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May 23, 2025 • 32 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
We have not spent as much time on the South
Africa question as perhaps some other people, and we will.
But there are a few things I think worth noting here,
and particularly how angry the left is that people are
being granted asylum who are white. And this gets back
to my theory. Have set all along the left, which

(00:21):
is white liberals and blacks black activists. They hate whitey
and they can't say it in so many words, although
some of them do, but they really really really don't
like anything done for whitey because they hate whitey. Well,
why do white people? Why would I say that that
white people would say that white liberals are self loathing.

(00:45):
They are so guilty. That's why so many white liberals
force their kids to get their wiener cut off. Because
whites are at the top of the power structure in
their mindset. And the only way to get yourself back
in the position where you can have a vaunted status

(01:06):
is to reduce yourself down to transgender. Because everybody hates
transgender and everybody represses transgender. Enow, if you become transgender,
then you get a seat at the table. You're you're
better even than a black person. See, because you're a
transgender so now you get to be you get to
have a cause because you chopped a wing or off.

(01:27):
So the left will tell you that whites aren't being
targeted in South Africa for the crime of being white.
But all you have to do is listen to South
Africans and they'll tell you the truth.

Speaker 2 (01:39):
So deep into history, you've taken us back to the
seventeenth century. In that case, shouldn't everybody leave the property
to the Koisan who are thought to be the native
occupants of South Africa. No, actuallye Africa and South Africa.
It belongs to the Bandu people. It belongs to them Gunis,
so it belongs to the people of Africa.

Speaker 3 (01:58):
What about Tavia here, we.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
Are not saying it doesn't Pologne now that who are
living together. Yeah, our perspective is that the land must
must go back to the chiefs and the traditional lead
does end and end the state. We're unapologetic about this
land must be expropriated without compensation.

Speaker 1 (02:16):
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa called the white South Africans
fleeing genocide cowards and called on them to return and
face it like a man. Now, mind you, they're not
accused of any crimes. He's mad they've left because he
wants to take all they have and kill him, and

(02:38):
by leaving, they're presenting him that they're preventing him from
doing that.

Speaker 4 (02:41):
None of us ever having to want to run away
to another country for fictional reasons that we are being persecuted.
We are united in diversity, and none of us should
ever feel that they have lost courage, that they've now

(03:03):
become cowards. And one Torano once played, he once sat Africanas.

Speaker 1 (03:11):
And I do get emails from folks asking why are
we talking about South Africa. It's around somewhere, halfway around
the world. They want to know what's going on here
in America. I'm telling you, what's happening in South Africa
is happening here. The hatred of white people, the open

(03:34):
espousal of the hatred of white people. Because white people
have all the power, We're gonna kill them, We're gonna
take what they have. They don't deserve anything. This is frequent.
MSNBC contributor Ellie missed All I don't know if I'm
pronouncing that correctly or not on the Black Star Network
saying America needs to be saved from white folks.

Speaker 5 (03:55):
Is that this election has proven that this administration has
proven painful in some ways. Is that black people cannot
save this country from white folks. We can't do it alone, right,
If white folks aren't going to join in, if white
women aren't going to join in, if Latinos aren't going

(04:15):
to join in, we can't do it alone.

Speaker 1 (04:18):
Another example this is Rutger's professor Britney Cooper calling whites
corrupt morally and spiritually bankrupt. This is pure hatred of
white people for being white.

Speaker 6 (04:32):
My hope is that we would do it differently, you know,
in the moments when we have some power. We will
not do it perfectly. But I do think that all
of us can sort of agree that a politics that
says like there are superior and fear human beings just
in the way to go. And that's the thing that
white people don't trust us to do because they are

(04:53):
so corrupt, you know, their thinking is so morally and
spiritually bankrupt about power that they can let you know,
they fear viscerally existentially letting go of power because they
cannot imagine that there's another way to be. It is
either that you dominate or you are dominated, and isn't
it sad that that is spiritually who they are and

(05:16):
that they can't imagine a sort of more expansive notion
of the world.

Speaker 1 (05:19):
And then she says something interesting that whiteness has an
end date. If you don't realize this is a threat,
you're not paying attention.

Speaker 6 (05:30):
There is a world beyond even our sojourn on the earth,
and so whiteness is gonna have an end date because
it is not. Despite what white people think of themselves,
they do not defy the laws of eternity right. Their
projects are not so sophisticated that the natural laws of
physics change for them. And when we sort of humble them,

(05:53):
in the humble our own understandings of whiteness, it seems
like the biggest giant that we face.

Speaker 7 (05:59):
But in the right it is.

Speaker 6 (06:01):
What I like to say is, you know, black folks
were out here for centuries and centuries and millennia doing
all kinds of wonderful things, and probably some things too,
but whiteness is largely an inc you know, an inconvenient interruption.
And so we then get to ask ourselves, so why
am I here in this moment of like, damn, you know,

(06:21):
why did I show up in this particular iteration, and
it's like, well, I think we showed up in this
iteration precisely so that we could help to figure out
an end and a way to the other side of this,
you know, gargantuan historical tragedy that is is white, sup.

Speaker 1 (06:42):
I bet you we've got ten thousands sweet little ladies
of seventy or more that would make a pound cake
that you could eat cold and enjoy. Michael, I will
confess that there is a certain fatigue to the discussion

(07:06):
of Joe Biden's health. I will I will also tell
you that I think it's a much bigger story than
Watergate or any other presidential scandal Monica Lewinsky in my lifetime,
and I was born in seventy, I think by far,

(07:27):
it's a bigger, broader, more scary cover up. It's never
about the crime, it's always about the cover up. But
it needs to be talked about. We're going to talk
about it because it is representative of something much bigger
than when we know Joe Biden got cancer, or whether

(07:51):
he had any balance or knew where he was and
who was using the auto pen. It's much bigger than
that that nasty person is Donald Trump, Caitlin calls her
Caitlin Collins CNN. As President Trump if he would comment
on Joe Biden's cancer revelation, and what they wanted him
to do was say something that they could then say,

(08:13):
see see how bad you are and stem the tide,
make the story go away, because now you were supposed
to focus on Trump saying something mean and not focus
on the cover up he didn't play along.

Speaker 8 (08:25):
Do you as want to President Biden being diagnosed with cancer?

Speaker 6 (08:28):
Are you gonna call your professor?

Speaker 9 (08:31):
I think it's very sad. Actually, I'm surprised at it
wasn't you know, the public wasn't notified a long time ago.
Is to get to stage n in this a long time.
I just had my physical. Hope you saw that. You
saw the results of that particular test. I think that
testa's standard to pretty much anybody getting a physical as.

Speaker 1 (08:53):
Joe Biden guaranteed transparency regarding his health.

Speaker 7 (08:58):
And so I guarantee you, I guarantee you I will
be totally transparent in terms of my health and all
aspects of my health. And when it comes to Donald
Trump versus me, just look at us. Okay, that's why
I had so damn any other people I grew up
have cancer. I've laid every bit of the record out and.

Speaker 5 (09:19):
The thing.

Speaker 7 (09:21):
You gonna ask Trump for this, Okay, I laid it
all out.

Speaker 1 (09:26):
More and more doctors are saying, with a body of
a body of work, an entire career behind them, of
dealing with this kind of cancer, that he very likely
had cancer and knew it when he made that guarantee.
This reminds me of Gary Hart when he said, they said, hey,
you know, we think you're you're messing around with this woman,

(09:48):
and he said, you think I am, then then follow
me and they did, and they're aboard the monkey business.
Because these things always there's always a comedic, unintentional comedic
value to this. There he was with Donna Rice, and
it ruined him.

Speaker 3 (10:06):
Gary Hart officially dropped out of the race today.

Speaker 10 (10:09):
He made a statement he took no questions.

Speaker 3 (10:11):
The day former Colorado Senator Gary Hart quit the Democratic
race for president in the face of a media frenzy.

Speaker 10 (10:19):
Now clearly under present circumstances, this campaign cannot go on.

Speaker 3 (10:24):
A media frenzy. Many remember today solely by this photograph
of Heart and a woman named Donna Rice. On the
dock next to a yacht called monkey Business.

Speaker 10 (10:35):
I do not have to answer that question.

Speaker 11 (10:36):
The question was have you ever committed adultery?

Speaker 8 (10:39):
And Gary Hart never really answered it.

Speaker 3 (10:41):
Just a few days before he had dropped out, an
anonymous tip about a possible affair had led Miami Herald
reporters to confront Hert outside his Washington townhouse. Their story
ran the next day. The very same day, the New
York Times printed quotes from an earlier Heart interview. Asked
about rumors of infidelity, he had answered, follow me around,

(11:03):
I don't care. I'm serious. If anybody wants to put
a tale on me, go ahead. They'd be very bored.
Gary Hart fled to his mountain retreat in Colorado Thursday
to boring.

Speaker 12 (11:14):
It was not.

Speaker 3 (11:16):
For that statement giving them license the media launched into
full scandal mode.

Speaker 10 (11:21):
I'm a proud man, and I'm proud of what I've accomplished.

Speaker 3 (11:24):
And within a week, candidate Heart announced the inevitable.

Speaker 10 (11:28):
I refuse to submit my family and my friends and
innocent people and myself to further rumors and gossip. It's
simply an intolerable situation.

Speaker 3 (11:38):
Not content with the simple statement of withdrawal, Gary Hart
went on to deliver this lecture.

Speaker 10 (11:43):
We're all going to have to seriously question a system
for selecting our national leaders that reduces the press of
this nation to hunters and presidential candidates to being hunted.

Speaker 3 (11:53):
For all of Hart's protestations, the release of that monkey
business photo was all most people needed to see, and
with that incident, the president of NonStop twenty four to seven,
coverage of the personal failings of politicians from both parties
was firmly established, something all candidates current and future ignore

(12:15):
at their peril.

Speaker 10 (12:16):
At least in spirit. I will be with you, Thank.

Speaker 8 (12:19):
You very much.

Speaker 1 (12:22):
Do you remember Joe Biden's Big Boy press conference? They
called it. It was the press conference his staff set
up after his disastrous debate performance. These people didn't want
to give up. They were clinging to power, and they
wanted to show that Joe Biden is capable of doing
the job. He started the press conference with a ringing

(12:46):
endorsement of his vice president.

Speaker 7 (12:49):
I wouldn't have picked Vice President Trump to be vice president.
I think she's not qualified to be president. Let's start there.

Speaker 1 (12:56):
The sad part is it wasn't talk radio. It was
his own staff that coined the term big boy press conference,
and Joe did about as well as a child wanting
to be a big boy.

Speaker 7 (13:08):
I'll take your questions. I've been given a list of
people to call on here. I wouldn't have picked Vice
President Trump to be vice president, so I think she
was not qualified to be president. I love my staff,
but the ads add things all the time. I'm catching
hell from my wife. Anyway, I'm following the advice of

(13:30):
my commander in chief, the chief of Staff of the military,
as well as the Secretary of Defense and our intelligence people.
Where the access to that market was enticive enough to
get companies to come in because they had access to
over a billion people in a market. Not a billion,

(13:51):
but a lot of people on the market, and so
they were doing it. We're sitting around this w COMMA
was so good as well. We're sitting around. More children
are killed with by the bullet in any other cause
of death the United States of America. What hell are
we doing? What are we doing?

Speaker 13 (14:12):
You earlier explained confidence in your vice president. If your
team came back and showed you data that she would
fare better against former President Donald Trump, would you reconsider
your decision to stay in the race.

Speaker 7 (14:25):
No, unless they came back and said there's no way
you can win.

Speaker 12 (14:31):
Me.

Speaker 7 (14:33):
No one's saying that.

Speaker 8 (14:34):
No bull.

Speaker 5 (14:37):
Okay, this concludes.

Speaker 14 (14:46):
The answer the Vice president Harris as Vice President Trump writing,
now Donald.

Speaker 15 (14:52):
Is using that to a law or an age memory.

Speaker 5 (14:56):
How do you combat that?

Speaker 13 (14:57):
For system signs.

Speaker 16 (15:02):
Nice press conference, Thank you everybody.

Speaker 17 (15:05):
I should arrest me or take me to Texas because
I'm ready to get out.

Speaker 11 (15:09):
Of the state.

Speaker 15 (15:10):
I think Michael Barry rob I like it.

Speaker 1 (15:16):
If the president has to hold what his own staff
calls a big boy press conference to prove he's capable
of holding the office doing the job, he's probably not
capable of holding the office. To quote Billing Vall, here's
your sign. If everybody around the president has to continually

(15:39):
tell the country that he's at the top of his game,
he's probably not at the top of his game. Credit
this clip to a clip keeper on X for the
montage that I think makes the point very well. You
don't need to say these things if they're true. If

(16:02):
you are saying these things, it's because they're not.

Speaker 18 (16:06):
Does the president have the stamina physically and mentally do
you think to continue on even after twenty twenty four.

Speaker 8 (16:12):
Don you're asking me this question.

Speaker 19 (16:14):
Oh my gosh, he's the President of the United States, you.

Speaker 12 (16:18):
Know he I can't even keep up with it.

Speaker 14 (16:21):
The most difficult part about a meeting with President Biden
is preparing for it, because he is sharp, intensely probing,
and detail oriented and focused.

Speaker 11 (16:33):
I can testify because I've been working very closely with
this president for the past two years. I've been knowing
it for thirty years, and I'm telling you, this guy's tough,
he's smart, he's on his game.

Speaker 8 (16:43):
Jill Biden has vision, he has knowledge, he has a
strategic thinker.

Speaker 9 (16:49):
The President is focused, he's detail oriented, he's always thinking
about the big picture.

Speaker 20 (16:55):
Is engaging, he is capable.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
He has an incredible record as president, and I'm often
with him on foreign trips.

Speaker 8 (17:04):
He's at the top of his game. So he has
a vision, he has knowledge, he has judgment, he has
a strategic thinking.

Speaker 17 (17:12):
I met with the President, I don't know, five or
six weeks ago.

Speaker 3 (17:15):
And he seems fine.

Speaker 9 (17:16):
To make half complete confidence in the President, I have
watched him expertly guide meetings of staff and cabinet members.

Speaker 10 (17:26):
I could not have more confidence in the President.

Speaker 3 (17:29):
I would just tell you that I meet frequently with
the President, and every single time I m meet him,
he is just fine.

Speaker 8 (17:38):
But he is again, knowledgeable.

Speaker 14 (17:42):
Wise, incredibly sharp, incredibly probing, incredible command of the details.

Speaker 10 (17:49):
He is sharp, He is on top of things.

Speaker 1 (17:52):
There is nothing to these challenges, these suggestions that somehow
he's not sharp and he's not capable.

Speaker 13 (17:58):
We see Joe Biden us.

Speaker 8 (18:00):
We know how attuned to oughts to the issue, and.

Speaker 16 (18:03):
You're going to see how smart he is and the
experience he has.

Speaker 8 (18:07):
I say his age is an asset.

Speaker 3 (18:09):
Aha, He's wise.

Speaker 16 (18:11):
Yes, he's wise.

Speaker 21 (18:12):
He has wisdom, he has experiences.

Speaker 10 (18:14):
And his experience because of his age and his wisdom
has been invaluable to this country.

Speaker 14 (18:22):
A lot of countries, people who've been in office a
longer period of time are praised for their wisdom.

Speaker 11 (18:27):
I have seen a law of seventy two year olds
not as capable as this eighty year old.

Speaker 6 (18:35):
It is hard for us to keep up with this president.

Speaker 20 (18:38):
His mental acuity is great.

Speaker 14 (18:40):
It's fine.

Speaker 4 (18:41):
It's as good as it's been over the years I've been.

Speaker 9 (18:44):
He's fine.

Speaker 18 (18:44):
All this right wing propaganda that he has mental acuity
has declined is wrong.

Speaker 11 (18:49):
And this kind of sense that he's not ready for
this job is just a bucket of bs that's so
deep your boots will get stuck at it.

Speaker 1 (18:56):
In fairness, not everyone associated with Joe Biden was part
of the conspiracy of trying to hide his decline. Former
White House physician Ronnie Jackson said in twenty twenty that
Joe should take a cognitive test. Obama wasn't happy with

(19:17):
Ronnie Jackson and wrote him a strongly worded letter. This
is Don Lemon reporting on that letter two years later,
in twenty twenty two.

Speaker 18 (19:29):
Learning about an email sent by the former President Barack
Obama reprimanding his former White House physician Ronnie Jackson, who
was also the personal doctor for George W. Bush and
Donald Trump. Obama wrote the email during the twenty twenty
campaign between Trump and Joe Biden, scolding Jackson for tweeting
criticism of Biden's cognitive health. It's part of Obama's email
he said, I've made a point of not commenting on

(19:51):
your service in my successors administration, and have always spoken
highly of you, both in public and in private. You
always served me and my family well, and I have
considered you not only a fine doctor, and service member,
but also a friend. That's why I have to express
my disappointment at the cheap shot you took at Joe
Biden via Twitter. It was unprofessional and beneath the office

(20:13):
that you once held. It was also disrespectful to me
and the many friends you had in our administration. You
were the personal physician to the President of the United
States as well as an admiral in the US Navy.
I expect better, and I hope a bund reflection that
you will expect more of yourself in the future.

Speaker 10 (20:31):
Now.

Speaker 18 (20:31):
Obama acted after Jackson retweeted a video of Biden along
with this message, Remember the cognitive tests that I gave
Donald Trump? The one he aced sounds like somebody else
might need some testing done.

Speaker 9 (20:45):
Scary.

Speaker 1 (20:46):
A lot of people are asking the question, and reasonably so,
why the White House doctors did not release the information
that Joe Biden had cancer. Doctor Nicole, if I'm pronouncing
this correctly, told Clay and Buck that the White House
doctor has no obligation to disclose a president's medical condition,

(21:11):
and I agree with that. He has a hipocritic oath.
He has a professional responsibility, just as a lawyer, to
take care of the patient, who is the president if
you well, let's play the audio.

Speaker 16 (21:28):
Medical legally is a physician. We are not supposed to
speak publicly about someone's diagnoses if it's our patient. Actually, ethically,
we're not supposed to really talk about their diagnosis, even
if they're not our patient, because we're not supposed to
draw conclusions without having done the work up. It is
only a courtesy that they show us these annual physical examinations.
That is not you know, that is not a right

(21:51):
at the Americans. I mean, that's not in the law
that they have to do that. We just liked this
on paper where it says that our presidents are mentally
and physically fit to do the h It's a great thing,
but really all it is is a feel good thing.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
My problem is if you require a doctor to owe
a greater duty to the public than to their patient,
then the president, if they fear they have a condition,
won't seek medical treatment for fear that that would then
be talked about by the doctor, who we say has

(22:24):
a responsibility to tell us what's wrong. And I don't
think that is a positive. You want your president, whoever
they are, to seek treatment. You want that that's a
good thing. Doctor Drew was on with Dana Lash and
he said, it's nearly impossible for a prostate nodule to

(22:45):
become terminal in one month.

Speaker 21 (22:48):
This is when I was reading about former President Biden's diagnosis.
So out of I guess one out of ten on
the Gleason scale, he's got a nine in terms of
it being aggressive. Its metastasizes is boned. Yes, that sounds
very serious, but it also sound Does that Is that
indicative of it being a long term problem?

Speaker 19 (23:08):
Does that?

Speaker 21 (23:09):
What does that tell you when it's at that stage.

Speaker 17 (23:11):
If if it were some man that walked into my
office who hadn't been evaluated in five years, and I
found an elevated PSA and a nodule on his prostate,
and lo and behold, we biopsied, it's cancer. We do
a bone scan, we find mets. Okay, that's maybe five
percent of cases, two percent. If it's somebody being followed regularly,

(23:33):
that it would present all of a sudden on a
metastatic basis. That did not happen here. In fact, when
my speidy sense started going up is when they said, oh,
we noticed a nodule. Oh low, and behold, it's metastatic.

Speaker 5 (23:44):
No.

Speaker 3 (23:45):
No.

Speaker 17 (23:45):
First of all, the digital rectal exam is largely been
a band on these days. We follow the PSA. The
idea that the President United States was not getting a
PSA at least annually does not pass the skip time.
They are telling me what's called one day, these little
things clothing for babies like.

Speaker 3 (24:04):
You support of all these ones season.

Speaker 1 (24:08):
There have been a lot of questions around the use
of the autopin during the Biden presidency. You know, this scandal,
this cover up. We tend to get bored and move on,
but the depth of banality, the depth of deceit that

(24:28):
has occurred here, requires that we stay focused because this
is incredibly important. President Trump says whoever was using the
autopin was effectively the president and that should be frightening.

Speaker 9 (24:44):
And it takes a long time to get to that situation. Now,
I think to get to us stage nine. I think
that if you take a look, it's the same doctor
that said that Joe was cognitively fine, there was nothing
wrong with him. Well, he said, if it's the same
doctor said there was nothing wrong there, and that's being
proven to be a sad situation. And the autopen is

(25:08):
becoming a very big deal. You know, the autopen is
becoming a big deal because it seems like that maybe
was the president who ever operated the autopen. But when
they say that that was not good, they also you know,
you have to look and you have to say that
the test was not so good either. In other words,
there are things going on that the public wasn't informed.
And I think somebody's going to have to speak to

(25:28):
his doctor, if it's the same or even if it's
two separate doctors. Why wasn't the cognitive ability? Why wasn't
that discussed? And I think the doctor said he's just.

Speaker 1 (25:40):
Fine, And so who is that? Well, Congressman James Comer says,
they have identified the Biden staffers who used the autopen.

Speaker 15 (25:49):
You are going and looking at who is controlling this
autopen because Joe Biden, I mean, he's demonstrating that he
doesn't have all the cognitive capabilities they had.

Speaker 5 (25:59):
That interview was from twenty three.

Speaker 15 (26:01):
Yeah, that's hard evidence. Early in the president Biden's term
as president, he clearly shows that he was in a
significant mental decline. It questions who was actually making the decisions.
So what we found is not just with the pardons
he issued, but many of the executive orders that the

(26:22):
courts are now using to trump proof many of the
executive orders that President Trump is trying to implement to
make government more efficient. Many of these executive orders, as
well as the pardons of Biden's entire family, as a
result of our investigation, these were all signed with the.

Speaker 22 (26:38):
Auto pen and clearly from that interview, which was many
many months prior to the heavy use thought of pen,
Joe Biden wasn't capable of making decisions, He wasn't coherent.

Speaker 15 (26:52):
We think we've identified who the staffers are. Jason, you
all have done great work with that over at Heritage Oversight.

Speaker 22 (27:00):
We're going to bring everyone that we believe was involved
in any role in the use of the autoped We're
going to invite them to come in for a transcribed interview.

Speaker 15 (27:09):
If they want, then they will receive a subpoena and
they will have a full blown deposition. But we want
to find out who was actually making the decisions in
the White House during the last nine months of the
Biden administration when he was clearly in mental decline.

Speaker 1 (27:23):
And then, of course this is what you would expect.
Hakeem Jeffries says it's inappropriate to discuss the Biden cover up.
What would Joe having cancer? And all you wonder how
they can make these statements with a freight straight face,
and then you realize they're just monsters.

Speaker 12 (27:44):
My expectation that President Biden is going to meet this
moment with the courage and resilience that he's consistently shown
seems to me entirely inappropriate that at this moment in time,
when President Biden is dealing with a serious an aggressive

(28:06):
form of cancer, there are Republicans who are peddling conspiracy
theories and want us to look backward at a time
when they actually are taking health care away from the
American people. No, as House Democrats were going to.

Speaker 20 (28:21):
Look forward, They literally are trying to take health care
away from millions of Americans at this very moment in
the dead of night, and Republicans want to fan the
flames of conspiracy theories at this moment.

Speaker 1 (28:42):
No thank you to his credit. Former RNC chairman Writs
previous told ABC News that people like you and me
were shamed, insulted, criticized for asking about Joe Biden's mental
acuity of how they got away with it. They scared
people into not asking because you'd be called a bad person.

Speaker 19 (29:06):
First of all, people were put to shame me and
others out there that talked about Joe Biden's mental acuity.
We were total. He was sharp as attack, had a
photographic memory. He was intense and brilliant. And what's amazing
is the sources of this book were the same sources

(29:27):
that told us that we ought to be ashamed of ourselves.
It's a stutter. Stop talking about him the fact as
they were managing his decline in a nursing home in
the White House.

Speaker 1 (29:38):
I liked this quote by President Trump, which is why
we're going to play it from a few days ago.
He says he ran again after what they did to
him in twenty twenty because the election was rigged. And well,
i'll let you hear it directly from him.

Speaker 9 (29:53):
You can't be embarrassed. No president's ever done that. And
I give him credit he went, but he should have
known the end this cool dealmaking, and he didn't, and
they put him at forth and he was so angry
that it hurt his whole thing. He didn't want to
talk to anybody. So I got a call from the
mayor and he said, sir, you're the president elect. I

(30:14):
was president elected at the time. The president will not
speak to the Olympic Committee. And I understand that, but
a little bit his fault. I guess he was very
embarrassed by that. And I said, I'll speak to him.
And I spoke to this gentleman who was obviously Scandinavian,
seriously Scandinavian and very nice. I couldn't get him off

(30:35):
the phone because he was so starved for love. He
just kept I much had him for two hours. I couldn't.
I said, sir, I have to go. I'm president elect. Yes, well,
I said to him, yes, yes, yes, we will take
good care. They wanted to know that if they choose
us for the Olympics, will they will we treat him nicely,
And I said, we're going to treat you like so well,

(30:57):
like you've never been treated. And then he wanted to
talk about it anything, because nobody would talk to him.
Now he talks to me. And we got the Olympics,
and then we got through Johnny, who's the boss. We
got he's a friend of mine, and we got the
World Cup. I got them both and I said, man,
I won't be president I won't. I got the Olympics
and the World Cup, and I won't be president. And

(31:18):
they're gonna forget that I got them. Nobody's gonna mention
it because you know a little bit, that's the way
life is. And then they rigged the election. And then
I said, you know what I'll do. I'll run again
and I'll shove it up there.

Speaker 1 (31:31):
I got a lot of emails from folks who asked
me about President Trump announcing that he had canceled the
that he had canceled Pride Month. And the short answer is, no,
he didn't say that. A guy named Maverick Alexander created
an AI President Trump. And we're going to see more
and more of this, and you're just you're just going
to have to do a little digging and understand that

(31:52):
there's going to be things like this and they're not true.
And this would be an example.

Speaker 9 (31:58):
My fellow Americans. It is with great pleasure that I
am announcing that Pride Month is canceled. Pride is a sin,
and we will no longer participate in deliberate moral inversions. Instead,
June will be known as Confidence Month, or maybe just June,
who knows. In either case, it'll be a time for
us to celebrate legitimate achievements worthy of reflection. I hate

(32:22):
to break it to some people, but putting a word
and a shouldn't be on anyone's highlight reel very unhygienic.
Love is love, that's what they say. However, poop is poop,
pops poop is poop.
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