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October 11, 2024 • 32 mins

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, time, lucking load. Michael Verry
Show is on the air. It's Charlie from BlackBerry Smoking.
I can feel a good one coming on.

Speaker 2 (00:24):
It's the Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
Oh yes, it is Friday. Drive home.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
Two six packs, shiners, not a nassive putet, ladders, Lucky's
track Center, fifth of Patrol, I stand Matty blue Coodlers,
take a cass at Hall to dodder.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
I can feel a good one coming on.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
Throw in ray Wie Cover, sing a long red that
mother any plus I had.

Speaker 4 (01:03):
Before another work and we.

Speaker 1 (01:08):
Get over, no chance to stay sober. I can feel
the good one and.

Speaker 4 (01:15):
Coming off in the week, We're gonna get the beetle arid.
We're gonna keep this higher. I can feel the brag
and no, I can feel the good one when coming un.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
Yes, indeed, yes, indeed, three blongs in a wrecked I
mustang follow us down to the lake and didn't have
to think about that too long, skinny dipping.

Speaker 3 (01:57):
In the bright moon ey situation couldn't be morack.

Speaker 2 (02:02):
I can feel a good one coming on.

Speaker 1 (02:07):
Hell we are.

Speaker 4 (02:10):
We gonna get to be right. We gonna keep it
clip the rock until the break of do. Yeah, I
can feel a good one. Feel good one. I can
feel a good one. Trump No, who Yeah, wee gonna.

Speaker 1 (02:54):
We're gonna get to be Remember if to start the week.

Speaker 5 (02:58):
For those of you said when I told you we're
an acquired taste, we are. But hang with us from okay,
and let me tell you why. And this goes for
listeners and program directors. I understand that for conservative talk,
just like Republican politics, we've done the same thing the

(03:23):
same way for as long as anybody can remember, and.

Speaker 1 (03:28):
Who cared if it worked.

Speaker 5 (03:31):
We're doing what we want to do because God knows,
we're not going to make any changes. We're not going
to let these automobiles replace our buggies. Buggies are working fine.
Got a brother works down at the buggy factory, and
I got a cousin that makes buggy whips. I don't

(03:51):
know why we need these automobiles. Well, you know, you
don't have to change for the sake of change. But
it's also good to be open to maybe on the
marketplace of ideas. Think some things might not all sound
exactly like the same shows you hear twenty four hours

(04:14):
a day, because we don't. It's how we've been able
to build an audience of people that aren't all exactly
the same and listening to all the same shows. Sometimes
that's hard for people to understand because we don't sound
like every other show is supposed to, and neither did Rush.

(04:36):
If you listen carefully, Rush did things very differently, did
his own way. That's what's allowed people like Joe Rogan
to build his own audience, and Tucker Carlson to build
his own audience, Andrew Schultz and.

Speaker 1 (04:50):
On and on and on. That's how you build those audiences.

Speaker 5 (04:55):
So bear with us, hang in there, give us a
try a couple of weeks, and if after that, hey, listen,
there's something else on the radio or somewhere else you
can listen to. Anyway, we're just a little different, and
that's okay. We do the show we want to do,
and after almost twenty years it works. We normally would
take calls on Friday, that's kind of what we have

(05:17):
always done. But if you've been around, you know that
as we get closer to the election, we get really
really focused, really really focused, and so that's what we
will do now, and when the election's over, we'll go
back to playing grab ass and taking a lot of
calls and goofing off and those sorts of things. We
did take calls this morning, but for the evening there

(05:39):
are things I want to get to that I don't
want to miss one of them. Michael Strahan, former NFL player,
went to college here at Houston at TSU. This wasn't
supposed to be a tough interview. They set Tim Walls down,
and this was not supposed to be a difficult and
it wasn't based on the questions. But when you're Tim Walts,

(06:02):
they're really really hard to answer, Like why do you
last so much?

Speaker 1 (06:05):
You call yourself a knucklehead.

Speaker 6 (06:07):
I call yourself a knucklehead because you've made some statements
that just aren't true. In a common about weapon of
the war that I carried in ward, which you didn't.
You said you were in Hong Kong doing a Tan
and Men Square massacre when you weren't. You kind of
talked at all up the bad grammar or getting the
dates wrong for your opponents that you lied to make
yourself look better.

Speaker 1 (06:28):
Do they have a point?

Speaker 7 (06:30):
Well, look, thirty five years ago, got the opportunity to
be in Hong Kong, be in China, learned a lot
about it. Served twenty four years in the National Guard,
passionately in an instance talking about gun violence in schools
on an instance there, Proud of the service that I've done,
Proud to be a teacher in that classroom, Proud to
have been very public all these years, and owning it

(06:52):
when I said, look, I was there in August of
eighty nine, and I think what you see here you
saw in Minnesota. I've been elected eight times here, These
things have been very public for folks here. They see
the results of things that we pass. We see a
state that's a top five state for business. We see
third best state, top three state for raising a child,
and we've got the best healthcare. And I think the policies,

(07:13):
whether it be dealing with China and understanding China's human
rights record, what you can be certain there is that
Kamala Harris and I aren't going to you know, FIC
dictators on speed dial see Shee Jing PINGI is doing
a good job during COVID, as Donald Trump said, And
I think those lessons learned over a lifetime of being
very public, whether it's in the classroom or being elected.

Speaker 6 (07:33):
Well, you know, but if it's one of things of
trust that some people who say we can't trust him
even tell the truth about himself. What do you say
to them, Well, I said, they know who I am.
I know who I am, I know the work that
I've done. I know that things get gets fun in
a political environment. But I think what they.

Speaker 7 (07:49):
See is if they want to compare that talking about
immigration policy or seeing the things that Donald Trump would say.
I think there's a big difference than missing a date
when you're there and again and spinning something for a
political reason.

Speaker 1 (08:02):
I'm very clear of who I've been.

Speaker 7 (08:03):
I'm very proud of twenty four years of doing that work,
and I think going to Congress and working for veterans,
they want to see it and make the difference look
a little different. I think people in Minnesota, my students,
the folks i've worked with members of Congress, they know
who I am, and they know the policies we put
in place have made a new and many times I
will talk a lot, I will get caught up in

(08:24):
the rhetoric the Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 1 (08:26):
I'm a knucklehead at times.

Speaker 5 (08:29):
One week into syndication, we welcome the listeners in state
state where we were not even heard before, including Connecticut, Maryland, Pennsylvania,
breaking Minneapolis, motive issue, Saint Paul, Minnesota. We added another

(08:52):
station in Alabama, which has been.

Speaker 1 (08:54):
A very very good state for us.

Speaker 5 (08:57):
We added we were in Los Angeles, added Sacramento. No,
we are now in Providence, Rhode Island. Now in Massachusetts,
Virginia Beach, Virginia with a lot of our kind of folks,
Navy seals we know in Washington.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
D C.

Speaker 5 (09:13):
And we're not in Djibouti, Ramon, We're not in Jibouti.
If you want us in Djibouti, that says a lot
about you.

Speaker 1 (09:23):
Seattle.

Speaker 5 (09:24):
We're in the Seattle market now. So anyway, with all
of that, we do two shows a day, a morning
show which tends to have much more of a Texas focus,
and an evening show, which has a national focus.

Speaker 1 (09:37):
That's an oversimplification, but.

Speaker 5 (09:40):
When you hear me talking about Texas, you'll know it's
because it's an issue that affects the country. We've got
a Senate that's locked up right now, and every individual
seat is very important because, unlike your members of the
House of Representative, which we refer to as congressman, if
you lose a you can come back and run against

(10:01):
him in two years. A Senate seat is for six years.
It's longer than a presidential administration. We got to get
those right. So the Democrats, the big donors, the George
Soros folks, they have targeted Ted Cruz in Texas and
they have thrown everything. It's going to end up being
two hundred million dollars they spend on this race. And

(10:23):
so you look at the polls and Trump is up
almost ten percentage points in Texas and Cruises up just
a couple. And I've known Ted Cruz for twenty six
years now, and people will tell me, yeah, well Ted
Cruzes not like a buller. Yeah, Ted Cruz, just yeah,
just to and a lot of times what our side

(10:44):
does is they don't realize it, but they're actually repeating
what CBSNBC and ABC have told them, and they don't
realize the same way that these people would say, well
you know that January sixth, it was kind of violent,
and now they've come around, or well you know, you
ought to just get a vaccine. You got to just
get the vaccine. Turns out it wasn't a vaccine. People
died from it. So what the media does is effective,

(11:12):
and sometimes even our own folks don't realize it.

Speaker 1 (11:15):
But if Trump is up by eight or.

Speaker 5 (11:18):
Ten percentage points and Ted Cruz is only up by
a couple of percentage points in the state of Texas,
what that means is that not all Trump supporters are
going to vote for Ted Cruz. Now, think about this
for a moment. What do you think Donald Trump wants
them to do? Do you think Donald Trump wants a
Barack Obama Democrat in the Senate instead of Ted Cruz.

(11:42):
Ted Cruz fought for Donald Trump after the election fraud
in twenty twenty. The first time I met Donald Trump
was when he came to Texas to campaign for Ted Cruise,
because Cruise and our friends, and he did it, and
he made very clear at a big event at the

(12:03):
Towyter Center, and he said, I want you to hear
me say these words. I need Ted Cruzan Senate. I
don't want me to O'Rourke there. The New Yorkers in
Californians that funded that race have doubled down. They're spending
even more money this time on calling all Red. But
I'm going to tell you something, All Red is all wrong.

(12:25):
This guy is for tearing down the border and wide
open illegal immigration. And he has said, so you got
that quote, Ramon. He has said that a border wall
is racist and that if you.

Speaker 1 (12:40):
Do build it, his generation will tear it down.

Speaker 7 (12:44):
They build that racist wall, my generation is the one
that will tear it.

Speaker 5 (12:47):
Down if they build that racist Well, you know what
he's doing now. These people have no shame. He's now
filming ads in front of a border wall claiming you
have to be tough on the border.

Speaker 1 (13:02):
He knows this is a lie.

Speaker 5 (13:05):
They're counting on. He's not running his campaign. He just
does what they tell him. They're counting on people not
being willing to believe that he would lie like this. See,
one of the things that they do is they rely
on people not being able or willing to learn the truth.

(13:29):
If we just tell them, you know, Colin already wants
to close the border, but Ted Cruz wants a legal immigration.
They're counting on a number of people saying, well, that's
what they said, and not knowing the truth. I think
we have a more informed electorate this year than most
because people are looking around and going, hey, these these
same people who told me to get a shot, These

(13:51):
same people who told me there wasn't any inflation. These
same people that told me Joe Biden was perfectly fine.
Those are the same people now tell them to vote
for Kamala Harris. Those are the same people that were
at Diddy's freak offs. Those are the same people that
were on Epstein's list. I think maybe I not trust
those people. Maybe I don't know all of the details

(14:13):
behind the scenes, but I'm pretty sure not to trust
those people. I don't think. I don't dare I say that.
I don't think they're telling the truth. The strategy for
Colin all Red, all wrong all.

Speaker 1 (14:28):
Red in Texas is to stay in his house.

Speaker 5 (14:31):
Literally, he does not leave his house. It's a campaign.
We know what candidates are up to. We hear from
people who are watching Colin all Red is sitting in
his house and not leaving, And people in California and
New York are funding ads to the tune of a

(14:53):
couple hundred billion dollars to tell people Ted Cruz bad guy,
Colin Allred good guy. Well I'm going to tell you something,
folks that's going to hit a lot of voters for
whom we don't get a chance to explain what's really happening. Hey,
do you want the people that brought you California and
New York to choose your senator? Because that's what's happening.

(15:14):
A lot of people are going to see that low
information voters. That means that people who know better are
going to have to say, do I love Ted Cruz?

Speaker 1 (15:23):
Do I like everything about him?

Speaker 5 (15:25):
Do I you know, does everything he say? Whatever their
issue is, I get that. People tell me that, But
this is binary, right. Same thing with Trump. People will
say to me, well, you know, it's just.

Speaker 1 (15:37):
That Trump this. Do you want to continue what we're
living through right now? No, than vote for Trump. It's
that simple. We're not looking for You're not looking for
a wife. Vote for Trump, vote for Cruise. It's Tracy Bird.

Speaker 2 (15:49):
Hey, y'all, if you drink, don't drive, do the watermelon
crawl and listen to the Tsar Salt my buddy Michael Bert.

Speaker 5 (15:57):
If you're a boxing fan, you know that sometimes the
biggest upsets will occur when a guy who has no
chance to win, no expectation to win, goes out there
and just throws haymakers. It's probably not the most strategically
sound strategy out of one hundred fights. It's going to

(16:20):
cost you more than it helps you. But when you
don't really have a chance anyway. By the same token,
it's how you'll see a guy like a pitcher go
up to bat and he'll swing for the fences because hell,
he's supposed to strike out anyway. Or your team is
down by four or more points on the football field

(16:43):
with one second left, they can't kick a field goal.
It doesn't matter where you are. You got to try
to put in the ends on. So you run a
play either you hell, Mary, or if you're too far away,
a dump off. And then you start to the craziness
and I always enjoy that. Or you try to throw
lateral passes and it ends up just in a mess
because at some point alignment ends up with the ball

(17:05):
trying to throw it across the field and other than
the Titans doing it that first year going to the
Super Bowl, it almost never works out, but it's fun
to watch because I love the chaos. Likewise, the Democrats
become very dangerous right now because they're losing, and they're

(17:26):
losing according to the latest Pew poll.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
No, I've never been a big pole.

Speaker 5 (17:32):
Guy, but the later you get I'll give a little
more credence whether my guy's winning or losing. But I've
always said polls are not voters. They are people who
are called. And I don't know about you. You can't
reach me by phone. My ringer stays off. I don't
want to talk to people on the phone ever, And
the people that tend to answer these things are shut INDs.

(17:56):
There's the same people who you have telemarketers calling. And
I have a theory, and if this offends you, I'm sorry,
but that means you're guilty. Only dumb people buy things
from telemarketers. And if nobody ever bought anything from the telemarketers,
that have to stop, because it costs money to run
a telemarketing scam, and if nobody ever bought anything, then

(18:19):
all that money would go down the drain. But there
are dumb dumbs out there, So all I have to
say this. The new Pew Research poll, and Pew is
not a conservative research center, has Trump at three hundred
and twelve, Harris at two twenty six in the electoral college.
Because remember, there is a national poll that will be

(18:42):
taken because that's the easiest and cheapest and fastest way
to generate content.

Speaker 1 (18:47):
Remember, everybody is wanting.

Speaker 5 (18:49):
To spill out their poll because it gives them something
to talk about, so they don't care that their poll
is not accurate. They don't care that the audience doesn't
understand what their poll reflects and doesn't reflect, or that
their audience doesn't understand the epidemiology behind it. That you
didn't You didn't actually use the protocols to make a
poll scientifically more predictive. It also doesn't include whether people

(19:15):
are going.

Speaker 1 (19:15):
To show up. It also dependent on the poll.

Speaker 5 (19:18):
It costs a lot more to only talk to people
who are most likely to vote. If you just randomly
call people, that's not a poll because people that aren't
going to vote, and we know they're not going to
vote because they never vote, but they'll answer the phone. Well,
that guy's opinion doesn't matter. If you don't vote, your
opinion doesn't matter. It shouldn't be counted in a poll, period,
end of story. Because the results on election night are

(19:39):
only going to be the votes of the people who voted,
not the votes of the people who are sitting at
home that have an opinion.

Speaker 1 (19:46):
And that's important to remember.

Speaker 5 (19:48):
So in the popular role vote, this poll, the pupil
had Harris up forty eight forty seven. But remember it's
fifty different individual states, all of them winner take all
except for Nebraska, and Trump's schedule to win all but
one of the electoral votes there battleground margins. Nevada Trump

(20:08):
up by point eight so almost a full percentage point.

Speaker 1 (20:10):
That would be a huge win.

Speaker 5 (20:12):
Now we know that in Nevada the mafia bosses come
in and they bring in the casino workers at the
last minute.

Speaker 1 (20:20):
We saw this.

Speaker 5 (20:22):
With Harry Reid where he was losing and they come
in and they pull out all the stops. I mean, look,
we all know you've got organized crime involved in some
of those casinos, and we all know that they're going
to deliver if they're told to. But Trump up by
point eight percent, almost a full percent. In Michigan, Trump
up by one percent in the Pew Pole. You know,

(20:44):
we talked about Michigan as a as a battleground state,
but it had to get pretty deep for Trump to
win there.

Speaker 1 (20:53):
And he's up in Pennsylvania.

Speaker 5 (20:55):
The Pew Pole has him up two point three percentage points.
In Wisconsin, the pew Poles got him up by two
and a half percentage points. In Arizona, the Pew Poles
got him up by two point six percent. In Georgia,
the pew Pole has him up by four point four percent,
and the biggest margin of the seven swing states, North Carolina,

(21:19):
the pew Pole has him up by five point one percent.
What happened in North Carolina? Helene or Helene have heard
it pronounce both ways. It wasn't the storm that gave
Trump the advantage. It was Kamala Harris's reaction. It was
FEMA bleeding off money for illegal aliens and having none left,

(21:44):
refusing potentially allegedly sabotaging the recovery efforts. The people there
saw what happened, if that was going to happen, and
I wouldn't wish that on anybody if.

Speaker 1 (22:01):
That was going to happen.

Speaker 5 (22:02):
I'm glad it happened right before people get to vote.
You know, the judges have refused to extend the deadline
for people to register and to vote.

Speaker 1 (22:15):
How cruel can you be?

Speaker 5 (22:18):
You break every rule for the illegal aliens, but for
American citizens to get to vote. When their house is gone,
they can't find their wallet, their job, they've lost, the
company they work for is washed away, and they've lost
a loved one and you can't give them a couple
extra days to vote. Wow, okay, good, Well, let's see

(22:38):
how that affects their vote. Let's now review how they're
going to vote after that, because because it's not good,
it's not good for Democrats, and it's fantastic for Donald Trump.

(22:59):
If you ever want an you know, if you've heard
that the Democrats are against the electoral college, let me
tell you why. Because America is not really a country anymore.
It's not a country evenly divided. It's not a country
where everyone has an opinion and gets to participate in
the government. It's about twenty large cities running the country.

(23:24):
If you had a national election, and this is the
way our country was founded for a reason. If you
had a national election, then all that would matter would
be what la New York, Atlanta, Houston, Chicago, what they
had to say. The people in the smaller states, they

(23:45):
wouldn't have any input. But that's not how it works,
is it. So why is Tim Waltz against the electoral College.
They want to change the rules. They want to violate
the constitution. They want to violate the constitution because they
can't win under the rules that we've all played by

(24:05):
for all these years. I played that audio of him
saying we wanted to violate the Constitution and then say.

Speaker 1 (24:10):
Oh, no, no, no, I never said that we are going
to supporter. We've been to supporter. You haven't been with
Michael Berry, and I haven't been to York the defrocked priests.

Speaker 3 (24:23):
Look.

Speaker 5 (24:24):
Tim Walls was talking to a group of the big
donors and he was caught on camera saying that we
have to do away with the electoral college. And then
Michael Strahan said you said that, and he says, yeah,

(24:47):
but the campaign doesn't agree with that, and then it
gets weird.

Speaker 1 (24:53):
Listen to this. I want to go back to something
you said on Tuesday.

Speaker 6 (24:57):
She said, I think all of us know the electoral
colleague needs to go, but the campaign came out later
that night.

Speaker 1 (25:03):
And that's not their stands. Well, it's not the campaign's position.

Speaker 7 (25:06):
And the point I'm trying to make is that there's
folks that feel every vote must count in every state,
and I think some of folks feel that's not the case.
Our campaign does that. And the point I'm saying is,
I'm in five states in two days. We're out there
making the case that the campaign's position is clear that
that's not their position. Their position and my position is
is to make sure that everybody understands their vote no

(25:28):
matter what state they're in, matters.

Speaker 6 (25:30):
So that's something that you and our present Harrit disagree on.

Speaker 7 (25:33):
I have spoken about it in the past that she's
been very clear on this and the campaign and my
position is the campaign's position.

Speaker 1 (25:40):
Okay, wait a second.

Speaker 5 (25:44):
I wish I could show you a transcript, because it's
hard to catch when someone is flipping back and forth
on an issue or obfuscating, absolutely blurring the lines. But
when you see it written down and stop and say,
wait a second. Yesterday you said two plus two was nineteen,

(26:07):
and now you're saying two plus two is three, and
this person over here in your campaign says two plus
two is seven, and you say, I was a school teacher.
I grew up in a community where people would ride
their bicycle till late in the ninth Okay, but I
need to know what two plus two is in your administration.

Speaker 1 (26:30):
Well, I.

Speaker 5 (26:32):
Had real good experiences in life. It's important people understand
what is this is Orwellian, this is Soviet style propaganda.
This is the ultimate insult because by the way Tim
Waltz isn't coming up with this. They've modeled this out.

(26:54):
They know these questions are coming. They're banking that they
can tell tell the big donors to George Soros. Hey, look,
I'll change the rules. We'll shut They've already said they're
gonna shut down free speech, we're gonna shut down social media.
We're not gonna let the peasants have a way to
communicate with each other.

Speaker 1 (27:15):
And I'll make sure we do that.

Speaker 5 (27:17):
When you say that and then it gets recorded and
shared and later you got to come back and answer
for it. And the peasants here see, we're hearing what
he's saying and he cannot justify it.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
Ramon, let's let's play that again.

Speaker 5 (27:31):
We're going to stop and start because I want people
to see exactly what he's saying. Go ahead, I want
to go on. Credit to Michael Strahan. I mean, this
is not a guy who's had a history of hard
hitting interviews, not because he's not a smart guy.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
He is.

Speaker 5 (27:46):
It's a very well structured question. He remained very composed.
He's out of his comfort zone here and he did
a great job. All right, take it slow.

Speaker 6 (27:55):
I want to go back to something you said on Tuesday,
he said, I think all of us know the electoral college,
and he to.

Speaker 5 (28:00):
Go, okay, stop, all right, So he says, I think
that's an assumptive close. I think all of us know
the electoral college must go. He doesn't mean you and me,
he doesn't mean the peasants to people. What he meant was,
I think all of us in this little room, all

(28:22):
of you billionaires, all of you. Soros says, no, we've
got to change the voting system so that we the overlords.

Speaker 1 (28:32):
I'll do this for you.

Speaker 5 (28:33):
I'm the hired hand to kill off the peasants. We've
got to change the system so that they never have
the opportunity to question us ever again.

Speaker 1 (28:44):
We all know it's got to go.

Speaker 5 (28:46):
Well, the peasants aren't supposed to hear him say that,
so here we go.

Speaker 6 (28:50):
But the campaign came out later that night and they
said that's not their stands op stop.

Speaker 1 (28:55):
But the campaign came out because the public.

Speaker 5 (28:58):
Heard about it and said no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
our stances we liked the electoral college. We didn't say that,
but you did. Tim Wallas is not allowed to go
off script. They're not mad that he said it. They're
mad that it was recorded and shared with people. All right,

(29:20):
keep going, Well.

Speaker 7 (29:20):
It's not the campaign's position, And the point I'm trying
to make is.

Speaker 5 (29:24):
Well, it's not the campaign's position. But at the beginning,
you said, we all know this has to happen. We
know this has to happen. Well, then why doesn't want
the campaign stand behind what we know must happen. If
this is the conscientious decision, because it's literally the only

(29:46):
way you can crush the people is to change the rule,
why doesn't the campaign have that as their policy?

Speaker 1 (29:53):
You said, we all know. That sounded like it was obvious.
You said.

Speaker 5 (29:58):
You didn't say, I know this is controversial. I know
y'all will disagree with me. I know that this will
this will spark furior in this room of billionaires that
want to control the people and prevent them from communicating
with each other, or getting to vote, or having a
chance to do anything other than what we tell them.
I know, he said, we all knew this very powerful language,

(30:21):
and then but the campaign changed their opinion.

Speaker 1 (30:25):
All right, So go ahead.

Speaker 7 (30:26):
There's folks that feel every vote must count in every state,
and I think some of folks feel that's not the.

Speaker 5 (30:32):
Case, hold on, every vote must count in every state.
This is an argument that Democrats make, and let me
tell you how it goes. What they're saying is in Texas,
where Donald Trump and Ted Cruz may only win fifty
one nine, they're saying the Democrat votes didn't count. They

(30:55):
did count. They counted toward who got the electoral colleg
votes for the.

Speaker 1 (31:00):
State of Texas. They did count for that.

Speaker 5 (31:02):
Every one of them counted, and then it's winner take all.
And if you say, well, that's not fair because they
didn't get any votes in the electoral college, Okay, but
that's also true in the much larger California where all
the Republicans there, because we don't get to fifty one percent,

(31:23):
none of their votes quote unquote count.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
What about in New York? What about in Vermont?

Speaker 5 (31:28):
What about in states that haven't gone Republican in decades?
You see, every vote counts within the process.

Speaker 1 (31:36):
Finish that up if you would. Campaign does that.

Speaker 7 (31:39):
And the point I'm saying is, I mean five states
in two days, we're out there making the case that
the campaign's position is clear, that that's not their position.
Their position and my position is is to make sure
that head.

Speaker 1 (31:50):
On hold on.

Speaker 5 (31:51):
You know we're traveling around. This is another one that
politicians love to do. You know, I'm traveling a lot
over Los. I'm traveling, I'm out I'm talking to people. Okay, well,
what you're saying is different than what you're saying the
next day.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
But I'm out there talking to people.

Speaker 5 (32:07):
Okay, you just said that you've traveled to five states
in two days.

Speaker 1 (32:10):
Hooray, Timmy, hooray. It's great. You must have come home
from China to do that.

Speaker 5 (32:15):
But what you're saying and what the campaign is saying
or two different things.

Speaker 1 (32:19):
I'm out there and I'm telling them.

Speaker 5 (32:20):
You know the campaign and you know the campaign, and
you know we're because we're far it because I'm traveling,
and you know Trump's crazy.

Speaker 1 (32:29):
Wait what
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