Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Keep America. We'll keep them. Maren con gray a keep Himmeric?
Can you jeep America? We'll keep a man? Could be
ah jeep Americ? Can you do jeep America? Well, jeep
(00:22):
a mere concree. Welcome to the Bob Save America Podcast.
My name is Bob Dunelab and my name is Eric Mathanie.
Thank you all for tuning in. Happy Saturday, Big week.
We've had a lot to talk about, my goodness. Guys,
Thank you, thank you, thank you. Please hit up the
Patreon Patreon dot com slash Bob and Eric. Everything you
(00:42):
give helps the show continue time and time again, hopefully forever.
We'll see, probably not on a long enough timeline. All
of our survival is zero. So one day, one day,
the civilizations that will come thousands of years after will
dig us up and go who are these Bob and
Eric characters? And thank you to you. We will have
been here all right eighty six hopefully not eighty six.
(01:05):
Speaking of eighty six, Okay, now we got to kind
of cut through. There's a lot of rage about that.
For those of you that don't know. If you've been
living under a rock on Mars with your fingers and
your ears and your eyes shut. James Comy the other
day on his Instagram took a photo apparently on the
beach of a shell formation that said eighty six forty seven, which,
(01:27):
for those of you that don't know, eighty six meaning
to kill or remove and forty seven being forty seven
President of United States Donald Trump. Now, immediately people saw
that and there was tremendous outrage. Now was the outrage warranted?
Was it manufactured outrage? I think and I hate manufactured outrage,
(01:47):
and I believe in free speech, Bob, And I think
that if James Comy would have gone out there on
his beach and with his shells would have written like
I hate Donald Trump. Trump's the worst president. You know,
impeach Trump, you know, knock yourself out, buddy. I'll give
you the shelves. But when you say eighty six forty
seven for a president who in the last calendar year,
(02:10):
mind you, the last calendar year has had two assassination attempts, Bob,
what do you think about that? And what do you
think he meant by that? He meant assassinate President Trump?
But I think he should be thrown in jail.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
Was it Tulci Gabbett's it's somebody threatened her life in
George hit and he's in jail. So I mean he's
got a podium, he's got a big microphone.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
Man, that was so out of line. He should go
to jail. It was so out of line. Now in
terms of him going to jail, Okay, so I have
to put on my lawyer hat for a minute. You know,
is there going to be probable cause to arrest? Can
he claim plausible deniability? Can someone say, well, you know,
is it did he mean kill or did he mean remove?
Like impeach, which is legitimate, you can say that. I
(02:53):
think it will be a hard prosecution to make. I
do like the fact that Cash Mattel was on top
of it right away. I do like the fact that
that was sort of the main issue that we've kind
of followed the remainder of the week, and that he
was visited by Secret Service and they did take the
threat seriously. My position on that is, I don't think
James Comy himself would ever do anything to Donald Trump
(03:14):
because he's too much of a coward. I don't think.
I don't think he would do anything.
Speaker 3 (03:17):
But you have to remember, and I want you to
think about the chronology of liberal folk heroes, and one
of them that we've had in the last year has
been a gentleman named Luigi Mangioni who shot and killed
the CEO of United Healthcare.
Speaker 1 (03:30):
And the left loves him. They love him. They think
he's good looking, they think what he did was bold,
and he's a full hero to them. Somewhere in this
country that is riddled with mental health crises, somewhere right now,
there is someone sitting there watching that, looking at that
post and being inspired seeing the hero worship that is
(03:51):
visited upon the Luigi Mangioni and seeing what Komi put
out there and went, aha, I will be the next one.
I will be the Luigi Vangioni. And when you've had
a president who's had two assassination attempts, one of which
on national TV where Trump was a millimeter away from
having his head blown off, you have to be cautious
(04:11):
in what you say, understanding not that you may be
saying I'm going toroduce some harm to Donald Trump, but
you being in a position of authority and people listening
to you on your side of the political aisle, inspiring others.
We always talk about radicalization, and we live in a
period of political extremes. And if you say things like that,
(04:32):
they they indicted Donald Trump, the JA six indictment by
the Biden administration for saying peacefully and patriotically, have your
voices heard, because they claim that that inspired people to
go storm the capitol.
Speaker 2 (04:46):
Right.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
So, with respect to what Komi has said, what he
has done is he's put that dog whistle out to
his people to say, hey, guys, interpret as you see fit,
so that someone goes out and does something to Trump
and then they can they can go out in fame outrage,
go oh my god, how could this have happened. We
(05:09):
need to tone down the rhetoric in this country. We
are so sorry for what occurred. In our hearts and
prayers go out to so and so. Meanwhile behind closed
doors celebrating what happened. It's disgusting, you know, that's what
it was. You know, but that's exactly what it was.
And the thing is, you know, remember that Donald Trump
(05:30):
was impeached for a phone call. Remember the first impeachment.
He was impeached for a phone call to Ukraine. We
have a congressional majority, and I think that there's so
much looking. I don't care. He's probably not going to
get arrested. He's probably not not for that. But our House,
our Senate, has the ability to subpoena James Comy, to
bring him in, to really put him under the gun.
(05:53):
That will send a message to other people like, hey,
I need to watch my words. You have freedom of speech.
You want to use your platform to say all the
reasons why you hate Donald Trump and he's the worst president,
and you think you should be impeached, you have the
god given right to do that. When you step over
the line and you start espousing violence and inciting others,
that's where it's no longer free speech. You know, there
(06:15):
are on free speech. I was no free speech. No,
there are certain things everyone uses. The example, you can't
yell fire in a crowded theater. There are limits to
free speech. You cannot put out a threat or a
call the violence against the president of the United States,
no matter who that president is. I agree. I just
don't think the Republicans are gonna be shit. They're gonna
write a letter. They're really good at writing letters. They're
(06:36):
gonna write a strongly worded letter. They're gonna send it
to Komi. They're gonna post it out on Twitter, and
that's going to be the end of it. But this
is just kind of a culmination of things we've seen
over the last month. We've seen the left rating federal
detention facilities, We've seen calls to violence, We've heard this rhetoric,
and it leads me to believe that we had Carlin
(06:57):
Borsenko on not too long ago, and she's kind of
an expert the real far left, like so far on
the left that we in the mainstream like don't see it.
I mean really like the depths of that kind of
the very edge of liberalism. I mean, we see part
of it online, but I'm talking she's out in the ship,
like she goes to like these socialist conventions and she
(07:19):
sees of and beyond what they're putting out on social media.
But that being said, do you think we're gonna see
the summer violence riots fires? Do you think it's gonna
be a Summer twenty twenty revisited? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (07:31):
I do, But this time I think the military is
gonna get involved, especially with the Supreme Court did yesterday.
If that's gonna parlay into the next discussion, it.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
Is gonna parlay into the next discussion. But I'm just
curious to know do you think there's gonna be an
event that sets off a summer of love or do
you think it's just gonna happen. I mean, there's talk
that you can just talk about Derek Chauvin possibly being pardoned,
just's talk about it. He should be.
Speaker 2 (07:55):
But yeah, I think there's gonna be an event yep,
and then it's gonna kick it all off. And I
think they tracking all these people's cell phones. So I
think it's the round up's going to go much quicker
than did non exist at the twenty twenty.
Speaker 1 (08:07):
Well, okay, so one thing that people got to realize
before you get, you know, all worked up over Derek Schauman.
So the pardon would have to come from the president.
As far as Derek Chauvin's federal conviction, remember he was
tried in state court and he was tried in federal court.
It doesn't violate double jeopardy because it's different jurisdictions. So
he's got it, what a twenty seven year sentence in
state court and he's serving whatever the sentence is in
(08:28):
federal court. So even if the federal sentence is commuted
or pardon, whatever what happens. He's still got his state sentence.
And the only person who could commute pardon that is
Tim Waltz. And you think Tim Wallas is going to
do anything. No, but that would definitely kick off the event.
The Left would go nuts if the Trump part of it.
I think if Trump partoned Chauvin, even though nothing would
(08:51):
change and Derek Chauvin will still spend time in prison,
I think that would just be the catalyst that just
sets off another summer Left. But I hope this time
will We were very critical of Trump during the first time.
I thought he should have called the military, and I
think Trump is at a point where, and we've talked
about this, that he doesn't have to be re elected
and he doesn't have to walk on eggshells like a
lot of first term presidents do. No matter who you
(09:12):
are do you all have to do it. You all
have to play the game to some extent. But this
time around, man, I could see him just calling the
military and doing what George hw Bush did in the
nineteen ninety two riots in LA called in the military
invote the insurrection, because that's exactly what it is.
Speaker 2 (09:26):
Well, that's the Supreme Court says we can't throw out
these legal aliens. I think he's just gonna crumple up
the constitution here for a little bit. What's that called has.
Speaker 1 (09:35):
Carcass hebe's corpus bringing up the next point. Okay, so
we got a seven to too ruling where it's two
the two dissenters. Yeah, centers. I'm gonna have to actually
look it up because I don't know who that want
to be. It's got to be it's got to be Aldo,
(09:56):
and what's his Well, No, I think I think it's
got to be Alido in Gorsach. I'm gonna go out
on a live and say Alido and gorsicch because they're
the two most reliably conservative justices there are. Which makes
me think, why did we go through the trouble for
Cony Barrett, Why did we go through the trouble for Kavanaugh?
(10:18):
Why who's recommending these picks to the president?
Speaker 2 (10:22):
I don't know. He's got a whole team for sure,
but his corpus, he's got to do it now. He
gave the court in the tweet. He gave him a
choice either do the right thing or I'm gonna have
to do the right thing.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
I'll take it up one level and what I think
we need to be doing. I think we and this
and this coming from a lawyer as bold, I think
we need to stop treating a legal immigration as a
legal issue and start treating it as a wartime issue.
I think I think if we, if Congress really wants
to do something about this, Congress needs to declare war
(10:57):
on You know, we had a war on terror. We
didn't have a war on a specific country. We never
did went into declare war on Afghanistan. We dided to
declare war on Iraq. We had a global war on terror.
Wherever these terror cells were, we're going to go after them.
We need to have a global war on American illegal
immigration where we target these criminal enterprises. Trend to well
(11:18):
MS thirteen, and we take the fight to wherever they are,
and it unleashes tremendous military power for the President to
use his War Powers Act and we are being invaded,
militarize the border, treat these people as prisoners of war,
take them into custody, and send them back to their
(11:39):
homes or detainment, Guantanamo or Alcatraz wherever. But we need
to start treating immigration the way it is illegal immigration
at the massive levels we've seen as invasion, akin to
being invaded by a foreign nation, which we are, we're
being invaded by numerous foreign nations.
Speaker 2 (11:57):
Isn't that what he already declared the Wartime Act?
Speaker 1 (12:02):
Not to the fullest extent, he's not using his war
Powers Act. He hasn't. He hasn't taken it to that
step yet. He's the border to some degree. Parts of
the border. You have National Guard on the border, but
actually making a formal declaration of war, and these people
will be treated not as US citizens or not as
persons by the constitutional standard. But his enemy combatants. Mind you,
(12:26):
we still have enemy combatants associated with nine to eleven
sitting on Tontoo Bay right now. It gives us a
lot more latitude as far as that. And also they
don't have the same due process rights where you could
take these gang members and ship equal waterboard them and
say who's paying you, who's sending you here, who are
you working for? Instead of you know, we have to
give you a government paid lawyer, and you have to
have all of these steps of due process. Where it's
(12:48):
an act of war. There is no due process in
war approved So I think if we start looking at
it from that angle, Trump's gonna have a lot more
leeway with out getting the courts involved with the global
war on Terror. I mean, George W. Bush pretty much
ran rough shot over the Constitution for almost a decade
with his War on Terror, and it was pretty much
(13:09):
able to do what he wanted to do. Trump needs
to have the same ability because we are being invaded.
And on a positive note, not to you know, always
dwell on the negative immigration. Illegal immigration just in the
last six months since Trump has been in office is
down tremendously. Just the sheer specter of Donald Trump, just
the idea that he's in charge. You don't see footage
(13:30):
like you saw under Biden, where you have hordes of
tens of thousands of people coming across the border. You
don't see that anymore because they know it's a different story,
and the luster is sort of worn off a little
bit as far as why people want to come here.
You're not going to be plied with free stuff anymore.
We're not going to give you a phone and give
you a court date in fifteen years and say have fun.
What it really is, though, is the funding.
Speaker 2 (13:51):
It took away the funding and these dan NGOs and
these Catholic churches in a stupid woman.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
We've got to treat it like a wartime issue. But
that being said, I do applaud what has been done,
and I I just like, you know, the Supreme Court
has basically told us, like, you can't have your own country,
you have to have open borders. You have to let
(14:20):
these people in and once they're here, okay. So once
they're here, okay, so they're entitled to due process. So
you get some jurisdiction where you get some crazy far
left ideologue judges like I'm not holding this person, I'm
releasing them and then give them a court date for
their asylum hearing in fifteen years. And guess what they're
doing while they're pending asylum. They're killing Americans. Lake and Riley.
(14:40):
You know, the guy who killed her was an asylum
seeker who had been in ice custody and had been
released under Biden. Yeah, and the reason Trump had a
mandate in this election was because of immigration, because people
were sick and tired of seeing every single day our
border being overrun. And granted it's down ninety eight ninety
nine percent, you know we still have an opportunity here.
(15:02):
So that's my position. I think that it needs to
be looked at the same way the Global War on
Terror was looked at with the same level of congressional support,
because you know, if there's one thing congressional Republicans love,
it's war. Hey, you want to fund a war, fund
this war? We can all get on board with that. Yeah,
how about the Middle East? This week? A man, Trump
(15:24):
was like, they love him over there, they love they
welcome him well, because the Middle East, like Qatar and
the United Arab Emirates and in that area, Saudi Arabia,
they're very into money and power because they all have it.
I mean, the you know, the Saudi family and the
the Amidis, they all they're loaded with that oil money.
(15:46):
And they just respect Trump. They just like say, game
recognizes game. They just see somebody who symbolizes wealth and
success for them. But man, it's a it's a whole
different world. I was watching you see the the interview
where this listener General or the Special Council is interviewing
Joe Biden, and they just released the tapes. No, I
(16:07):
haven't heard that yet, but I hear it's a disaster.
Robert heard tapes. Yeah, it's a disaster. I mean, and
to think that this guy was in charge for for
I mean, he wasn't in charge, let's be honest, but
for four years that he was at least the figurehead.
And that's why we never had a trade deal with China.
That's why we never had peace negotiations in Ukraine. That's
why we never had peace negotiations in the at least
(16:28):
because nobody respected him. It's like that should all be
wiped right. Who was operating it, that's the thing, not him.
You know, if in a foreclosure, if there's an auto
pen used to sign loan documents, that could be a
technicality upon which you can have your foreclosure vacated. And
(16:49):
here we have an actual presidency that's operating from an
autopen perspective, and wondering who's operating that, who's making these decisions,
who made the decision to pardon Hunt? Oh yeah, who's
We've always wondered that since day one. I mean I
look back to old post from like twenty nineteen where
we started to see Biden slipping. I mean, look, even
(17:10):
in twenty sixteen, he was still you know, like we've
always said, I mean, he was never a mental giant,
but he could put a sentence together. It was really
like twenty eighteen, twenty nineteen where you really started to
see it and then obviously it was on full display
in the debates. Yeah, yeah, it's crazy. And to think that,
you know, we sat and we laughed about it. But
(17:30):
like the people around him that came out and looked
you in the eye and said, no, he's fine, he's sharp,
he's on top of things, so he's he's got his
hand and everything. He knows what's going on. When it
was complete and utter crap. Just how much danger we
were in for those four years. I don't know if
we really appreciated that.
Speaker 2 (17:45):
How about the fact that now they're like, oh, we
didn't know, we got Why do Deke Taffer he wrote
a book on this, right, No.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
They they all knew. Everybody knew it was bad. I mean,
there was talk they said that if he wanted reelection,
he might have to be spent a second term in
a wheelchair.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
That comment I did, I did, But yeah, it doesn't matter.
It's the mental capacity. He had no mental capacity, had
no mental capacity. But it's not just the mental capacity
and the ability to do the job. Because look, we've
had presidents before that.
Speaker 1 (18:13):
Weren't terribly bright. And the hallmark of a good president
is not necessarily someone who could do everything on his own.
It's to have good people around you. And you can
be not a terribly bright president, but maybe have leadership
potential and have good people around you. But it's the
image that you project for the world that's a big
(18:33):
part of it. Is the image you project, because image
is everything. And when you have this old tired man
who can't find his way off of stage, who's stumbling
over his words, what do you think that does to
animy nations? What do you think that does to rush
in Ukraine?
Speaker 2 (18:47):
Like him?
Speaker 1 (18:47):
These guys are gonna oversee peace talks. No, he's gonna
write me another check for two hundred billion. He's gonna
shut his mouth. China, are we gonna? Are we gonna
stop hitting the US with fifty percent tariffs? Now we're
gonna take advantage of him because we can't.
Speaker 2 (19:00):
Yeah, how did they not China invade Taiwan during this period?
I'm shocked about that. So I'm equally shocked. I thought
they were going to do that too. I was posting
out in twenty twenty. I'm like Taiwan, you're next, that.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
Never did no. And look, you know China. I don't
think China is a military threat to US. I don't
think they've ever been a military threat. So I don't
think Russia is a threat to US period. But China, Look,
they're a geopolitical threat. They're an economic threat. They're always
going to be trying to take us down. But I
think you know, and and the tariffs, and the tariffs worked.
(19:33):
I want you to look at your four oh one
k today. It's it's it is better now than when
the tariffs were put on. It has come back. So
all those people out there who are panicking and losing
their minds ran all a trader. He tried to stop
to Donald from doing tariffs. He backstabbed him. I was
so disappointed with the rampall. It needed to be done
(19:54):
because we've been taking advantage of for so long. But
one of the main reasons why we've been taking advantage
of is because guys like Joe Biden. Are there other
people like Obama who would just give it away willingly.
I'm not saying Obama projected the same weakness that Biden did,
but Biden my god, we are very lucky. There wasn't
like a massive terror attack in the US between those years.
(20:15):
Maybe they just didn't see the benefit. They didn't see
the upside because they were getting everything they wanted anyway,
and we weren't a threat to them. So I mean,
why why cut us out at the kneecaps? They said, Hey,
you know we're getting we can screw them on trade,
and we can send as many of our immigrants, our
gang members, We can open our prisons and send them
to the US. So what would be the We're already
giving them everything they want. They don't need to commit
(20:36):
an active terror. They're already committing their acts of terror.
They're just doing it without a bomb or a plane. Yeah. Yeah,
good time. So that's that's one thing there. We had
a Memorial Day weekend coming up next week. Yeah, it's
gonna be a good time. Man, we need it. I remember,
like back in the COVID days, like, oh, your Memorial
Day barbecue or your your July fourth hot dog is
(20:59):
going to cost you fourteen cents less than it did
last year. And then going back into like the heyday
of COVID, like, oh, you know, maybe by July fourth
you'll be able to have friends. Over just the last
five years. Man, Like, we're halfway through the twenties, and uh,
this has been a very strange decade to live through.
(21:19):
Imagine if you're a kid, your kids, my kids, Man,
I look around. I was out fishing with my son
and his and his boys this morning, and that was great.
It's cool that you'll get kids off the couch and
go take them out to do things like that. But
I feel, you know, we are fully formed, develop human beings.
We had our formative years and now we get to
just be the grumpy old men and sit back and
(21:40):
make fun of the younger generation, which is our right
to do. But I couldn't imagine like coming up in
this world, in in the COVID and just everything that
we're seeing, you know, a president being shot on TV.
I mean, what what? Just a challenging time and I wish,
like I think one of the big things that strikes
(22:02):
a chord with younger people I notice is music. They
listen to music and they go, man, you don't hear
this anymore? Wow, Oh my god, this is amazing. I
can't believe they performed like this. Like bands music we've
we've had this talk for years. It just doesn't exist anymore. Movies,
the way they used to make of entertainment, comedy. It's
just not what it used to be. I guess, you know,
(22:23):
the world changes, but I just feel the world we
grew up in was a much better place to live.
Speaker 2 (22:30):
It really was without cell phones and I just played sports.
There was any computers. I played ice hockey three hundred
and thirty days a year.
Speaker 1 (22:41):
I you know what, Like, here's the thing. And my kids,
my kids are very funny with that, Like I'll tell them, hey,
you get off your tablet, and they're like, Dad, you
know how many hours of TV a day did you
watch as a kid? And I'm like, okay, tuche. Yes,
I grew up in the eighties and nineties. I watched
a lot of TV. But the difference between a tea
and the difference between a phone or a tablet is
(23:02):
that TV is stationary, that's not coming with you everywhere
you're home. You watch TV, that's wonderful. The phone, the
tablet that goes with you everywhere. So whereas the TV
used to be the escape from reality, now you have
reality as the escape from the screen, from the entertainment
and you bring it with you everywhere. So I think
trying to break away from that, trying to touch some grass,
(23:23):
trying to just interact and live in the world and
be in the moment is a lot harder because there's
too much temptation around. I'm not saying that we're any
better than this generation. I mean if we would have
had cell phones and tablets and social media back in
nineteen eighty seven, we probably would have fallen victim to it.
Just the same. We're human beings. We cannot help ourselves.
If you put a buffet in front of us, we
will eat too much. If you give us an open bar,
(23:45):
we will drink too much. Everything you give humankind we
will push to the extreme. There's no such thing as moderation.
So you give us this wonderful technology and say, hey,
we can give you ideas instantaneously, we can connect people,
we can provide information, and what do we do. We
become completely and utterly addicted to it.
Speaker 2 (24:07):
Yeah, and it would have happened in the eighties too,
But like you said, we're just humans.
Speaker 1 (24:11):
We suck. It would have happened in the fifteen hundreds.
I mean, that's that's just the nature of humankind. We
cannot help ourselves. So I think it's important to try
to break away from those technological shackles and go live
in the world and slow down a little bit.
Speaker 2 (24:28):
Man.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
I still, you know, I live in my head in
my cowboy fantasy, you know, my portune dead with South
Dakota and just drinking coffee and staring at the Black hills.
That to me is my idea of heaven. So if
we can, you know, exist in the world and you know,
break away from the politics and the rhetoric and everything
like that, I think it's a better place to be.
But that's you know, moyal day. Weekend is nice, get
(24:50):
three days off. We all work too much, man, Americans
like we don't put enough emphasis on quality of life
for our young people. We put way too much emphasis
on what you're going to be, what you're going to do.
And granted, I understand that is the idea of school
and college and training you to become a person. But
to quote my father, college just trains you to be
(25:12):
just a middle class worker, bee. That's really what it's
there for. It just trains you to be like a
sixty hour a week, punch a clock, make eighty five
thousand dollars a year, worker Bee, and I think there's
so much more to life than that. And it was like,
probably when I was thirty six, I staw thinking, like,
how much of my life has been spent preparing me
for what I'm going to do? And now that I
(25:34):
do it, you know what's next? When do we say, hey,
enjoy the world, enjoy, go travel, go make mistakes, do
silly things as a kid, have fun, enjoy yourself. I
don't think we do that enough. But the problem is
the flip side of that coin is that all the
stupid things you do now are on film. All the
stupid things you and I did, those are funny stories
(25:54):
we share with friends. Hey, I remember that time. Yeah,
I have to remember it because I can't see it
because there was no video to take. Would stay what
happens in Vegas? Actually stay in Vegas? Actually stay in
Vegas doesn't exist like that anymore. Man, All the and
we we could look at the younger generation doing foolish things,
and we can, you know, cast our aspersions and again
we have the luxury of having done it and being
(26:16):
able to sit back on our high horse and go, haha,
look at you. But we were doing it too. The
difference is we weren't recording it. We didn't have any
means by which to post it up there. Nice on occasion,
there'd be like a polaroid and it'd be like floating
around like someone got drunk in a party and passed
out and we drew a penis on their cheek with
a sharpie and you take a picture of it. But
(26:36):
that's how we used to do it back then in
the in the nineties, in the early two thousands in college.
But that being said, Supreme Court, you know, look, we
may have to work around you. We have a country
to save. If you don't have sovereignty, if you don't
have the ability to protect your own borders, then you
(26:57):
cease to be a country. Yep, and we need to
find some work arounds. Hey, Joe Biden, very famously when
the Supreme Court said you can't forgive student loans, He's like,
I'm gonna do it anyway, And the left applauded him
for it. They said, bold, beautiful, this is the kind
of action we need. If somebody shoots Trump, that person's
going to be a hero. So get ready, if somebody
(27:18):
shoots Trump, they are going to be a hero left.
I mean, look, hey, remember the first time it happened.
They were all said, I remember how many people will saying,
oh god, just a little more to the right, come on,
couldn't be you know, there was a lot of jokes
about that, but those weren't jokes. There's a lot of
seriousness underlying that. I think there are a lot of
people in this country who would like to see harm
visited on Trump. And that's why with Komy and his statement,
yeah no, he's not going to do anything to Trump,
(27:39):
but there are a lot of crazy people out there
that are inspired by that rhetoric and see the hero
worship visited upon these guys like Luigi Mangioni and go,
that's going to be me. I mean, think about it.
You know, have we not learned anything from Matt's shooters.
They all fancy themselves martyrs. They all have these shitty
lives and they want to go out with a bank
so people will remember them. And they're trends.
Speaker 2 (27:59):
Like the last ten Matt shootings, they were all trans
taking those fucking drugs.
Speaker 1 (28:04):
Well, there's a lot of mental illness underlying transgenders, and
I think to be born a biological male and to
convince yourself you're not. There's something. There's some deep seated
mental issues going on, and the forty percent suicide rate
among transgenders is not because you're being bullied. I think
you're dealing with a lot of personal demons and these
are people that need help and need someone to talk to.
(28:25):
Not have you know your woke parents on Facebook going,
oh my god, my nine year old girl plays softball.
I'm gonna go give her puberty blockers. Crazy. That being said, guys,
I want to thank all of you for joining us today.
Thank you, enjoy your weekend, have fun, be saved, touch grass,
love life, eat some good food, and we will see
(28:46):
you next weekend for a beautiful Memorial Day weekend. Take
care of us. I'm bless. Keep America.
Speaker 2 (28:55):
You keep America, We'll keep ammeric Great.
Speaker 1 (29:02):
I keep America.
Speaker 2 (29:04):
Could you keep America?
Speaker 1 (29:07):
We'll keep Americ.