Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to the Rogue Recap. Hot takes, cold facts, and
zero respect for the official narrative. Sit back, roll your eyes,
and let's recap rogue style.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
Welcome everybody to the Rogue Recap. This is episode seven
of Soundbites. I'm here with my great friend Eric Eggers. Eric,
how are you today?
Speaker 3 (00:37):
I'm well, But it occurs to me that something's changed
in this episode. You know, we talk about some potentially
troubling aspects of what's happening in American society and some
things to be worried about. And you and I have
never appeared to be more in tactical gear than we
are in this episode. Like, I think we both look
like we might be ready for something that's that accident.
Speaker 4 (00:57):
I just want everybody to know, like we don't know anything,
you'd I don't know as far as that goes.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
My son the other day, we were coming in from
somewhere running errands, you know, YadA YadA, and I always
carry always, so I was looking for something in my
purse and he goes, Mom, is that a gun in
your bag? And I'm like yeah, he goes, man, You're
just ready, right, Mama. I'm like yeah, baby, Mama's always ready.
I was like, it's never going to be a moment
(01:22):
where I'm gonna say, Damn, I wish I had my gun.
It's gonna be like, damn, so glad I have my gun.
So he started laughing, but it made me think. I
was like, God, the world we live in.
Speaker 3 (01:31):
Right, I always I also am always ready, and that
by that I mean I am always ready to call
in take care of whatever the problem is.
Speaker 4 (01:38):
I am wearing running well, I'm curled up in the
fetal position.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
So I'm telling you, man, every time I go to
the range, I just think to myself everybody, it's this
is such a pivot. But it's like, you gotta practice.
You gotta go to the range. You gotta practice, you know.
And I have a non lethal weapon and I have
a lethal weapon. I'm gonna shoot you first and just
try to knock you down so that you know, knock
it off. And if you don't knock it off, I'll
just shoot you in the kneecaps so you can't come
(02:03):
after me. You know, I'm not gonna sometimes it's center
masks because I want to end it because you're, you know,
a rapist or murderer. Maybe you should go, you know,
but if you're just like stupid and you're like screaming
and maybe you're jumping on my car, I'll just shoot
you in the kneecap, knock you out. You know, you're
gonna need some surgery. It's gonna be a pain in
your ass, and you're not gonna bother anybody for a while.
You know, you're not pushing anybody down subway steps.
Speaker 5 (02:23):
You know.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
Honestly, I should get an award for that. I'm helping
the part.
Speaker 3 (02:27):
I'm I'm just glad that we could took a seven
episodes for us to use the phrase center Max in
the first two minutes of an episode, but we did it,
you know, and it worked naturally organically.
Speaker 4 (02:37):
And this is a new show. But here we are.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
Well, welcome to episode seven of our new show. Last night,
so that we're recording this on Wednesday, May twenty seventh,
and last night, John Corny got the shit kicked out
of them. For those of you who don't know, I
hate John Cornyn, I hate John Thune, I hate every
Rhino establishment piece of shit in our Congress. And it
was so nice to see a victory and super stoked
(03:03):
about Ken Paxton winning. People are like, oh, no, he's
gonna go up against tall Rico. I'm like, tall Rico
is talking about vegan meat and trans kids, like this
is not something that Texans give a rip about. I'm sorry,
I really have difficulty with this guy.
Speaker 3 (03:20):
What do you think I thought Ken Paxton's line. You know,
he told a little mini Trump right. He had a
few different kind of nicknames for mister tall Rico, but
I thought his nickname Jimmy six genders. But it is
interesting and I am ignorant a little bit about the seeds.
(03:40):
I mean, I know some of why you find mister Cornyan,
former Senator Cornyn to be distasteful. But then some of
these clips we have of him, I think maybe shed
some more light on what you believe about the future
former senator from text.
Speaker 2 (03:51):
Yes, I'm not even gonna set them up. I'm going
to play them for you guys, and then we'll talk
on the other side. Here's cut one of Cornyn. Are
you and you will run for your life?
Speaker 6 (04:01):
And yeah? You do you think? I mean god willing? Well, yeah,
what does the aw.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
That's cut one. In case you didn't hear it, somebody
asked him, do you think you're going to win, and
he said, haha, God willing or in shalah because suddenly
he's fluent Arabic. Give me a break.
Speaker 7 (04:26):
Hi, I'm Texas Senator John Cornyn. I want to take
a moment to say I know this year's Ramadan will
be different from those before, and that's why it's important
to keep the spirit of hope in community alive.
Speaker 2 (04:38):
I wish you all good.
Speaker 7 (04:39):
Fast and that you and your friends and families stay
safe during this challenging time. Ramadad Obarak.
Speaker 2 (04:50):
So, yeah, a lot of really good highlights there of
why Cornyan didn't win. Because we've got massive issues in
Texas with this lack of assimilation and an influx of
radical Islam. Right, so people everywhere are going, yo man,
this is Texas. We've got a gajillion people from India,
(05:12):
a gajillion people from Arabic nations. None of them are
speaking English. They're taking our jobs or taking over our streets.
They wanted to build the Epic Center. Oh and guess
who was helping with the funding for all of that,
John Cornyn's daughter. So, needless to say, not a big
shock why some people instead of saying yo man, it's Texas. Yiha,
and here's some steak he's like in Chilah Mobhart.
Speaker 3 (05:34):
Well the you know, we're gonna hear from Minneapolis mayor
Jacob Fry later in the show. But it reminds me
these videos of John Cornyn remind me of when the
Democrats in the house like put on like the kintake cloth,
you know, and they kneeled. They're kind of like Coast
Blaine as like culturally aware or sensitive or at least
in touch with a culture that's not theirs.
Speaker 6 (05:55):
You know.
Speaker 3 (05:55):
Look, I have Muslim friends, and what I would love
to know is how many of them are like you
know who. I love John Cornyn and it really meant
a lot to me that he wished me a happy ramadant.
Speaker 4 (06:04):
That was a big deal.
Speaker 3 (06:05):
That'm Republican in Texas. That's what I was looking for
to help kick off my fast. It's so I just
think it seems so needless. It's needless. And also you
know when you have I mean, ultimately, John Cornyn lost
because he was not a fan of and not a
supporter of helping Donald Trump, and so many people in
the Republican base want to pass the save ac right.
I bottom line if they supported things that are actually
important to the base of this party, then I think
(06:27):
it's a different story. So when you seem to you know,
and I'm sure you could pull clips of him doing
other things, but when you appear to be interested in
appeasing people that are not your you know, not your
kind of core constituents, and not doing the things that
the people have voted for you want you to do,
you know, then you find yourself at office.
Speaker 4 (06:43):
And that's exactly what happened one hundred percent.
Speaker 2 (06:44):
And I think too. You know, he's been in office
for twenty four years, So twenty four years as a
sitting senator. What have you done for me lately? Absolutely nothing.
Speaker 3 (06:54):
Well, listen, I remember, and this is you know, kind
of a deep cut. But so I'm I live in Tallahassee, Florida,
and I remember twenty ten like this first kind of
stea change election was we had a governor named Charlie
Christ and he was going to run for He was
a Republican, right, and he could have run for reelection
as governor as a Republican, would have been re elected,
and then he would have been set up, you know,
kind of quite nicely as a presidential hopeful. Instead, he
(07:16):
chose to run for Senate. They chose to run for
Senate against the former Speaker of the Florida House who
didn't have much of a national profile named Marko Rubio.
And so, but John Cornyn, then the head of the
National Republic Senate Committee, endorsed at the time Charlie crist
over Marko Rubio.
Speaker 4 (07:32):
He was considered to be the front runner.
Speaker 3 (07:34):
And obviously Rubio ended up kind of like winning in
the primary and then Chris drops out, rants independances, the
whole thing. But you know, so Cornyn has a long
history of maybe not exactly being in touch with the
most conservative aspect of the.
Speaker 2 (07:47):
Party, and to that point when we think about not
being conservative. So the Save America Act, which is pretty
interesting to me, has an eighty four percent approval rating.
But it's bipartisan. So people on the left people on
the right both saying, you know what, I'm all in
on us having honest and elections with integrity. Great, let's
try that, right, something new, who knows, But then you
(08:10):
have John Thune, you know, Cornyn's best buddy. So John,
you know, fun is just as bad as John Cornyn. Right,
So John Thune has been behind Cornyn the entire time
that he has been this rhino establishment scumbag, and he's like,
you know what, that looks good to me. I'm going
to go out and I'm going to support Pence, and
I'm going to support McConnell and I'm going to support Cornyn.
(08:30):
By the way, I'm going to put one hundred million
dollars taxpayer dollars are NC funding that we could be
putting behind other candidates into John Cornyan. How much time
and money has he put into the Save America Act?
When he went on vacation again last week, not passing
any DHS funding, not passing any of the candidates that
(08:50):
are waiting and getting these pro form of votes every week.
None of that happened. He's on vacation, back home, barbecue
and by the way, hope you're enjoying that time. Fuon
because you're man, Your ass is on its way out.
You will not win. You are going to get kicked
to the curb, and everybody's pissed off. Not a moment
on the Save America Act. One hundred million into inshala
(09:12):
over here.
Speaker 3 (09:14):
Yeah, you saw Steve Krnakiy on MSNBC react like almost
immediately that how decisive, Uh the victory was for John Paxton,
like or Ken Paxton immediately. And so I think that
the lesson is bottom line, look, people want to save acts.
I think what came down to. And so you know,
for all to talk about oh tall Rico and you know,
now is this now a lean Republican seat as opposed
to a like the Republican seat and all that stuff.
(09:35):
I think if you keep it about the main thing,
that same energy will yeah, I think, and I would say, ah, this,
you know, we got a couple weeks ago. But if
Steve Hilton ends up winning or finishing in the top
two in California, I think it will largely be partly
because of the strength of voter ID and the fact
that we should require voter ID in elections in California
as well. That's going to be something he's obviously in
favor of. So yeah, it's interesting to see if election
(09:57):
integrity is that matter and elections across the country.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
And I think to that point, we're talking about California
for a brief moment. You know, a lot of people
don't understand the Jungle primary, which is basically whoever the
top two are totally unrelated to party. That's who goes
into the final you know, primary race and so then
general election. Right, So the top two right now on
the ticket are Bianco and Hilton. So you've got two
(10:20):
Republicans leading in California. Hasn't happened and god knows how long.
I think a large part of that is that most
people now are saying, you know what, I'm actually not
in favor of crackheads and homeless everywhere as I walk
my five year old to kindergarten. Perhaps there's another way, right,
and then the palis as fire thing. Right, we look
at Bass, we look at Newsome. Here's the problem. So
the jungle primary has worked for them for a very
(10:41):
long time, and they've been able to lie and now
they got a lot of eyeballs on them. They've also
got a great da out there. I mean that guy
Bill Elias. Elias am I saying his name right, He's
phenomenal and he's done some pretty bold moves. I'm like, okay,
so you're definitely a Republican and you are in the
backquestion Democrat, you know, demonization of all things, and they,
(11:04):
I mean, they just passed the Nick Shirley Act not
allowing people to do investigative journalism. I'm like, I'm so sorry.
This is the Party of Freedom, right. Have you heard
of the First Amendment or did you miss that page?
You just what the page too, I don't know what happened. Anyways,
I digress. But they want to get away and stop
that jungle primary. And Newsom is saying he's got some
(11:24):
tools in his bag to kick that jungle primary out
and now put something else into effect so that they
don't end up with the top two contenders. I'm like,
are you kidding me? Like, I just I don't know
how that works. I really don't. I don't know how
the governor comes in and does that.
Speaker 4 (11:41):
Well.
Speaker 3 (11:41):
Remember they had a constitutional amendment that said you're supposed
to have a nonpartisan independent commission draw the redistrictine lines
for the congressional seats. And they did away with that
right and the just passed it right initiative, So I
mean that, Yeah, they kind of make it up as
they go along.
Speaker 4 (11:53):
In California.
Speaker 3 (11:54):
The good news, everything's working great in California. Yeah, So
it's a model for governance.
Speaker 2 (11:57):
Big absolutely doing well. So since we're talking about the
save America Act. I think we'll go to We have
a cut of timber Chet. Timberchet obviously a stalwart in
the House. This guy is no nonsense, just tells it
like it is. And he was in a meeting last
week as they were breaking for a Memorial Day and
he was out of his mind angry. It was working
(12:18):
till like one two o'clock in the morning. He was
in the Capitol and he was like, I just was
in this meeting. It was a closed door meeting with
Senate and House members, Dems and Republicans, and I watched
our leadership completely and totally capitulate to the Democrats and
give them everything they wanted. And he said, and we
as a House, obviously this final push is happening in
(12:39):
the Senate, have no control over what fun and these
other assholes are doing. So he's been great on the
Save Act. This is a really good cut of him
sort of explaining what is happening with the Save Act.
It's a little long, but probably cut out into a
minute in it. But I do think it's worth listening
to anything you want to add to that.
Speaker 3 (12:57):
No, I think it's perfect, I think, and I mean
it's a weird I think we have this and then
we have I think Susie Wall's after this, and I
think it's all kind of connected because at the end
of the day, I think people are kind of waking
up to like, hey, we have real problems in this
country when it comes to elections, and you get some
recent evidence of what happens if we don't take election
Tegrity series.
Speaker 2 (13:12):
No, I agree, let's play this one.
Speaker 6 (13:18):
Hey, everybody, Tim Barchet.
Speaker 8 (13:20):
People are asking me about what's going on with the
Sable America Act. Well, the Senate, of course, is dragging
their feet. The House has passed it twice.
Speaker 6 (13:30):
I've got a snake in suspicion. They'll probably attempt to.
Speaker 8 (13:35):
Pass it or pass it so late in the dad
gum game that it can't get implemented, and then they
can go home and say, oh, look we passed it,
and everybody would be celebrating, pat them on the back,
and then it just cannot get implemented at the state
and local level in time for it to have any
effect in these elections. And ultimately, I think that's what
(13:58):
you've got. And I'm afraid in the Senate leadership they
have such a hatred of Trump and the conservative movement.
They want things to go back to the status quo,
which is them being called from the golf course by
the Democrats when it's time to make a vote, and
(14:20):
they do the obligatorial. We don't like what they're doing,
and they get their crumbs off the side of the
table and for their districts, and they go home and
get re elected.
Speaker 6 (14:33):
And I'm afraid that's exactly what they're up to.
Speaker 2 (14:36):
So I have to tell you everything about this. I
love I love that he is at home. I love
that he's in front of his garage. I love that
he is just talking to us. I love it. I
think it's incredible that he takes that time on what
looks like probably a Sunday morning, he's probably heading the church,
and he's just like, I don't have an answer. He goes,
(14:59):
they're going to do this in such a way that
we get every establishment asshole and every liberal elected and
every conservative buried. But they're going to do it in
a way where they pass it, just not in a
way they can implement it.
Speaker 4 (15:13):
I think you're right.
Speaker 3 (15:13):
I think he came home from church and got you know,
took off the shirt and tie, got his undershirt, Tim
Burchett is like elite Tim Burchett, you know what I mean,
Like I liked the brown coat before, but now he's summertime,
so we have to do a new look in the video.
But yeah, look he's telling the truth and he's talking
directly to the American people. And you know, we've had
a chance to interview him before.
Speaker 4 (15:32):
He's great.
Speaker 3 (15:33):
Yes, he's so no nonsense and he's so I mean.
My favorite thing about it he sponsored a bill, I think,
to make it legal to eat roadkill in his home state.
So I know, oh yeah, he's I don't know that.
Speaker 2 (15:45):
I'm behind that. That's kind of I'm not into tired a.
Speaker 4 (15:47):
Man of the people. Okay, big government, So listen.
Speaker 2 (15:52):
You can't do it. I have to say it. I
don't want to be that night.
Speaker 3 (15:56):
No, But you know, I think the reality is is
that because so many people want to know, I mean,
that's why.
Speaker 4 (16:01):
I think that explains that.
Speaker 3 (16:02):
Again to Ken Paxton, John Corner, results people like why
are we not doing this? And so he's like, look,
I think it's just because they'd like the status quo.
They think by not doing radical things like requiring voter
i D, they're actually protecting the party because I think
like middle of the road is what wins. Democrats lose
because they're too extreme. They actually think voter id requirements
are too extreme. On the right side, they're insane. That's
(16:23):
what happens when you hang out in the bubble of
WASHINGTDC for two decades.
Speaker 2 (16:26):
It's honestly, so well said. I watched Timberchat, I watch Luna,
I see Mike Lee and Rick Scott, and it is
such a struggle for them, right. And then you have
these people, you know, the Lindsay Grahams and the McConnell's,
and they vacillate in these weird worlds where it's like,
(16:46):
can you just show me your bank account? I just
want to see it. I want to see who has
wired you money in the last six months, just for
shits and giggles, just to see how they would act, right,
because what we are seeing every time is once we uncover,
like the Cornins and the Funes, where your money's coming from. Like,
you know, douchebag Massy wants to stand up there and say, oh,
(17:09):
I wanted to call my you know, to concede, but
you know he was in Tel Aviv. I'm like, you're
taking money from Soros and Qatar. Why don't you shut
your trap and stop? You know everybody knows you're big slut.
You had a lot of fun, You're doing a lot
of things, and you know, this girlfriend comes out and
is talking about that he's some kind of like evil
(17:29):
canevil in the bedroom asking her to submit and do
all this other gross stuff. And she is a former
staffer for Bobert and she's like, I had to leave
the Capitol because he was so controlling and psychotic. Meanwhile,
his wife was only gone a month. I'm like, what
the hell's going on? I thought that, like, is everybody
there just a deviant? I guess so.
Speaker 3 (17:51):
Well, they say politics is Hollywood for ugly people, oh
and so but yeah, I would say, you know, the
the save acts I think can actually be helped dramatically
and significantly if what Susie Wilds is talking about does
come to fruition. So I think the White House maybe
still has some cards to play on this. You found
this clip. I can't believe it's been three weeks since
(18:13):
it was played.
Speaker 4 (18:13):
I haven't seen this anywhere and it is kind of
one of those.
Speaker 3 (18:16):
Records scratch, like wait what because Susie Wilds is not
one that's prone to hyperbole or exaggeration.
Speaker 4 (18:23):
She's very understated. She's measured.
Speaker 3 (18:25):
So for her to say this, I think was significant,
not just for like what it would have meant historically,
but what it might mean moving forward for the passage
of the Save Act specifically.
Speaker 2 (18:34):
Correct, Okay, when you first started working with President Trump,
what was the biggest This is not what I was briefed.
Speaker 6 (18:41):
For a moment.
Speaker 5 (18:44):
I was after I did not go into the White
House in sixteen the twenty election. Twenty twenty election I
worked for I ran Florida, and then when he came
back to Florida after leaving the White House, he called
me and invited me to dinner, which I was not
in the inner circle.
Speaker 9 (19:00):
Just overwhelmed. I couldn't imagine why.
Speaker 5 (19:05):
I drove down to mar A Lago, which I think
he thought, I live, you know, ten minutes from there,
but it's really four hours.
Speaker 9 (19:11):
And we had a lovely dinner.
Speaker 5 (19:13):
And at the end of it, he wanted to know
why he won Florida but maybe struggled in some other
states that I think we're going to find out he
actually did win.
Speaker 9 (19:24):
But I wrote, like an after action.
Speaker 5 (19:27):
Report, gave it to him to read, and as I
was going out the door, he said, I have a
pack and I think it has money in it, but
I'm not sure and I'm not sure who works there.
Speaker 9 (19:39):
Can you take that over? And I said, well, sir,
you know I have a job.
Speaker 5 (19:43):
He said, no, you can do it in your free
time and get it done in a week or so,
and I did so here I am.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
So I think the high level of that is I've
actually never seen her humorous ever. Got She's all so like,
it's all about business and by the way, you're in
my way. So I'm like, uh, I don't ever want
to piss her off, you know. But it's that moment
where she says, I think we're going to find out
that he actually won a bunch of those states. It's
(20:14):
so passing. It's not anything you would hear. It's not
anything you would notice. Like it's just one of those
things where you're like, wait, what did she just say,
and then you hear it and you go, oh shit,
So it is. It is real because those of us
who raise those questions following twenty twenty and we looked
at these, you know, to go down a rabbit hole
(20:36):
for a hot second. And there's no one better to
talk to ladies and gentlemen than Eric Egger's about this
because he did direct the movie The Creepy Line. He
had this movie out in twenty eighteen, Right, Eric, Am
I wrong?
Speaker 3 (20:47):
Well, The Creepy Line came out in twenty eighteen. We
talk about how Google and Facebook can you know, kind
of manipulate and shift opinions and voting behavior. And then
my book about election fraud also came out in twenty eighteen.
But and you know, and I'm talking to people, I
know you're talking to people, and actually, like, you know,
issues surrounding the twenty twenty election is kind of how
we first got connected. They like start looking at some
of this stuff, and I think, you know, the things
(21:07):
you hear now from the people on the ground about
Fulton County ballots, the things you hear now from people
in some of these other states with some questions, right,
whether it's Michigan or Sars. And I do think, yeah,
I think, you know, it's amazing what happens when people
are they they now have access to stuff. And to me,
you know, we talked about California and Chad Bianco. I
(21:29):
thought it was very telling when and that California redishutine
initiative he seized as sheriff. I think of a Riverside county,
these six hundred and fifty thousand ballots, because he had
an independent citizens group say look, we think there's a
discrepancy here about forty thousand ballots versus like what the
records say we're cast versus what the official people say
(21:51):
we're counted.
Speaker 4 (21:51):
So we just want to.
Speaker 6 (21:52):
Look at it.
Speaker 4 (21:53):
So to me, it's like, hey, the vote's over.
Speaker 3 (21:55):
So this guy wants to do an investigation look at
these things, and the Supreme Court stopped him. And so
what I'm saying is like, that's basically what happened. After
twenty twenty. The posture of all these kind of overseen
courses been No, we're not allowed to look at it.
You're not going to do it, even though there's no
threat to I think you know you're not. No one's
being suppressed to vote by looking at what Stepan's It
was already done. But now that they're back in the
(22:16):
White House and they've got, you know, kind of good
relationships with some of these key states, Yes, I think
to me, That's what that Susie Wilas quote says is
that they've got access to stuff now that they can
look at. And you know, obviously big text not actively
censored in the way they were in the aftermath of
twenty twenty.
Speaker 4 (22:32):
So stay tuned. I mean, you know, I don't think
anybody would be really.
Speaker 3 (22:35):
Shocked to say, oh wow, really, that whole tranche of
ballots that came at two am, there's some real questions
about that.
Speaker 4 (22:40):
Yeah, and it was then.
Speaker 3 (22:41):
I think all it does is provide momentum for this
push to have common sense election integrity reforms, including voter
ID Yes.
Speaker 2 (22:47):
And I believe beyond that point as well, is we're
talking about those mail in ballots. We are looking at
the mail in ballot is such a pervasive part of
the election integrity conversation. And sure, if you want to
give it to you, you know, absentee ballots for those
who are maybe serving abroad, right or they're in Iran,
they're in Poland they're being stationed somewhere. Fine. But one
(23:08):
of the things that we saw, and I specifically talked
to a lot of people who witnessed this, was we
had people that were literally they had worked the poles, like, like,
my dad works the polls, you know, he's worked them
for thirty years, and he knows Harry and Joe from
down the street, and they come in, Hey, Harry, who
are you voting for? And it's blah blah blah. You know,
it's no big deal. But what they started to see
(23:29):
was these mail in ballots that were pristine, clean, perfectly
filled out ovals. Right, So if you're like the rest
of America, you get your ballot, it comes in, it
sits on the kitchen table, in your car, under your keys,
your coffee cup. It is not pristine, right, There's nothing
pristine about living life. It is a hot mess. And
that's on a good day. So the idea that like
(23:51):
thousands of ballots came in. So people started to call,
and people started to ask that, well, hey, anybody else
see this? Oh yeah, you know, and thousands of people
were reporting the same thing. And suddenly everybody who reported
something that seemed like an outlier was a conspiracy theorist, right,
because conspiracy theorist tinfoil hat. I never heard of these expressions.
Suddenly they remainstream, right, And it was so odd to
(24:14):
me because I felt like it was like twenty twenty
election and COVID were these two sy ups by our
government and by what I would call, you know, this
big government, deep state, these operatives. Man, they were so
ready and we were so not ready, right because we're
living life, honestly, So when somebody starts to do something
really sort of off kilter, you're like, wait, what, oh shit,
(24:36):
you guys are like really doing this. And I'm telling you,
when I saw Bibb County in Georgia, when I saw
Fulton County in Georgia, when I saw Pima County in Arizona,
when I saw things that were happening out in Delco
in Pennsylvania, and whole computer shutdown, and I'm like, Okay, no,
nobody thinks it's weird or exact flips of votes, These
(24:57):
words Joe's and now they're Trump's, and they were Trump's
now they're jos Okay, what the hell is going on?
And now we're finally getting to it six years later,
six years too late because it's May and the elections
are in November.
Speaker 3 (25:11):
Yeah, six is too late, but if you uh, but again,
that's where the momentum comes, right, And I think, if
this we'll see what the response is or the people
in the Senate to the packs and win, because I
think that shows you like, hey, this is what the
people want. Yeah, so there were are real consequences you
capacity don't well, and we'll find out. But yeah, I
think the Susie Walls, if she's suggesting or signaling something
(25:32):
that could be unfailed, I think that would actually be
a real boost to the effort to I agree.
Speaker 2 (25:36):
And I think once they are allowed, I'm assuming they
have a ton of legal behind them. I'm assuming once
they're allowed to say something, it's going to be like floodgates,
you know, just like we're getting the information now on
the raid in Trump and mar A Lago. Now that
we're getting all that information, it's like, hmm, so everything
was a big lie. Cool? All right? So in other news,
(25:57):
we have somebody that is I think probably the biggest
loser of the week. And I love Representative Brandy Fine.
I know you know him well, and he is actually
calling for this Democrat congressional candidate. She's refusing to pledge
the pledge of allegiance. She's in these Sacramento council meetings
and the you know, I guess whoever is drawing the
(26:19):
met is like everybody turned around and see the pledge
of allegiance. What a novel idea. And this bitch literally
faces forward, does not put her hand on her heart,
and puts her head down. I don't even know why
she stood up. I'm like, why are you standing up?
You don't want to pledge. But in any event, for
those of you listening in your car, this is a
congressional candidate vang v A n G. She stands up,
(26:40):
she doesn't pledge, and they all say the pledge. She
stands awkwardly. Anything you'd like to add, sir.
Speaker 3 (26:46):
No, But I just think this is like, you know
this plus the next thing I think we'll talk about,
which is a tweet from Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Fry, I
think they're connected in a significant way and it does
speak to like this this problem that I don't know
the Democrats will ever be able to fix, at least
not with this current crop of candidates and the mentality
of it that seems so pervasive. It's just I thought,
the biggest reason why Kamala Harris lost is when she said,
(27:09):
I love this country.
Speaker 4 (27:10):
I'm so proud of this country.
Speaker 3 (27:12):
I just don't think it rings as authentically true and
videos like the one we're about to watch are honestly why.
Speaker 7 (27:20):
Absolutely, I let.
Speaker 5 (27:26):
In the United States of America and she felt like
lucious stance nation.
Speaker 2 (27:31):
I forgot the invisible with liberty and justice role. Thank
you very much, And madam yeah, thank you very much.
I'm sorry if I was running that medium. I'm sorry. Vang.
Did you break your arms or do you have a
non bending elbow?
Speaker 7 (27:47):
Like?
Speaker 2 (27:47):
What is the problem?
Speaker 4 (27:49):
Well?
Speaker 3 (27:49):
And especially consider this right, I mean, they're in California,
so I'm old enough to remember when the mayor of
a town in California was recently exposed as being like
on the take with Chinese spot eyes. You've got another
former Member of the House in California, ex Suaball obviously
had his own entanglements with some Chinese espionage officials, so
it's not insane to suggest that maybe some elected officials are,
(28:13):
let's get it, at least divided in their allegiance and
not completely loyalty United States. Peter Schweitzer, who I work
with and you are the excellent producer of our podcast,
has exposed how many actual elected officials in Mexico live
in the United States so I mean, we're getting to
a place where pledging the allegiance the American flag is
not just performative or perfunctory, but it's actually significantly necessary
(28:34):
loyalty test. So when someone chooses not to do that,
it's worth paying intention to me, here's.
Speaker 2 (28:38):
My thing, and this is something that you know. It's
the age old question. If you hate it so much here,
if it's so bad here, if you feel that your
hand cannot reach to your heart for a country that
you wish to represent in its government, what are you
doing here? There are so many places you could go
that will tell you you're not allowed to do it anything.
(29:00):
You can stand there perfectly still for twelve hours a
day and be suggest you know, subjected to slave labor.
God knows, there's plenty of socialists and communist countries. Why
are you here? What are you doing here? If you
don't like what our pledge stands for? Why are you
running for government? I mean, shit, at least stay in
your house. When are you doing at the meeting? Go home?
(29:20):
Then get out.
Speaker 4 (29:22):
It's that country.
Speaker 3 (29:23):
Ironically, it's the country whose laws allowed to run for
and hold elected office.
Speaker 2 (29:27):
Right, So it's so true. It's like we you know.
I remember this line from the movie American President, where
Michael Douglas delivers that epic line where he says, oh, yeah,
you know, part of our country is loving our flag
and then allowing us to have the freedom to watch
somebody else burn it in front of you. The problem
is burning it is now the normal, and loving it
(29:48):
makes you weird. Loving it means, you know, we haven't
addressed our white privilege, or we can't talk about this
because it's black on white crime and it's racist to
identify people as the race that they are there the crime.
I'm like, we were recently watching a show. I don't
know if you've seen this. It's the guy who did
Yellowstones called the Madison. Have you heard of it. It's
Kurt Roer.
Speaker 3 (30:09):
I'm pretty much spend most of my time reading scripture
and worldly television you speak of is interesting to me,
but also inaccessible and a threat to my own spiritual sovereignty.
Speaker 2 (30:21):
So well, hands up, bit, because it's about to get
real threatening. Michelle Pfeifer's in this is in this episode
and her daughter gets accosted and she's unable to identify
the purp because she doesn't want to say that he's
black because she thinks it's racist, and the cop is black,
and he's like, okay, I don't I don't understand.
Speaker 4 (30:39):
What does he look like me?
Speaker 2 (30:41):
Or does he look like my partner who's white? And
I'm a dude. I laughed so hard because I was like,
that's that's real, that's what it is. I don't see
color except for when I have to see color, and
then it's awkward because you're just shut up. You know
who racist people are. I'll show you who the racist
people are. In Newark, New Jersey. Right now, we have
people protesting ICE. So two guys walk out in front
(31:04):
of the protest protesters. They happen to be brown, and
so the protesters think that they've released two illegal aliens
and they're cheering. Well, the ICE agents behind the fence
are like, you freaking morons. They work here, you're idiots.
I mean, it's classic. Do you have anything you want
to add to that? Have you've seen this? No?
Speaker 4 (31:20):
This is good. This is like I have the.
Speaker 2 (31:23):
Classic as. So this guy's behind the offend and he goes,
(31:51):
you guys are so racist. You think because they're brown,
they can't work here, and they just I'm like, dude,
this is so epic that whole moment there, and and
so the officers behind the gate are black. It looks
like either a black or Latino, a woman, a white guy,
you know, and they're just like, you guys are so dumb,
so dumb.
Speaker 3 (32:11):
Yeah, there was a this reminds me of and you know,
I like Rick Scott a lot.
Speaker 4 (32:16):
I think he's done a good job.
Speaker 3 (32:17):
But when he was governor, he always you know, made
an effort to try to reach out and try to
appeal to people. So they get a protest at his
mansion and it was a group called Dream Defenders, So
like this like kind of young you know, a lot
of younger African Americans showed up and they're kind of protesting,
like I think it was like a social justice thing.
And so he comes out and he's trying to like
connect them together. Listen, guys, I'm a lot like you.
You know, I grew up in government housing. I kind
(32:38):
of did all this stuff. And then someone from the
back goes, not all of us are poor, and it's
just true, like but it's the same thing as you know,
they'd be like that not every Hispanic is actually a
detaining in this ice facility.
Speaker 2 (32:57):
And it's also the flip side, right, like not every
word person and you see was born with the silver spoon,
some of us before too, you know, And that's that's
the whole thing, right. The messaging from the left is
so loud, Like I was shocked the other day to
see Hassan Piker actually admit that he was getting his
funding from Nevill Singham, who you know, ultimo all about.
(33:20):
Because you and your group have done amazing research, I
strongly recommend everybody go to the Drill Down and Gai
dot org to see it. They crushed this information on
his whole group, but nobody even blinked. I'm like, I'm sorry,
you guys know, this is a communist piece of shit
that is sending money into the United States and he
lives in China.
Speaker 3 (33:40):
He's not here sending money into the United States with
the stated goal of trying to cause division and like
basically wage this kind of like unrelenting warfare against our
nation's kind of like mental and emotional well being. You know,
we just in the latest episode of The Drill Down,
you know, Peter Schweitzer made the point of we played
a clip from a medal of honor winner who defended
(34:02):
this country in the battlefeld in Afghanistan, and he goes,
but we face threats from abroad, not just on the battlefield,
but like everywhere on the phones and the computer with
through TikTok, through nevill Seeingham, through these finance groups that
we've documented them, you know, our reports called riotingc So
we know it's a real thing. And so that's a
that's a bigger deal about the sandpiker.
Speaker 2 (34:21):
Roy stinghams, Yeah, we definitely do another show on that
for sure. So last clip of today, so we talked
about this scumbag DEM candidate vang and how she's unable
to bring her elbow to bring her hand to her heart,
you know, for the country she so desperately wants to represent.
And Joey Jones took to X over Memorial Day. So
Joey Jones is a doubmptee from I think it's from
(34:43):
his knees down. I think one leg might be higher.
But he's a great guy. I've known Joey a long
time and I just think the world of him. And
he's a good dad, good broadcaster, you know, served our
country honorably and so he sees scumbag Jacob Pry put
this post out that he's going to remember George Floyd
on Memorial Day. I'm sorry.
Speaker 3 (35:06):
I saw it and I was shocked, and I like
went to double check he Jacob Fried did later post
about Memorial Day, but the fact that he posted about
George Floyd first is insane. And again it speaks to
they had that I'm sorry, like you hate to say
it and speaking like blanket stereotypes, but Democrats have a
patriotism prospective and you know, and just from a like
why are we divide in this country? Like there there
(35:27):
should be nothing that we take more collective pride in
and like in a unifying way from the people who
have sacrificed on behalf of this country, right they gave
their today's for tomorrow. Yes, we are the you know,
the land of the Free because of the brave, and
there is no greater thing we should all be able
to take pride in than that. And so for you
(35:48):
to then kind of elevate a divisive figure like George
Floyd on the day that's meant to be set aside
to remember the fallen I think is is you know,
is a choice, and I think it's a choice that
actually will can to you that will like color the
way I think most people see Democrats in the way
they think about this country moving forward in a way
that won't be helpful with them.
Speaker 6 (36:06):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (36:06):
And I also think what's very sad is the same
people that are screaming that they hate veterans, they hate war.
Nobody likes war. Nobody's out there going yay war. Everybody's
like shit, this sucks. But I feel so blessed that
I have a one hundred percent volunteer based military. You know,
many other countries it's required service, mandatory service. This country
(36:31):
is a one hundred percent volunteer service. So you only
have to protect your nation if you love it enough
to put your life on the line. And there are
a very small portion of very small brave view that
do that. So the audacity to take Memorial Day, of
all days, if you want to be an asshole and
say that any other day, all right, go be an
asshole and say it. But Memorial Day, really, bro, this
(36:55):
is the moment.
Speaker 3 (36:57):
And oh, by the way, is anyone sit around refreshed
in like hope some says about George Floyd today. I'm
sure it was the anniversary of his death. But you know,
I think we would have been.
Speaker 6 (37:06):
I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 3 (37:07):
There's a huge constituency for that. But yeah, here's Jacob Fry.
Speaker 4 (37:09):
I agree.
Speaker 2 (37:11):
I don't. I really just don't understand. This is an image.
So for those of you who are listening and not watching,
we basically have mayor. Jacob Fried says, today we remember
George Floyd, who was murdered by a former Minneapolis police
officer six years ago. That moment changed our city forever.
And Joey Jones then says, do you want to read
this part?
Speaker 4 (37:31):
Eric h He says, you, sir can blank right off today.
Speaker 2 (37:36):
He couldn't do it. He's such a good boy. So
he says, you, sir can fuck right off. Today is
for heroes, and you know what that he is so
spot on with that, Not to mention the fact, in
the past week we have gotten a resurgence of the
full autopsy report of George Floyd. So I'm not going
(37:57):
to go down the rabbit hole of George Floyd or
tell you all the things I think about George Floyd,
but I would invite you to do your own research
and take a strong, close look perhaps you know, take
a few minutes. Read the whole thing, get to the
second page again, don't be a headline hero. Read the
whole thing. And also remember that George Floyd while he
died during an interaction with a police officer because he
(38:20):
was in the middle of robbing a store while high
on fetanyl and methamphetamine, caffeine and several other things that
were in his system, which if any of you have
ever seen people on these drugs, they have extreme strength.
But we'll just leave that there for a moment. Putting
all of that to the side. This is a man
who held a pregnant woman with a knife to her
(38:40):
belly and he robbed her in the middle of a burglary.
This is a person with a very long rap sheet
to honor him on Memorial Day. Is truly an atrocity
of just the utmost proportions.
Speaker 3 (38:56):
You know what, That's actually an excellent point because it's
one thing too at the moment, and say, listen, I
believe that the death of George Floyd is regrettable in
a tragedy and something that you can like rightfully ask
questions about and you know, want to hold people responsible accountable.
That's like a totally separate thing to then elevate and
memorialize him right literally over the people who have died
(39:18):
for this country. Because in terms of order of operations,
in terms of your social media stuff, No, it's ridiculous
and it actually reminds me very much to kind of
come full circle of the John Cornyn like insha Lah
and Ramadan posts like no one's waiting on you to
say anything about this, Yeah, like everyone else would be
just fine. It's performative, it's insincere and ultimate. That's why
(39:39):
it comes off as disrespectful.
Speaker 2 (39:40):
Yes, and Cornin to that point, he was all ready
to talk about in shaw Lah, but had nothing to
say about the nine year old child brides walking around
the state of Texas. Super quiet about that, just wondering,
you know, keeping it proportionate, just yea, asking questions. Why not?
It's my right right Anyways, you guys, thank you for
joining us. This is episode seven of sound Bites. Eric
is laughing at me as per usual.
Speaker 3 (40:02):
Well, I'm just laughing because we started with center Mass
and we ended with child brides like Lenda mcglock and everybody.
Welcome to the show.
Speaker 2 (40:08):
This is the Rogue recap. We're here to say all
the things you're thinking because you're afraid to say them,
and we're happy to help. That's what I'm here for.
You know. I got the guns, I got the hat,
I got the flag. I'm all in, you know. Anyways.
Check us out on my Rogue recap dot com. He
is Eric underscore Eggers at on X, I am at
Lindamick at Roague Recap. Be safe, pray for our troops,
and we'll see you next time.