Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, Luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Michael Verie Show is on the air all day every
day on the radio, online, and television. People claim to
know and to state what Americans are thinking, how Americans
(00:34):
think about particular issues. And one thing you learn very early,
and you should have noticed this is that when you're
a person who does that, there's extra credit for having
a great deal of confidence in whatever you say, even
if you're just making it up out of thin air.
(00:55):
And this is how they get it so wrong. This
is how you get right from the New York Times
telling us that this is what's going on, and this
is what these people think, and then you find out
they finally let loose at one point when they've had
too many glasses of wine. On Twitter, I've never known
a single human being who drove a truck. And you go,
wait a minute, you can't talk about what Americans think
(01:20):
if you do not know a single person and never
have who drives a truck. And I'm talking about I'm
not talking about an eighteen wheeler. I'm talking short bed,
long bed. I'm talking about what most people where I
live do drive, including but not limited to ramone. I
(01:43):
refer to my Chevy Tahoe as a truck, but mostly
to annoy Ramon, because in Ramon's mind, if the bed
is not open, it ain't a truck. It's a closed
end truck, a feminized truck. But my point is one
thing about elections that makes them useful is that if
(02:07):
people don't vote the way they were told to vote,
and they vote independently, as they did this time, then
you actually get a real sense of what people think.
To some extent, you don't know which issue was the
most important to a voter who voted for Trump or
voted for Kamlow, but you can start to see some indicators.
(02:31):
And the rest of the world has no understanding of
the American people. He blows their mind, especially the europe
that the Europeans. I lived in England for a year
getting a law degree after I finished my law degree here,
and I was surprised at how many sort of myths
and things about the United States people had, and things
they just didn't understand. So there's a fellow named Constantine Kissen,
(02:54):
and he did a longer deal and this is about
as long as I wanted to play. It's only three minutes,
which is longer than most audio clips we play, but
this was his top ten reasons the British didn't see
Trump winning, and I think it's actually I think it's
actually pretty perceptive. There are some folks who've really, I believe,
(03:16):
nailed what's happening in America right now, and this happens
to be one of them.
Speaker 3 (03:20):
Here are the ten reasons.
Speaker 4 (03:22):
One, Americans love their country and wanted to be the
best country in the world. America is a nation of
people who conquered a continent. They love strength, they love winning.
Any leader who appeals to that has an automatic advantage.
Speaker 3 (03:36):
Two.
Speaker 4 (03:37):
Unlike Europeans, Americans have not accepted managed decline.
Speaker 3 (03:41):
They don't have ned zero here.
Speaker 4 (03:43):
They believe in producing their own energy and making it
as cheap as possible because they know that their prosperity
depends on it. Three, Prices for most basic goods in
the US have increased rapidly under sky high What the
official statistics say about inflation and the reality of people's
lives are not the same.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
Four.
Speaker 4 (04:05):
Unlike you, Americans do not believe in socialism.
Speaker 3 (04:08):
They believe in meritocracy.
Speaker 4 (04:10):
They don't care about the super rich being super rich
because they know that they live in a country where
being super rich is available to anyone with the talent
and drive to make it. They don't resent success, they
celebrate it. Five Americans are the most pro immigration people
in the world. Yes, they're the most pro immigration people
(04:32):
in the world. Americans love an immigrant success story. They
want more talented immigrants to come to America, but they
refuse to accept people coming here illegally.
Speaker 3 (04:42):
They believe in having a border.
Speaker 4 (04:44):
Six Americans are sensitive about racial issues and their country's
imperfect history. They believe that those who are disadvantaged by
the circumstances of their birth should be given the opportunity
to succeed. What they reject, however, is the idea that
in order to address the errors of the past, new
errors must be made.
Speaker 3 (05:04):
DEI is racist. They know it, and they.
Speaker 4 (05:07):
Reject it precisely because they're not racist. Seven Americans are
the most philo Semitic nation on Earth October seventh, and
the pro Hamas Left's reactions shocked them to the very core, because,
among other things, they remember what nine to eleven was like,
and they know gihad when they see it. Eight Americans
(05:29):
are extremely practical people. They care about what works, not
what sounds good. In Europe, we produce great writers and intellectuals.
In America, they produce and attract great engineers, businessmen, and investors.
Because of this, they care less about Trump's rhetoric than
you do, and more about his policies than you do.
Speaker 3 (05:49):
Nine.
Speaker 4 (05:50):
Americans are deeply optimistic people. They hate negativity. The woke
view of American history as a series of evils for
which they must eternally apologize is natally abhorrent to them.
They believe in moving forward together, not endlessly obsessing about
the past.
Speaker 3 (06:06):
And ten.
Speaker 4 (06:08):
America is a country whose founding story is one of
resistance to government overreach. They loathe unnecessary restrictions, regulations, and control.
Speaker 3 (06:17):
They understand that.
Speaker 4 (06:18):
Freedom comes with a price, and that price is self reliance.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
They paid gladly.
Speaker 2 (06:24):
I'll bet you we've got ten thousand sweet little ladies
of seventy or more that would make a pound case
that you could eat cold and enjoy.
Speaker 5 (06:34):
Michael Very shows we will be drilling down into what
happened in the election and what happens going forward.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
As we move forward, one of the things we're going
to need to focus on is the House and the Senate,
and this comes from CNN's Chris Wallace, a little weasel
that he is, but listen to this.
Speaker 6 (06:56):
I mean, let's talk about the significance of a Republican Senate.
If and I repeat, if Donald Trump is elected president,
it means that they can confirm without any Democratic votes,
any appointment he makes to his cabinet, to the government,
to the Supreme Court should there be a vacancy. It's
(07:17):
an enormous advantage to a president. And at this point
we haven't talked about it much. But in the House,
although that hasn't been decided yet, the Republicans have flipped
three Democratic seats. The Democrats haven't flipped a single Republican seat.
So there is the possibility here of a complete United
(07:38):
Republican government with Donald Trump as the president and with
a Republican House and Senate, which means that in terms
of appointments, in terms of immigration policy, economic policy, environmental policy,
you name it, he could have a pretty blank check.
Speaker 2 (07:55):
Let's go to Michael. You're on the Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
Go ahead, Hey, Michael, I just want to give a
call because I haven't heard anybody mention this, but I
think the person that we all need to thank most
for Donald Trump's victory is Barack Obama, and the reason
being is I don't think Donald Trump will have ever
stepped into politics if it wasn't for Barack Obama chiding him.
(08:22):
I think it was twenty fifteen or twenty fourteen at
the Al Smiths dinner we looked at Trump and said
one thing, you'll never be as president or something on
that line. Then that really pushed Trump to want to
run for a presidency. Then over this past election cycle,
I don't think well, first off, Barack Obama forced.
Speaker 3 (08:44):
Joe Biden out of the president out of the race.
Speaker 7 (08:48):
I honestly think they will have been able to cheat
if Biden will stayed in because it will have been
a lot closer than it was against Kamla. So we
can thank him for that, and we can also thank
him for e chiting all the African American men for
not being black enough if they.
Speaker 3 (09:07):
Didn't vote for Commas.
Speaker 7 (09:09):
So I think his pompousness is what's really driven in
MAGA movement and drove the black vote to get out
and vote for Donald Trump. So all in all, I
think we really need to thank Barack Obama for Donald
Trump's rise and the right of the Maga movement.
Speaker 2 (09:27):
But I get the point and the irony or satire
that is intended, and it's not lost on me. But
I don't give Barack Obama credit for anything, nor will
I now. I do attribute.
Speaker 3 (09:43):
His errors.
Speaker 2 (09:45):
His arrogance is evil. I believe the man has committed crimes,
serious crimes. I believe that. I don't care if his
wife has a wiener or not. People focus on those
sorts of things. I guess that's another thing that and
add to what they don't like about him. He's a
bad human being. And somewhere along the way, in the
(10:06):
course of the life of our republic, this free people.
And by the way, the one of the great joys
is that in twenty twenty six, during the middle of
Donald Trump's presidency, will be the two hundred and fiftieth
anniversary of our people being free. We didn't have a
(10:27):
constitution yet, but we were free. We were independent. We
were our own, our own civilization, our own community, our
own In the max Weber since nation, it wasn't just
that we shared a language or tract of land. It
was that there was a spirit. You know, Bono had
(10:50):
one of the deepest things I've ever heard said about
the United States. And I don't care much for his politics,
but he makes I think a brilliant point. I mean,
he's a songwriter, he's a man who expresses ideas in
words beautifully, and I love this particular phrasing and concept
by him.
Speaker 8 (11:10):
It's not a right left issue, it's a right wrong issue.
And America has constantly been on the side of what's
right because when it comes down to it, this is
about keeping faith with the idea of America, because America
is an idea, isn't it. I mean, Ireland is a
(11:30):
great country, but it's not an idea.
Speaker 9 (11:33):
Great Britain is a great country. It's not an idea.
That's how we see you around the world.
Speaker 8 (11:40):
That's one of the greatest ideas in human history, right
up there with the Renaissance, right up there with crop rotation.
Speaker 9 (11:45):
On the Beatles' White Album.
Speaker 8 (11:48):
The idea, the American idea, it's an idea. The idea
is that you and me are created equal. It will
ensure that ann recession need not become an equality recession.
The idea that life is not meant to be endured
but enjoyed. The idea that if we have dignity, if
(12:09):
we have justice, then leave it to us. We'll do
the rest. This country was the first to claw its
way out.
Speaker 3 (12:17):
Of darkness and put that on paper, and God love
you for it.
Speaker 8 (12:21):
Because these aren't just American ideas anymore.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
There's no copyright on them. You brought them into the world.
It's a wide world now.
Speaker 8 (12:30):
I know. Americans say they've a bit of the world
in them, and you do. The family tree has lots
of branches. But the thing is, the world has a
bit of America in it too. These truths, your truths,
they're self evident in us.
Speaker 2 (12:48):
We're the only nation born of an idea. When does
Germany start? When does France start? You know, you study
the civilization of the Gauls or what we now call Germany,
and you bring together these pieces. You know, Italy was
(13:12):
the Neapolitans and the Sicilians and the Tuscans and the Genuines,
and you bring them together under a flag and you
call them a nation, and you muster an army. But
at the end of the day, it's not on the
basis of an idea. It's typically by brute force. It's
(13:38):
typically by brute force. And the beauty of July fourth
seventeen seventy six. Is that was the moment that in
a rented room on Main Street in Philadelphia, Jefferson presents
the final draft of a document outlining as a people
who and what we are? I mean, I can't begin
to tell you how moving I find this to be.
(14:01):
I realized, these are the things that you learned in
Civics when you really just wanted to get with Susie
behind the building. But it really is deep. It's it's
so profoundly deep in a religious, spiritual way when you
consider whether you were born here or you came here,
(14:21):
that there's nowhere on earth that people want to be
more than here the entire world, like ants to the honey,
ants to the sugar, want to get here because it's freedom,
it's opportunity. Now, many of them don't understand how you
get that freedom, how you maintain that freedom, how you
maintain that opportunity, because they come from cultures that didn't
(14:43):
have that, So they want to institute all that they know,
which would actually destroy that freedom and opportunity. But God
bless America that we live in this place a.
Speaker 7 (14:52):
Forum decision, and you're giving them the insto Michael Berry,
because you're a public.
Speaker 9 (14:58):
Paul Revere in the Morning rare.
Speaker 2 (15:02):
Moment of introspection by Joe Scarborough, an MSNBC who does
Morning Joe with his mistress Mika Brazinski, whose father was
a horrible, horrible government figure in the Harder administration. Joe
Scarbroo has a disturbing past as a congressman. Just look
(15:22):
it up, and he was once a Republican. He was
once an aspiring, very ambitious Republican and he.
Speaker 9 (15:32):
Well, just go look it up.
Speaker 2 (15:34):
So like many of these people, he's he's found that
as a former Republican, as a former supposed conservative, he
never was that when you get cast out of your
own house, you're worthwhile to the opposition. Then they can
parade you around. This is what bo Bergdahl thought would happen.
(15:55):
He would defect from the United States and enjoin ISIS
or the the one of those groups, and you know,
he would be put into a position of leadership because
he's a white American. Instead, it turned out quite differently
for him. But Joe Scarborough, there's a moment here where
(16:16):
he's a little more introspective. And the guy who blames
Trump for everything, you know, he once admired Trump. I
think he still does. He's got a problem. I think
he's a woman still does too. But he's admitting to something.
This is the moment where you realize you were right
all along. He says, Democrats made a mistake allowing men
to play women's sports. This is part of the culture
(16:39):
war that Trump understands. This is how you win back women.
Protect women, not their ability to have unprotected sex with
random men, and then kill the baby. Protect little girls
on the playing field from from being bashed by boys.
I think Megan Kelly's done a great job advancing this agenda.
(17:02):
But here is MSNBC's Morning Morning Joe making that point,
which is rare for him to make a good point.
Speaker 10 (17:08):
The Washington Post Matt Bye writes, some part I do
think the prosecutions fed a narrative of Trump as a victim.
I also think Democrats dug themselves into a hole on
cultural issues and identity politics. Trump's vicious transgender ad in
the closing weeks, She's for they them, He's for you,
was probably the most effective of the cycle. I think
(17:30):
that probably landed with a lot of traditionally Democratic voters
who feel like the party is consumed for the cultural
issues while the economic issues don't really change. I think
people needed a reason to feel good and hopeful about
voting for her, and absent that, a lot of frustrated
voters apparently decided to go with the guy who wants
(17:51):
to burn.
Speaker 9 (17:51):
It all down.
Speaker 11 (17:53):
Let's dig a little lever, because you have that stacked
on top of what happened on college cap This is
this fall stacked on top of what's been happening on
college campuses over the past four or five years. I
have said this on the air, and every time I've
said it, people said, Oh, you're just saying that because
you're a white conservative.
Speaker 9 (18:13):
No, I'm just saying.
Speaker 11 (18:14):
It because every Democrat that we have ever sat down
with dinner with over the past five years, who have
kids that go to colleges say their kids are afraid
to speak in class because they'll be canceled.
Speaker 9 (18:25):
Let me say that again, and they're all Democrats.
Speaker 11 (18:29):
Everybody that we've had dinner with, if they have a
kid in college, you.
Speaker 9 (18:33):
Go ox and they're.
Speaker 11 (18:35):
Hitting beautiful day to day, wasn't it. You know, my
daughter at University of Virginia, she's afraid to raise her
hands in class. Because if she says something that's politically incorrect.
Speaker 9 (18:45):
She will immediately be canceled.
Speaker 11 (18:47):
She'll be shunned from class, should be destroyed in social
media by noon. So they just sit in class quiet. Now,
if any of you which cam, we give me camber
to look at it.
Speaker 9 (18:56):
Boom, all look at that one.
Speaker 11 (18:57):
If any of you out there say, oh, that's just
like a conservative, white southern guy, da da da, that's
where you're losing, that's why you're losing. Because that's what
I heard. And I didn't hear it from Republicans. I
didn't hear it from Trumper's I heard it from Democrats
over the past three.
Speaker 9 (19:14):
Or four years.
Speaker 11 (19:15):
Their kids were afraided to talk in class and say
something unpopular because they would be canceled.
Speaker 9 (19:22):
And it's an epidemic. WILLI will tell you.
Speaker 11 (19:25):
It happens in New York City schools, it happens in colleges.
Speaker 9 (19:29):
And all of this adds up to people going, come on,
come on, this is crazy, and.
Speaker 11 (19:35):
Mike is having an impact from again the transad to yeah,
the athletics and by the way, by the way, as
we've said of the show a thousand times, Democrats should
be smarter on the women's athletics, saying eighty five percent
of Americans oppose men transitioning after puberty and competing against women.
And I'm not just saying this to day after the election.
(19:56):
I've been saying this for years. This is not a
hard call. You can show compassion and you can show grace,
and as the Republican governor of Utah said, let's figure
out a way to do this. But one way we
don't do this is by allowing men who transition after
puberty competing against young girls who have been working their
(20:17):
entire lives to be as good as they can be,
and then they get destroyed in the pool, on the track,
et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
Speaker 2 (20:24):
And since we're on the subject, here is CNN's Sanchez.
These are over the last few days. I just haven't
had a chance to get to them. Here's CNN's Boris
Sanchez making the point that Democrats have no idea how
to connect with Latino voters. And this is true for
the same reason they're struggling to connect with white males
(20:46):
who are not college educated. That's veterans, that's welders and
painters and plumbers and Electricians. They're just not connecting with
these people because they're trying to dress boys up as
girls and tell you to drink their beer, and it's
not working.
Speaker 12 (21:02):
Two years ago, Dan, during the midterms, we were sitting
here stunned at Ronda Santis winning so many Latinos in
Florida and Republicans flipping seats in the Rio Grand Valley
in Texas. But this is a trend that's been percolating
for some time, in part because Donald Trump, I believe,
and speaking to a number of Republicans and Democrats, has
a unique appeal to Latino voters. Most Latino voters are
(21:22):
working class folks, and despite his crude sense of humor,
despite the jokes that he makes, despite the exaggerations about
his wealth and his exploits, for folks that are from
where I'm from and folks that I've grown up around,
that resonates more so than man, not just the strong man,
but a figure that has succeeded in capitalism, that has
(21:46):
wealth that he flaunts, versus the conversation that they hear
often from Democrats about Latin X or LATINX. I don't
know how to say it. No One where I'm from
knows how to say that word. They don't use it.
And so in conversations that I've been having with Republican
operatives today, they pointed out that a lot of it
just has to do with conversation. The way the conversations
(22:08):
have helped. And actually I spoke with one Democrat moments ago,
a Latino operative, who said, we need to rethink the
way that we talked to folks, specifically, have.
Speaker 2 (22:17):
You ever made money off of it? We didn't get
nothing the hard time the Michael Berry Show. It's a
damn shame.
Speaker 3 (22:23):
It's a damn shame.
Speaker 2 (22:25):
Since we're on the subject of failed Republicans who then
went over and got paid by Democrats to trust to
trash Republicans. And by the way, Nicki Haley is top
of the list. Scott Jennings, who's been a breath of
fresh air on CNN. I think he'll end up. I
think he should be Donald Trump's press secretary. I think
it'd be a great one. I think you could handle
(22:47):
it quite well. He's proven that under fire. Here he
is talking about the never Trump industry. These are the
Bill Crystals and the Jonah Goldbergs, and the Rick Wilson's
and the the folks who were once Republicans and are
now getting paid by rich Democrats to trash Trump. And
(23:09):
A Navarro was one of those. Jennifer Ruben was one
of those. Max boot was one of those, and his
wife got caught as a spy. But they're all scoundrels,
and they're hustlers, and they're grifters, and as Scott Jennings says,
and they're ineffective. Nobody's listening to them.
Speaker 13 (23:25):
This never Trump whole complex that grew over the last
several years. Nothing has ever failed as hard in politics
as this, The Lincoln Project, all these people that built
millions upon millions upon millions of dollars from Democratic donors,
and all the eggs that was put in this basket.
Speaker 3 (23:44):
The split was amazing.
Speaker 13 (23:45):
Trump got like ninety four percent of Republicans. I don't
think they accomplished anything except probably build a bunch of
beach hous's. That's about what they did. Republicans being lectured
to condescended, to browbeaten by all these folks over the
last I mean, look at some juncture, it's okay if
we have different opinions about the election. You don't have
(24:06):
to beat people to death over it. And the more
you do that, the more it drives people away. Total failure,
and let's close the show for the week.
Speaker 2 (24:15):
You know, polls end up having a great level of
influence to the extent that people believe them. So I
follow something called pole Fair, which reviews polls to tell
you which poles are actually being paid for about people
to say things that aren't actually true. And they did
a study on polls in the battleground states for this
(24:38):
election cycle, and the number one most effective poll was
Atlas Intel. It was the only one that was over
ninety percent at eighty six percent. Was Rasmussen pretty darn
effective at seventy one percent, was Trafalgar Insider Advantage, and
Real Clear Politics. Nothing else cracked above seventy percent. Wall
(25:04):
Street Journal was at fifty percent. They got half the
polls right as to who would win and lose.
Speaker 3 (25:11):
But guess what.
Speaker 2 (25:14):
By getting half the polls right, that puts them in
the top twenty five percent because nobody else got it right.
Beacon doing their polls for Fox was only at fifty
Marist was at fifty five point thirty eight. Nate Silver
that was thought to be so good before down at
forty three percent, Quidnipiac forty percent, Susquehanna thirty three percent,
(25:37):
Seenn thirty three percent, Bloomberg thirty three percent, Washington Post
thirty three percent, CBS twenty five percent. Shame on you, Sienna,
the Siena poll fourteen percent, they got one out of seven.
You're wrong almost every darn time. And so we'll close
(26:02):
the show with the words of Greg Guttfeld on Fox,
who made the brilliant point that pollsters this season had
the accuracy of Stevie Wonder playing Jinga. And as you
think about this, just remember this. They'll start the polls
again soon, and they'll tell us that the American people
don't like Trump. They don't like the job he's doing,
(26:24):
they don't like the deportations, they don't like the closing
of the border. They don't like this. And just remember
the polls are lies, live by the hoaxes.
Speaker 14 (26:37):
So it's true. Kamala Harris got to lacked like a
hardwood floor on this old house.
Speaker 2 (26:44):
And instead of.
Speaker 14 (26:44):
An evening concession speech, she avoided her supporters like Hunter Biden,
dodging child support.
Speaker 2 (26:51):
For the first time. She wasn't laughing, although you got
to admit This is pretty hilarious.
Speaker 3 (26:56):
Watch.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
Are there any places where Kamala Harris overperformed from where
Biden did?
Speaker 9 (27:02):
So we could show you that as well. We just
bring that out here. Harris overperforming twenty twenty.
Speaker 3 (27:06):
Holy smokes, there you go talk. So let us go
away a fifth.
Speaker 9 (27:09):
That's anything from the east side.
Speaker 12 (27:11):
There literally nothing, literally not one country by three per
central North.
Speaker 3 (27:18):
Look it that way.
Speaker 14 (27:19):
This is called a mandate. He won the popular vote
by over five million. That can't be explained away. The
Dems can't give their usual excuses with more butt butt
butts than a Kardashian family reunion, And so there will
be changes. Shoplifters may actually have to pay for stuff,
migrant gangs might have to get a new realtor, and
(27:41):
Jimmy Kimmel will probably be institutionalized.
Speaker 2 (27:46):
But there's a larger question.
Speaker 14 (27:47):
Did Trump do this by the strength of his personality
alone or as America changed?
Speaker 2 (27:53):
And Trump's just the first to call it like it is.
Speaker 14 (27:55):
I mean he did that with the media, the same
collection of hacks who told his fairy tale about how
close this was all going to be and how abortion
would send the evil Orange Man packing, and how the
polls were going to be honest this time. Turns out
they had the accuracy of Stevie Wonder playing Jenga.
Speaker 2 (28:12):
Truth is so cheap, The Truth is Musk and.
Speaker 14 (28:22):
Joe Rogan and a few other podcasts did more to
get the word out on this election than all the
legacy media combined.
Speaker 2 (28:28):
It's amazing. Tells you one thing. Legacy media is dead.
It is I only hope.
Speaker 14 (28:37):
I only hope that if Brian Stelter jumps from a window,
it's from the first floor, so we won't crush dozens
of pedestrians. But there's another group that's over too. It's Hollywood.
All the virtue signaling from the anisons and the cloonies,
it didn't mean a thing. All that botox must have
paralyzed their brains into believing it matters what they think. Sorry, sorry, douchebage,
(29:05):
You're just hairless circus bears here to entertain us.
Speaker 2 (29:09):
The other message, identity politics is dead. Deida. Enough with.
Speaker 14 (29:19):
Enough of dividing Americans into absurd categories that only matter
to self obsessed people with more pronouns than friends. The
truth is Americans of all stripes want the same things. Prosperity, safety,
a president who doesn't smell like an outhouse. It's why
Trump won record numbers of Hispanics and black voters, but
(29:40):
he also won a whole bunch of different people. What
else could appeal to both black men in Homish voters. Well,
that list is Trump and common sense and fat asses.
But perhaps the biggest unsung hero Kamala Harris secret weapon,
(30:01):
proving that you cannot win by identity alone.
Speaker 2 (30:03):
You need ideas, a vision of a better life brains.
Speaker 14 (30:08):
You can't just tell us how deplorable we are, laughed
like a lunatic, and then rush home to make sure
Doug's not tapping the nanny again like a keg abud light.
Because whether you like Trump's policies or not, at least
he had some. So will the media learn anything from this?
Will the Dems course not expect to be told how
(30:29):
sexist and racist you are for the next four years.
But it won't work because by now our collective skin
is tougher than a two dollars steak. After all, the
opposition called trumpet fascist.
Speaker 2 (30:39):
And a Nazi. They shot him, They told us he
was a threat to democracy.
Speaker 14 (30:43):
The coastal elite and the Obamas, Clinton's and Biden's told
us no decent person would vote for him, and yet
he caused a landslide bigger than the cast.
Speaker 2 (30:51):
Of the view on a snowboarding trip.
Speaker 14 (30:56):
That's why last night's reckoning signals something bigger even than Trump.
Speaker 2 (31:02):
You could see it in the faces of.
Speaker 14 (31:03):
Those who voted for him and those who didn't. The
American people went from wanting to deciding, and that decision
is now reflected in the calm that you sense right now.
We may not get this country back on its feet tomorrow,
but we're well on our way.