Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well, we have come in.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
Your city one way I gets and saying you a
conscious Well, I'll be entire.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
And if you want a little banging again and come along.
Speaker 4 (00:18):
It is the second consecutive Starship test flight from Elon
Musk's company to end with destruction.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
All I can think about was that's good. That's good.
We got it all right.
Speaker 5 (00:30):
Best de Hoo's appropriation is the money moons Comss.
Speaker 6 (00:34):
We are not chasing the bag. We are the bag.
Speaker 7 (00:37):
We have them on the run and we're going to
keep our foot on the gas pedal.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
Radom is back in style.
Speaker 6 (00:46):
Welcome to the revolution that we have.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
Coming to your city, going the way I gets and
saying you a conscious silly.
Speaker 6 (01:00):
Show more me. I'm the scenes. Information on breaking news
and more bold inspired solutions for America.
Speaker 2 (01:10):
All right, thank you, Scott Channon, Thanks to all of
you for being with us. Write down our toll free
telephone number. We'd love to hear from you. Today. We're
going to point out a lot of liberal hypocrisy. We
are officially on the clock. Schumer shutdown Watch is officially underway.
Hopefully the minor hydraulic issue delay in the launch to
(01:31):
rescue these two astronauts. Hopefully that'll happen by the end
of the week as well. We're ready to bring these
astronauts home and hopefully we pray safely. We are on
official watch for piecing the possibility of peace in Europe.
We know as of this morning, the Russian Foreign Minister,
(01:52):
their spokeswoman said that Russia was ready to talk to
the US about a peace initiative discussed between the US
and Ukraine, and contacts could take place as soon as today.
My understanding is Steve Witkoff is if he's not there
on his way to Russia right now, to have those
conversations directly with Vladimir Putin and after talks with top
(02:14):
US diplomats in Saudi Arabia. Ukraine is ready to accept
a thirty day ceasefire, and the United States said it
was putting the proposal to Moscow and they were bringing
it there. Quote, We're ready to discuss the initiative set
out there in future contacts with the US. Such contacts
are already possible as early as today. The Kremlin said
(02:36):
earlier that US negotiators were flying to Russia. It said
the Kremlin Foreign policy advisor and US National Security Advisor
Mike Waltz had spoken by phone on Wednesday. I know
that Secretary of State Rubio is also actively involved himself
in all of this as we speak. The Russian President
Vladimir Putin himself said today that he was open to
(03:00):
a ceasefire in the Ukrainian War, provided that a ceasefire
led to a permanent end to the conflict. And we
agree with the propositions to stop hostilities. Let me proceed
from the fact that a ceasefire should be such that
would lead to a permanent piece remove the initial original
causes of the crisis, which I would argue would be him.
(03:23):
But that's separate and apart from what he's talking about anyway.
As translated by state media, Putin did not comment on
the immediate ceasefire, but merely agreed to one in principle,
should it include specific provisions he now himself is negotiating.
Washington Times laid out a list of major caveats that
(03:45):
come with Putin's conditions. If he were to support this
thirty day ceasefire, it would on their end. Again, this
is all negotiation. I mean, you got to understand, just
like the tariff thing, its all negotiation. Just like Wen
Zalyinsky and the meeting and the White House blew up.
That was all the negotiation. In the end, it was
(04:05):
the beginning of a negotiation and it ended well, and
I hope this ends well too. But anyway, so, in
remarks Thursday, Putin said, before Russia would agree to the
deal already endorsed by Kiev and President Zelensky, that negotiations
must address the presidence of Ukrainian troops still inside Russia's
Kursk border region and possibly and the possibility of continued
(04:29):
arm shipments to Ukraine, and whether the pause and fighting
will genuinely lead to a permanent peace acceptable to the Kremlin.
The idea itself is the right one we want, and
we do support it, but there are questions that we
need to discuss, and I think we need to talk
them through with our American colleagues and partners and mister
Trump for the President met with the NATO Secretary General
(04:52):
in Washington at the White House today, telling reporters that
Putin's response was promising, but it wasn't complete. He said,
Putin put out promising statement, It's not complete, and he's
willing to talk to the Russian president to help secure
the ceasefire. Hopefully Russia will do the right thing, said
the president. One other note on this, NATO Secretary General
(05:14):
Stollinberg praised President Trump for pushing countries in the Alliance
to boost their defense spending, an issue that has driven
a wedge between Trump and Europe. And let me thank
you for your leadership that you show on the issue
of defense spending, because it's very important that we all
contribute to our shared security. And it's really having an
(05:36):
impact because, as you said, allies are now spending more
on defense, and you know, this goes to the issue
of Canada. Canada, you know, only pays a small portion
of what their contribution should be to NATO versus other countries.
The European Union has similar problems, and they have the
tariff issue that they put on American dairy products. In particular,
(05:59):
it hurts dairy farmers in states like Wisconsin and elsewhere
and people in Michigan. So we're hopeful. Apparently it's not
going very well. The podcast of Michelle Obama and I
would imagine that this had a pretty heavy you know,
first take tune in curiosity to it, and if they
(06:23):
drew less than twenty thousand viewers on streaming platforms after
nearly after almost what twenty hours, the first three episodes
didn't match. Three episodes didn't manage to clear twenty thousand
views on YouTube, and that kind of anemic audience level
is usually a disastrous start for a former First Lady,
who the left believes is a beloved figure. Apparently a
(06:46):
lot of complaining in there as it relates to Barack
Obama as well. Let me get to the Schumer shutdown,
because it was announced yesterday by Chucky that the most
Democrats in the Senate will not support the House passed
bill to continue to fund the government. Now, let's backtrack here.
(07:08):
Chuck Schumer has failed at a spectacular level. Chuck Schumer
has had opportunity after opportunity after opportunity. You know, they're
supposed to pass appropriations bills, twelve of them to be
exact before the beginning of the fiscal year. The fiscal
year in government begins on October the first. The fiscal
(07:30):
year therefore ends on September the thirtieth. Hence, some of
these buyouts will we'll go through September the thirtieth, And
Chuck announced that most Democrats in the Upper Chamber will
not support the House Republican bill, and that means that
a government shutdown is now looming, and that that would happen.
Funding the government should be a bipartisan Effortchie He's claimed, No,
(07:53):
it doesn't have to be. It's your government. This is
what you appropriated. This is the Biden and Republicans are
planning to hopefully start implementing the Trump economic agenda, and
that would begin through the reconciliation process. But the first
order of business would be to keep the government open.
(08:15):
And so Schumer really doesn't have a leg to stand on.
Now we can play, you know, Schumer, he says that
they're not going to invoke cloture. But let me let's
take a trip down memory lane. How we and Chuck
Schumer about government shutdowns and how bad they are. This
is Chuck Schumer when he thinks he can blame Republicans
(08:37):
for a government shutdown.
Speaker 5 (08:39):
I would say to the leader very simply, you may
disagree with us, open the government. Open the government. You
can do it, Leader McConnell. And all you're blaming and
flailing isn't going to open the government. It's sort of
like this, someone goes into your house, takes your wife
and children hostage and then says, let's negotiate over the
(09:02):
price of your house. You know, we could do the
same thing on immigration. We could we believe strongly in
immigration reform. We could say we're shutting down the government.
We're not going to raise the debt ceiling until you
pass immigration reform. It would be governmental chaos. I don't
know if they can pass the three week bill. We
would much prefer they do a full funding bill. But
we're not going to shut the government down. But let
(09:23):
me just say two things. So does that mean to
support the three week extent? Yes, yeah, we're not going
to shut the government down. But to keep doing this
time and time and time again, it hurts our homeland
security even doing these short term extensions.
Speaker 3 (09:38):
The bad news is that the Motion to proceed so
that we could pay our bills failed because it didn't
get the sixty votes. It didn't get the bipartisan support
that we had hoped.
Speaker 5 (09:50):
Why must we hold millions of Americans who depend on
the services of these agencies that are closed, hundreds of
thousands of workers who get paid by these agencies. Why
must we hold them hostage? Why must a temper tantrum
determine how we vote and what happens in this government.
Everyone can shut down the government on anything, any leader,
(10:12):
any president. That's not the way to do things.
Speaker 2 (10:16):
Not the way to do things. Did I hear that correctly?
Not the way to do things. And you know we're
going to hold millions of Americans hostage, hundreds of thousands
of workers hostage, and all the blaming and flailing and
hostage holding of government worker. That's Chuck Schumer. That's what
(10:39):
Chuck Schumer. Now we have Schumer committed to shutting down
the government. This will be the Schumer shut down. This
will be on his watch. This will be because of him,
and because he is now beholden to the radical Democrats
that run his party. And the only Democrat that was
making any sense and warning Senate Democrats that the shutdown
(11:03):
could hurt the economy was John Fetterman of Pennsylvania.
Speaker 7 (11:06):
Listen, if you shut it down, you will impact and
part millions and millions and millions of Americans, and you
run the risk of slipping us into a recession or
even all kinds of other things.
Speaker 2 (11:20):
Oh all these there's one reasonable Democrat. Now let's go
back to what a lot of this is all about Democrats.
They want to negotiate because they don't want to cut
the hundreds of billions of dollars that are now being
identified as waste, fraud, abuse and corruption moneies that they
have been spending abroad deceit that is, at a high level,
(11:44):
they never labeled how this money was being spent. Average
American PAI that makes sixty six thousand dollars a year
has been forced to pay their taxes and this is
how they spend their money. And the fact that they've
been so willing to basic steal from our children and
grandchildren and future generations because that wasn't the Chuck Schumer
(12:07):
of old. This is the new, radicalized, new Green Deal
DEI woke, transgender and LGBTQ, a broad spending party. This
is the party that won't stand for the first Lady
of the President. This is the party that won't stand
for mothers that lost their children. This is the party
(12:29):
that won't clap for a young man that survived cancer,
or for the wife of a slain officer, or for
a young man who lost his father who got into
West Point. This is the party of bingo cards. This
is the party of stunts, and this is the party,
and this is the people of the party that Chuck
must cater to. Because the old Chuck Schumer actually sounded
(12:52):
a lot like Bill Clinton sounded, and Al Gore sounded,
and even Barack Obama sounded when they would often talk
about eliminating waste, fraud, and abuse, but none of them
ever got it done. Here's Schumer from years gone by.
Speaker 5 (13:07):
If we're going to eliminate the waste, broad and abuse
in Medicare, it does mean we're going to cut some
of that out. And when I hear my friend Dave
Camp say you cannot cut money out of Medicare, well,
we don't want to cut the good stuff that you
point out one third of Medicare doesn't go to patient care.
You can't just get up there and say we don't
(13:28):
want to cut anything out of Medicare. We want to
cut the bad stuff and keep.
Speaker 2 (13:31):
The good stuff. Sounds exactly like Elon Musk, President Trump
and the Republican Party. And now the question is what
happened to Chuck Schumer? And the question is we know.
And here's more Democrats warning about the consequences of a
government shut down.
Speaker 4 (13:48):
We believe in governance we want to keep governments open.
A shutdown is very serious.
Speaker 1 (13:53):
They are real consequences. When the government shuts down, it
harms our national security, It harm to our economy, and
it harms service members, veterans, retirees, and vulnerable communities.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
We all know a shutdown is unnecessary and completely avoidable.
The tragedy here is all the civilian employees. It is
the American people who are going to suffer. Border patrol
agents will not be paid. TSA agents will not be paid.
Speaker 5 (14:24):
Small businesses will be hurt.
Speaker 4 (14:26):
Not only is it irresponsible and purposely misleading, it is
a dangerous precedent to be threatening a shutdown. I'm worried
about our air controllers, those in the military. We have
over almost forty thousand in the military, as well as
personnel who work in the military, and they won't have checks.
I mean, this is real, the real people's lives at stake.
(14:50):
It is not normal to hold eight hundred thousand workers
paychecks hostage.
Speaker 6 (14:55):
It is not normal to shut down the government when
we don't get what we want.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
Our troops deserve better, our children deserve better, and the
American people deserve better.
Speaker 7 (15:05):
These chaos agents, they don't have a plan be They
just want to see everything burning.
Speaker 5 (15:11):
Shutdown is really is an extremist policy designed to appeal
to an extremist base and hold the whole country hospital
take this shutdown.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
You know who's gonna feel the pay, You know who
hurts you. Extremist policy appealing to an extremist based. I
never thought i'd quote Jerry Nadler on this program, but
he kind of has it right. I'm actually consistent on
government shutdowns. I don't worry about them that much. And
there's certain points where you've got to take a stand.
(15:40):
And now the Republicans just to have to hold the
line and let the Schumer shut down unfold and not
give in and let him shut it down, and he
will own it. We have a lot of ground to cover.
This student at Columbia with his pro Hamas positions, a
designated state of terror is likely to be deported. And
(16:04):
Trump Tower, of course, had a bunch of protesters today.
We'll get to that with Greg Jarrett on the law
of regarding that. We'll introduce you today. Laurel Libby, she
got a censure in Maine for daring to stand up
for women and not have men and women's sports, which
is now a big democratic position. And also Senator Ram
Paul on this continuing resolution and course reconciliation.
Speaker 6 (16:28):
You're on the Sean Hannity Show, a place where free
speech and the First Amendment are still alive. And well
get your dose of independence and liberty every weekday right
here with Sean.
Speaker 2 (16:44):
All right, twenty five now till the top of the hour,
eight hundred and nine foot one, Shawn. If you want
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puretalk dot com for details. All Right, so we have
a lot going on. One of the other things that
we're watching, we're watching the economy and you know, the
ups and downs of the economy, and you know, all
the while, as I pointed out yesterday, is we now
have eggs at the lowest level that they have been at,
(18:35):
actually lower than when Donald Trump became president. Okay, so
shoppers are finally beginning to get some relief in the
egg aisle. And I know, because I only eat eggs
of meat, that the prices had gone on pretty significantly
if you could even find them. There was a couple
of weeks, you know, I had to struggle to find
the eggs that I like to eat. But anyway, egg
prices are now down a whopping sixteen percent in a
(18:58):
significant amount, and prices both large white eggs dropped a
buck twenty. It's about six eighty five a dozen as
of Friday. Good. I'm not gonna have to get chickens
and put them in my backyard. I'll probably be breaking
some law. I don't know what. I'm not sure. My
my townhouse is designed for chickens. I don't you think
(19:21):
my neighbors would mind, Linda, I don't think they'd mind.
Speaker 4 (19:23):
I mean, I have them.
Speaker 2 (19:24):
I don't know you well, you have chickens.
Speaker 4 (19:28):
I do.
Speaker 2 (19:30):
How many chickens do you have?
Speaker 4 (19:31):
I have four?
Speaker 2 (19:33):
And how many eggs a day do you give from
your chickens?
Speaker 4 (19:36):
It depends. We probably get about, you know, a dozen
every few days.
Speaker 2 (19:41):
Really, And do you eat that many eggs at home?
Speaker 1 (19:43):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (19:44):
And the kids love them.
Speaker 2 (19:46):
Yeah, that's awesome. And are they as good as are
they better than.
Speaker 4 (19:49):
I mean, I think they're probably better than store boughd
It depends on the eggs that you buy.
Speaker 2 (19:54):
But yeah, they're organic, I would imagine in every way. Right.
Speaker 4 (19:58):
Well, yeah, I'm not giving my chickens anything weird, you know,
other than feed so they get there pretty healthy.
Speaker 2 (20:03):
No, no, you you might be feeding them kale, which
is not good.
Speaker 4 (20:07):
Like, you know, there were fine chickens, so I'm getting refined.
Speaker 2 (20:11):
They were fined for fine chickens. Have you ever thought
about maybe sacrificing one of the chickens and making a
royal chicken out of it?
Speaker 4 (20:20):
Apocalypse? Otherwise? You know, they all got names or we're
good to go.
Speaker 2 (20:23):
Oh, they got names that like family pets. Now, you're
not going to treat the chickens the way you treated
your cat, which grew to four times its normal size.
Speaker 4 (20:30):
Fat chickens are good, man, they lay more eggs.
Speaker 2 (20:33):
Okay, so you are overfeeding your your chickens over with
your cat.
Speaker 4 (20:38):
It's a very different thing. It's like peck peck, peck peck.
I mean, really, how.
Speaker 2 (20:41):
Much can you I want you to put a picture
of the cat that had to go to the that
frankly needs ozempic. Did they have a cat?
Speaker 4 (20:49):
First of all, nobody needs oseempic. Second of all, my
cat was just actually.
Speaker 2 (20:53):
Are people I know that have lost one hundred pounds
on ozempic?
Speaker 4 (20:56):
I know I know people too, but just makes me nervous.
There's a lot of side effects, and I think you know,
to Kennedy's point, Secretary, of Kennedy's point, there are healthier weight.
Speaker 2 (21:05):
The first line of defense.
Speaker 4 (21:07):
Okay, exactly, well said, not the first line of defense exactly.
Speaker 2 (21:09):
It's not the first line of defense. But if obesity,
one of the best things you can do for your
health is lose weight, and if you can't, if you
have that much to lose, and it's good for your
A one C. Which I think that's been pretty well
proven and it's apparently when I've talked to people that
have used it, and what they've told me is you
(21:31):
look at food and you're like, you want to vomit,
you don't want to eat it, right.
Speaker 4 (21:36):
It totally takes away the urge, and that's an amazing thing.
And I think under the guidance of a medical professional,
it's probably Okay, I am not a medical professional. If
I want to lose weight, I hop on the peloton.
That's my world.
Speaker 2 (21:49):
Okay. The bottom line is you just monitor what you look. Well,
one thing I do is I usually eat two meals
a day. I don't need three meals a day, as
three meal a day came from or you.
Speaker 4 (22:00):
Eat those six micro meals you know.
Speaker 2 (22:03):
No, that's a way. And certainly intermittent fasting is not
a bad idea if you can pull it off.
Speaker 4 (22:08):
So that's not for everybody like I like it, but
then I have friends that can't do it.
Speaker 2 (22:12):
Okay, sixteen they say the ideal is sixteen hours. Gary
Breco says anywhere between twelve and sixteen hours.
Speaker 4 (22:18):
It depends on your age. It's like fourteen ten, sixteen eight.
It's all different.
Speaker 2 (22:23):
Did you see the list of how many push ups
you should be able to do? For example, if whatever
your age is, they would have me doing like three
push ups a day. It's so ridiculous.
Speaker 4 (22:36):
Really, I've never seen that. Where is that?
Speaker 2 (22:38):
There are plenty? I had to do two hundred, I did?
What did I do?
Speaker 4 (22:43):
Where is the list? Who made up that list?
Speaker 7 (22:47):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (22:47):
All right, google it now while we're talking. So they
came up with a list how many push ups you
should do at whatever age, and then I think of
all the I do a lot of whore and a
lot of push ups, a lot of setups every single day,
and I do hundreds of situps depending on the day,
depending on what the plan is, along with my mixed
martial arts, along with you know, riding my bike, along
(23:09):
with you know, all the other things that I do
to stay as fit as I can. I'm not perfect.
I got a lot of improvement to make. And boy,
I got yelled at by Jillian Michaels recently. I mean
just just raked over the coals. I felt like I
was on the Biggest Loser.
Speaker 4 (23:23):
Listen, she's on tomorrow. Make sure she does it again
live on air.
Speaker 2 (23:26):
No no, no, no, no no, no, no no, no,
not on air. I can't handle it. It's too much pressure.
I mean she she came down hard on me big time. Anyway.
So if I so take a look at like what
people you know, twenty to thirty, thirty to forty forty
to fifty fifty to sixty sixty seven, how many push
ups they should they should be doing?
Speaker 4 (23:47):
People in their thirties should be able to do at
least nineteen for women, twenty one for men. People in
their twenty one, people in their forties should be able
to do at least fourteen if you're a woman, sixteen
if you're a man. And people in their fifties should
be able to do at least ten for women and
(24:07):
twelve for men. People in their sixties for both genders,
I guess we become even then should be able to
do at least ten.
Speaker 2 (24:15):
At least ten. Okay, on the easiest push up day
I have, I must do my age. That's sixty three,
and that's what I do every single day. That's a minimum.
But like yesterday, you know, we did let's see, you know,
forty inclined, forty decline, forty regular pushups, and then we
(24:38):
did thirty crossover pushups. Crossover, do a push up, crossover
to a push up, crossover to a push up, And
when you do it that way, it's pretty hard. And
then that's a minimum. Then there are days I'm trying.
I just don't remember the actual number. I think it's
I'm given Oh, i think I'm given four minutes, but
(24:59):
I usually do it a little over three minutes. It's
either one hundred and fifty or two hundred push ups.
I think it's one hundred and fifty. I'm just I'm
just trying to get it right. I just don't remember.
Speaker 4 (25:09):
That's what foxsome Friends did a show. Ainsley is actually organizing.
Speaker 2 (25:13):
I saw that. Yeah, and LJ and Brian you know,
at a contest. Yes, and LJ does a much better
push up than Brian by a long shot.
Speaker 4 (25:23):
Well, now they have people submitting the videos of themselves
doing push ups.
Speaker 2 (25:29):
And they're gonna and they're showing them on the air. Well,
I should show my I should take a video.
Speaker 4 (25:34):
You should do it live on set.
Speaker 2 (25:37):
Oh, just get down and do my push up.
Speaker 4 (25:39):
That's it, man, and then we can start the push
up challenge on Hannity dot com.
Speaker 2 (25:45):
How many do you think you could do?
Speaker 5 (25:47):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (25:47):
God, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (25:48):
Ten. All right, I'll tell you what. Why don't you
video tape it and we'll put it at the end
of this half hour and we'll upload it right away
on hannadi dot com.
Speaker 4 (25:57):
Absolutely not have you seen the car, but in the
studio I am not put in my face anywhere near it.
Speaker 2 (26:03):
We'll just get a couple of napkins.
Speaker 4 (26:04):
And back to the knaw bro no, no.
Speaker 2 (26:06):
No, oh, so you're afraid to do it, that's right.
Speaker 4 (26:10):
I am afraid of the carpet. Yes, I am afraid,
and I will admit that willingly.
Speaker 2 (26:14):
That is ridiculous. Anyway, Inflation is down significantly. I know
the markets are skittish. I know they're freaking everyone's freaking out.
Just it's sort of like how they were freaking out
over Zelensky in the meeting in the Oval Office, and
I kept saying they'll be back. I'm telling you, this
issue of tariffs is going to be resolved. You know,
the EU is planning to impose a fifty percent tariff
(26:35):
on American whiskey. Good luck with that. You know. The
problem is, you know, like Germany sells eight German cars
to our one car in Germany because of their ten
percent tariff and then their their value added tax or
national sales tax, which makes it financially impossible. And if
we sell X number of dairy products various dairy products, eggs, cheese, whatever,
(26:59):
poultry free products to Canada, you know, after you sell
a certain amount at a five percent tariff rate, then
they go to two hundred and fifty percent and it's
not free in fair trade and you know the fact
that the markets don't understand that Donald Trump is in
the middle of the negotiation here is kind of hard
to comprehend that they have no curiosity about what the
(27:20):
thinking of Donald Trump is in this. The thinking is
to get them to the table and to either choose
free your fair trade or reciprocal tariffs. And that's what
it is. I mean, Howard Lutnick actually said, and he
was very clear about this, He said, what is in Canada?
Say thank you for all that we do for Canada.
We do a lot for Canada. We like our friends
in the North. And I like that the President messes
(27:42):
with them constantly about being the fifty first state. I'm
not sure I want them to be the fifty first state,
although he's not wrong that it would be one big, massive,
beautiful country, and I think it would be. It's interesting
to think out of the box. I think Greenland would
be smart to align with US over you know, the uh,
what is it, Denmark. I think I think they'd get
(28:05):
a better deal from US anyway. The New Republic, the
FBI is preparing to charge major climate groups with a
conspiracy to defraud the United States. New Republic. Trump Administration
targeting climate organizations that receive Biden error grant. City Bank
revealed in a court filing Wednesday that it was told
(28:26):
to freeze the bank accounts of several environmental groups at
the request of the FBI. Why the FBI alleges the
groups are involved in a possible impossible criminal violations, including
conspiracy to defraud the US. Why do I believe at
the end of all of this, all of this accounting analysis,
we are going to find corruption at a at a
(28:46):
level we've never seen before. Now on the issue of tariffs,
let me go back to this point, and I now
that I've I've never really paid attention. I've always been
pro choice when it comes to what people should be
able to drive. I thought it was so stupid to
try to force companies like Ford to produce cars that
(29:07):
their customers don't want and invest in money they didn't
want to be in the electric car business. You know,
now that I've I've done such a deep dive and
we're going to announce on Monday how you can win
a free Tesla on this show that I am going
to buy for the winner. And now that I've I'm
getting my own. It's the most American made car in
the country. And after all the attacks on Elon Musk
(29:30):
and the viciousness directed towards this guy for no reason
at all, he's been very altruistic. He's doing this for free.
He's identifying waste, fraud, and abuse, and his only crime
is he's doing that and exposing corruption. And he supports
Donald Trump. He's going to rescue astronauts. He helps people
out in North Carolina that have no communications abilities with starlink.
(29:51):
You know, He's he's building out robotic technology that probably
in time, the average middle class family will be able
to forward that these test is the one I got
literally goes from zero to sixty and zero in two
point zero seconds. It's got over one thousand horse power,
its self driving, and it's again with the most American
(30:16):
made car in all of this country, of all the
car makers. Now, President Trump just saved the American auto
industry nearly three quarters of a trillion dollars seven hundred billion.
How did he do it? Because the EPA began the process.
As of yesterday, we'rescinding the vehicle fuel efficiency standards that
Republicans have called a de facto electric vehicle mandate and
(30:39):
you know, stop putting all these burdens. These are taxes
on the American people. Estimated regulatory compliance cost of the
current rules comes to seven hundred billion dollars. Well, that's
a tax on everybody that buys a car. Bet is
they're going to pass that cost on to all of us.
I love the fact that you know. I'm going to
get my new test by the way next week. I
(31:01):
ordered it. That's pretty exciting. I can't believe this thing
is like a rocket ship.
Speaker 4 (31:07):
And you know what you should do. I have a
great idea, and there's definitely some levity in this land
of insanity. Have you and the president get in your
respective teslas and.
Speaker 2 (31:19):
You race, take to the track and race the president.
Speaker 4 (31:23):
I think it would be amazing, go to like Daytona
or something.
Speaker 2 (31:26):
Do you want to make that request of him, because
I'm not making that request for him.
Speaker 4 (31:29):
But sure, you know, you just give me a cell phone.
I'll give him a quick call.
Speaker 2 (31:33):
But did you noticed when he said he was buying
the tesla? And I was glad to see that he's
helping Elana. I listen, there are things that people can do.
I mean a lot of people can't afford a new
car right now. And I remember when I had to
buy my two hundred dollars you know Ford a Connoline van.
And then at one point I bought for fifteen hundred
(31:54):
bucks at Dodge Truck and in another point I bought
it uh it purchased a three hund and fifty dollars
Ford Maverick, and I had a nineteen seventy four AMC Hornet,
which was a piece of garbage. And I painted most
of those cars and trucks myself and damage my lungs
doing it with a paint called Imron, but and I
(32:15):
would repair them myself myself. I love people can't afford
but maybe they can get starlink. Starlink is awesome, as
you know. I have it at my house. I love it.
You have it at your house. Great. You know there
are things that Elan is doing that you know just
I don't know, I just shooting up his They're they're
(32:38):
threatening his life, they're shooting up his dealerships. You know,
they're committing acts of terrorism on his charging stations. Tell
me what the guy's done to deserve that level of
hatred and threat level. Nothing. It's just so wrong. And
now the people that will suffer will be the people
that work for him and the dealerships. The people that
will suffer are going to be the people that manufacture
(32:59):
these cars, and then I want to stand up for them.
I know it's not I know I'm one person, that's why.
But I'm buying two cars and I'm giving one away.
I want somebody in this audience to have the experience
that I'm going to have. And we will start the
contest on Monday. I had a lot of ground to cover,
Ram Paul coming up and Greg Jared as well as
(33:21):
we continue