Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Is Biden trying to start World War three before Trunk
takes office? I mean, this is getting literally outrageous. Probably,
So you know, I want to talk about Chris Wright
for a minute before I do play off that talk back. So,
Biden is in Brazil for the G twenty, and the
(00:24):
news I heard this morning was that all the other
leaders that showed up were greeted with a red Did
you hear this, dragon? I did hear that. I was
coming in this morning.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
Everybody had the red carpet treatment and except them, and
then it's just oh, hi, old man.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
And then did you see the photo? He was in
Europe for something else, maybe that was the G seven,
So he's I think he's just trying to run around
making all of these the farewell tour, farewell tour, and
they put him on the back row far as you're
facing the group, he's in the far back row, right corner,
(01:05):
and when they snapped the photograph, he's off kind of
looking like off and downward like where am I? Well
at least he wasn't asleep, so that's a plus. I
think he was afraid of falling off the riser. I
think he was looking down like oh, that's a long
that's a two foot drop. I better be careful here,
(01:26):
Where's Jill to hold my hand? And then he went
to now Theodore Roosevelt. After Theodore Roosevelt lost in his
re election bid as a third party candidate at the
Bull Moose Party, Theodore Roosevelt took off on a lifelong adventure,
(01:49):
one of which was exploring the Amazon with his sons.
And there's in fact, I have a first edition of
his book about those travels. So he was the first president,
albeit he was no longer president when he visited the
(02:13):
Amazon in the nineteen hundreds. Well, Biden, and I don't
know where or how, but he apparently visited the Amazon
and is now claiming to be the first sitting president
to have visited the Amazon. And he did so because
he thinks it's a great place that ought to be
(02:34):
preserved for humanity, ought to be preserved for mankind. And
I thought, wow, you are really desperately trying to do
everything that you can to what establish yourself as something
(02:55):
listen to. Let's see, let me see if I can
find it where he sent Let's see if this is it.
There's no secret.
Speaker 3 (03:02):
And I'm leaving office in January. I will have my
I will leave my successor and my country in a
strong foundation to build on if they choose to do so.
It's true some may seek to the law to deny
or delay the clean energy revolution that's underway in America.
But nobody, nobody can reverse it. Nobody.
Speaker 1 (03:27):
Oh yeah, yeah, they can. And let's see the markets are.
What else did he say with us?
Speaker 4 (03:36):
Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you.
Speaker 1 (03:39):
You have a lot about it.
Speaker 3 (03:45):
I speak more language than I've heard.
Speaker 1 (03:51):
You speak. There's some talking to some navy Brazilian in
the Amazon rainforest and he says, you speak more language
than I've heard of God love you. Oh my gosh.
Please go away, Please just go away. Let's talk for
a moment about Chris Right. So, the once in the
(04:11):
future President Donald Trump announced that Chris Wright from Colorado,
he's a proponent of fracking. He's in fact, he's probably
one of the revolutionaries in terms of oil shale fracking.
Speaker 2 (04:24):
Didn't he come in into a coo spotlight with us? Yes, okay, sorry,
are you getting there?
Speaker 1 (04:30):
No? I wasn't getting there right, I actually hadn't thought
about it. But you're right. He was the one that
gave us all the great info.
Speaker 2 (04:35):
Right, He's the one that said that we have under
Colorado alone five hundred years of energy.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
Yes, yeah, and he denies that there's a climate crisis. Well,
he'll be joining the administration both as the Secretary of
Energy and a member of the newly formed Council of
National Energy. Now, the reason I wanted to talk about
it was you heard at the top of the hour
the local news is starting to talk about this now.
(05:02):
Trump promised when he was in Aurora in October that
on his first day back in office, not only would
he begin the task of depointing every single illegal alien,
but also we're gonna drill, baby, drill. Well. Chris Wright
has the experience and the inclination to do exactly that.
(05:23):
He's the founder and CEO of Liberty Energy. The Western
Energy Alliance named him Wildcatter of the Year in twenty
twenty two. He's a native of Colorado. He is described
as a bold advocate who brings rational thought to the
energy dialogue. But that's not what I remember him for.
(05:46):
He's done a lot of appearances on Network TV on
this program, documentaries, podcasts, But I think the thing that
fascinates me most about Chris Wright. Is this hashtag thank
you north Face cam pain that I haven't checked today,
but I think at one point it had like five
million views, which sparked a really serious discussion on the
(06:09):
multiple efficient uses of oil and gas in everyday products.
Do you remember what that story was about. It's a
fantastic story. So north Face of north Face was approached
a Texas based company by the name of Inovex wanted
(06:31):
wind breakers. Maybe they were parking for some reason. I
just think they were basic wind breakers of jackets or something,
just jackets of some sort with the Inovex logo and
name on the jacket, and north Face refused to make
the co Brandon jacket because Inovx is a oil and
(06:51):
gas company. So Chris Wright took action on behalf of
a Liberty competitor, one of his competitors. He bought billboards
to note north Face's dependence on the oil and gas industry,
and then he did what every good person should do.
He made a YouTube video.
Speaker 5 (07:13):
Really an extraordinary customer of the oil and gas industry.
I'm Chris Wright, CEO of Liberty Energy. North Face recently
came out against my industry, even refusing to let one
of my competitors put their company logo on a north
Face jacket. I went through north Face's website of wide
ranging products, and I failed to find a single product
(07:37):
that wasn't made out of oil and gas.
Speaker 1 (07:39):
I faked. I went through their entire catalog and I
didn't find one single product that wasn't made out of
oil and gas. And even if it wasn't made from
oil and gas, guess how it got to the north
Face retail outlet and Park Metals mall, which I just
happened to walk by yesterday. Oh yeah, somebody drove it there.
Speaker 5 (08:00):
The great majority of north Faces products, jackets, backpacks, outdoor pants, shirt, shoes, hats,
et cetera, are dominantly made out of the oil and
gas that we so proudly produce. Globally, sixty percent of
all clothing fibers are made out of oil and gas.
For north Face, it is likely ninety percent or more,
(08:22):
simply because they make premium, high performance products. But our
customer relationship goes much further than simply supplying north Face
with copious raw material. They're vast manufacturing, distribution and retailing networks.
Are also large consumers of gasoline diesel natural gas, propane,
(08:45):
jet fuel, et cetera. But heck, I could say that
about any manufacturing company. Perhaps they went the extra mile
with those outdoor natural gas and propane fireplaces at headquarters
and the private jet terminal. Again, many others check those boxes.
Where north Face does go the extra mile is their
(09:05):
focus on the outdoor industry, an industry which only came
into existence because of oil and gas. Without the enormous
leap in human wealth and health catalyzed by the arrival
of oil and gas, there was no spare time or
wealth necessary to pursue such luxury endeavors as outdoor sports.
Speaker 1 (09:26):
This is such a brilliant point what you think about
everything that oil and gas has done to make our
lives easier, more efficient, more cost effective. The ability to
have fresh strawberries in the middle of winter, to have
raspberries from Chile, to be able to travel from here
(09:49):
to Tokyo in eleven hours, to just be able to
get in my car and without filling up, other than
just maybe filling up before I leave, drive all the
way to the undisclosed location and back without stopping one time.
Even if I have to pee, I could still just
I could still keep going, and last week there was
(10:12):
like forty inches of snow at this undisclosed location. I
didn't worry about it. No, we keep the thermostat like
at forty five to fifty degrees. We put aner freezing
the pipes, just as an extra precautionary measure. We got
the well house well insulated with insulation made from oiling gas.
We've got so it's just ready. We could walk in
(10:33):
with forty inches of snow. If I can make it
to the front door. We could walk in. Just turn
the heat back up to say sixty five or seventy,
and you know, maybe light the fireplace. We might blue
the air, and just walk in and enjoy it and
enjoy the beautiful outdoors of the Sangred to Crystal Mountains.
Chris Wright is absolutely on point here that oiling gas
(10:54):
made it possible for things like, oh hmm, what's the
number one tourist attraction in Colorado? I think that might
be scheme. Yeah, I was way off. I was gonna
say surfing. Well, I think surfing is number two. Surfing
like over on Chatfield. I think people go surfing on
(11:14):
Chatfield all the time. I see them, and I see
I see all the girls of the bikinis. In fact,
I was walking the dogs. It was pretty cold, you know,
Saturday morning, like at six am. But they were out there,
you know, they were windsurfing in their bikinis. There was
a sight to be old water skiing down the platt
Chris Right is exactly right about this. Oh, this is
(11:35):
just glorious.
Speaker 5 (11:35):
Where north Face does go the extra mile is their
focus on the outdoor industry, an industry which only came
into existence because of oil and gas. Without the enormous
leap in human wealth and health catalyzed by the arrival
of oil and gas, there was no spare time for
wealth necessary to pursue such luxury endeavors as outdoor sports.
(11:59):
Escaping the modern world to the great outdoors typically begins
with modern energy and transportation, whether by car, bus, train,
or plane. Our outdoor choices keep expanding because we now
have all these fabulous outdoor toys made of oil and gas,
like skis, snowboards, wakeboards, bikes, kayaks, canoes, sailboats, hot air balloons,
(12:24):
climbing gear, ropes, etc.
Speaker 1 (12:27):
We can spend days in.
Speaker 5 (12:28):
The outdoors with our lightweight backpacks, tents, sleeping bags, cooking
with our camp or backpacking stoves. Climbing the world's highest
mountains wasn't even imagined before oil and gas for all
the reasons that I've already mentioned.
Speaker 1 (12:44):
Plus, there is no water high on mountains.
Speaker 5 (12:47):
Fortunately, we can carry canisters of white gas or other
petroleum fuels to melt snow off glaciers for drinking water
and cooking, even at twenty six thousand feet elevation. I
could go on and on about the beauty of wilderness,
the joy of being in the backcountry, the character building
experience is made possible, the team adventures and serenity of
(13:11):
the great outdoors all only possible thanks to oil and gas.
So north Face is not only an extraordinary customer of
the oil and gas industry, they're also a partner with
the oil and gas industry and bringing the grade outdoors
within reach of so many. So thank you north Face,
and you're welcome.
Speaker 1 (13:33):
And you're a bunch of hypocrites too, north Face, You're
a bunch of hypocrites. Now at Mentley, I own some
north Face products, but I've owned north Face products for
long before Chris Wright was nominated, or before he did
this particular YouTube video, which, if Dragon's any good at
this job at all. He'll put up on your on
the website, Michael saysgo youer dot com and you at
(13:55):
already is yeah, very good. He did another video I
think it's over on LinkedIn, where he announced that there
is no climate crisis. We are not in the midst
of an energy transition either. We have seen no increase
in the frequency or intensity of hurricanes, tornadoes, droughts, or floods.
(14:17):
Despite endless sphere mongering of the media, politicians, and activists,
the only thing resembling a crisis with respect to climate
change is the regressive opportunity squelching policies justified in the
name of climate change evs. I still go back to evs.
(14:40):
Sales are declining. Nobody wants to buy them. They're sitting
on the lots. The used car prices of evs are plummeting.
Sales are plummeting. People don't want them. There was some
commercial Ford Ford's trying to sell an EV. I don't
know whether it's an F one fifty, I don't care
what it is is, but Ford's trying to sell an EV.
(15:02):
So I think this commercial on TV over the weekend,
in which Ford will and there's of course some qualifier
about you know, you know, it has to be no
unusual circumstances or something. But Ford will install an electric
charger in your home so that you can charge your
(15:22):
Ford EV at no charge to you. Now I think
to myself, wait a minute, at no charge to me?
Or is that built into the cost of the EV
and into the cost of your marketing and the production
of the commercial and everything else that you went trying
to convince me to go buy a Ford EV And
by the way, if you do, we'll put a charger
in your house. Then I thought about this because there's
(15:46):
this nice charger that you know, the kids are using
to charge some stuff, they're using it for other things
in the house, and it's sitting there in the garage
and it's it's a nice charges it's a nice unobtrusive charger.
It's got the Ford logo on it everything. And I'm thinking,
where's that electricity coming from? Natural gas? Coal? I wish
(16:07):
it was coming from nuclear, but it's not, uh, wind solar.
And if it's coming from wind and solar, where are
those solar panels coming from other than China? I mean,
where are they? How are they being manufactured, Yeah, by
oil and natural gas. And those wind turbines, how are
they being manufactured? How's that steel or aluminum or whatever
(16:30):
they're made out of. I don't know, I don't care.
How's that being manufactured? And then how are they putting
those up? And then what are they doing to control
the speed of the turbines as they spin around? Yeah,
probably oil and gas or the very electricity that they're
generating from the wind, except when the wind's not blowing.
(16:51):
Guess how much Guess how much energy electricity wind turbines
produce when they're not spinning. Michael, I do wonder what
this country would look like if they did the same
thing that the President of Argentina did. Wouldn't there be
some I wonder how that meeting between Midieu and Trump went.
(17:17):
I may have mentioned this earlier. There was a there
was a great video of Milieu on UH. He was
somewhere in Argentine, I assuming the capitol or something, and
he had he had they had across the wall all
of these UH like name plates for all the departments,
And of course I was listening to a translation because
I don't I didn't understand why he was speaking in Argentinian,
(17:39):
and he would walk by and he would read the
name off everyone, and he had rip it off the
wall and then throw it on the ground and say
done or gone or disappeared or something. I want to
talk about. Never Trumper's for a moment, but before I do,
I just as I was just peddling around during the break,
Congressman Meeks. It was over on MSNBC again, the same
(18:03):
place where we've heard earlier today that they've turned a
new leaf. Mika and Joe went down tomorrow Lago on
Friday to talk to Trump about can't we all just
get along now that our ratings are plummeting. Can we
get you to come back on our Can we get
you to come on our program and maybe boost our
ratings and save our contracts. That's what was really going on.
Congressman Meeks, Democrat from New York. I haven't listened this yet.
(18:27):
I've only read the transcript. I just find this fascinating.
We talked. I think we may have mentioned something on
air about how Zelenski is basically saying that you know,
if Trump, you know, when Trump becomes president, the war's
going to be over or soon thereafter. By the way, Dragon.
(18:48):
Did we get a talk back from Alexa earlier?
Speaker 2 (18:53):
Yeah, she was the first one of the day, or
first the second one of the day. Yes, she yeah,
hath Kelly show you the picture of her? Oh she
showed me. Yeah, it was discussed a special. It takes
real talent to do something like that, way to go.
Speaker 1 (19:06):
To trip up the stairs, to trip up the stairs
and break your foot, right.
Speaker 2 (19:10):
Hey, talent, I'm telling you what not everybody can do it.
I'm telling you that kind of talent belongs on air.
That's all I know.
Speaker 1 (19:17):
To break your foot in that many places to have
it look that, I mean, it looks like like it's
it's it's already like uh atrophy, it's like chubby. It
looks chubby too chubby. She has stuff that she is doing.
It's two toes that are broken. And you're a jerk.
(19:43):
You told you came in here and said, would you
please give a shout out because Alexa has broken her toes,
and so I gave her a shout out. But you whatever,
I'm done. Did I not do what you asked me
to do? Shut up, Michael, I did, didn't I Dragon? No,
It's sounded pretty pretty right to me. Yeah, I mean,
(20:05):
I don't know what. I don't know what she was expecting.
But you asked me to get a shout out. I
gave Alexa a shout out. Now, if if Alexa is
offended by the shout out that I gave her, I
seriously doubt that. I seriously doubt it. I doubt it.
The only person offended is you know who's sitting over there,
me me me, me, me, me in the corner. Oh my god,
(20:25):
Congressman Meeks. Listen to this. I just find this amazing. Congressman,
get great.
Speaker 4 (20:30):
Gat Meets is back with us. I just want to
get your reaction to this news that the Ethics Committee
is going to meet.
Speaker 1 (20:35):
What should they do?
Speaker 6 (20:36):
Well, they should definitely make sure that that reporters on Lisa.
Speaker 1 (20:38):
The United States Senators, they have the stors. That's not
what I want. I'm sorry, that's not what I was
looking for. That's that's about Matt Gates. I don't care
about Matt Gates. Where did it go? It disappeared during
that time while I was sitting here. They they flipped
it on me. Bellieway, oh oh here it is here
(21:02):
it is, thank you. Listen.
Speaker 4 (21:04):
There has been some mixed reaction coming from Republicans both
in the set in and.
Speaker 1 (21:08):
In the House.
Speaker 4 (21:09):
Senator Roger Wicker responding that he was encouraged by this
move to send these long range missiles or to approve
the long range missile use inside Russia, He says it
does not excuse the administration's deliberate slow walking of items
and assistants long authorized by Congress for use against Putin's
illegal aggression. You also had congressmen my Turner applauding the
(21:30):
decision but called it overdue. Conversely, you heard from Donald
Trump Junior in that piece by care there and he
said this, the military industrial complex seems to want to
make sure they get World War three going before my
father has a chance to create peace and save lives.
What do you make of that disconnect? And do you
worry about this move could backfire for.
Speaker 1 (21:50):
The that's galate Warmer.
Speaker 6 (21:52):
I hope that's some of my colleagues who talk about
the sining of the attacks being approved. Remember there was
a long pause because of my Republican colleagues who refused
to fund Ukraine. There was that long force which gave
Russia an advantage.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
That it currently has. This tries to now level that
playing field.
Speaker 6 (22:15):
That long is almost eight months of which we were
bickering back and forth because Republicans.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
Wouldn't agree to fund it.
Speaker 6 (22:22):
And now you know, you hearing from the administration, the
incoming administration. I think that's what the President's son is
talking about. He's not saying how it will be done,
because I believe and many believe, that what he talks
about saving lives means that giving away you the solvereign
territory of Ukraine.
Speaker 1 (22:41):
That's not the way to do that.
Speaker 6 (22:42):
What we want to do is to make sure Ukraine
stays intact.
Speaker 1 (22:45):
And that's the focus and has always.
Speaker 6 (22:47):
Been the focus of this administration, along with our allies
working collective together, which is extremely important, not America alone,
in America by itself, which is you know, concerning learning
to our allies and our friends across. I mean, I
remember when Joe Biden first won the presidency. One of
the first things I said to a number of our
(23:08):
allies that at that time I was the chairman of
the committee, was aren't you glad that America's.
Speaker 1 (23:12):
Back at the table. Their question back to me was yes,
we are, but for how long?
Speaker 6 (23:18):
Because they were fearful of a comeback of Donald Trump
and then the same kind of you know, coldness that
he had to our NATO friends. Remember he had coldness
to our NATO friends, but warmth to Putin warped to
Victor Aubyn, wolf Took, Kevin Jong Ung. Those are the
people that he was praising, but he was always criticizing
(23:38):
our NATO allies. They are still very concerned about that.
Speaker 1 (23:43):
So if saving Ukrainian lives means concessions, we should let
them keep dying. We want to make What we want
to do is make sure that Ukraine stays intact. I
don't know if that's going to happen. And by the way,
who's the one that shut down the churches, who's the
(24:06):
who's the one that canceled the elections? Uh is? Now,
we can argue about the merits of protecting ukraine sovereignty,
but hmmm, seems to me that Zelensky has gone a
little off the deep end just in terms of what
he's willing to do to try to preserve what himself
(24:30):
or his country. It really makes you wonder, and I
think that Democrats are starting to realize, uh oh, that
gravy train might be coming to an end. Anyway, I
want to talk briefly about never Trumper's So I think
with the with the election of Trump, we saw the
(24:50):
the end of a We saw the end of several
political assumptions. Assumptions about the nation itself, about the inevitability
of the of the Marxist generation shifting agenda, I think,
assumptions about the inability of the Republican Party to penetrate
key demographics. All of that has proven resistance or resistant
(25:13):
to some of these assumptions, but it also ends I
think one of the most violent, corrupt stains of political
activity of the past eight years, the professionalized Never Trump movement.
Talk about a bunch of grifters. They raise scads of cash,
generational wealth. In the phrasing of Steve Schmidt, one of
(25:35):
the founders, if you if you start, if you start
a political group and then you freely admit that your
fundraising has created generation, generational wealth for yourself, then I'd
like to see what you spend the money on. I'd
like to see, like how much did you pay yourself?
(25:57):
How you know you raised millions a pair of apparently
tens of millions of dollars all because you were never Trumpers.
You know one of them. One of the founders used
to be one of my I think he he may
have been, he may have been a legislative aide, and
(26:18):
my sympathies to him. His father recently passed away, But
Reed Galen was one of the never Trump founders. And
I'm really curious read just how much money did you
and Steve Schmid and these others make off your grift
of never Trump. And you were obviously selling a failed
(26:38):
product to the Trump antagonists. So when Trump, when Trump
made it to the top of the Republican Party back
in twenty sixteen, all of these little colleques and groups
of individuals and organizations who positioned themselves as this constant,
unending opponent of Trump his administrationist policies kind of jailed
(27:00):
and really formed this amazing political group. And I say
amazing not because I admire them. I simply admire them.
They were able to take their opposition to Trump and
grifted so well that, in Steve Schmidt's own word, they
created generational wealth for themselves. Now, while some of these
(27:21):
respected commentators were animated I think maybe by principle and
maybe by a deep belief in some sort of old
fashioned version of American Conservatism. George will for instance. I
think most of them really had selfish reasonings for doing
what they did, because the Never Trump movement had no well,
(27:43):
you know, before I say that, let me ask you,
what was the guiding principle of the Never Trump movement?
Can you tell me what it was? Three? I think
it's summed up in three words. Orange man bad. That
was it. No real discussion about neo conservatism, no real
(28:04):
conversation about genuine conservatism or Reagan conservatism, no real discussion
about his policies, just orange man bad. These were all
because I know a lot of them. These were all
power hungry individuals, and they were just frustrated because they
got shut out. They were no longer a part of
(28:24):
the establishment, got shoved aside, something that we've been screaming
about for decades, something about that. Even my old boss
just capitulated to the establishment. In the media, probably the
most prominent was Bill Crystal. He actually went to a
(28:45):
bunch of lefties to start online publications bashing all of
his former friends, launching podcasts providing outlets for all the
resistance on our side, resistance to Donald Trump. And then yeah,
he never could take a break time either and offering
easy quotes antagonizing Republicans for anybody who happened to call
(29:07):
in the world of publishing. Oh, they went nuts. So
what's happened to him? Since?
Speaker 5 (29:14):
So?
Speaker 1 (29:15):
Hey, Mike, I might have missed this. I was doing
the whole take the kid to school thing. But how
fast are you skadad out of the office today to
get to that appointment for your jeep? Uh? They scheduled
it at ten right or was it nine thirty? No? Remember,
I asked for ten thirty. You asked for anything after
ten thirty and ten thirty on they gave me ten.
(29:38):
And I explained to him again, Hey, it'll be ten
to fifteen before I can get there, and he's like,
don't worry about it, You'll be fine. I'm like, okay,
and I still love a cell number, and yes.
Speaker 2 (29:49):
We'll find out tomorrow, and huh, we'll find out tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (29:52):
Yes, and this dragon will tell you. I have everything
packed up and I am ready to skidaddle out of here.
Kimmedy Christmas. I hope it goes okay. I do not
want to. I'm not in the mood for it.
Speaker 2 (30:10):
You're going to cancel your appointment because you were fifteen
minutes later.
Speaker 1 (30:13):
I know, I may know, I've I've already checked Google Maps.
I should be able to I should be able to
get there in ten minutes. Should now depending on knowing
how Colorado traffic is and Denver drivers are, who knows,
I may have to run down a few people and
you know, knock a few beds out of the way.
(30:33):
But yeah, we'll get there. We'll get there. They should
just stay off the road, to stay off the road. Yeah, no,
they should, Oh yeah, they should, you know if well,
in fact, I shouldn't have to be doing this. I mean,
I would think that my producer or Kelly or somebody
would be offering to take the jeep over there for
me so I could just go on about my business
for the day. I have things to do today. Really,
(30:56):
what Kelly driving the cheap No? No, not at all,
not at all, not at all anyway, real quickly, one
last thing I want to make it about to never trumpers.
Who's probably I mean, I know I've listed a bunch
of names, Steve Schmidt and Ree Galen and others, but
who's really the number one never trumper that really should
be putting their head down in shame Liz Cheney. Because
(31:21):
remember Liz Cheney was a strong supporter of Donald Trump
during his first term until impeachment occurred. And when she
voted in favor of impeachment, that led to her removal
from her GOP leadership post. And that's when she turned
against all of her former colleagues and started leading that
January sixth inquiry designed to embarrass them and Trump and
(31:44):
hopefully get rid of it and now and then she
joined hips with Kamala Harris. So Cheney's failure and Trump's
return should mark the death knaill for the Never Trump movement.
Ask me what they accomplished all of the money, generational wealth?
(32:05):
You know what I do the Vestera commercials. I talk
about creating generational wealth, meaning enough money that you can
live happily and pass a bunch of money onto your
children for them to live happily. They did that grifting
another Trump Go away, Go far, far away.