Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
It's that time time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael Very Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
And frankly, I think a lot of Republicans look at
me as like, oh, that's a straight white Christian male
son of a cop. Like everyone else like him looks
like me. So when he comes at me, it's more
betrayal to them. Like I've heard that a lot from
them on their side, and that's that's why they take
it so personally.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
But like, I'm a Christian and I don't want.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
To be defined by what Republicans think of me, Like
I don't wear it on my sleeve in my politics like.
Speaker 3 (00:38):
They do everyby.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
Tonight, facing the threat of a pending House Ethics Committee
investigation and expulsion the Battle, Congressman Eric Swalwell says he
will leave office, still answering the call from a wide
swath of both Republicans and Democrats urging him to step
down following allegations of sexual assault and misconduct. Swalwell continuing
(01:10):
to deny many of the allegations, calling them false, but
adding I must take responsibility and ownership for the mistakes
I did make.
Speaker 3 (01:18):
Because I got a half thing.
Speaker 4 (01:29):
His resignation will end the threat of a congressional probe,
but he is still facing the possibility of a criminal
investigation in New York, where one of the allected incidents
took place, Multiple women have accused Swalwell of sexual misconduct
and assault, one woman telling the San Francisco Chronicle that
she had several sexual encounters with the congressman while working
in his office. She also accused him of sexually assaulting
(01:51):
her twice while she was too intoxicated to consent. NBC
News has not verified her allegations, but it confirmed her
identity and that she worked for Swalwell twenty nineteen until
twenty twenty one. This accuser, sharing her story with Sienna,
he said to me, you're.
Speaker 3 (02:06):
Right, it's probably not good for a congressman to be
caught with his pants down.
Speaker 5 (02:09):
Yet Well resigning from Congress now after suspending his campaign,
he's still under investigation in Manhattan for an alleged rape. Generally,
these things follow a pattern, and there will be many
more to come. My guess is that he realized, based
(02:36):
on threats that have been made, that there are going
to be a lot more women coming forward. That's that's
a guess. I don't know that because for him to
resign so quickly. Now, he wasn't going to be in
Congress come January anyway, because he did not run, He
(02:59):
did not file for reelection to Congress, because he did
file for governor, and that date has passed. So for
now his campaign for governor is suspended. I wouldn't be
surprised if he doesn't do a big apology tour a
llah Bill Clinton, and come out and say I believe
(03:20):
in the God A second chances, you know, my heart,
I love California. We can't afford to let the Republicans win.
You've got to support me, and that might be enough. Honestly,
that might be enough. Democrats hate Republicans that much. They
hate growth, they hate low taxes, they hate security, they
(03:41):
hate securing the border, they hate all these.
Speaker 3 (03:45):
They hate Trump so much.
Speaker 5 (03:49):
That despite everything he's done, they may say, you know what,
You're right, he's a sleeve bag, but he's our sleeves bag.
Speaker 3 (03:59):
He's a rapist, but he's our rapist. We didn't really
believe me too anyway.
Speaker 5 (04:02):
That was just a way to bring down Republicans, and
we ended up getting our guys all ensnared in it.
So I will I will throw it to Laura Ingram
to give voice to something that the number of people
have noted, and that is that for anyone who thinks, oh,
the Democrats are cleaning house, they're not going to let
(04:24):
a scoundrel survive in their midst. As Laura Ingram noted,
everybody in Congress knew what was going on. And this
is Anthony Wiener all over again, this is Bill Clinton
all over again.
Speaker 3 (04:38):
Everybody knew what he was up to.
Speaker 6 (04:41):
For you, by the media spin that this shows that
Democrats have zero tolerance policy for sexual impropriety. Or before
you say, look how quickly they pushed out Swallwell guys.
Swallwell sleeves even after the before the recent accusations, was
the the worst kept secret in Washington.
Speaker 4 (05:02):
This thing has been an open secret and whispered about
amongst the campaigns for months that this Swalwell thing could
break now.
Speaker 6 (05:10):
Former Congressman Eric the Creep Swalwell long before last week's
sexual assault allegations, while everything about him oozed ick from
the minor things like passing gas during an interview.
Speaker 2 (05:22):
The evidence is uncontradicted that the President used taxpayer dollars
to ask the Ukrainians to help them cheat in election.
Speaker 6 (05:29):
So big things like his dalliance with Fang Fang, the
Chinese spy, Well, it was obvious he was a sleezbag,
but even the slimiest survive how Essex Ethics Committee investigations,
which he did back in twenty twenty three. But his
dealings with that Chinese operative named Fang Feng aka Christine.
Speaker 3 (05:47):
Fang spoke volumes.
Speaker 6 (05:49):
The communist agent not only fundraise for Eric Swalwell's campaign,
but she got so close to him that she managed
to place an intern in his office.
Speaker 3 (06:01):
But during it all, he remained a reliable.
Speaker 6 (06:04):
Attack dog against all things Trump, and years before he
has sailed Brett Kavanaugh over thirty year old accusations from
Christine blase Ford.
Speaker 3 (06:14):
What are the.
Speaker 2 (06:15):
Chances that three or four women independently who never met
each other would have similar experiences with one person? So
either ari this person committed these horrific acts or he
is the single unluckiest person in the world for these
people to conspire and make up lies against him.
Speaker 6 (06:32):
Well, now who's unlucky. Once the leading Democrat and a
crowded California gubernatorial.
Speaker 3 (06:38):
Field, he's now out.
Speaker 6 (06:40):
Not just from the governor's race, he's leaving Congress. The
allegations of sexual assault came in like a hurricane, published
in the San Francisco Chronicle. The woman told the Chronicle
the first assault occurred in September twenty nineteen, when she
was a twenty one year old staffer in Swollwell's office.
She said he assaulted her again five years years later
(07:00):
after in April twenty twenty four charity gala in New
York City. In both cases, she said she was too
drunk to consent to sex or remember clearly what happened,
but woke up the next morning naked in Swallowell's hotel room.
Speaker 2 (07:14):
I can see flashes of that evening, of him on
top of me, me pushing him off.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
Him grabbing me. It was a lot more aggressive. It
was aggressive. I was pushing him off of me, saying no,
And what was it he do? He didn't stop, He
didn't stop.
Speaker 5 (07:39):
Now, what's interesting is Corey Mills has some really big
scandals stealing a lot of money against him, and yet
they haven't pushed him out yet. The one thing elected
officials cannot do is a sex scandal. If you can
(08:00):
steal all the money you.
Speaker 3 (08:01):
Want, just awful, horrible fraud, just don't have a sex scandal.
Speaker 7 (08:11):
I really enjoy I listen to both sessions of your
show every day. Michael Berry, he had the most pleasant voice.
Speaker 5 (08:21):
Let's learn back at Maartwell and what he said just
two months ago about the Epstein files.
Speaker 8 (08:31):
He said this, my Republican colleagues, do not trust women.
You don't trust women. Do you all ever talk to women?
They deserve better? Trust women. My friends trust women. They
will get it right now.
Speaker 3 (08:51):
He knew.
Speaker 5 (08:54):
That he was being accused by a former staffer and
presumably others, of having raped them. It is I have
this conversation often. It's not until you understand politicians that
you can understand how this happens. Most people are not
(09:18):
able to look you in the face and say I'm
a vegan, I would never eat meat, and neither should you,
and you're a monster for killing animals, and literally walk
and two minutes later be ordering a hamburger.
Speaker 3 (09:37):
But these people can.
Speaker 5 (09:40):
Once you understand that nothing of what they say is legitimate, authentic,
real heartfelt. So why do they say it? Because they
learn what matters to you. They say to you, they
feed you what you want to eat, and in the process,
(10:05):
you make the mistake of believing that they feel the
way you do.
Speaker 3 (10:12):
But they don't. And that's why you're always betrayed.
Speaker 5 (10:17):
That's why they always do something that leaves you wondering, Well,
but you said you were gonna he never meant it.
And the game of smearing the Republicans. They don't believe this.
(10:37):
Let's hear that again. Believe all women. Two months ago,
Believe all women.
Speaker 8 (10:40):
My Republican colleagues do not trust women. You don't trust women.
Do you all ever talk to women? They deserve better?
Trust women, my friends. Trust women. They will get it right.
Speaker 3 (10:57):
Believe all women. And then just a couple of days.
Speaker 6 (11:00):
Ago, the fact that he has now dropped out of
the governor's race and resigned from Congress.
Speaker 3 (11:08):
Is that justice in your view? No, it's just the beginning.
It's just the very beginning.
Speaker 6 (11:12):
And I know personally that we're not walking away from
this fight.
Speaker 2 (11:17):
For me, justice won't be until he can't ever harm
a woman ever again, and he has faced the consequences.
Speaker 3 (11:24):
For the women that he has harmed.
Speaker 9 (11:27):
I think, in regards to the governor's race, he never
should have ran for governor to begin with, knowing the
kind of history and receipts that are out there, so
that's a non starter. And then in terms of Congress,
I think he absolutely should have resigned. I think we
just prevented another thirty to forty years potentially of him
(11:49):
harming people if he were to stay in Congress. So
in that sense, I think we have served justice for
his future victims. Wow, that won't exist anymore.
Speaker 5 (12:00):
Ye, there is something rich about all of this. It's
Harvey Weinstein. Bill Clinton says our Chavez all over again.
Their criminal behavior, their sleazy behavior, was protected because of
(12:25):
their politics, because they served the good. How many things
were covered up about these people because they served a purpose?
Ted Kennedy Politico headline warnings about Congressman Swalwell had long
(12:48):
circulated privately. He quote had developed a reputation for unsavory
and sometimes unwanted behavior toward women. Those warnings were shared
in whisper networks, but rarely traveled outside the circle of
(13:09):
political insiders. Why we're not talking about affairs here, We're
talking about pushing women into sexual acts that they don't
want to be a part of, with a person they
don't want to be a part of. Why do they
not report that? Because they fear no one will trust them,
(13:35):
no one will believe them, no one.
Speaker 3 (13:37):
Will take action.
Speaker 5 (13:39):
And that is a fear that Swallwell stoked. It's a
fear that Bill Clinton stoked. Remember when Paula Harris came forward,
Do you remember how Hillary tried to destroy her?
Speaker 3 (13:54):
Do you remember that.
Speaker 5 (13:57):
When Bill Clinton ran for president in nineteen ninety two,
he was going to run in eighty eight.
Speaker 3 (14:01):
They had the ballroom, all.
Speaker 5 (14:04):
The balloons and the signage, and they decided to last
minute not to run because there was too much heat
at that point over his affairs. The thought was, clean
this thing up for four years and in ninety two
will run and the.
Speaker 3 (14:22):
Heat will be off of us. That was the plan anyway,
in ninety two. D. D.
Speaker 5 (14:30):
Myers would later say of that year that she was
in charge of the committee, well, that she was part
of the committee that Hillary would lead to put out
the quote bembo eruptions. Do you see what the implication
(14:51):
there is If you're a woman who had sex with
Bill Clinton, or you're a woman that Bill Clinton forced
himself on, that makes you less than a decent person.
You are a bimbo. That is a derogatory term. You
(15:16):
are a bimbo. You are someone who either got with
Bill Clinton of your own desire or who Bill Clinton
managed to pin in a corner and rub one out on.
That makes you a bad person. You're a bimbo. You
(15:38):
spoke up about it. That's a bimbo eruption. How dare
you speak out against this man? Remember when everything came
out about Bill Clinton years ago as president, and conservatives said,
what about the National Organization of Women? Where are they
(16:00):
doing all of this? The believe all women, the support
all women? And finally their president came out and said,
Bill Clinton's been very good for us. Oh oh, so
those women will just have to suffer in silence because
(16:21):
you really like Bill Clinton. That's everything you need to
know for how principled most of these people actually are.
President Trump was started life as real estate developer, something
his father did, but.
Speaker 3 (16:39):
He figured out.
Speaker 5 (16:41):
That it was good for business and he enjoyed it
to become a celebrity. He started as a New York celebrity,
but he had a real knack for showmanship. He has
a real knack for how to present things, how to
catch people popull's attention. That's why, with no TV production experience,
(17:09):
having done a number of other things. As the producer
of the Celebrity of The Apprentice, which of course starred him.
He took that show to number one. That was a
huge asset to the NBC network. He gets the idea
(17:36):
of showmanship, salesmanship, you name it. There are people who
are in television, who ran stations, who ran shows, showrunners, producers.
Speaker 3 (17:48):
Who don't get that to that extent.
Speaker 5 (17:51):
I'm not saying he's the greatest ever was, but he's
the greatest ever was in the political spectrum, no question
in my mind. So this Iran thing is hurting him.
Speaker 10 (18:04):
Now.
Speaker 3 (18:05):
I don't need to hear from you, Michael, I worshiped Trump.
You need to also, whatever you may think, three D chess,
four D chess, Iran is terrible.
Speaker 5 (18:15):
Whatever you may think, I believe it's hurting him, and
I believe it's hurting Republicans. And I believe that the
election were today, we'd lose. And I believe that Iran
is a big part of that. But this president is mindful.
He needs to show America that he is still focused
on domestic politics and not some Lindsey Graham off, you know,
(18:39):
just wanting to fight wars abroad. So yesterday, the door
dash grandma. They called her Sharon Simmons. She brought McDonald's
to President Trump, and she says the elimination of taxes
on tips has changed her life. That was a big
campaign promise for him. So this is a tell him
(18:59):
where you're gonna do, do it, big beautiful bill, and
then tell him what you did. She says last year
she received eleven thousand dollars in tips and that savings
has helped her cover her husband's cancer treatment. So after
she after the delivery to the president, he had her
(19:22):
stand next to him as he took questions from the press.
This is called staging. This is called genius. He's the
best I've ever seen at it in my lifetime. He's
the best there has ever been in my life. I
can't I can't say what past presidents did, but I
can tell you for staging a moment like this, he
(19:45):
gets it. Riding in the trash truck, standing in the
to go window at McDonald's.
Speaker 3 (19:51):
He gets it. He's good at it.
Speaker 5 (19:54):
This is President Trump with the door dash grandma talking
about the no tax on tips.
Speaker 11 (20:00):
Thank it for this is the fact that I heard
you picked up an extra eleven thousand dollars if you
didn't think it.
Speaker 3 (20:06):
Because the tax bill was so big.
Speaker 11 (20:08):
The refund was the biggest you've ever had?
Speaker 3 (20:10):
Is that a Correccy? It definitely was. Yeah, I saved
over eleven thousand.
Speaker 7 (20:16):
Dollars by not having to claim.
Speaker 3 (20:19):
Was that surprising to you? Actually it was very surprising, great.
Speaker 11 (20:23):
Big beautiful bill that doesn't include overtime in your cases,
is only just based on what we did in terms
of every other aspect of the tax bill, right, yes, sir,
so it was eleven thousand saving. Yes, that's incredible, and
that's what it is, the tax cut.
Speaker 3 (20:39):
It's really you know, we caught the great big beautiful bill.
Speaker 11 (20:41):
We should call it the great big beautiful tax cut
bill because it's a tremendous amount of money and that's
overtime that's also on Social Security, as you know.
Speaker 3 (20:50):
Yes, and it's pretty amazing, Yes it is.
Speaker 12 (20:54):
You're really nice.
Speaker 3 (20:55):
Would you like to do a little news conference?
Speaker 10 (20:57):
Would be with these people?
Speaker 11 (20:59):
These are not the nicest people.
Speaker 3 (21:00):
They're not nice like you. You know that, right, do.
Speaker 9 (21:03):
Whatever you asked me to do, sir.
Speaker 3 (21:05):
So. The no tax on tips is something special. It's
very special, and.
Speaker 11 (21:09):
That's the one that really pertains to you more than
anything else. Yes, fantastic and sich an honor to meet you.
And I think you voted for me.
Speaker 3 (21:16):
Do you think maybe you're a great supporter.
Speaker 11 (21:21):
We appreciate it.
Speaker 8 (21:22):
Thank you.
Speaker 11 (21:23):
I'll put this over here.
Speaker 3 (21:25):
And why don't we have a.
Speaker 11 (21:26):
News conference for the question.
Speaker 9 (21:27):
I want to do it.
Speaker 11 (21:28):
Sure you don't have to stay safe too much. I
think they're looking about foremost straight and various other things.
Speaker 3 (21:34):
Do you have any questions? Did you post that picture
of yourself to Jesus Price, Well, it wasn't a picture,
it was me.
Speaker 11 (21:43):
I did fust it and I thought it was me
as a doctor and had to do with the Red
Cross as a Red Cross worker, which we support, and
only the fake news could come up with that one.
Speaker 5 (21:54):
So I and here is the door dash Grandma Sharon
Simmons talking about the no tax on tips eleven thousand dollars.
Speaker 7 (22:03):
You know my tips were over half of my income
from last year.
Speaker 3 (22:09):
So that's a life changer. Yes, it is, it is.
Speaker 7 (22:12):
And when you know, like I said, when you're dealing
with someone that has gone through cancer and you know
you love them, you don't want to lose them, so
you do everything that you can, and you know, you
go through your life savings. But this no tax on
tips and the help from door dash is.
Speaker 5 (22:34):
Life changing politically, a genius move by Donald Trump to
campaign on it, to build us well of support for it.
Speaker 3 (22:46):
It won him.
Speaker 5 (22:47):
I'm sure untold number of votes in the hospitality industry
from people who make the money on tips.
Speaker 3 (23:00):
And I'm all for that.
Speaker 5 (23:00):
I want to win the elections, don't get me wrong,
But I have to ask a couple questions. We recognize
that not having to pay taxes is a good thing
because then you keep that money for yourself, right than
giving it to the government. And we recognize that people
have legitimate needs for their money, like taking care of
their spouse. Right that money would have gone to the
(23:22):
government and they would have gone to smali fraud for instance. Okay,
so how do we pick and choose winners and losers?
So what if you're not a tipped employee, you don't
get a benefit. Hey, how about we cut everybody's taxes?
How about we eliminate everybody's taxes. Do you know why
we can't because of all the government expenditures. You can't
(23:45):
have government spending so much money without taking money from
people to fund it. So when you pick and choose
a few people and go hey, we won't take money
from you, they go yay. And we recognize that not
taking people's money makes their life better. That woman doesn't
need the government to have her money, She needs to
(24:08):
keep her money right. Why don't we do that for everybody?
Why don't we ever discuss cutting spending. We love to
talk about cutting taxes. Why don't we ever talk about
cutting spending?
Speaker 3 (24:25):
Michael, do I have a story for you.
Speaker 5 (24:28):
My brother in law murdered too Native American.
Speaker 3 (24:32):
Michael Barry show, Now you have my attention.
Speaker 5 (24:37):
I am not a fan of Lindsey Graham. I have
said that many times. I don't think he is a
supporter of Trump. I think he's an embarrassment to the
Trump agenda. I think he's a man who fantasizes, if
not downright masturbates to the notion of war. I think
he is a criminal, crook, fraud awful human being. Sorry,
(25:01):
I don't use that language very often, but I believe
it to be true. And the only way we get
him out of there short of an Eric Swalwell level scandal,
and I wouldn't be shocked. If we get one any day,
it might look a little different than the Swalwell deal.
And I think we all know what it looks like,
and it's gonna happen, by the way it's gonna happen.
(25:24):
But what I don't like is that this man wants
to send your boys to war and doesn't have any
to send himself, that he fantasizes about it, and that
he doesn't seem to care about the United States of America.
Speaker 3 (25:37):
He seems to care about Ukraine and Iran.
Speaker 5 (25:40):
And beyond, the way you get him out of there
is you beat him in an election. We have a
Republican primary coming up. We had big developments this week.
Mark Lynch is the candidate vying to defeat Lindsay Graham. Mark,
Welcome to the program. Thank you, Michael. It's an honor
to be on for the folks who are hearing about
you for the first time. Let's take a couple of
(26:02):
minutes and introduce yourself.
Speaker 12 (26:04):
Yeah, well, I'm a lifelong South Carolinian Michael born in Greenville.
I've took over my family's business back in nineteen eighty five.
Speaker 10 (26:13):
My father and I've created a by sell agreement.
Speaker 12 (26:16):
I've bought the business and he released The Rains in
nineteen eighty five. In the last forty years, with God
at the center, I've grown the business thirty five times
from five people to one hundred and ten and we
now operate out of one hundred and thirty two thousand
square foot facility, and we're debt free corporately and individually.
(26:41):
I've been married to my lovely wife, Sarah for thirty
eight years.
Speaker 10 (26:44):
We have two awesome children, they're both married.
Speaker 12 (26:47):
Everybody loves Jesus, and we've got four wonderful grandchildren.
Speaker 10 (26:53):
And so we've got a lot of fruit in our
life to prove.
Speaker 12 (27:00):
What we do as a leader in the community, as
a father, as a husband, as a successful business owner.
And I'm an ordained deacon in our church at Burnsview
Baptist Church that we attend in Greer, South Carolina, with
Pastor Tim Huckabee.
Speaker 10 (27:18):
So we've got a lot of good stuff in life.
Speaker 12 (27:20):
And I got into this business and got asked to
run from my association with one of the heads of
the Anti Terrorism Division of the FBI after nine to
eleven and have been working since twenty fourteen to help
educate the public on the local Islamic infiltration into South
(27:42):
Carolina and America, and training FBI and SLED and police
and sheriff's departments across the state.
Speaker 3 (27:50):
And meeting different people.
Speaker 12 (27:52):
I got asked to run back in twenty nineteen and
we formed the United Patriots Alliance organization. We've been fighting
against bad bills in the state House in Columbia, helping
get Freedom Caucus members elected and supporting good candidates and
stopping evil out of the state House. And I got
asked to run, and we looked at this race as
(28:15):
for US Senate to remove Lindsey Graham, and we jumped in.
Speaker 10 (28:19):
And filed in February at twenty five.
Speaker 3 (28:22):
And we're in it to win it.
Speaker 12 (28:24):
We're committed, and my wife and I, being debt free,
chose we prayed about it, and we injected five million
dollars of our retirement fund into this race to jump
start the funding that it requires to let people know
this is serious to us.
Speaker 5 (28:42):
You know, when I ran for office the first time
successfully two thousand and one, I put my own money
into it, money I didn't really have. It was our
only savings, and I showed my commitment to this. I
didn't take a salary the first year. You know, people
say Mark Lench is our guest. He's running for Senate
(29:03):
in South Carolina.
Speaker 3 (29:04):
People say good.
Speaker 5 (29:06):
People don't get into politics, but good people should, and
we should seek them out and we should support them
when they do, no matter how steep the hill decline.
We're about to bounce a senator in Texas who's been
in there for twenty four years, John Cornyn, in favor
of the Attorney General Ken Paxton. But when you look
to run for the United States Senate and the incumbent
(29:29):
is running for reelection, there has to be a basis
upon which you're running that he hasn't done a good job.
Speaker 3 (29:35):
What would that be for you with Lindsey Graham.
Speaker 12 (29:39):
Well, just as voting record alone, I ask Republicans if
you say you are a Republican and we have an
employee in Lindsey Graham and the US Senate, and we
know that as lifetime voting record and the Conservative Review
Scorecard lifetime percentage is forty three percent. He's failing South
(30:01):
Carolinians and failing America. And he's not a conservative. You know,
he only gets conservative near election campaign cycles and then
the other five and a half years he's a trader,
he's a Democrat, doing everything he can against Republican values.
It's America Last is what he supports, and he proves
(30:26):
it out every time.
Speaker 5 (30:28):
It's amazing because he John Cornyn, now McConnell, since he's
not the leader anymore, Tom Tullis, since he's on his
way out. These guys are establishment guys, and they really
just seem to care about the establishment, and that's why
they didn't like Trump.
Speaker 3 (30:48):
That's why they don't like the voters. They care about war.
Speaker 5 (30:52):
And spending and debts running them up even greater, and
they care to protect themselves and the club that they
are a part of. And I find it very very
disturbed me. What is your strategy to win?
Speaker 12 (31:05):
Mark Lynch, Well, we've been traveling over a year all
over the state. We bought a van, our campaign team.
We just met at the capitol and had a press
conference with Paul Dans because he's left the race and
he's endorsed me, and so it'll basically be me going
(31:25):
up against Lindsay and our polling that just came back
about three weeks ago, while Paul was still in the
race with an informed ballot. Lindsay dropped to twenty three
percent and I surged to thirty four. Paul Dans was eleven.
Then we had twenty six percent undecided. Still, so it's happening.
(31:47):
The rast mustin poll, Mark Mitchell said, and the momentum
is there and it's doable this time. Lindsay's going to
be removed on June ninth, working hard. Our platform is
America first. It's about common sense values, bringing God back first.
That's the way this country was founded. When our forefathers
(32:11):
wrote the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, they were
divinely inspired by God. And we know we're in doubt
that are created with certain unalienable rights.
Speaker 3 (32:23):
And my only.
Speaker 12 (32:23):
Authority is to go in there and protect our God
given unalienable rights and monitor that through the lens of
the Constitution and make good decisions that support the people.
That's who I work for. I'm not going in there
like Lindsey Graham and working for every other country but America.
(32:44):
It'll be America first all the way.
Speaker 5 (32:48):
Mark Lynch, we wish you the best of luck. We
are not fans of Lindsey Graham. We've heard good things
about you. It is time that we send people to
wash Washington, d C. That represent our values and live
in our communities. You don't need term limits if you
(33:08):
vote against the incumbent. I don't know how many times
I have to say that we need term limits, or
you voting for the incumbent, yeah, I like him.
Speaker 3 (33:15):
We don't need term limits.
Speaker 5 (33:17):
If you'll vote for the challenger.
Speaker 3 (33:20):
It's just that simple.