Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I do have a really good idea for your iHeartRadio app.
Let's have an option where we can cut the top
of the hour news and the bottom of the hour
news and then have it pop back on after they're
done with the propaganda.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
Propaganda?
Speaker 3 (00:19):
How tare you?
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Oh, that's ABC News. Don't disparage David muiror an ABC News.
You know I have a program. Let me pull it
up real quickly. I hate talking back, as you guys are.
Just let's see here we go.
Speaker 3 (00:41):
That's why they keep leaving them.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
I know, well, this fits same with something I wanted
to talk about. Let's see what ABC says about this.
Speaker 4 (00:52):
The President's order doesn't actually declassify anything. It does direct
agencies to come up with a plan for the release
of the still secret document. That plan is due in
two weeks for the JFK records and in forty five
days for the MLK and RFK material. Experts who have
been steeped in these cases for decades called the president's
move an important and positive step, but they're still skeptical,
(01:13):
fearing a cumbersome declassification process is still in store.
Speaker 2 (01:17):
So that's a Stephen Portner This Morning, This Morning on
ABC News. Now, Actually, it's interesting that I hadn't heard
that till I just I just it's number two on
this list here from ABC News. But that's actually an
accurate report about what Trump did yesterday. He signed an
executive order that says, you need to come up with
(01:39):
a process, and I'm going to declassify these documents. And
when I read the story yesterday, I thought, you know,
there's a I'm not sure people understand what declassifying documents means.
So I'm holding I'm holding my notebook up that has
(02:00):
all my sponsors in it. Let's say that this notebook
is in a red folder, uh, or the notebook itself
has in the plastic sleeve in front has a red
folder that's got little hash marks around the side, and
(02:20):
then across the top it says top secret. And I
can't I'm just trying to visualize what those folders used
to look like. Says top secret across the center, and
then down below in as kind of a subheading, it
might have the classifications like it's it's a uh special
sci Special compartmentalized information. It might be a S A
(02:44):
p S Special Access Program. And so then you open
the folder up or that you. Yeah, You open the
notebook up, and then every page will have at the top,
and usually on the bottom it'll have the classification top secret.
And then over here on the left margin, every paragraph,
(03:11):
or maybe not always every paragraph, but usually almost every paragraph,
the paragraphs themselves will have markings that indicate whether this
particular language, that paragraph itself is maybe it's just for
official use only, which is a classification, but it's not
(03:34):
necessarily a secret classification. Or it might say no form,
which means no foreign it's top secret and you cannot
disclose it to any foreign people. It's only for domestic consumption.
So if Trump orders the declassification of this notebook, then
(03:57):
all of those markings will be marked through like a
single line, just noting that that's no longer classified. But
the information itself may be redacted. And this is where
(04:17):
I think people are getting a little too hyped up
about the Kennedy and the Kennedy and the MLK files.
They could easily declassify them. The real rub's going to
be what's going to be unredacted.
Speaker 3 (04:36):
So basically the entire page could be just blacked out.
Speaker 5 (04:40):
Right, it could just be blacked out, but he declassified
it but right, that's.
Speaker 2 (04:44):
Right, or he may or they may go through and
declassify the whole thing. And then you're reading along in
a paragraph and then you get to the one key
name about somebody that did, somebody that did, somebody that
was in the CIA that was cooperating with the FBI,
and those names were reducted.
Speaker 3 (05:05):
And who was really on the Grassy Knoll?
Speaker 2 (05:06):
Yeah? Who you know? And then we had placed on
the Grassy Knoll dragon red Beard. But you can't read
the words dragon red Beard because that's been blocked out,
so you don't know it. So I admire and I
appreciate the initiative to do this, and I do agree.
(05:28):
Don't some of you are gonna jump down my throat
about this. I just think people think that suddenly the
the FBI and the CIA and whoever, the National Archives,
whoever has any of these documents, are gonna just, you know,
somebody's gonna go to the copy machine, some portal intern
(05:51):
is gonna go to the copy machine, and then boxes
and boxes and boxes and boxes just to you know,
take up, you know, in an entire room somewhere. He's
just gonna sit there at the copy machine and copy
everything and we're gonna just skip to read the whole
ship shabang. No, that's not how it's going to happen.
And I don't think that's how it should happen, because
there will there will be some names that you know,
(06:15):
they because they interviewed thousands of people. Well if if
they interview for example, I forget how old I was.
I wasn't very old when Kennedy was assassinated. But let's
just say they came in and interviewed me. I had
nothing to offer. I don't want my name release that
I was the that I was interviewed because I had
(06:37):
nothing to say. Why do I not want my name released?
Because I guarandamntee you that there will be people in
the media and otherwise that will come clamoring to my
doorstep wanting to, you know, shove a microphone in my face,
shove a camera in my face. Okay, why'd you say?
(06:58):
What do you really say? Why do you really know?
Speaker 6 (07:00):
Well?
Speaker 2 (07:00):
I didn't know anything. And if you read that paragrapher
of my name's been blacked out, it says we interviewed
Michael Brown. He didn't know Pheess, so I didn't know Pheess,
so I do think that some names ought to be protected,
and I think some things probably ought to be redacted.
So don't get just all that excited about it. Let's see, uh,
(07:26):
of course we have. This is a short one. This
is just ABC News.
Speaker 7 (07:34):
So once in a lifetime storm was plenty for Walter
Sullivan of New Orleans.
Speaker 3 (07:38):
Living here in the south.
Speaker 2 (07:40):
Now think about this now, I'm sorry, let me finish it.
Speaker 3 (07:44):
Let's talk that I went out and be digging myself out.
Speaker 7 (07:47):
The city doesn't have snowplows per se, so it used
front loaders, road grads, and other highway construction equipment to
clear the roads. That ninety year old Governor HUEP. Long
Bridge over the Mississippi River has finally opened gymerally in
ABC News, did you get the beginning of that, the
once in a lifetime storm, the.
Speaker 2 (08:08):
Once in the oh's a once in a lifetime storm?
Well yes, uh so they talked to some eighty year
old guy. So there hasn't been an ice storm in
New Orleans in eighty years. That's a lot different than
it's never snowed in New Orleans in the history of
the world, which is not true. It has, and they've
(08:33):
had ice storms before. But you see how they do it. Now,
this one's kind of funny because this is actually in
one of my tabs today, but I haven't intended to
talk about it. But have you heard this?
Speaker 8 (08:48):
He has now proposed this resolution to amend the Constitution
to allow presidents who are serving non consecutive terms to
run and be elected for a third term. This is
considered a long shot here. It would have to be
passed by both chambers with a two thirds vote. It
also needs to be ratified by thirty eight states, but
either way that is notable. This is being proposed by
(09:09):
a Republican who is very loyal to Donald Trump.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
Yeah, you know, quill, wasting your time on that. It's
not going to happen. I'm actually opposed to it. I
don't want anyone serving more than eight years as president,
whether it's consecutive or non consecutive. I just don't want it.
Whether it's Donald Trump, Abraham Lincoln, or George Washington, I
don't want that. You know, that's feeding into this idea
(09:34):
that you know, we don't want a monarchy and we
don't want you know, we get so sick of Congress,
the legislative branch that these same incumbents get elected over
and over and over again. But now we finally get
a president we like, and now we want to extend
it and giving them an additional four years in addition
to the four years he's had and the four years
(09:55):
he's not that he had, and now the four years
that he has, we want to add four more on that. No,
stop it, people are just getting nuts. Oh this is
pretty good. This one pisses me off.
Speaker 8 (10:07):
Pag Set can only afford to lose three Republican senators
Markowski and Collins make two. We're also going to be
watching Senator Mitch McConnell tonight. He could be a wild
card in all of this, but either way, Republican leadership
is very confident he has the vote.
Speaker 2 (10:19):
Yeah, Pete heggs, I will get confirmed. It may take
it might take uh Vice President Vance to break a tie,
but he's gonna He's gonna get confirmed. But let me
just comment for a moment about Lisa Murkowski, Susan Collins,
and Mitch McConnell. All three of you can bite my ass.
(10:44):
You know what this is? Who Trump wants all the
mud that the Democrats have slung up on the wall,
hoping that Actually it's not mud, it's manure that none
of it's stuck. Your cavanaughing of Pete Haggs is an
abject failure, So just stop it. You know the thing
(11:05):
that Pete Heggs has said during his confirmation hearing that
I thought was the most important thing, because I truly
believe it myself. You want people smarter than you to
surround you when you're leading an organization like that. Do
you think Jamie Diamond, that the head of JP Morgan Chase,
(11:26):
do you think that he wants stupid people around him? No,
he wants the smartest people he can find around him.
I think Jamie Diamond himself is smart, but he wants
smarter people around him so that he can get the
absolute best advice and recommendations, which helps him even look
smarter and runs the company even better. Pete Heggs has
(11:48):
said there's that he was smart enough to know what
he doesn't know, and he wants smart people to surround
him so that he can manage the Pentagon the right way.
That's a leader. That's a smart manager. What else does now?
You got me off on ABC News? What else are
(12:09):
they doing this morning? Let's see, I have no idea
what some of these are.
Speaker 9 (12:18):
Immigration a top issue in Trump's campaign, The White House
now eager to show they're delivering across the country in
major cities like Boston, New York, and Newark. Some communities
rattled by ice raids.
Speaker 2 (12:30):
They're rattled, they are rattled by the ice raids. I mean,
who saw it coming. Who could have possibly imagined, after
you know, a years long campaign, after all the speeches,
after all the polling numbers, after the defeat of the Democrats,
who could positively imagine that the Democrat that Republicans would
(12:55):
actually go out and do what they said they were
going to do.
Speaker 9 (12:58):
The Newark may A saying he will not stand by
idly while people are being unlawfully terrorized. Trump has promised
the large unlawfully terrorized.
Speaker 2 (13:09):
You know, do we unlawfully terrorize if somebody robs a
bank and we find out that they're holed up, you know,
at grandma's house somewhere, and we send the swat team
to go get the bank robber, who literally are an
armed robber who threatened to kill people in the security
guard and the tellers and everybody else and stole your
(13:29):
money and then runs to grandma's house and hides in
the basement and so we surround. Do we really report that, Oh,
we're terrorizing this armed robbery suspect. I'm not saying that
all these illegal aliens are the equivalent of an armed robber,
but they are criminals. Yes, uh, oh, this might be good.
(13:54):
This is immigration. North Carolina have a plan.
Speaker 10 (13:57):
We help people have power of attorney so that other
people can pick up their children that are in school
if they get picked up at work or another place.
We're telling people not to open the doors.
Speaker 2 (14:11):
Wow, there there are your tax dollars hard at work
in North Carolina. Yes that you know that whoever that was,
she works for an NGO and they're advising people don't
answer the door, and we'll give you advice, we'll find
you lawyers, we'll do everything. And of course they're being
funded by you know, tax dollars, so that you are
(14:33):
paying for them to help go fight the deportation of
illegal aliens. What a country? What a country? Oh, this
might be interesting. This is the Nash County Sheriff's plan.
According to reporter Tom George from ABC News.
Speaker 11 (14:50):
Way County Sheriff's office telling ABC quote, the agency's plan
is to continue to maintain a good working relationship with
all federal, state, and local agencies while focusing on the
safety and well b of Wake County residents. In Nash County,
Sheriff Keith Stone says, well, he supports efforts to tighten
the border.
Speaker 12 (15:06):
Secure that border, the real criminals, cenis communities, get them
out of here. Work towards the people that are here
being safe and making sure that they have the safe
routes and the legal routes to become citizens.
Speaker 11 (15:20):
Locally, his office is only interested in targeting crime.
Speaker 12 (15:22):
We're not focused on going out trying to round somebody
up that's not causing criminal activity.
Speaker 2 (15:28):
Oh so, amnesty and then, last, but not least, this
is only six seconds.
Speaker 7 (15:34):
Taxes descends Washington a bill for border enforcement time. Jim
Ryan EBC News, the story is coming out. Tell ya
Texas sends.
Speaker 2 (15:42):
Why Governor Abbott sent a bill to d C and
for billions of dollars for the cost that Texas has
incurred dealing with illegal immigration. Now, after Trump gave that
speech in which he just heaped praise upon praise upon
(16:04):
praise of Governor Abbott, what do you think Donald Trump's
saying today? Where's that Bill all. I told that guy
sitting in the wheelchair that I loved him and he
did a great job and we ought to, you know,
congratulations on a job well done. The audio but see
sent me a bill. No, I'm not paying no damn
bill till there? Do you want to leave me and
(16:27):
talk back and bitch about the propaganda ABC moves. I
guess it's kind of the mood I'm in today, kend
of the mood.
Speaker 6 (16:35):
I'm here.
Speaker 2 (16:35):
You have some more ABC moves. Let's see the surge
at the border of US troops.
Speaker 3 (16:44):
IM ABC's Dave Packer. That's coming up.
Speaker 2 (16:46):
Oh, can't wait to hear that.
Speaker 13 (16:51):
You might get the news breaks some uh I don't know,
NGO or some company trying to protect illegals. And if
you see an ice raid, please call us. Oh boy,
am I going to have fun with that today.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
Yeah. I don't recall if on the KDVR story they
gave a telephone number out or not, but that little
nitw that was on KDVR about you know, if you
see something on social media that is, you know, false,
be sure to let us know because we got to
keep our community. Somebody on the text line said that
that's one of their bugaboo words too. I hate that word.
(17:29):
Our community. Yeah, I got your community right here. All right,
let's let's swerve, you know, drag And I just found
out that the Boss is listening to us this morning.
Speaker 3 (17:40):
Oh so we better behave?
Speaker 2 (17:42):
So do we have to behave now?
Speaker 3 (17:44):
Never?
Speaker 2 (17:44):
Why why would we do?
Speaker 6 (17:46):
What?
Speaker 3 (17:47):
Why start now?
Speaker 2 (17:48):
The two guys who don't give a rat task about
anything except maybe some light bulbs in the studio once
in a while, that we're now going to pay attention,
like trying to be serious radio people now because the
Boss is listening this morning. All I know is he
must be desperate for something to do.
Speaker 5 (18:04):
Desperate just needs a bit of entertainment. Everybody else is
just boring. He's just looking for a reason to firus.
That's exactly what's going on.
Speaker 2 (18:15):
I just expect, you know, at ten o'clock to be
greeted at the door, you know here, what maybe we
have your key card please? Yep? So to get serious
for a moment, you know how. I love the World
Economic Forum? And Trump gave that speech yesterday in which
(18:36):
he just I mean, it was glorious to watch because
he stayed. By the way, did you notice that He
didn't stand in a fake oval office. He just went
to the In the old Executive Office building across from
West Executive Drive, there is a how would I describe it,
(18:58):
just like a production room. It's like it's little, it's
like it's a small studio, and so it has, you know,
all sorts of backdrops and stuff that you can use.
And often, unlike Biden who had to have enough room
for a teleprompter and everything else, Trump appeared to be
using that studio in the old Executive Office building. So he,
(19:19):
you know, he walks across the street. They got the
speech on the teleprompter or probably on teleprompter and in
a notebook, and he stands up and he lectures these
globalists sitting over in Davos. And you probably didn't think
about this, but remember yesterday we played the sound bites
of old lerch himself, John Kerry, John Heinz Kerry. Well,
(19:46):
you know he was sitting in the audience seeing just seething. Wow,
Donald Trump was speaking. And then they made the mistake
of going to a Q and A. And that's when
Trump decided it was time to lecture Bank of America
about d banking conservatives. And then of course, Bank of
America has to issue a statement that why we never
(20:06):
d bank anybody. We have to follow all the rules
and regulations and we're not allowed to be political when
it comes to banking. Well, really, ask Professor Eastman about that.
Ask all of the conservatives. Ask you know, the people
that you know, try to fight abortion around the country.
Ask the people that do all these conservative things about
(20:27):
how many times they got d bank by Bank of America.
So they're all sitting there listening, and in the group
is Ursula von dert I never can say her name,
Ursula vonder Len. You know who she is. Well, she's
the President of the EU, she's the EU EU Commissioner.
(20:51):
She laid out her view of what constitutes the global agenda,
particularly as it related to the climate and all of
the Of course she's speaking to the congregants of the
Church of the climate activists, so that's what she's doing.
This woman is bacrap crazy, and in doing so, the
(21:18):
bombastic rhetoric that she employs sounds pretty much identical to
a famous scene from a great nineteen eighty four film
called Ghostbusters. Now you can't make this stuff up. Now
that's just let me just read you the transcript and
you'll hear from her in just a man. So just
(21:39):
hold your horses. The coming years will be vital well
beyond Europe, all continents will have to speed up the
transition towards that zero and deal with the growing burden
of climate change. Its impact is impossible to ignore. Waves
(22:00):
across Asia. Why that's never happened before? Has it? Floods
from Brazil to Indonesia. That's never happened before.
Speaker 3 (22:08):
Either, Fires in California.
Speaker 2 (22:10):
From Africa to Europe. Wildfires in Canada, Greece and California. Wow,
there's never been a fire until this year, caused by
the Santa Ana wins. It's fascinating. Hurricanes in the US
and the Caribbean really sizzam. Climate change is still on
(22:35):
the top of the global agenda, from decarbonizing to nature
based solutions, From building a circular economy.
Speaker 3 (22:45):
The first day on the planet, I think so dragon.
Speaker 2 (22:49):
But from building a circular economy, you're the very first
thing I thought about when I read from building a
circular economy, I thought about a certain kind of that's
in a circle. That's what I thought. That's what she's
doing right here to all those congregants of the Church
of the Climate Activists to the developing nature credits the
(23:12):
Paris Agreement, which Trump just withdrew from. The Paris Agreement
continues to be the best hope for all of humanity.
So Europe will stay the course and keep working with
all nations that want to protect nature and stop global warming.
Now that caught my ear too. I thought we were
worried about climate change. She's worried about global warming. I
(23:36):
gud use some damn good global warming right now. It's
golden and a whale digger's ass out there. But amazing,
isn't it. She seriously wants everybody to think that wildfires, droughts, floods,
hurricanes never existed before you bought that damn jeep, Grand Cherokee.
Speaker 3 (23:53):
It's one of my favorite sayings. You must be new here,
he must be.
Speaker 2 (23:58):
It's the most ridiculous thing ever. Yet this long time
leader of the European Union is totally and dead serious.
So I thought, you know, to show you just how
unserious vonder Leon truly is, I give you the famous
Dogs and Cats living Together mass hysteria from Ghostbusters.
Speaker 12 (24:21):
You could accept the fact that the city is headed
for a disaster of biblical proportion?
Speaker 2 (24:25):
What do you mean biblical?
Speaker 4 (24:27):
What he means this Old Testament from their real wrath
of God type stuff, fire and brimstone coming down from
the skies, rivers and seas.
Speaker 12 (24:35):
Boiling, fortyears of darkness, earthquakes, volcanoes, dead rising.
Speaker 2 (24:39):
From the greed, human sacrifice.
Speaker 1 (24:41):
Dogs and cats living together, mass hystaria.
Speaker 2 (24:44):
Dogs and cats living together, mass hysteria. She's not done,
ladies and gentlemen, Ursula wonder Leon. This is just she
spoke for almost thirty minutes, so you know this one
should do. We know the boss is listening. Why don't
(25:04):
we just let this thirty minute sound by play and
you know, just go get some breakfast? How about that?
Why not?
Speaker 5 (25:11):
And then breaking news here from the boss. Hey, you
got your light bulbs, and please don't behave that would
be boring.
Speaker 2 (25:25):
Yeah, but I still haven't gotten my uh cleaning done.
Called the new rid. Now that we know he's listening,
this is called you talk about chasing a squirrel and
it's Friday. We really don't give her a frat task anyway.
So now as love as we're going to have this
conversation on air. Yeah, I got my light bulbs. Well,
I owe him a drink or too for some light bulbs?
Speaker 3 (25:48):
What's the book?
Speaker 2 (25:48):
If you give a think about this, he could get
a full meal, say it Shanahan's. If I could just
get this studio like sanitized, a full meal at Shanahan's.
Speaker 5 (26:01):
If you give him out of cookie, or if you
give a pig a pancake, or is it's the same.
Speaker 2 (26:05):
I've never heard any of those. Give cookie.
Speaker 5 (26:08):
Oh yeah, then he'll ask for some milk. And once
he gives a you know what, then he gets asked
for something else after the milk. And then he asked
for something else.
Speaker 3 (26:16):
That's me, that's you.
Speaker 2 (26:18):
Well, of course that's me. I don't deny that. Oh,
let's do this. Let's take a let's take let's take
a break early because now I don't have time to
play vander Lean, so that the goober's out there can
enjoy the the globals of all globalists telling us just
how bad we are.
Speaker 14 (26:36):
Mike, the local news never uses the word illegal for immigrants.
It's always just immigrants. Thank you for using the words
illegal immigrants when speaking about the illegal immigrants.
Speaker 2 (26:56):
Well, actually, and thank you, but I actually try to
use the legal monology, which is contained in the Immigration
and Naturalization Act, which still is the controlling legal authority
in this country, which the term is illegal alien. You know,
the term that bugs me the most, migrant. That's the
you know, we just dragon. We should have the word
(27:19):
of the day that irritates Michael Brown.
Speaker 3 (27:22):
We don't have enough time for that.
Speaker 2 (27:23):
Well, you're true. Well, just one word of the day,
Just one so every day with the word of the day.
Today's word would be community. Community that drives me crazy. Yeah, oh,
it's about our community. So anyway, back to urschel LeVander Leon.
Here she is giving her a welcoming address at the
(27:47):
annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in DeVos. Now
she has a heavy accent. It's hard to understand, so
some of you are hard of hearing people we know
who you are. Might have to listen pretty carefully, druput.
Speaker 6 (28:03):
In recent decades, our supply chain dependencies are times weaponized,
as shown by Russia's energy blackmail, or exposed as brittle
when global shocks such as the pandemic.
Speaker 2 (28:22):
You guys and the World Health Organization are the ones
that shut down the world. You shut down all the
supply chains. The cognitive disson It is simply.
Speaker 6 (28:33):
Amazing without warning, and the very inter connectors that bring
us together, like under see data cable, have become targets
from the Baltic Sea to the Taiwan Strait. The cooperative
world order we imagined twenty five years ago has not
(28:57):
turned into reality.
Speaker 2 (29:00):
No it hasn't. You know what, Here's what may I
interpret for you? Thank you? Because I speak government bull crap.
The new world order that twenty five years ago, that
the EU said out upon to try to create, and
that you know, democrats in this country and then all
of the radical leftists and Marxists all across the fruited
(29:23):
Plain tried to implement has failed. Yeah, it's failed.
Speaker 6 (29:29):
Instead, we have entered a new era of harsh cear
strategic competition.
Speaker 2 (29:37):
And who are the people that are harshly competing with
us economically? Oh yeah, the Supreme Leader Jijing being of
the Chinese Communist Party, Vladimir Putin of the old Soviet Union. Yes, oh,
(29:57):
she probably is also thinking about that dick, that dictator
for life, Donald J. Trump.
Speaker 6 (30:04):
The well It's major economies are vying for access to
raw materials, new technologies, and global trade routes.
Speaker 2 (30:13):
Wait a minute. Is she saying that countries are vying
for raw materials like I don't know, uh, fossil fuels
or all those little kids mining you know, cobalt or
whatever it is they mine with their fingers, and all
those little you know, apphole countries. Is that what she's
talking about? You know, all those rare earth minerals that
(30:33):
we need for all of the stuff that we use,
and the fossil fuels, the uranium that we need for
nuclear power plants and all that. Is that what she's
talking about? Is this an admission against self interest?
Speaker 6 (30:46):
From AI to clean tech, from quantum to space, From
the Arctic to the South China Sea, the race is on.
As this competition intensifies, we will likely continue to see
frequent use of economic tools such.
Speaker 2 (31:08):
As And listen closely because here it turns so as
this competition increases, as it gets difference different, you're like
to see certain things sound familiar.
Speaker 6 (31:21):
From the Arctic to the South China Sea, the race
is on. As this competition intensifies, we will likely continue
to see frequent use of economic tools such as sanctions,
export controls, and tariffs.
Speaker 2 (31:39):
Ooh, sounds like the Trump agenda, doesn't it? Sanctions, export controls, and.
Speaker 6 (31:46):
Tariffs that are intended to safeguard economic and national security.
Speaker 2 (31:53):
At least, she admits they're intended to safeguard economic and
national security.
Speaker 6 (31:58):
But it is important that we balance the imperative to
say've goud our security against our opportunity to innovate and
enhance our prosperity.
Speaker 2 (32:12):
Which I find fascinating because that's exactly what Trump's trying
to bring back to this country. Innovation, prosperity, you know,
grow the for the history of mankind, it's been about
improving our standard of living. Now that comes with downsides,
(32:35):
because I think Americans have become kind of dumb, fat
and happy. But nonetheless, do you really want to give
up fossil fuels so that you can not efficiently heat
your home, you know, sit around and shiver all day,
or not be able to have fresh strawberries or raspberries
from Chile? Really you want to give all that up?
(32:58):
That's what they want us to do, yes, and that's
why they are so afraid of Trump. You know the
other thing about that podcast I told you to listen
to about hr McMaster, he addresses that very point that
Trump's America First Agenda is not like you know, Charles
(33:20):
Lindbergh in World War One. No, this is about America
first