):
killed by somebody who shouldn't even be in the country.
I do want to come out of the gate with
something lighter though. It's such a beautiful day. I don't
know if there's been a more beautiful day. Dave Tepper
will know. Dave is our boss. Here is our program director.
He's filling it on the board because Ryan is turning fifty,
and I guess that means he doesn't have to work
the show today. Is that right? Dave, I need to
turn fifty. When I turned fifty, do I get to
(04:25):
not work the show first? He may not want me
to work the show's thirty years from now or so. No, No,
you're being way too generous. No, he's out the next
three days, sir. So okay, listen, he's giving me the
gift to be able to now sit in this chair
and work with you and Kelly's Dave, Dave, Dave. Sarcasm
is never appreciated here. We have a sarcasm free zone here.
Speaker 2 (04:46):
Oh yeah, it's nice to get behind a board, Sarah.
We're for the fabulous show.
Speaker 1 (04:50):
Trust me. Happy birthday to right. Yeah, definitely fifty. And
did you see that cake that Jack Phillips did for
a masterpiece cake shop? I did not say you did
not see Kelly's show your picture Kelly's dozing off in
the corner over their bonds. I Kelly, Kelly is the
best you should be. You should be. Who was that
woman on the Love Boat? Maybe the favorite character at
(05:12):
least for boys my age when we watched we were
twelve or so. The you know, the Julie the Cruise Director.
You should be Julie the Cruise Director. Oh my Lord,
you would be perfect. Dave has no idea what we're
talking about.
Speaker 2 (05:28):
What it is. My parents are so conservative. I don't
even know if you're allowed to watch anything called The
Love Boat.
Speaker 1 (05:33):
I know, of course.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
But man, I was having to watch Sesame Street and
listen to Christian Rock.
Speaker 1 (05:38):
I'm wondering if we had to sneak in the love Boat.
I can't remember, because I had the greatest parents ever.
No offense to your parents, but at least the greatest
parents ever for me. And and yeah, they they were
not big on any of that stuff. Back then, movies
would have ratings, like I think the church would put
out ratings on movies. What, yeah, what would that look like? Oh,
(06:02):
I can't remember. If it was great, it was grades
like ABCD or X. There was an X. An X
meant straight to hell. Man, there was there was no
prigage straight down the shoe.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
It would be an X. I mean, I know what
an exment right right in my book these days, but
what would be an X movie for that was like
a like a violent movie.
Speaker 1 (06:21):
Oh no, well it might have been, but the big
focus back then was on sex, right and yeah, and
I'm trying to remember what that grating was but the
church may have had their own X before or maybe
it was something else, but you just knew that was
that was hades right there, Hades on the screen straight down.
Because I can still remember as I grew up on
(06:41):
the South side of Chicago, and they had a big first,
big shopping almost called Ford City, and they had some
movie at the theater that was like a D or C.
You weren't supposed to see it. So I went over
to the phone booth across from the theater and called
in and pretended to be my dad and just said, Hey,
my son's going to be coming over. It's okay for
to see that movie. Yeah, it didn't work, okay.
Speaker 3 (07:03):
So down do you remember on TV and select TV
where you had the keys that you had to Okay,
I'm dating myself. I get it, you know, I'm old,
but used to my parents had to take the keys out.
But sometimes parents would forget.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
Oh yeah, I don't remember that and leave it in.
Speaker 3 (07:26):
But I will tell you I learned all about sex
from Against All Odds the movie.
Speaker 1 (07:32):
Really in that movie?
Speaker 3 (07:34):
Oh yeah, yeah, very interesting.
Speaker 1 (07:38):
I never saw it. Oh I never saw it. Football
against What was the plotline again? Besides the sex, what
was the plot line?
Speaker 3 (07:48):
Football player trying to redeem himself and it didn't really work.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
And that's where the pop song came from, against all,
against all odds, I'll look at it during the break,
but oh it's not yeah, oh really it's one of those.
Speaker 3 (08:02):
Okay, well Rachel Ward, yeah, by the way, is gorgeous.
Speaker 1 (08:08):
And yeah, we're sure not going to look at it,
and I can't. Jeff Bridges, I think I wouldn't look
at it. Lead Mail, Okay, well, thank you, there you go.
Well this is a perfect tarry into what I, believe
it or not, was actually thinking the first topic today
would be, and that is Hey, there's no doubt about it.
Now multiple poles have shown the same thing, the most
(08:29):
recent being Quinnipiac, which leans in my experience, heavily left
Quinnipiac coming out and confirming all these other poles de breath.
The Taylor Swift endorsement has now officially hurt Kamala Harris,
and I want to hear from you, why do you
think and hurt her with all age groups. So when
(08:51):
we come back, I'll give you that data won't be
the only thing we do today. So don't go anywhere.
But I'll give you that data. But I really want
to hear from you. Why do you think the Tailor
Swift endorsement in all of these polls now ended up
hurting Kamala Harris eight five five for zero five eight
two five five the number. I'm glad it did, But
why did it? You can text s da N five
(09:12):
seven seven three nine. Yeah, that's going to put her
over the top, right, that that's what all the people
in America are hurting, That that's what they needed to decide. No,
she's actually going to be better for me. More the
same is better for me because I really hated having
more money under Trump and the world being much more
peaceful under Trump. Yeah, no, we we need more Kamala, Right,
that's not what the polls are showing. Glad you're here.
(09:33):
We're talking at the moment about why the Taylor Swift
endorsement has actually hurt Kamala Harris. And it's not just
me saying this, And if you know me, you know
I'm the last guy in the world who would say
it because I've talked for years on air about how
for our daughter Caroline and me since Taylor Swift started
and Caroline was a little girl. Then you know, we've
(09:53):
been going to her concerts and drove to Omah to
see a concert, back to my hometown of Chicago. We've
seen all of them in Denver, all that stuff. It's
been a big father daughter thing. And I've come to
really like Taylor Swift's music, and I really like her
concerts and the vibe inner concerts. She doesn't talk politics,
So I've talked for over two years about how, wait
a second, if Taylor Swift for an endorsement, No, but
(10:15):
if she actually goes, if she actually goes to the
swing states with the Democrat candidate, that could be a
real issue. Now, clearly I'm being proven wrong right now,
and I'm trying to figure out how I got this wrong.
So why why is the endorsement actually hurting Harris? And
here's the headline from Newsweek today. Taylor Swift endorsement hurts
(10:37):
Kamala Harris, polls suggests, But then they say multiple polls
saying the same thing, and it's across age groups that
it hurts her. So why is that happening? Most say,
of course, it doesn't make any difference to them, But
then a bunch of others say yeah, let me give
you the breakdown. So eighteen to thirty four, the endorsement
(11:00):
makes them more enthusiastic about Swift eight percent, less enthusiastic
eleven percent, no difference eighty percent, And that's in her wheelhouse, right.
Eighteen to thirty four, thirty five to thirty nine five
percent says more enthusiastic, twelve percent says less and no
difference eighty three percent. Now this may surprise you a
(11:20):
little bit. Fifty to sixty four ten percent more enthusiastic.
So the highest boosh she got, which is only ten percent,
but in a closer race that could matter, was from
fifty to sixty four less enthusiastic twelve percent, no difference
seventy eight So why is that happening? We won't spend
(11:40):
the whole show on it as much as I'd like to,
but love your take eight five five for zero five
eight two five five takes d an five seven seven
three nine a Texter Dan. I think Taylor Swift, like
most entertainers, doesn't realize that we pay and follow them
because they entertain us. I can make up my own mind.
I don't need somebody who thinks they're more important than
they are trying to tell me how to think that
(12:02):
From Sarah Dan, I can sum it up in forwards,
shut up and sing Dan, and this text may now
it Dan because all of her music is about choosing
the wrong person. I think there may be another dynamic
at work that I didn't appreciate, and that is the
match between Taylor Swift and Kamala Harris. Like, if you
(12:25):
had an artist as big as Taylor Swift and there
isn't one right now endorsing President Trump, I think that
helps him tremendously. I think maybe the reason it doesn't
work for Harris is she's so empty, right, She's just
so superficial, She's so devoid of substance and of the
intellectual horsepower to be president that when the big thing
(12:49):
she's waving around is an endorsement from a singer who
I think is a tremendous artist, but nobody in the
right mind would want Taylor Swift to be president. Yeah,
then that made backfire and Harris. That reason the match
between Harris and Swift best I can do. Dave, what
do you think of that theory?
Speaker 2 (13:06):
It's interesting. I just think that there's people that are
sick of her, and I'm with you. I think she's
very talented. I like her, but not everyone does. And
I wonder if there's just a group of people that
they're just are folks who believe that she's just too
it's just overexposure of her from the NFL games, everything,
(13:27):
And I wonder if there's a group that maybe there's
more to them than some may realize. They just don't
want to touch anything that she's touching because they're.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
Tired of her. And I think Dave also it goes
to the serious mood the voters are in right now,
which cannot be good for Kamala Harris, right. I mean,
when you don't do a press conference two months after
you've been installed, that's not a serious candidate. She's trying
to go on vibes and joy and everything else and
not showing a lot of joy right now from her.
But anyway, it may very well be that because all right,
(13:59):
her big deal is a Taylor Swift endorsement. Taylor Swift
lives in this money bubble where none of these earth
of the realities matter to her, right, And I think
an awful lot of voters in every one of these
demos are hurting and so yeah, I think that may
rub him the wrong way. For that reason too, I
am glad to see it. I have never been so
happy to be wrong about something now. I'd still hold
(14:21):
out a little bit of a possibility if Swift does
go into the Swing States physically with Kamala Harrison is
appearing with her a big rallies and things like that,
I wouldn't want to see that, but who knows. According
to these polls, that may end up hurting Harris more
height five five for five two five five the number
(14:44):
dan It says when Dana Bash tried to belittle Vance
about eating the pats, he handled it perfectly. He has
had twelve Ohioans contact him since he's an Ohio senator,
contact him by eating pats. Excuse me, He said they
were responding to concern. He was responding to concern, oh
hyawins and was able to confirm ten of them. That
from Patty. And my only point on this, because I
(15:07):
don't know if it's been happening or not, but my
only point on this is when that comes up in
the debate, Vance just needs to turn to Walls and say,
but but you will agree it. You will agree that
folks here illegally are raping American women, folks here illegally
are killing American women. You'll agree with that, right, Tim?
(15:29):
And how does Walls respond to that? How would you
respond to that, Dave, if you're Tim Wallas, which you
could never be because you're very cool and normal and sane,
and Wals is he's He's an odd dude.
Speaker 2 (15:45):
I mean, to your point, there are facts that appear
to make that pretty indisputable, right, And I would tend
to agree with you that if that's the angle that
is taken against him, that's harder to dispute than the
cat dog thing.
Speaker 1 (15:59):
Yah. Yeah, yeah, and you can bet.
Speaker 2 (16:01):
I mean, it's hard to dispute a fact.
Speaker 1 (16:03):
Yeah. They have really got to be dreading that debate.
And when we come back in the next segment, I
do want to talk about the latest example of Colorado's
being killed by folks here illegally. But the Harris camp
has to be living in absolute fear of that. Jadvance
Tim Walla's debate, right, because Trump very wisely has done
(16:25):
what I suggested he do and say nada to another debate,
and so Harris has no other way now to reach
the mass the voting mass, and she's stuck with doing interviews.
She's being forced into another friendly tonight. But she even
lost the Oprah interview and how do you do that?
That was more of a BackRub than an interview. So
(16:45):
they're in trouble because jd Vance will be ready, right,
it's his skill set, it's his whole future. It's on
the line. Waltz is a lying dufist. I don't mean
that disrespectfully. It's just the most accurate word I can
think of. Jd Vance will be ready. So when we
come back, I'll tell you about some Coloraden's killed by
(17:06):
people here illegally. How do we stop that? You're on
the Dan Kapsu Show. Do you endorse her for president?
Speaker 4 (17:12):
Then?
Speaker 1 (17:14):
Yeah, and that's a big deal. I think Manchin was
looking for an excuse not to endorse her because I
think it's very clear right now to political professionals that
are in some major curveball, she's going to lose, and
may lose very very big eight five five for zero
five two five to five. The number text d an
five seven seven three nine. Want to get to the
(17:34):
latest example of Coloraden's killed by folks here illegally and listen.
The point isn't that everybody here illegally is bad, not
at all. You know better than that. I know better
than that. I can tell you right now some of
the finest people I've ever met came here illegally. But
that's not the point. The point is, no civilized society
can allow, can justify even one member of that society
(17:57):
being killed by somebody or raped by somebody who should
even be here to begin with. That's the point. And
there are so many more deaths of Coloradin's at the
hands of those who shouldn't even be here than get reported,
and we need to talk so much more about that,
because again, the point is, we need to control the border.
(18:17):
The point is voters need to fully understand, and I
know we're not a swing state, but voters need to
fully understand the price, the human cost, of what Harris
and Biden have done at the border, because guess what
if she does win, if she pulls that shaker, that
thing is going to be absolutely wide open, as open
as the shower head in the morning when you step
(18:37):
in there. Because obviously the Left sees every one of
those folks crossing the border as future votes, and they
don't need that many more votes in swing states to
be able to they think have all this locked up forever.
Let's go to beautiful Littleton, Colorado on what may be
the single nicest fall day we've ever had in this state. Mick,
you're on the Dan Kapla show.
Speaker 4 (18:57):
Welcome and yes, it is a nice day, isn't it.
Speaker 1 (19:03):
Yes. Yes, I'm going to go home with my wife
and we're going to go outside and we're going to enjoy,
even though it's getting dark so early.
Speaker 5 (19:11):
Now.
Speaker 4 (19:12):
Yeah, I know, I don't like the dark days, the
dark long winter days. Hey, it's quick comments. You know,
you always talk about your wife and stuff. I remember
the day you proposed to her and saw you on
the movies.
Speaker 1 (19:22):
Were you watching live?
Speaker 4 (19:24):
Absolutely?
Speaker 1 (19:25):
Oh man, how did you think that was gonna end?
Speaker 5 (19:28):
Well?
Speaker 1 (19:29):
Then, uh it was a end studio. It was a cliffhanger.
Speaker 4 (19:33):
Yeah, yeah, I I thought it was gonna end well
you Uh, I wish I wish I had your uh,
your nerves, I guess. Yeah. Yeah. Anyways, Hey, uh, you
know something the Democrats always like to use, and they
always used. They always say nobody's above the law. And
(19:55):
every time they're you know, in a struggle and I
agree that that ties to the illegal aliens as well,
the illegals that are here. Nobody's above the law, and
I hope that carries over and people start to realize it.
But anyways, the reason why I think the pull numbers
for Kamala Harris dropped under a Swift's endorsement is I
(20:20):
think people are, like you say, the bubble, the financial bubble.
I think people are getting tired of being tried to
persuade by these people that live so outside what the
average working Americans lifestyle is like that it starts to
get offensive. You know, Taylor Swift's vote should equal, no,
(20:42):
it should be no greater or no, no less than
my vote, and that's it.
Speaker 1 (20:49):
I think you nailed it, man. Yeah, hey, thank you
for that. Man, I think you absolutely nailed it.
Speaker 4 (20:55):
Then you take care and say hi to that lovely
wife of yours.
Speaker 1 (20:58):
Wank you, friend. I will do that at six oh
five today. Appreciate that very much.
Speaker 4 (21:02):
Now.
Speaker 1 (21:03):
I think he nailed it, guys, I think it good.
Speaker 4 (21:06):
God bless you man, you too.
Speaker 1 (21:08):
Thank you, my friend. Yeah. So, anyway, I think Mick
nailed it. I think that's the dynamic in this election.
That's why Kamala Harris one of the reasons she's going
to lose, and on this track, I think she's going
to lose by a significant margin. People are hurting. Inflation
is real for the vast majority of normal folks. This
(21:28):
really hurts, right, and you know the drill right, just
about everything I let alone, going out and trying to
eat it all really hurts. And it's just not manageable
in real life for most people. So to have somebody
who jets around the world on a Gulf Stream forty
five or whatever and has no sense of the pain
(21:49):
everyday people are feeling tell him how to vote. Yeah,
I could see now why that would backfire. I had
a blind spot to that in advance, but I could
see now why that would backfire. Eight five five for
zero five eight two five The number text d an
five seven seven three nine. I want to get to
some more of these texts right now, Dan. Trump lives
(22:10):
in a money bubble, but worse, he lives in a
bubble of self ego and hate. Wow, Texter, thank you
for that. I wish you'd call and you're so wrong.
I mean, Trump's the opposite of money bubble, right. He
could have stayed in that bubble. He could have stayed
in that bubble and just indulged every personal comfort and
every personal pleasure available to man or woman or both,
(22:33):
because he had the ability to do that. But he
stepped out of that bubble. And he's a smart guy.
He knew he was putting himself at grave risk the
day that he did that. And I'll give you another
example when he then made that decision to kill that terrorist,
General Solomony in order to save our soldiers and others.
At that point, he knew he was putting an enormous
(22:53):
target on his back, in the back of his family members,
but he was willing to do it to protect this
nation and as he expected. And now Aroan constantly trying
to kill him, and the Biden administration clearly not doing
enough for a very long time, even though they knew
that threat was out there to protect him. And listen,
as we sit here right now, and I've talked about
(23:14):
it on the show, and I know you've been thinking it,
the danger has never been greater for Donald Trump. But
the danger is less today than it will be tomorrow.
And it's less tomorrow then it will be the day afterward.
Because every single day closer we get to him winning
a second term and then to him assuming office, those
(23:36):
who want to stop him are going to get more
and more dedicated to that. And we've already seen it, right,
and we know it's just going to get worse. And
so that's just a harsh reality. And all we can
do is pray for him and hope that the Biden
administration is finally willing to give him the protection that
(23:57):
he's deserved all along, because that's the reality. And what
kind of situation are we in right now where there's
no doubt nobody's disputing it. Iran, Iran, Iran, Satan on Earth,
the talking about the regime, the Iatolas. The good people
of Iran are hostages of those Iatolas. But the regime
(24:20):
at this point openly siding with Kamala Harris, feeding information
to her campaign, trying to kill her opponent. But what
do you what effect do you think that has on
election month when Iran, when the Iatolas are openly siding
with Harris, do you think that's a plus for Harris.
(24:40):
I'd love your reaction to that. Eight five five for
zero five eight two five five d an five seven
seven three nine Colorado Peak Politics has this story. It's
an important story, and unfortunately there are so many more
out there like it. But their story is media ignores
immigration status of drunk driver who killed mom and son.
(25:00):
And I'll quote from part of it. Missing from news
reports that a repeat drunk driver pled guilty last week
to particular homicide charges in the deaths of a Broomfield
mother and her son is the suspect's immigration history, which
includes four deportations. We know it's true because some media
reported those details in the weeks after the horrific crash
(25:22):
caused by El Salvador national Jose Menshevar who was driving
over eighty in a forty that killed Reridan and Melissa Powell.
And then it goes into the story. But yeah, just
doesn't make it into the Channel seventh story, doesn't make
it into the Channel nine story. Why do you think
those details get omitted? But I think that the more
(25:43):
critical point is you have got this entire category of carnage,
this entire category of slaughter of murder of American citizens
by folks here illgally that barely gets mentioned and not
much in the way of official stats are kept on
and I wonder why. And this is something Americans need
(26:07):
to be aware of. I hope jad Vance brings it
up in the decimation of walls that that wait a second. Okay,
you may say no dogs or cats are being eaten.
Maybe you're right, but you got to admit women are
being raped. Women are being killed. Lots of American women
and children and boys and men are being slaughtered on
the roadways by folks who shouldn't even be here. Tim,
(26:27):
is that acceptable to you? We better hear that from
Jade Vance and that reality needs to be done in America.
It is a horrific, deadly secret that is largely covered
up by the media because most of the media is
a tool of the left. And I'm just one guy, right,
I've been practicing law forty years. I'm one guy. I'm
blessed with the real nice practice and great people to
(26:48):
work with. But I can tell you in my own practice,
over and over and over again, we see it, including
cases we have right now, or somebody who should not
even be in this country has been deported before then
kills a wonderful human and all of a sudden, the
wife and kids who that morning that they had a
husband and father. They come home that night and they
(27:09):
don't because somebody who never should have been here killed him,
and that's got to be completely unacceptable in any civilized society.
Eight five five for zero five A two five five
you're on the Dan Kapla show. I mean, if I
just saw him on the street, I would think what forty.
Speaker 2 (27:25):
I would think? So yeah, yeah, I mean I'm younger
than him, but I look older than him.
Speaker 4 (27:28):
I know that.
Speaker 1 (27:29):
Well, I wouldn't say that I'm also a male. He
might say I'm a management So that's kind of how
it goes. Yeah, that's but eight five five for zero
five eight two five five the number. Hey, we're We're
talking about a lot of things right now. I'm about
to get others. But the polls and I've been proven
wrong on this and I'm trying to figure out how
I missed it. The poles across the board now showing
(27:50):
the Taylor Swift endorsement has actually hurt Kamala Harris. I
think a caller nailed it, and that is Wait a second. Obviously,
Taylor Swift doesn't live in the real world and the
rest of us do, and many many people are hurting,
and so you know, there may very well be blowback
to that. I would add to that theory with the
benefit of hindsight that when you match Taylor Swift to
Kamala Harris, who is herself an extraordinarily superficial type of individual,
(28:16):
I mean, come on, she hasn't done a press conference
two months after being installed as the nominee. Yeah, I
think that match probably is not a great match, Texter
says Dan. The difference is Taylor Swift built her empire
from the ground up using her talent. Trump was fed
with the silver spoon well as second First, I have
all the admiration in the world for the way Taylor
(28:37):
Swift has handled her business and built her empire. Nothing
but credit for that. I think that she is gravely
mistaken in her endorsement, and her endorsement would lead to
a world she would not want to live in and
she wouldn't want her fans to live in. But that
aside for the moment, full credit to her. She worked hard,
she works smart, She provides great value. But also keep
(28:59):
in mind, Taylor Swift has amazing parents. I met her
mom at the same time I met Taylor Swift. She
has amazing parents and she had the benefit of that.
Donald Trump had had great parents, and he had the
benefit of some money from his parents, But common denominator
is both had superb parental support, which then helped launch
(29:21):
them to their success. I want to play you something here.
Play you some sound from Joe Biden that you got.
You have to listen carefully, obviously, because he doesn't articulate
that well right now. But it's it's really important sound
to hear, because this is Biden being asked on the view,
Biden being asked on the View about you know, whether
(29:44):
he was forced out and and all of that stuff.
And if you listen very carefully to this, what you
will hear is you will hear Joe Biden talking about
poll numbers. And what I want you to hear is
where Biden starts to say, my poll numbers are about
the same as hers, and then he breaks it off right.
(30:09):
And one thing that I've been talking with you about is, Okay,
if my theory is correct and I have zero duff,
it is that Joe Biden wants her to lose, because
Joe Biden wants the people who humiliated him, who stripped
him of the nomination he had earned, who pantsed him
and tied him to the goalpost for the world to see.
He wants them to lose. Joe Biden wants to be
sitting there on election night with a big glass of
(30:31):
Scotch and a big cigar and smoking it with a
smile on his face and see and see, I'm the
only one who ever beat Trump. I'm the only one
who could beat Trump. I don't see how any rational
person could doubt that is the case. Here, so we've
talked about, Okay, what will Biden do to try to
make sure the people who forced him out lose? Well,
the first thing, right is to force Kamala Harris on him,
(30:52):
because she is the worst candidate they could have right
now among the contenders. And so he succeeded in doing that,
stuck with her, and what else? And he you know, today,
in this appearance, I think there's been some other subtle things.
Might bet is there are going to be some leaks
if there haven't been already behind the scenes, of stuff
damaging to her. But listen carefully as he starts to
(31:15):
talk about poll numbers, and then he catches himself and
cuts it off.
Speaker 6 (31:21):
President, we all agree at this table is very selfless
of you to pass the baton and step beside, there
was a perception that perhaps her hand was forced in
some pointed fingers to speak, your answer, Pelossy, who you
have a long relationship with and accomplish many things with,
did you feel that your hand was forced? And what
is your relationship with Speaker Pelosi?
Speaker 1 (31:40):
Now?
Speaker 5 (31:40):
The relationship is fine.
Speaker 7 (31:41):
Look, I I never fully believed the assertions that somehow
there is this overwhelming.
Speaker 5 (31:53):
Reluctance soon my running back. I didn't sense that. And
although the polling mission Biden's polling was different, the fact
of no matter is my polling was about we're you know,
we're always within range of fitting.
Speaker 1 (32:06):
So he wanted to say my polling's about where hers
is now, because it is, and we'll do our little
pole dance in the next hour. But for those like
me who want to see Trump win, it's going to
put such a big smile on your face, you may
have to pull over when I read the poll results,
because it's just right now, right now. Of course, it's
not universal, but clear trend line heading toward what I've
(32:27):
been predicting all along, which is a big and clear
Trump victory with really nothing to break her fall. She
cannot win, but Trump could lose Trump at this point
would have to essentially give it away. And when we
come back and we start to get into some of
those numbers, and this isn't eye glazing stuff. This is
like big headline even when you're driving easy fun stuff
(32:50):
and from some major pollsters. And so at this point, now,
what does the left do next? You know they're never
going to stop. What do they do next, at least
those who want her to win? What's behind the next curtain.
I've got one thought. You're on the Dan Kapla Show.