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November 30, 2024 • 36 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
To night. Michael Brown joins me here, the former FEMA
director of talk.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Show host Michael Brown.

Speaker 3 (00:04):
Brownie, No, Brownie, You're doing a heck of a job
the weekend with Michael Brown.

Speaker 1 (00:09):
Hey, so we came with Michael Brown Live after the holiday.
Is glad to have you with me. So you know
the rule of engagement. If you want to send me
a text message, the number on your message app is
three three one zero three three three one zero three.
You can tell me anything, ask me anything. Just start
your message with one of two words, Mike or Michael.
I just get going. So the other thing that I

(00:30):
heard while I was gone was this leaked uh and
I use the term leaked somewhat loosely leaked audio of
and video two of Vice President Kamala Harris. Do you
don't remember she's still vice president? Just not to ruin
your Thanksgiving, but to remind you that Joe Biden is

(00:53):
still potus and Kamala Harris is still the vice president.
Isn't that fantastic? Isn't that wonderful?

Speaker 3 (01:00):
But don't worry.

Speaker 1 (01:01):
I mean, you know, we got what how many days
fifty days or so till the inauguration? What could possibly
go wrong next fifty days nothing, I mean, so just
sit back and watch the giant mushroom cloud. Anyway, they
released this, they they decide to have a phone call,
a conference call. I mean maybe maybe they're having a

(01:23):
team's call, like we have an eyeart and they're going
to do a after action report. I don't know what
they're doing. Well I do know what they're doing. She's
doing everything she possibly can to remain relevant after having
lost to Donald Trump, the first president I think since

(01:46):
Grover Cleveland to serve two terms but not consecutively, and
to come back in a way that's just I mean,
is a l There's no way to count it except
a landslide. I know in many states it was close.
But when you look at the county by county map

(02:08):
and you see all those red counties versus the blue counties,
and then you realize where those blue counties are, and
then you looked at the elect Electoral College map and
you look at a popular vote, Yeah, this is this
was a major, major victory. So John Morgan, who's one
of the Democrat mega donors, thinks that the Vice president

(02:29):
and Oliver campaign staff should literally be blackballed from politics
in the future. So Morgan is talking with Chris Cuomo
on News Nation and like in the Democrat presidential campaign,
burning through one point five billion dollars through the twenty
twenty four race as something that came to the chaos

(02:50):
in a Mad Max movie, suggesting the donor money had
been legally stolen. In the interview, Culomo, you'll hear in
just a second, Culomo asked, do you think somebody stole
the money? Well, maybe legally, says the mega donor, mister Morgan.
He says, Look to me, you remember the movie Mad Max,

(03:13):
with everybody just doing whatever they wanted at the end
of the world. Now Morgan is the founder of Morgan
and Morgan, a huge law firm. He goes on to explain,
before continuing that that's what happened here. All of a sudden,
everybody's got the keys of the candy store, ad buyers,
talent consultants. There's one hundred days to do it, and
the money just started pouring in. Now, I don't want

(03:34):
a gloss over that sentence because I think I think
many people don't understand how how do you blow through
one point five billion dollars? Because now now again, I
live in a state that Trump was not going to win.
So any any national advertising that I happened to see

(03:58):
would be if I was watching one of the cable
chairsimals and Trump or Harris had a campaign ad running
on one of the you know, on let's say CNBC
or Fox Business or something. But that ad represents an
ad that you see on television is like the tip

(04:20):
of an iceberg. Go back to what mister Morgan said,
all of a sudden, everybody's got the keys to the
candy store. Ad buyers, talent consultants, there's one hundred days
to do it, and the money just started pouring in.
Think about an ad, You first have what in the

(04:43):
business we call the creative somebody has to come up
with the ad itself, Like, okay, what's the message? What
are we trying to sell?

Speaker 2 (04:53):
Here?

Speaker 1 (04:53):
Are we trying to sell Jaguars? Because if we're trying
to sell jaguars, why don't we put a bunch of
I don't know, beta men in pomp palm outfits or
something and never show a car and just have them
do some little funky dance and then just put the
word Jaguar at the end, and everybody, I don't know
what we're talking about. That's a creative. I don't think

(05:16):
that was a very good creative, but that was a creative. Well,
that costs money. So the creative costs money. And now
once the creative gets approved by somebody on the campaign staff,
now that commercial has to be produced. What does that mean. Well,

(05:39):
if you're going to have someone other than the candidate appear,
you need actors, and preferably you want real actors. You
don't want volunteers because well they you know, that's going
to take more time and more money and more effort,
and you're gonna have to have more cuts. So you
want professional actors to be in the ad tending to

(06:00):
be your voters. Well, you got to pay them. You
probably have to pay on union scale. Then you have
to find a time to actually do the production. So
you've got to run a studio somewhere, or if you're
gonna do it outside, are you gonna do it with
the green screen? Right, But you're gonna have to You're
gonna have to actually produce the commercial, so that takes money.

(06:25):
Then you're gonna have to have all the consultants that
are all around that, the consultants about the messaging, the consultant,
the consultants about the actors, the consultants about the candidate herself.
What what's she going to do? You know, what's she
going to say, How's she going to dress, how she
going to look? You know what angle I mean, all

(06:45):
of that takes place in all the creative and in
all the production of the ad. But the one part
that nobody ever talks about the ad buyers, because the
ad buyers make a boatload of money on the commercials,
because not only do they get paid by the campaign

(07:08):
to go place the commercial, but then they get paid
a commission when they sell the commercial. They're like, they're
like your pharmacy benefit manager. You know, the medicine you're
buying really costs about, let's say, ten cents a pill.

(07:30):
But by the time the pharmacy beneficiary, the pharmacy pharmacy
benefit manager gets involved, the pharmacy that's selling you the
pill is selling you the pill. Instead of ten cents
a pill, they're selling it to you at two dollars
a pill, and the pharmacy benefit manager is pocketing you
know about ninety Well, that's what the ad buyer's doing too,

(07:51):
and they're taking the money on both ends from the
campaign and from wherever they syndicate or sell the commercial.
That's what he means by the ad buyers. So it's
pretty easy to blow through one point five billion dollars.
But he gets pressed hard regarding Kamala Harris's future in
the Democrat Party, and surprisingly he didn't hesitate at all.

(08:17):
He went on to express his belief that she has
no future. I think he might be master of the obvious.
But you don't run. You don't run for president of
the United States and then just disappear and go away forever.
Not someone like Kamala Harris who's used to always getting

(08:38):
her way and not really having me work very hard
for it. So I would just give a warning to
all of our listeners in California, watch out because she
may be coming for you. Maybe she wants her old
Senate seat back. So maybe when who'll be having the
Senate from Califi? We got Adam Schiff and he's the

(08:59):
new one coming. Who else do we have? I forget anyway,
who is maybe she'll come for a Senate seat, or
maybe she'll come to run for governor. But mister Morgan
told Clomo this, I think this disqualifies her forever. If
you can't run a campaign, you can't run America. The

(09:20):
same thing is going to follow Harris for the rest
of her career. She cannot be trusted with the money,
and the donors are going to be like, yeah, where
is this money? The anger in the Democrat donor group
is amazing, absolutely amazing. But I want you to hear
what she said and what he said. It's the Weekend
with Michael Brown. Don't forget. Go over and follow me

(09:42):
on exits at Michael Brown USA, at Michael Brown USA.
Go give me a follow right now and on your
podcast app, subscribe to this podcast. Search for the Situation
with Michael Brown. When you find that on your podcast app,
the Situation with Michael Brown, you hit subscribe now. We'll
give you all five days the week day program plus
the weekend program. Get your ears ready, Kamala Harris and

(10:05):
mister Morgan coming up next. Hey, welcome back to the
Weekend with Michael Brown's id to have you with me.
I'll bet I bade a great Thanksgiving. Don't forget. Follow
me on x It's at Michael Brown USA, at Michael
Brown USA. The anger, as I said at the beginning,

(10:26):
at the end of the last segment. The anger among
the donor class and the Democrat Party is palpable. But
it's not just directed at Kamala Harris. It's also drawing ire.
Or also drawing ire are David Pluff, the Obama World
political consultant that served as a senior advisor on Kamala

(10:47):
Harris's campaign, Jen Dillon, who is the Harris campaign manager.
And Anita Done. Now, Needa Done, that name should sound
familiar to many of you. She's the Dark Arts communications
Google route who took over the Future Forward superpack and
is a big Barack Obama acolyte. So mister Morgan goes

(11:10):
on NewsNation with Chris Cuomo and it goes like.

Speaker 2 (11:13):
That, John, I never heard anything like this before. Do
you think people, do you think somebody stole the money?

Speaker 1 (11:18):
Well maybe legally.

Speaker 3 (11:20):
All of a sudden, everybody's got the keys to the
candy store, ad buyers, talent consultants, there's one hundred days
to do it. And the money started pouring in, pouring in.
Remember this, Chris, It wasn't pouring in for Harris. It
was pouring in against Trump and a lot of people

(11:44):
got rich on the back of donors trying to stop Trump,
and I think this disqualifies her forever forever. If you
can't run a campaign, you can't run America. And that
would be the argument. Just day one was at the
White House for a dinner Friday night. It's calling to
a lot of people, and I'm telling you, man, there's

(12:06):
a lot of whispering. There's a lot of names about
who got paid this and who got paid that.

Speaker 1 (12:11):
Same thing is going to.

Speaker 3 (12:12):
Follow Harris for the rest of her career. She cannot
be trusted with the money.

Speaker 1 (12:18):
Wow. I mean that's pretty strong, but that's also very truthful.
It's something that I want you to remember because I
encourage people to give money to candidates. I think that
one way that you can show your support for a
candidate is to give them five bucks. Now, five bucks

(12:39):
may not seem like a lot, but there's you know,
when you got three hundred plus million Americans in the
country and a certain percentage of them all give five dollars,
and some give five thousand dollars, some give some give
a million dollars. Pretty soon it all adds up. But
you want to know, and you have a right to
know that when you give money to a campaign, that

(13:01):
money's going to be used wisely. Now you may not
agree with maybe you don't like the commercial, or maybe
you don't like somebody on the staff, or maybe you
don't like an interview that somebody did. But it still
takes money to run a campaign. And that's why I
believe that the McCain Fine Gold Act, John McCain, God

(13:23):
Rest his soul, what a dirt bag and fine gold
from I forget Wisconsin, Minnesota where fine Gold was from.
That put these limits on campaign contributions because I do
believe that a campaign contribution is speech. And when I
give money to a campaign, I'm exercising my First Amendment right.

(13:47):
By giving somebody, you know, five dollars or two hundred
and fifty dollars or five hundred dollars, I'm exercising my
First Amendment right. And I'm supporting them because I want
them to get their message out and I want to
get there. I want them to use that money to
get their message out however they need to. If that's
if that's you know, pay paying for some jet fuel,

(14:07):
If that's paying to part of the least for an
aircraft so the candidate can fly around, if that's paying
for paper clips or a stapler. I don't care, because
I know campaigns cost money, but I don't think there
ought to be limits on money if I want to give.
But let's say that I want to give if I could,

(14:30):
I want to give five million dollars to somebody running
for governor in Colorado. And if I had five million
dollars to give, and there was somebody that I thought
could a good conservative Republican that could turn this state around,
I would give them five million dollars. I just think

(14:50):
that I as should that the campaign should be required
by law to disclose that Michael Brown gave five million
dollars to the Joe Blow campaign for Go in Colorado campaign. Now,
why do I think it should be disclosed Because I
think we should be able to know who's funding campaigns,
and I think a campaign ought to be required to

(15:12):
disclose that because that might influence somebody else to give
some money and guess what else it might do. Yep,
you know, because there's I know this comes as a
shock to you because I know that you all love
and adore me, but there are some people who actually
hate my guts. I know that's hard to believe, but
there are people who actually hate my guts. And if
they found out that I gave five million dollars to

(15:32):
Joe Blow to run for governor in Colorado, they might go, oh, yeah,
well really that I'm gonna up the anny. I'm going
to give his opponent seven million dollars or ten million dollars,
But don't limit me on how much money I can give.
Just disclose it. The other thing that I think is
going on is I think within the Democrat Party itself,

(15:56):
including the Democrat National Committee, that they're doing everything they
can to keep her for money. So they had this
conference call with the donors and it didn't go well,
and they released part of the video. If you haven't
if you haven't seen this video, you need to go

(16:19):
look it up. I'm not saying she's drunk. I'm not
saying she was drinking. I'm not saying she's on xanax.
I'm not saying she's on valume. I'm not. Maybe she's
just super tired.

Speaker 2 (16:34):
But my gosh, and I know this is an uncertain time.
I'm clear eyed about that. I know you're clear eyed
about it. And it feels heavy, and I just have
to remind you, don't you ever let anybody take your
power from you. You have the same power that you

(16:57):
did before November fifth, and you have the same purpose
that you did, and you have the same ability to
engage and inspire. So don't ever let anybody or any
circumstance take your power from you. Look, this mission that

(17:19):
we have, it takes hard work. But as you've heard
me say many times, we like hard work. Hard work
is good work, hard work can be joyful work. And
in doing our work, we will remain commitments work, work.

Speaker 1 (17:36):
Work, work, still word solid, still nothing but word slid.
Oh my gosh. Yeah, I think she's done, and I
think the mac truck hit her pretty hard, t boned
her pretty hard. It is the Weekend with Michael Brown.
Text the word Micha or Michael to three three one
zero three. Tell me anything, ask me anything, Let me
right back tonight. Michael Brown joins me here, the former

(18:02):
FEMA director of.

Speaker 2 (18:02):
Talk show host Michael Brown.

Speaker 3 (18:04):
Brownie, No, Brownie, You're doing a heck of a job
The Weekend with Michael Brown.

Speaker 1 (18:09):
Hey, welcome back to the Weekend with Michael Brown. Glad
to have you with me. So let's go back for
a moment to the campaign. Because the knives are out.
Congressman elon Omar, the Democrat from Minnesota. She's now calling
Vice President Harris's decision to embrace the backing of former
Republican Vice President Dick Cheney, calling it you remember he

(18:35):
was the little prospective, you know, Dick Cheney. I'm no
fan of Dick Cheney. I may have worked in the
Bush administration, but I was no fan of Dick Cheney.
His staff, they were wonderful people, good people. MC Dick
Cheney himself was a I can't say it on there.
He was an ass He was reviled by demos. Is

(19:00):
the architect of the two thousand and three Iraqi War,
and indeed, I think that's a legitimate moniker to put
on him. He really was the architect of that war.
And his daughter, Liz Change, the former congressman from Wyoming.
Elon Omar says courting the support of her was a

(19:23):
significant error. Now want you to stop and just think
about this from them, So Dick Cheney is, you know,
the devil incarnate he's responsible for you know, he's a
war criminal, according to Democrats, absolute war criminal. And Liz
Cheney his daughters no better. She's been described as a

(19:47):
war criminal. But suddenly the Democrats are embraved. Well, I
shouldn't say democrats. Suddenly the Harris campaign is embracing them.
You see there. Their embracing of the Chinese was not
about anything about advancing their vision for America. It wasn't

(20:09):
at all about anything to do with the economy, inflation, immigration, anything.
Why would you embrace someone that you think is responsible,
that you believe as a Democrat, that you believe is
responsible for the death of millions of people, that you
believe as a war criminal, whose daughter doesn't fall far

(20:29):
from the tree is as bad as her father. Why
would you embrace them? Because their whole campaign was based
on Trump bad, Haaris good Trump, Hitler Trump, fascist Trump,
Nazi Trump, whatever. So let's run over here, because here

(20:52):
are a couple of Republicans that don't like Donald Trump.
So let's embrace them. Let's get them on the campaign.
What message does that sin and to Democrats? What message
does that send to independence or or for that matter,
even disaffective Republicans. What message does that send to anyone
who's concerned about the economy, about our place in international affairs,

(21:15):
about about immigration in the and and the totally screwed
up border that even Democrats are beginning to admit. Yeah,
I think maybybe we've we messed that up big time.
He says that the only thing you're running for is
against Donald Trump. You just want to you just want
to beat Donald Trump. You just want power for the

(21:38):
sake of power. So Elon Omar, a member of the
progressive I would say Marxist congressional faction known as the Squad,
said the Kamala Harris's late attempt to win over Republicans
was a huge misstep. I think it was desperation. The

(21:58):
Somali born congresswoman contends that by openly campaigning with the
Chenese that Harrison her running mate Tim Walls. And Tim Walls,
I'm sorry I had his name here in my notes.
I just hadn't thought about Tim Walls for a while.
Wonder what he's up to, Wonder how's how was his Thanksgiving?
I wonder there. The embracing of the Chenese further alienated

(22:26):
this pro Palestinian uncommitted movement, remember that group of people.
According to Omar, that likely costs the nominee state of Michigan,
where the uncommitted movement held considerable influence. The Uncommitted movement
shows you with withhold its backing from Kamala Harris because
of their dissatisfaction with the Biden Harris governments approach to

(22:49):
the Gaza conflict, you know, the same conflict that they
couldn't that Joe Biden really couldn't seem to do much about.
And suddenly Donald Trump gets elected and suddenly has Below
and Hamasral like, you know, let's try to work out
a ceasefire, and Joe Biden tried to take credit for it.
That's the power of someone like Donald Trump who simply

(23:13):
by taking strong, unequivocal, solid positions. I support Israel, period,
and they have a right to defend themselves, period. And
I'll give them whatever they need to defend themselves, period.
And what was the enemy, dude? Suddenly the enemy is like, eh,

(23:35):
you want to talk about these fire? You see what
we can do here. That's peace through strength right there.
That's truly reaganizzedment. Back to elon Omar So, Michigan has
a really substantial Arab and Muslim community, and they were
voicing their concerns over the perceived lack of accountability placed

(23:57):
on Israel for what they believe was this ongoing vie.
That's what they actually called genocide, an absolute bastardization of
the word. Well, elon Omar highlighted Cheney's name as being
synonymous with the war itself, trying to get younger generations
to tie Dick Cheney to what was going on in

(24:19):
with Hamas. As part of their efforts to appeal to
disenchanted I guess Republican voters, they prominently featured Liz Cheney's endorsement,
the same Liz Cheney that was overwhelming. She was beaten
like a stepchild in Wyoming. Talk about getting hit by

(24:40):
a mack truck. Treney, Liz Cheney was run over by
a complete convoy of Mack trucks in Wyoming, and yet
they embraced her thinking they were going to get who
When you do some sort of autopsy on the Harris
Walls campaign, you realize that and I go back to
my and I think I was never with either this

(25:07):
audience or my weekday audience. I never and I really
hate to admit this, and I think I didn't admit
it to the audience at the time because there was
still that little bit of doubt in my mind. But
in my gut. I believe that Trump was going to win,

(25:28):
but I just couldn't bring myself to admit that it
was really going to happen, because when I you know it,
I know it's totally irrational. But when I didn't want
in Jenson and two, I just kept thinking that the
Democrat machine would kick in, and the unions and everybody
would coalesce around Kamala Harris at some point, and they

(25:51):
would pull out all the stops, including all the lawfare
and everything else, and it would work against Trump. I
didn't realize was how disaffected not Republicans were, but how
disaffected the Democrats were. I'd go back and think about

(26:12):
all of the things that I talked about, not just
on this program, but during the weekday program too, all
the problems internationally domestically, all the problems with the functioning
of the government or the dysfunction of the government, the economy, inflation,
everything that I kept pointing out. There were times that

(26:34):
I thought, well, I was just preaching to the choir
that you knew those things. What I didn't realize the
extent of was the disaffection that Democrats felt, too, and
they were beginning to draw a causal link between the
Marxist policies of the Biden Harris administration and all the

(26:54):
problems in the economy and all the problems in the border.
You go back and think about what Doug Doucy, the
former governor of Arizona did, what Governor Abbott, the current
governor of Texas did in terms of making every city
a border city, every sanctuary city in the country a
border city, every state a border state. That was having

(27:19):
an effect on Democrats as much as it was on Republicans.
And now elon Omar is looking and doing her post
mortem and basically saying this, I look back on the campaign,
your embrace of the Cheneye, particularly in Michigan, was a

(27:40):
horrible mistake. Can She emphasized that the personal engagement demonstrated
by Donald Trump, who met with Dearborn's Democrat mayor, actually
influenced the outcome there. All politics as retail, all politics
is local, and it was those kinds of things that
Trump was doing that was not reflected in the polls.

(28:02):
And in fact, the polls, I'm ashamed to say, are
what kept me thinking that they kept having that little
bit of doubt that maybe what I felt in my
gut wasn't really true? Well, exactly what were the polls
doing and how bad were the polls? Stay tuned. It's
the Weekend with Michael Brown. Don't forget you want to

(28:24):
send me a text message on your message app the
numbers three three one zero three three three one zero
three tell me anything, Ask me anything. To start your
question or your comment with either Mike or Michael either one.
Go follow me on X It's at Michael Brown USA. Hmmm,
those stupid polls. Next. Hey, welcome back to the Weekend

(28:48):
with Michael Brown. Glad to have you with me. So
I it was it was confession time last segment that
I always had this gut feeling that Trump was going
to win, but I couldn't bring myself to really kind
of brag about it or projected on air very much

(29:08):
because I was always worried that the polls might be
somewhat right, and if the polls were that close, that
Democrats would get out the vote and the unions would eventually,
particularly the teacher unions maybe not so much the auto workers,

(29:29):
and the cheating would continue, and that that would put
Harris over the edge, ever so slightly, but over the edge.
But for the third straight election cycle. Now, public opinion
polling once again underestimated support for Donald Trump, and that
resulted in a significant polling error. Once again, I guess

(29:52):
third times a charm I guess I finally learned the
left wing Guardian newspaper based in the United Kingdom. They
saw their US national polling average air by three points
with ninety nine percent of the vote in the presidential
election counda That era alone was fairly consistent with the
polling misrepresentation of Trump in the past two presidential election

(30:15):
cycles by the Guardian itself. The Guardian's polling appears to
have been thrown off by the inclusion of several polls
they were viewed as outliers by other websites that would
aggregate public polling. Now, according to the to the aggregate,
the polls predicted a similar a similar but slim lead

(30:35):
for Harris with forty eight percent of the vote to
Trump's forty seven percent. How many times did we hear
that it was forty eight to forty seven But as
the election results stand now, Trump's won a majority of
the popular vote at around fifty percent, Harris coming into
forty eight percent. But then you get to the key
swing states, because remember, we don't do a national election,

(30:58):
we do fifty separate state elections. There, the polling inaccuracies
were a little more varied. In states like Georgia, polls
were very aligned closely with the results, but then you
go after Arizona, a discrepancy of four percentage points is
in those polls. Now Interestingly, when looking at individual posters

(31:22):
regarding the national popular vote, Richard Barrison Big Data Poll
were the most accurate posters of the entire cycle. They
saw only a zero point one percent error from the
final popular vote results the Wall Street Journal their era
was only zero point four percent, while Atlas Intel all

(31:44):
of these polls I quoted during the campaign, Atlas Intel,
the most accurate poster of the twenty twenty cycle, was
off by only zero point five percent. The New York
Times Cena poll, which I've never trusted before, was just
zero point six percent off, Rasmussen off by just zero

(32:05):
point eight percent. But then conversely, posters like Maris Morning
Consul Quinnipiac they saw significant pulling errors, and their inclusion
in some aggregates likely resulted in the third straight mission
support for President elect Trump. So what are we to learn.

(32:29):
I don't think, well, I think we already know it.
The lesson that we need to learn. As I've said
a bazillion times, polls prior to and particularly during the
heat of a campaign, are generally not designed to reflect
public opinion, but to direct public opinion, to guide public opinion,

(32:53):
to either discourage or encourage, depending on what the polls
are showing. I still believe that, and I'll always believe that.
Although some of these that were close New York Times, Sienna, Rasmussen,
Wall Street Journal, Atlas Intel, they were so close that

(33:15):
I have to give them credit for being close. But
then the broader polls they get a lot of coverage.
Maris Morning, Consul Quinnipiac. Everybody cites Quinnipiac. They had huge
polling errors, much like we no longer really do exit polling.

(33:42):
Campaigns will always do their own internal polling, and they
pay pollsters to do very significant and accurate polling for them.
But I think in terms of the national media, I
think it's time for us to do the same thing
that we're doing. Going to MSNBC and CNN and all

(34:02):
the rest of them just tank their ratings by just
learning to ignore the polls, which I know is hard
to do. Don't get me wrong, I understand it's hard
to do, and it's hard to do because they're in
your face the entire campaign. But in hindsight, for the
third straight time now we realize that they're really probably
just trying to guide opinion, not reflect opinion. And I

(34:27):
think there's something else going on too, which may or
may not appear. Because Trump won't be on a ballot anymore.
This is the last time that Trump will appear, that
Donald Trump will appear on the ballot Baron Trump, who knows,
but Donald Trump Senior will not appear on a ballot again.
So maybe the posters have learned their lesson. Maybe posters

(34:51):
will more accurately flect what people are really thinking. But
then they're going to figure out a way to actually
conduct the poll. How many of you in this audience
have ever responded to a poll? Raise your hand, That's
what I thought. I don't know as broad of the
sphere of influence that I have, as many people as

(35:14):
I know all across the country, I don't know of
one single person, not one, out of the thousands of
people that I know. I don't know one single person
who's ever been pulled, which is not surprising when you
look at some of the sample sizes and you know
they've they've sampled two thousand people, well, two thousand people
out of three hundred and fifty some million Americans is

(35:35):
a tiny, tiny, tiny percentage. So their method methodologies are
going to have to change. I never entered my cell
phone if it first of all, half the numbers that
do show up my carriers shows scam likely or unknown
caller or not in your contacts. So I'm not answering

(35:58):
you want to talk to me, leave a message. I'll
decide whether or not I want to talk to you.
They're going to have to figure out new methodologies to
reach people. And if they can't figure out new methodologies
to reach people, then perhaps they'll just give it up,
just give up the ghost, kind of like MSNBC and

(36:19):
the cables are kind of giving up the ghost because well,
like MSNBC's ratings are now, like you know, in excess
of fifty percent, because nobody's listening. Wh when it comes
to polls, nobody's answering. It's the Weekend with Michael Brown.
Don't forget to follow me on Exit's at Michael Brown USA,
don't forget to send me text messages. The Message app

(36:40):
the numbers three three, one zero three to start your
message with either Mike or Michael. Hang tight, we'll be
right back.
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