Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
So I guess we don't where we would normally play
a talk back if there were any talkbacks. But don't worry. No, no,
don't worry about it right now. Don't worry about it
right now. But Jack and there weren't any. Unfortunately, there weren't.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
There weren't.
Speaker 1 (00:12):
That was the first thing I did want to hop
on the computer. Do you know what we're going to
have to? Just imposed demerits? I think, just imposed demerits.
But I got I'm want to ask you a question.
I know, I know you're busy, but you know you're
not doing anything else today. You're stuck with me, So
you don't just deal with it, right? I mean, come on,
(00:34):
deal with it. Have you heard the new promo with
the liners? So there was a story in the trade magazine.
Do you know I can see electronic trade magazines, and
one of them, I forget whether it was Talkers or
Inside Audio or whatever, if they had something about iHeart
put out a big press release yesterday about how we're
all human, we're not AI. Did you see that? Have
(00:58):
you heard that?
Speaker 2 (00:58):
What I did?
Speaker 1 (00:59):
I was I was asking and grant yesterday, like what
is up with the guaranteed human thing?
Speaker 2 (01:03):
And he was filling me in some on that isn't so.
First of all, grant is a grant doesn't really exist. No,
that was the irony there.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
I thought, Yeah, that's funny because he claimed that he
was here yesterday, but he didn't.
Speaker 2 (01:15):
He didn't do squat.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
But is it real or is it memorys You probably
don't remember that reference either, although I was impressed today
when I talked to you earlier you got.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
The Steve Martin the jerk reference. Yeah. I love my
Steve Martin, one of the greats man.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
Are you watching the series right now on I forget
Hulu or something.
Speaker 2 (01:32):
Murders in the Building.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
Yeah, I've seen the first couple of seasons of it,
but I'm behind now.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
There's just too much stuff to watch out there.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
There is too much to watch, and they've done like
a bazillion of those and my wife is hooked on
him and I enjoy them. But it's like, you know
you have too much, you know, you have too much
Taco Bell or too much McDonald's.
Speaker 2 (01:51):
You'd ream. I can't do that for a while. Exactly
same with that.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
I mean it, GE's like, Okay, let's watch a few
album and then let's go watch something else and then
go back to it again later. But I just got
a big kick out of the whole thing about, oh hi, heart,
we're human.
Speaker 2 (02:07):
Now.
Speaker 1 (02:07):
If you if you've ever been in this building, and
I can't say anything about because I know little Zach
well enough, you had to really kind of blast him
like I normally do my producers and my board ops.
But if you know, most of the people that I
work with, they're anything but human. I mean, they may
be a part of an anatomy of a human you know,
a particular let's just say, serves with an A and
(02:28):
ns with a whole that that mad, you know, but
I know whether that's AI or that's real or not.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
But this building is not very full of human beings. Ah,
if you will, Yeah, Ah, they're ahs. Yeah they're not ais,
they're ahs. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:41):
That's very good. That's that's very good. You're not nearly
as dumb as what Shannon and the others told me.
Speaker 2 (02:46):
You work.
Speaker 1 (02:49):
So anyway, I just want you to know that I'm live,
if not memorys, I'm really here today now. I wan't
to be here tomorrow and Friday, but I really am
here today. You know that I am a I love
X formerly known as Twitter. I know a lot of
you do not, but it is a great insight into
(03:09):
American culture. And once you learn how to curate X.
And by the way, you should be following me on
X if you're not at Michael Brown USA. In fact,
that would be a wonderful Thanksgiving present if you would
go over to X right now at Michael Brown USA
and give me a follow. I like it because if
you and I've got certain lists. I have lists of
(03:32):
people that drive me crazy, you know, usually you know.
Speaker 2 (03:35):
Far left, lack of doodles.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
I have, you know, a list of Colorado politicians so
I can see what they're tweeting out or posting or
whatever the correct term is. I've got lists of different
news organizations that I want to see what stories they're posting,
because it's kind of like the old AP, you know,
so the UPI or the newswire, the news services, and
so it really is an insight. And then watching people
(04:00):
argue with each other gives me an opportunity to look
at the different arguments. And then sometimes I use it
just because it's fun to see the stupidity, because stupidity
abounds in this country. And if you're not using X
and you you've tried it, I would suggest you go
(04:21):
back and try it again. Don't follow everybody, now, you know,
I just ask you to follow me, But I'm telling
you I don't follow everybody. And the reason I do
that is because, again, I want to keep my timeline
somewhat curated, so I will certainly see if you're following
me and you post something, I'm probably going to see it.
(04:42):
But I don't put a lot of people in my timeline,
primarily because I don't have time to, you know, with
twenty and look, I'm a little guy.
Speaker 2 (04:51):
I don't have you know, hundreds of thousands of followers.
Speaker 1 (04:53):
I've got, you know, some twenty some thousand followers, and
that's difficult enough to keep up with.
Speaker 2 (04:58):
But nonetheless, I really do.
Speaker 1 (05:00):
Think that of all the social media platforms, Facebook has
kind of turned into the old aging boomers looks over
my shoulder, the old aging boomers. X is a pretty
good cross section. But when it comes to like the
blue check marks. For example, I've been verified back when
(05:23):
you didn't have to pay to be verified. I got verified,
use a little blue check marks, and everybody, oh, I
gotta have a little blue check mark. I got mine,
I know, back in twenty fifteen or something, as you know,
because I was a so called public figure whatever the
crap that means. Today you can actually pay Elon Musk
because he doesn't have enough money.
Speaker 2 (05:43):
See, he doesn't have enough money, so you need to
pay Elon Musk. So you given meet a little blue
check mark too.
Speaker 1 (05:48):
And then once you get the blue check mark, and
then that apparently gives you some sort of if you know,
it's better for the algorithm, and you get more likes
than you get your your tweets or posts, you know,
exposed for more people.
Speaker 2 (06:01):
Who knows how the algorithm really works. I don't know.
I don't care. But there is something new on X
that I find fascinating.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
If you want to refer to say, the influencer industry,
they're now absolutely apoplectic about a new function on X
which allows you to see the location from which any
given account is actually operating. Now, this latest update makes
it possible to establish when and where your account was
(06:37):
set up, so you can, for example, if you go
on mine and you look at the profile page and
then you click on the date where I join, that's
a hyperlink, and it will now show you when the
account was set up, whether it has changed its name
since it was originally set up, and the location from
(06:58):
which they originated their account, from which they post and
even where they downloaded the app to use X now
a sensible measure, you might think, But not of X
is where you make your living, and you do so
by inserting yourself into other countries' internal politics, which is
(07:21):
happening here a lot. There are really no firm figures
on how many earn a you know, a living this way,
but even the most cursory glance through the you know,
the hel site formerly known as Twitter, we'll tell you
the number isn't significant.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
But it is near impossible.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
When you go to the following there's two columns, the
following column and then the four U column. And if
you go into the four U column, you'll easily spot
accounts that have a lot of US flights, like people
put little US flags like the little flag pin, the
pel pins that all these Congress critors were making sure
that you understand that they you know, I love Godmother
(08:01):
and apple Pie. What a bullcrap, But anyway, you'll see
all these US flags in their profile and then header
pictures and aliany of posts, images, and obviously videos that
highlight the very worst of America's political, cultural, and racial divisions.
Speaker 2 (08:20):
Yeah, while this is posed as the output.
Speaker 1 (08:23):
Of American citizens that are frustrated by you know, who
knows what it is, sometimes, in fact, more often than not,
it's the work of foreigners who.
Speaker 2 (08:35):
Do not even live in this country. They never lived
in this country, they.
Speaker 1 (08:38):
Don't have any connection to the country whatsoever, but they
have figured out a way to make money off the
need of very online Americans for a validation of their
pre existing attitudes. For example, if you have if you
hate America for whatever reason, masses you hate America, I
guarantee him to you that they have a way to
(09:00):
spot you through their own systems, that they have spot
you and then reinforce your hatred of America.
Speaker 2 (09:08):
It's it's really bizarre.
Speaker 1 (09:12):
All of this is the result of Elon Musk allowing
users I don't monetize my account, but you can monetize
it via a premium subscription.
Speaker 2 (09:21):
I could.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
I could, and because I do the premium subscription because
I obviously don't want people imitating me, or if people
read other Michael Brown accounts, I want them to realize
that that's not me. I'm the one over here. So
that's why I pay for the stupid privilege of now
having that verification when I didn't have to pay for
it before. And that's because, you know, speaking of which,
(09:44):
like when when Kaminski said, you know, the one and
only Michael Brown, Well we were joking after affair about no,
I'm not really the one and only Michael Brown. There
must be a bazillion Michael Brown's in the country, and
some like to imitate me, and some like to post,
you know, in on behalf me, pretending to me and
me and say really bad things. Well, now everybody can
(10:04):
just see now, because of this change on X how
many of those blue check marks aren't really what they've seen.
You really have to admire the entrepreneurial spirit of those
people who are sitting back, you know, who are actually making
money off this, because it's really easy to sit back
and coast it, you know, a nine to five job.
(10:25):
But these people have identified a gap in the market
and they've now created an entirely new industry serving up
a bunch of slop to you know, a bunch of
mim wits who can be roused to anger about anything.
You can make people piste off about race, gender, Jews. Oh,
Kim trails, that's a big one. Kim Trail's you know,
the White House refurbishment. There was something recently about Michelle
(10:48):
Obama cried when she saw the destruction of the East Wing.
Speaker 2 (10:53):
Wait a minute, she lived there, does.
Speaker 1 (10:56):
She know what the east The East Wing is not
the residence, It's not the main part of the White House.
He was this little tiny ramshackle addition on the east
end of the East Wing that was dusty, dirty.
Speaker 2 (11:09):
I mean, I've been in it. I was there.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
There were some old offices there and if you really wanted,
you know it primarily for the first lady, if they
needed some extra desk space, they would crame a move
in that old East Wing. This now since been turned down,
a torn down, So even they they'll even get people
spun up about that. So now farming this culture war
engagement is a slog, especially when you work to build
(11:35):
an audience for one grievance and then you know events,
you know, whatever you're grieving about, griping about, complaining about
gets ode overtaken by events. That requires you to pivot
to another thing to get people all spun up about.
It's more effort than reward in my opinion, and in
most advanced economies, it's not really worth the time and
(11:56):
the energy to try to make money off that.
Speaker 2 (11:59):
But now that we really know.
Speaker 1 (12:01):
That there are people from other countries, hmmm, why are
you trying to interfere in us? And how many useful
idiots that are citizens of this country fall for that
and realize that, Oh, I'm being trolled by somebody sitting
in Zambia. I'm being trolled by somebody in Yemen. I'm
(12:23):
being trolled by somebody in the United Arab Emirates. I'm
beingtrolled by somebody in Venezuela. I'll give you an example.
You've been following something called at Zuomer Rhodesian, which I
know you haven't, but it popped up in one of
the stories that I read. Claims to be a twenty
something girl from Gallaston, Texas. For her is at them again,
Yogi all those kinds of memes, and she is a
(12:45):
very keen interest in waffle House closer a TV footage.
But doesn't matter that the account is actually the work
of somebody named Mangjeit, a gen X father of eight
from Gaziabad or any other place you know from Gaza. Now,
(13:06):
if you're in the market for a desperate gazanin who's
only sign a shot dead by the idef every few weeks,
and somebody in Romania is happy to play that role
to get the engagement and to make money about it,
then what do you have to complain about. You created
a market, the market responded accordingly. Service, service rendered cash collected.
Pretty easy, right, basic economics. But the problem is this,
(13:28):
and this is why I think the whole thing about
iHeart talking about we are human. This is a great
example of that because when you tune in to listen
to me, or you download the podcast, or you see
what I put up on X or on Facebook.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
Or on Instagram, it's really me.
Speaker 1 (13:49):
It's a human being, and it's a human being that has,
you know, gone through some really highs in life, some
really lows in life. And I'm actually sitting in a
studio at forty six to ninety five Minchaol dimber Coloradometo
two three seven. The phony accounts and the AI. I'm
so sick of the AI videos. They can actually be
(14:14):
a source of harm when their fictions are amplified without verification,
either by you know, being verified and you checking to
see if this is a legitimate source, or the cabal
actually coming down and saying, oh no, wait a minute now,
whoever's spreading this story, that story simply isn't true. There
(14:35):
was there was one the other day that I thought
was kind of interesting that Donald Trump's health is deteriorating rapidly.
He's dragging his feet and he's talking. He's going through
the Colonnade from the residents over to the Oval Office,
which is a beautiful smile over by the Rose Garden,
and he's walking through there, and they're looking at some
(14:55):
pictures and some things on the wall, and this little
boy who came me, I don't know, six teen years old,
is following along. Maybe it's a grandson or something. But
then people who've never been there don't realize. And it's
hard to see from the photo or from the video,
but there's an incline up to the Oval Office. They
did incind's been there twenty at least twenty years, because
(15:17):
it was there when I was there. But as Trump
is walking sideways up an incline, and the angle from
the camera taking the video is down lower and probably
you know, because the Secret Service has them far away,
you know, from probably well maybe not one hundred yards,
but you know, maybe from twenty five yards away. Then
(15:40):
it looks like as he moves upward on that incline,
that his foot is kind of dragging, and so the
story gets blown up that oh my gosh, look Trump
is dying in office. He must have Parkinson's or he's
got some he's you know, Lord knows he's got whatever
it is the Bruce Willis has, or he's got MSS,
(16:02):
or he's got something, and he's unable to walk into
the Oval office. That's the kind of crap that goes
on that drives me crazy, and I think it's it's
destructive to our culture. Now, the origin update that now
exists on Twitter, it isn't all you know, bad. If
(16:24):
you've ever been unjustly accused of being a foreign influenced operative,
then this new innovation brings some vindication. I should know
from my own ex account, because contrary to what I'm
sometimes told, I don't tweet from some air conditioned basement suite,
you know, somewhere you know, still within DHS. There's it's
(16:47):
kind of pitiful when people kind of think that or
that I'm getting some gigantic generous pension from you know,
by almost six years at at homemandsecurity in the White
House and FEMA and all of that. But when you're
doing it from across the pond and you're trying to
stir up American's hatred, which is too bad that it
(17:09):
already exists.
Speaker 2 (17:10):
Then yeah, it's kind of a bad thing. But I
just want you to know that.
Speaker 1 (17:14):
On Wednesday, November twenty sixth at nine four nine twenty
four am Mountain Time, I am human good some hard
truths about the current state of American society, which I'm
(17:37):
not trying to ruin your Thanksgiving. But when the time
comes to be really blunt, it's time to be blunt.
And as I always like to emphasize, I live in
the real world and I really do talk about things
that I think are really important. And I just think
this is something that's important, and I'm not a I'm
(18:00):
done an election denier. I don't think that there is
always widespread fraud in the sense that there may be
certain type. I mean, there are different kinds of voter fraud,
you know, for example, ballot harvesting may or may not
involve fraud. If you are a member of one of
(18:22):
the two major parties and you have a get out
the vote campaign, and part of that get out the
vote campaign is that you go pick up for say
elderly people or people who are traveling or whatever, and
you pick up their legitimately voted ballot and you take
that to a drop off. I don't find fraud in that. Now,
(18:46):
don't presuppose that I like mail imballots. I despise mail
in ballots. I think we got to get rid of
mail in ballots. I think that voting is such a
serious civic duty that, like everything, we become lazy asses
and we don't want to get off our butts and
actually have to, you know, either go to vote before
(19:08):
work or after work because we're too ashamed or embarrassed
or afraid to say to our bosses, hey, I need
an extra thirty minutes or an hour because during my
lunch hour today, I'm going to go vote. Because by
federal law and state law. I think also employers are
required to give you time to go vote. But ballot
(19:28):
harvesting is not in and I it's you know, ballot
harvesting has way too many connotations and what I just described.
You know, I agree to go pick up ballots in
my precinct for people who have indicated they need someone
to take the ballot, you know, to the drop off
box because maybe it's too late to mail. Or if
(19:48):
you're really doing a legitimate get out the vote campaign,
then part of the GOTV campaign would be to help
people who maybe don't you know, they don't have stamps,
they can't afford stamp, they're maybe they're in a nursing home.
Speaker 2 (20:02):
Any I mean, I just.
Speaker 1 (20:03):
Dream up, you know, different scenarios all day long about
different situations that are not fraud. On the other hand,
I don't deny that fraud occurs. We have we have
criminal convictions showing people casting illegal ballots, and we've seen
(20:24):
from previous reporting by former reporters, say over at Complete Colorado,
where they have gone to different apartment complexes when all
of the ballots you know, show up, and maybe it's
near the University of Denver, or maybe it's scenario apartment
complex somewhere down in Rhino or someplace, and the people
who now live in that apartment or that condo, they're
(20:48):
not the ones who are receiving the ballots is for
the previous occupant, and so the ballots just get tossed
over on the side and a reporter goes out and
gathers up all of those ballots. Or we got the
case member when there went down to Colorado Springs and
voted down in Colorado Springs. I mean, there are situations
where you can actually go commit voter fraud. Not saying
(21:11):
that John did or was intending to, but it's an
example of how wax these rules are. I say all
of that because what I'm about to tell you I
don't want you to say, oh, well, Michael Brown, he's
one of those crazy election deniers and he thinks that
you know, Trump one or Trump lost, or Biden one
or Biden lost or whatever. But here are just some
(21:32):
facts for you to consider. Take New Jersey, North Carolina.
We're just a few weeks ago, we had two major elections.
Do you know that in New Jersey after two decades,
after more than twenty years of consistent turnout numbers in
the off year gubernatorial elections, suddenly there was a twenty
(21:55):
percent uptick in the published numbers of voters for no
discernible reason. Now wers, Oh yeah, there's now there's there's
a twenty percent increase in the number of voters. Now
that loan may not be newsworthy, But if I told
you that uptick was only among Democrat voters, Yeah, so
(22:19):
you have a sudden uptick. You know, you're just plodding
along at you know what, let just pick a number
out of my butt. You're just plodding along at one
hundred thousand voters, one hundred thousand voters, one hundred thousand
voters in these off your gubernatory election years, and it's just,
you know, remains the same at one hundred thousand, or
if you want to put a million, because that's more likely. Whatever,
just pick a number, but pick an easy number so
(22:41):
I can I have twenty percent to it. And then
suddenly there's a twenty percent. He goes from one hundred
thousand to one hundred and twenty thousand, or goes from
one million to one point two million, and that increase
is only among Democrats.
Speaker 2 (22:55):
Hmmm.
Speaker 1 (22:57):
It's the kind of thing that makes you stop and go,
why w what's really going on there now?
Speaker 2 (23:03):
In Virginia.
Speaker 1 (23:05):
I guess you're expected to believe that the polling consensus
missed the governor's race by more than ten percent, and
that Jay Jones, the guy running for the attorney general's race,
won his race after weeks and weeks of public discussion
about his texts in which he advocated murdering his political
(23:25):
opponents and not just them, but their spouses and their
kids too. I just find that either it's an indication
or an indictment of really how sick democrats are, and
that oh, yeah, well, so here you are. You were
given an opportunity to retract your texts at the time
(23:48):
they occurred, and you didn't do so, and in fact,
you dug yourself a hole even deeper and said, well, yeah, no,
only would would I like to kill that guy who
is the former Speaker of the Virginia House Delegates, but
I would also like to murder his wife and his children,
because only when they die do they start to take
us seriously. Now, is this a coincidence or not, I
(24:13):
don't know. But both of those states, New Jersey and
Virginia use Internet linked dominion voting machines. That's how they
tally their votes. And they also do this like we
do in Colorado, they allow for this extended period in
which voters are able to vote by mail in ballots,
and neither of those states has a hard voter ID requirement.
(24:35):
H conspiracy or is it just that, Oh, look at
what's going on here, and it seems to me that, yeah,
maybe there's something that you at least want to go Huh,
what's that about? As I've explained before, the seditious sixth
video that was released last week, the one that you know,
(24:58):
we talked about it, we played it yesterday. I talked
about how there probably is a legitimate case for under
the Uniform Code of Military Justice for investigating them for
interfering in the laws, the statutes that prevent you or
make it a crime to actually try to discourage and
(25:20):
reduce the morale of the military. Hmmm, what if that
was an operation instigated in the botwels of the CIA
or the intel community. Now I'm assuming the organizing was
done by a bunch of rogue radicals in the ranks
without the knowledge of either the CIA director or the
(25:41):
Director of National Intelligence Toldy Gabbert, and I've got full
confidence in Gabbard's lack of involvement, and for that matter
of Ratlus too. But don't you wonder, like, how did
those six come together and decide to make the video,
who pays for it, who did the production and the
(26:02):
editing and everything else. It's just those things that make
you go huh in.
Speaker 2 (26:07):
The middle of the night on the air and doing
what you do.
Speaker 1 (26:18):
If if you, and by the way, thank you, I
appreciate that. Let me remind everybody because if you want
to send me a text message, I can't even tell
you what the other number is. But the number for
this program and for the nationally syndicated weekend program is
three three one zero three. So on your message app
(26:40):
if you've been accustomed to texting you know Colorado O'Neil,
the what it used to be, Colorado Morning News, or
any of the other programs on KOA, that number does
not get read by me. I don't even have a
log in to that number, so I don't see any
text that you send, but I hear through the grapevine
(27:00):
people may have. So if you're wanting to make certain
that I see your you know, nasty text or your
disagreement texts, or your congratulations text or whatever it might be,
even a happy Thanksgiving text, the number is three three
one zero three. Keyword micro Michael All right. So I'm
just I'm telling you that because I hear through the
(27:22):
grapevine that some of you are still using that other number,
which again I don't even know what it is to
text me on this program three three one zero three
on your message out keyword micro Michael. So go back
to the point about we have Virginia, New Jersey, You've
got the attorney general in Virginia, and then you have
(27:44):
people starting to think, well maybe you know. In fact,
I even read for my promo for the nationally syndicated program,
I included the story where they are now believing that.
Speaker 2 (27:56):
The CIA is out to get Donald.
Speaker 1 (27:59):
Trump, and of course it comes from Info Wars and
Roger Stone, and I just dismissed the story. I will
tell you I dismissed the story. And I know Roger
Stone personally. I know Roger Stone for I don't know
twenty years. But just because I know somebody doesn't mean
that I agree with what they happen to say.
Speaker 2 (28:21):
But let's go through some.
Speaker 1 (28:22):
Of the other stuff that I think is just the
reality that we need to think about the federal judiciary,
and frankly, the lower courts have been completely captured by
the radical left and I think that has as much
to do with twelve years of Obama and Biden filling
the bench with these radical leftists who just truly, I think,
(28:43):
hate the country. They want to, in Obama's words, to
fundamentally transform the United States of America from a constitutional
republican to whatever socials utopia it is that they happen
to believe in. It also has to do with and
I've not been been a member of the American Bar
Association after I think. I think I was a member
(29:04):
for two years when I was a baby lawyer, and
then I got to see and I'm talking about decades
ago about how the ABA, the American Bar Association, how
they operate and what they do and how they are
involved politically, is why I dropped, I quick pain Dues,
I just refuse to be a member of the ABA. Well,
I think that between Obama and Biden and the American
(29:26):
Bar Association, that's why we have these really radical judges
who are taking really radical positions. Remember the story I
gave you this week about the judge down in Texas
that overruled the Texas redistricting map solely on the basis
of no evidence whatsoever that he just believes it was racist,
(29:47):
and it didn't.
Speaker 2 (29:47):
Matter to him who did the map.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
He thought the map was racist, so he was just
gonna throw it out, something which he has no authority
to do whatsoever. It seems to me that the radicalization
of the judiciary is systematically working to dismantle the powers
of the executive branch, and unfortunately, that effort appears to
have at least the tacit support of Chief Justice John Roberts,
(30:11):
who insteadfastly refused to sanction any of these judges who
are clearly operating outside their jurisdiction, and he is the
one individual who could rein them in. Now, the other
justice Associate Justices of the Supreme Court could give speeches
and lectures, and they could write, you know, articles for
(30:32):
Law Review or other journals about how the they need
to stay within their lane blah blah blah. But they're
not doing it because they're waiting on the Chief Justice,
who really is in charge of the judicial branch, to say, hey.
Speaker 2 (30:45):
Guys, stop it, just stop it.
Speaker 1 (30:49):
And despite the fact that the Chief justicesn't do that,
the Supreme Court still finds majorities to reverse some of
these outrageous lower court decisions. And the most recent example
being the reversal of that judges ruling down in the
state of Texas and trying to prohibit their ability to
finalize their new congressional district map ahead of the elections.
(31:12):
We should all actually be quite thankful that Clarence Thomas
and Samuel Alito and some of the others are still
on the court. And then I would just throw out
that what's going on with the FBI and what's really
the truth about Thomas Matthew Crooks. I don't know why,
I mean, really he was the only one involved, or
(31:36):
that they didn't know about it and the Secret Service
had no clue that there was a sniper and there
was an unsecured area. I just that's either such blatant
incompetence or alternatively, there was something nefarious going on. That's
the real world that I live in.