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December 7, 2024 • 36 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
To night.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
Michael Brown joins me here, the former FEMA director of talk.

Speaker 1 (00:03):
Show host Michael Brown.

Speaker 3 (00:04):
Brownie, no, Brownie, You're doing a heck of a job.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
The Weekend with Michael Brown. Hey, welcome back to the
Weekend with Michael Brown. I appreciate you tuning in. Glad
to have you with me. You know, if you you
want to follow me on X, it's at Michael Brown USA.
And if you don't want to follow me on X,
it's still at Michael Brown USA. In fact, i'd like
for you to follow me on next and it's at

(00:28):
Michael Brown USA. So get off your ass and go
follow me on X. It's at Michael Brown USA. Go
do it, Come on, do it right now. You're not
doing anything else. Go do that right now. Send me
a text message. The text number on your message app
is three three one zero three three three one zero three.
Just start your message with one of two words, Mike

(00:48):
or Michael. Tell me anything, Ask me anything. I was
just reading through text messages during the break, and let's
just say some of them are very interesting.

Speaker 1 (00:57):
You know.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
If the Marxists, the Communists, the liberals, the democrats, whatever
you want to call them, I don't care. Just call
them whatever you want to call them, just don't call
them to my house. If they are truly neurotic wrecks,
which I think most of them are. You know, I

(01:18):
sometimes I just randomly pick out Alexandria Cossia Cortez. If
you ever just stop and really kind of listen to
some of the things you say she says, you think
to yourself, man, how much did you pay for that
graduate degree? Because I don't think you got your money's work,
or what goes on in that brain? Because or Kamala Harris,

(01:38):
remember all the word solids we used to play of whatever.
Whatever she was saying made no sense whatsoever. So if
you think, I mean it is a it's a neurosis
of some sort. And so if you think that progressivism, Marxism, communism, democratism, whatever,
if you think it is a disease, what's that book?

(01:58):
Liberalism is a disease. I forget the name of the book.
Now it's a pretty good book. If you think they
are neurotic RECs, think about their children. Because the children
are being raised in this climate of wokeness, in this
climate of you know, just backcrap craziness, and often they're

(02:27):
as members of the opposite sex, without the experience, the perspective,
or the maturity to laugh off the sick lies that
are pushed by the cabal. For example, listen to this
CNN host assist a moon bat crazy neurotic mother. Help

(02:52):
this crazy neurotic mother in the brainwashing of a ten
year old boy who has been taught that he is
a girl, and that because he actually is a girl,
he's in physical danger from Donald Trump? Did I set
that up bizarrow enough? Because that's what this is. This

(03:15):
is just weird. What have you had about speaking out?

Speaker 4 (03:18):
Then I'm gonna be like murdered, Like one day, I'm
gonna be walking down the street.

Speaker 2 (03:27):
This is this transgender youth is ten years old. It's
it's a boy who's been taught that he's a girl
and goes by the name of Violet Dumont. I only
say that the full name because it's on CNN there,

(03:48):
you know, it's it's kind of I hadn't thought about
this till just now, but when I found this clip yesterday,
I wanted to emphasize that I'm going to use her
full name, Violent Dumont, because it's on CNN, so it's
public it's public knowledge. It's out there. But I didn't
think about this. How many times do you see in

(04:13):
a newscast a story about, you know, a transgender kid
or whatever, and they have the face pixelated so you
can't see the face. Well not on CNN. Here's a
ten year old's name, face, everything in high definition. What
concerns have you had about speaking out?

Speaker 4 (04:32):
Then I'm going to be like murdered. Like one day
I'm gonna be walking down the street and somebody's gonna
come up and like shoot me or something.

Speaker 2 (04:44):
That's a really scary thing to be worrying about it
ten years old.

Speaker 4 (04:48):
Yeah, that should not be a worry.

Speaker 1 (04:51):
Michelle, what's going through your mind as you hear your
daughter say this? It's sorry to hear say that. And
she asked me three three questions after she heard who
won the election? Are we going to have to move?
Are they going to take me away from you? And

(05:13):
am I not going to be able to get my medicine?
It's just it's frightening.

Speaker 2 (05:22):
You know that. The the teary eyed psychopaths mentioned of
her son's medicine. I as soon refers to whatever pharmaceuticals
puberty blockers or whatever else that they're using to prevent
the child's normal physical development, whatever drugs they have this
kid on, I think is abusive. I sincerely do so.

(05:48):
We talked about this on my program, which is again
why you should be listening to the Weekday Program. We
talked about this in depth on the Weekday Program, and
how the because the Supreme Court this week heard the
case about the Tennessee law that prohibits the mutilation of

(06:08):
a child under the age of eighteen seventeen and under
or the use of pharmaceuticals, puberty blockers and other medications
to alter the physical and the well physical and the
mental condition or state of male to female or female

(06:30):
to male, and I fully support that law. At the
same time that we have a case in US Supreme
Court that's considering the constitutionality of a law that prohibits
a state from or the prohibits doctors, practitioners, healthcare providers,
parents from mutilating their children. In Colorado, they're debating about

(06:56):
banning flavored vape or to buy products because they might
be attractive to children. Because those flavored vape and tobacco
products are harmful to children, so they want to ban that.
In Denver, Colorado, at the same time that they're challenging

(07:18):
a law in Tennessee that says you cannot go cut
off the penis of someone under the age of seventeen,
you cannot perform a double mastectomy on a young girl
under the seventeen or under what weird old world do
we live in? You know, raising your children to be

(07:40):
sexually psychotic, I think just helps those progressive liberal parents
to view themselves as more interesting. I get to be
on CNN. It would be remarkable and probably rare for
a child that's brought up by one of these backcrap

(08:01):
crazy parents to go on to live a healthy, happy,
normal life. Yet we encourage this sort of thing. Now Again,
I emphasize that you turn eighteen years old and you
want to go perform irreversible surgery on yourself, and you've
got a doctor that's willing to do that kind of

(08:23):
abomination of a surgery as opposed to getting psychiatric help
and working your way through it. You know, my weekday
producer came with up with some stats and I can't
quote them exactly, but the US population something like zero

(08:46):
point zero six percent attempt or fully go through committing
suicide you want that rate. What that percentage is of
people who undergo transgender surgery and fully transition from male

(09:08):
to female or female to male youth, their suicide rate
is fifty percent. It's clearly a psychological psychiatric issue. And
parents who indulge in this, and the cabal and CNN
who encourages this mother to come on air and to
talk about this. And do you think this little girl
got it into her own head that maybe she did.

(09:32):
Maybe she watches CNN that Donald Trump's going to come
and kill her or someone's going to murder her on
the streets because she is a boy pretending to be
a girl. Huh. Someone sent me a text message that said,
isn't it interesting that we allow these transition surgeries to occur,

(09:54):
yet when we archaeologically find bones, we are able to
identify the gender based upon the bone structure. Oh, this
was a female that died when vesuvius erupted, and this
was a male based upon the bone structure. Some things
are immutable, despite what modern medicine does. It's the weekend

(10:18):
with Michael Brown. Text the word Mike or Michael to
three three one zero three. Hain't tight. I'll be right
back Hey, it's the weekend with Michael Brown. Glad to
have you with me. I appreciate you tuning in. If
you want to find one of our three hundred, three
hundred and fifty plus affiliates around the country, go to
this website, Michael says go here dot com. Michael Says

(10:39):
go here dot com, pull down the how to listen tab,
and you'll find all the affiliates across the country when
they air the program, and many of them when they
reair the program, because, for example, like here in Denver,
we reair the program later in the day on this
station that I broadcast from Freedom ninety three seven, and
then we broadcasted on my home station KHOW on Sunday evenings.

(11:02):
So many stations around the country do that, and you
can find that at Michael Says go here dot com
under the how to listen TOAB. So spent having spent
almost six years inside the Beltway is the Undersecretary of
Homeland Security. I've spent enough time in d C to
know exactly how things work, and particularly how they work

(11:24):
between UH, most of the rest of the government, at
least my little corner of the federal government, Homeland Security
and the Pentagon. I've worked with the Pentagon in domestic
matters and in foreign matters. I've been aboard aircraft carriers,

(11:44):
I've I've dealt with, you know, the Coast Guard both
here and and I've dealt with the Navy in Southeast Asia.
And I've also worked with obviously, the intel agencies and
groups like the Defense Intelligence Agency, so I kind of

(12:06):
know how they work and I kind of know how
they operate. So what's going on with Pete Hagesith, the
Secretary of Defense nomination that Trump's put up, and what's
going on with his campaign to win over the Senate
before confirmation hearings? And it's important to phrase it that

(12:30):
way because these confirmation hearings are so much more than
just the confirmation hearing themselves. Those hearings are are pretty
much theater because what happens beforehand is really the determining
factor on whether or not someone's ultimately going going to
get confirmed by the US Senate. And what happens is

(12:53):
the same thing I did for both of my numb
for both of my presidential nominations, was you go to
Capitol Hill and you first meet with your authorizing committee. So,
for example, I met with the Senate Homeland Security Committee.
Now I would meet with other committees too, because other
committees might have a piece of the nomination, but primarily

(13:16):
the Senate Homeland Security Committee. So I would meet with
the Republican and the Democrat members on those committees, and
they would grill me about, you know, what's my philosophy
about this? You know, or well we read this in
your background check tell us about what happened there? What
was that all about? There wasn't much in my background

(13:38):
for them to ask me about. I mean, I don't
drink a lot, don't smoke weed, don't haven't committed any crimes,
and there's just wasn't much there, pretty blase and vanilla.
But nonetheless, it was an important part of the nominating
process and the confirmation process us because that gave us

(14:01):
a feel for what's the vote going to be. Now.
Ultimately my votes were unanimous, so there's that. But nonetheless,
you go through that before you have the hearing, because
the hearings are pretty perfunctory because they know what the
questions they are they want to ask because they've already
asked you the questions, and then you're going to give

(14:23):
the answer that you gave them in private in their offices,
so they know what the answers are too. So it's
pretty much for primetime TV. And that's what's happening with
Pete Haigesth. And of course there are allegations that he
doesn't treat women well, that he drinks on the job
that you know, there's one that just I find absolutely hilarious.
He's at ground zero. He's at the nine to eleven Memorial,

(14:47):
and he's wearing running shorts and he's shirtless, and he's
carrying an American flag and he's looking at across, you know,
there's this pool and the around the pool are the
names of all of the victims. And he's standing there
in his running shoes, his shorts, shirtless, carrying an American flag,

(15:09):
a gigantic, a big ass American flag. And the mean
going around is here's your future Secretary of Defense with
out a shirt at ground zero Memorial. Totally out of context,
But that doesn't make any difference because that's part of

(15:29):
the battle that's going on trying to kill this nomination. Now,
why are they trying to kill a nomination? Why do
they think he's unqualified? Do they think that he's a
woman abuser. Do they think he's an alcoholic? No, those
are all unfounded allegations from anonymous sources. So why is

(15:51):
it happening. Well, when there's blood in the water, you
have to confess that when Trump nominated Hegesath, it was
kind of shocking. It wasn't someone that you ever expected
he would nominate. And the President elect initially came out

(16:15):
to bat strongly for Pete Hegesath, but then something changed.
Some of the President's advisors, some of the President elects associates,
alluded to the idea that Hegsath wasn't forthcoming about some
stuff involving his vetting process. And then we get the
New York Times reporting Trump considers Ron Desanders for Defense
Secretary as his Trump's support for Hegsath's falters. The subhead

(16:40):
was President elect Donald J. Trump is weighing his options
even as Pete Heegas meets with senators who muster support.
Accusations of past misconduct have threatened his nomination from the start,
really from the start. Now, for his part, President Trump
is now more restrained in his support for Hegesath. It

(17:01):
appears he now wants him to prove himself in Washington
before publicly going to bat for Hegxath, urging Hegxath. In fact,
Eat verbally encouraged Hegxath to fight for his post. That's
so quintessentially Trump. Oh, there's a little bit of blood
in the water. Now, I'm not going to say anything

(17:24):
except you want this, you go fight for it. I
nominated you, now go prove your metal. Now. Of course,
the Senator is tuned into those developments, and they're not
going to pass up an opportunity to advance their own priorities. So,
knowing that Hegesath's nomination might might be on the ropes,
the Senator smelled blood in the water, and now some,

(17:46):
not all, but some have become hesitant to embrace the nominee.
But what else is going on? What else? Just want
you to think about this. It's The Weekend with Michael Brown.
Text a message to three three one zero three. Start
the message with the word Micha or Michael. I'll be
right back.

Speaker 1 (18:07):
Tonight.

Speaker 2 (18:08):
Michael Brown joins me here, the former FEMA director.

Speaker 1 (18:10):
Talk show host Michael Brown.

Speaker 3 (18:11):
Brownie, No, Brownie, You're doing a heck of a job.

Speaker 2 (18:14):
The Weekend with Michael Brown. Hey, welcome back to the
weekend of Michael Brown. Really glad to have you with me.
If you want to send me a text message, please do.
The number on your message app is three three one
zero three. Just start your message with either the word
Mike or Michael either one. Tell me anything, ask me anything,
and then of course go over and follow me on
X that's at Michael Brown USA. Get over to X

(18:35):
at Michael Brown USA. So we're talking about the nomination
of Pete Hagsath and why he's kind of in the
position that he is. He's having to fight for this nomination,
and the very first reason is because DC is such
an awful place. Senators, democrats, the cabal in general, they

(19:02):
detect blood in the water. Now, part of that is
because this was an off the wall, unexpected nomination. So
people were initially shot Pete hegsas remember how they framed it. Well,
he's just a weekend host on Fox and Friends trying
to minimize his gravitas. My god, he's a combat veteran.

(19:27):
Come on, give the guy a break. But second of all,
it's a chance to go after And this was the
problem I had when I was the undersecretary. Anybody who
works for a particularly a Republican president. The cabal will
go after you to get to the administration because while

(19:50):
they're always going after the president himself, if they can
get any of his appointees in trouble, then that's the
same an Well you're going after, you're going after the troops.
And that's what the cabal does. That's just exactly what
they do. It's a game. It's a huge, horrible game.

(20:11):
Presidents should be with, you know, other than nominating someone
who is just clearly like backcrap crazy, presidents ought to
get who they want in their cabinet. The sentence job
is to advise and consent, and if you don't like someone,

(20:33):
you can tell the president you don't like someone. You
continue to tell the president why you don't like someone.
But at the end of the day, I can't believe
I use that phrase. I hate that phrase. They ought
to just go ahead and confirm them because that's who
the president wanted. So when there's blood in the water,

(20:54):
like there was with Pete Hegseth, they just it's like sharp,
So they just come out because if we have a
chance to kill a nomination, that makes it more difficult
because now the president has to find another alternative, and
they don't care if if the alternative is better or worse.

(21:17):
That takes time, energy, resources, and it gives them another
shot at attacking somebody else. So when there's blood in
the water, they come out just like the sharks. And
that's the first thing that happened here. Anonymous sources saying
that Pete Hags's didn't treat women what right. His mother
had sent an email when he was going through a

(21:37):
divorce that, son, you got to quit treating women badly
or something. I forget what she said, but it sounded
like a typical mother who probably liked the daughter in law,
who was mad that her son was getting divorced, and
then accused him of having a drinking problem, of drinking
on the job, which is kind of interesting because, speaking

(21:58):
for myself, which I think would certainly even be more
so true for a Fox News host, if my employer
thought I was drinking on the job, coming to the job,
you know, as a what do they call it? A
functioning alcoholic? Oh, I think they be coming for me
on my contract. Yeah, And obviously I'm not. And I

(22:23):
don't think Pete Hexas was, because I also think some
of his coworkers would have said something, maybe not to management,
but maybe to him. But nonetheless it was all anonymous anyway.
And now many of us coworkers have come out, including
the most important coworker you know who that is, no,

(22:43):
not the people he sat on the couch with for
the Fox and Friends on the weekend, the makeup artists.
Do you know why the makeup artists the most important
because those are the people you have the closest contact
with very first thing. I've had makeup put on so
many times I can't remember how many times before I
would make an appearance on TV, and the makeup artists

(23:04):
are right in your face because they're putting on makeup.
They know if you've been drinking. None of them have
come forward, so they see, they detect, they smell blood
in the water, and so they become hesitant to support
the nominee. But then there's a second reason, and that

(23:25):
I've already mentioned it, let me spell it out. They
since an opening to fill the slot with somebody else
that might be more you know, lobbyists friendly might be
more friendly to the defense contractors might be less likely
to stir the pot. Because DC's all about. DC is

(23:48):
all about just maintaining the status quo, don't ruffle any feathers,
and Pete Hegseth would be a change agent. A massy,
sprawling bureaucracy that is obviously very top of the list.
It's vitally important to our national interests, but it's also

(24:10):
a bureaucratic, bloated mess with a lot of fraud, waste
and abuse, and a lot of cronyism between defense contractors
and the people who are overseeing those contracts. So for
senators who are strongly aligned with a military industrial complex,
this potentially presents a threat to their network. And of

(24:31):
course it's not going to be welcomed by the institutional,
the administrator, the bureaucrats, the civil service employees who have
it really easy. They don't want to disruptor you know,
Pete Hegseth. I'm not going to play it here, but
he did an interview with Sean Ryan. You should go

(24:51):
listen to part of that. It's the Sean Ryan Show.
He also interviewed Tulsa Gabbard and some others, But you
got to go listen to part of it because you'll
find a candidate who, like the President elect, feels emboldened
with the heartfelt mission to be a change agent, and
I thought, that's what'll be voted for, and that's what
we're going to get with Pete Hegseth. But the political

(25:13):
establishment is never friendly to change agents. I've told you
my stories about trying to get certain things changed within
homeland security and walking into a brick wall. I even
had a good friend of mine who happened to be
an ambassador. I'm not going to tell you to which country,
but a European country who we were having dinner one

(25:35):
time in DC and we were standing outside waiting for
our security details to show up, and he turned to
me and he said, Michael, you've really got to stop
beating your head against the wall. Mister ambassador, what are
you talking about? He says, you're trying to change some
things that I just don't think you're going to be

(25:55):
able to accomplish because the entire bureaucracy, the entire establishment,
doesn't want those changes. They may be right, may maybe
the right thing to do, but you're not gonna get
them done, and you're just beating your head against the wall. Unfortunately,
my wife was sitting there and he heard the ambassador

(26:16):
say that, and it really kind of I think kind
of poison their brain a little bit. So when you're
a change agent inside the Beltway, you're already swimming upstream
because DC does not like change. They got a great
gain going. They're like the house in a casino. They

(26:40):
know how much money they're making and they know how
they're making it, and somebody comes in and wants to
disrupt that. They don't like it. But there's another reason.
Senators want their position of power to be acknowledged. That's
why you go meet with them. You know, I never

(27:01):
lied to a senator, but I may have told I
may have told them everything. If they asked me a question.
Being the lawyer that I am, I gave them just
enough information to answer the question, while at the same
time acknowledging that yes, I need your vote, I want

(27:22):
your vote, and I need your vote just like a
political campaign, because that's what these nominees are doing. They're
running a They're running a political campaign to get those
senators votes so they can get not so they can
get confirmed. The Senate is a is a place of Look.
I have a lot of reverence for the US Senate,

(27:43):
but I also recognize that these are one hundred individuals
that have egos the size of the Grand Canyon, huge egos.
So while for the public it might seem that it's
an annoying and it is annoying to go through all
the rounds of these private meetings in the Q and
A with all these politicians, Yes, it is annoying, But

(28:05):
for the senators, it's a process that they take great
pride in because it makes them feel important, which is
kind of silly because they're already members of a very
exclusive club. There's only one hundred US senators in this country,

(28:26):
and the constitution gives them the authority to advise and
consent when it comes to presidential nominees. So why do
they need their egostroke. They've already got all of that.
So what they're really doing is they're just protecting their
power structure and they're protecting their turf. And they want

(28:46):
me as a nominee or Pete Heggs as a nominee
to know their place. Yes, come and kiss my ring,
come and kiss my feet. That's what they're doing. And
you've got to play the game if you want to
get at least fifty one votes. And they went to

(29:07):
established leverage, so the confirmation may come down to just
a cup. You know, again, you need fifty one. So
that puts some senators in a really advantageous position because
they've got the power to either make or kill your nomination,
and you've got to figure out which and who those

(29:28):
are and then play to them. And of course they're
trying to get a feel for whether or not this
particular nominee is really a good nominee. So they're going
to test Pete Hegesith. And that's why Donald Trump said,
you want this and there's blood in the water, you
go fight for it. And that's exactly what he's doing.

(29:51):
And the tide seems to be turning. We'll know more
whether the tide turns enough or not as he goes
go through this process. It's the weekend with Michael Brown.
Text the word Mike or Michael to three three one
zero three. Hang tight. I'm coming right back. As always.

(30:12):
At the end of the program, I want to thank
everybody for tuning in. I sincerely appreciate you taking some
time out on a Saturday or whenever you listen to
the program and listening to what we have to say.
I really do appreciate it. I do appreciate it too.
If you tell your friends and family about it, spread
the word. Let's keep building this audience up because it's

(30:32):
doing great and I'm very, very appreciative. So who's in
charge until January twentieth? Who is it? Well, it's this guy.
Ostensibly it's this guy.

Speaker 4 (30:48):
Now.

Speaker 2 (30:48):
This is from the Trans Africa summit in Libido, Angola,
in Africa. He joined a bunch of other other leaders
about the Libido Corridor. It's this train that's going to
run from I don't know, from east to west. It's
going to be the longest train in the history of
mankind or something. Joe Biden loves trains. And during this meeting,

(31:11):
he's speaking to a representative from the Democratic Republic of
the Congo and a couple of other people, and one
of the guys is kind of droning on and Biden
falls asleep.

Speaker 3 (31:21):
In the US in support of the development of the
Orbito Corridor, Tanzania have used the Orbito Corridor as an
integral part of a broader strategy to enhance connectivity in
Africa's Closing the implementation project will provide important opportunities for

(31:44):
Africa's development in sectors such as agriculture, renewable energy, transformation,
trade and logistics. Tanzania already undertaking internal consultations in this

(32:05):
project with the original integration that just brought to this initial.

Speaker 2 (32:14):
Beginning to do they had.

Speaker 3 (32:18):
Twenty sixty three will be real.

Speaker 2 (32:21):
Just a couple more seconds. Oh, and he's asleep. The
President of the United States in front of the cameras
is asleep now. According to a new poll, Joe Biden
said to leave the White House as the worst rated
president in modern history. Americans registered to vote Raster rank

(32:44):
the last nine presidents of the United States, and President Biden,
the most current president, came in dead last, behind Richard
Nixon and Jimmy Carter. The sad part is Jimmy Carter,
in hospice is probably doesn't have the enough brain power
to understand that he's no longer the worst president in

(33:05):
American history. It's kind of sad. I wish he'd wake
up just enough for his family to say, Dad, granddad,
guess what, You're no longer the worst president in American history.
Forty four percent of the respondents had a negative view
of Biden, placing him in the bottom two rankings, with

(33:25):
only fourteen percent putting him in the top two rankings. Trump,
in contrast, had thirty percent of respondents placing him in
the top two rankings ahead of Bill Clinton. Jay Ol
Partners conducted the poll. Its founders James Johnson, described the
results as worse than I expected. He says, voters have

(33:46):
obviously obviously looked at his age, general conduct in office,
his botched withdrawal from Afghanistan, the situation of the Southern border,
and decided that in their own views, it qualifies him
to be the worst president in modern history. His popularity
has dipped since he dropped out of the race. You

(34:07):
would have thought it would have stabilized or maybe even
gone up a little bit once he withdrew. No, we
haven't even seen him, and it's gotten worse. His recent
announcement to give a sweeping, decade spanning pardon to Hunter
was one of the reasons he was so unpopular in
this particular poll. Now could it be because he told

(34:31):
us over and over and over that no, I will
not pardon Hunter. I will not, I will not, I
will not. He lied to us all the time. District
Judge of Mark Scarzy, who's involved in one of Hunter's cases,
criticize the pardon, claiming that was partially unconstitutional and intend
to rewrite history. Well, I don't think it's unconstitutional. He

(34:52):
has an absolute right to issue those pardons, even extending
them for as long as he did, which I know
is unpressed. But there's nothing in the constitution that limits
the power that pardon. But if Biden was concerned about
his legacy, he does not give a rat's ass anymore.
What soever? Why go to Angola, who's running the country.

(35:19):
Tell me the last time you saw Kamala Harris. Tell
me the last thing time you heard anything other than
what a couple of weeks ago when she talked to
her donors. The donors are coming after her. She owes
money when she did that Who's My Daddy podcast or
whatever it is. They spend one hundred thousand dollars billing
a fake studio. Why not go to the studio where
she does the podcast itself. Holy Crapola. The Democrat Party

(35:45):
is imploding, and I say, just let it implode. And
for Republicans who keep talking about, well, Democrats need to
be doing this, they need to be doing that, shut up,
just shut up, because everything I've heard, would you say
that they need to be doing I agree with, and
so why give them free advice, why give them any

(36:07):
sort of hint whatsoever that you ought to be doing
this or that. Biden is now, I know it's dangerous.
How many days we have December seven, we got till
January twentieth, so we've got twenty four We got forty
four days or something until January twentieth. Let them flounder.

(36:29):
Just let them flounder. Don't help them at all. It's
the weekend with Michael Brown. Don't forget any time you're
listening podcaster. Otherwise, you can send me a text message
the number three three one zero three. Start the message
with the word Mike or Michael. Everybody have a great weekend.
I'll talk to you next Saturday.
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