Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
A keep Americ? Could you keep America? We'll keep Ameron
Congray ha keep Emeric? Could you keep America? Well? Keep
a man?
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Could Gray.
Speaker 1 (00:19):
Ah keep Americ? Could you jeep America? Were keep amhervn concree.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
Every Welcome to the Bob and Eric Save America Podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
My name is Bob Dunla and I am Eric MATHENI.
Good afternoon, Happy Saturday, and happy birthday seventy nine years
young to our President Mayor in Chief, Donald Trump. And
I was thinking about that, Bob. I was thinking that
at seventy nine years old, if I had a fraction
of the money that he had, the last place I'd
(00:54):
want to be is in public service. And maybe that's
the difference between us. I just I would be on
a beach with a drink in my hand, enjoying my life.
There is a guy who doesn't need this, who can retire,
who can live a beautiful, extravagant life. And he puts
himself willingly into the fight day in and day out.
(01:16):
He has taken ninety one felony counts, he has taken trials,
He's taken bullets, slings and arrows for the American people.
He does not need this he chooses to do this
in the true tradition of what our founders thought a
president should be, someone who achieved in private life and
saw public service as a way to give back. So
(01:37):
Happy seventy ninth birthday to our President Donald Trump. Yeah,
so we start off today. Today is the No Kings
protest Day. For those of you who don't know what
that is, and I think most of you do, there
are eighteen hundred protests nationwide. I'm right here in Broward County, Florida.
They're like four within an outwards drive of my home
(01:59):
in the Red stae to Florida. Obviously, obviously we treat
things a little bit differently here than in California. You're
allowed to peacefully protest, but the minute it turns into
a riot, we don't tolerate that. We don't stand for that.
Speaker 4 (02:15):
But it's just was that did you see the video
where the late turn green and that they all went
off to the curve?
Speaker 2 (02:21):
Was that from today? It might have been yesterday, but
it was Florida. Because they'll know I haven't I haven't
seen that. I've seen a couple. I think what we're
gonna see like with respect to today and for those
of you that are listening later or watching later. It's
twelve o'clock Eastern time on Saturday, June fourteenth. I think
the protests are going on. Obviously on the East coast
(02:42):
they've started. On the West coast, they're still sleeping. You know,
these are lazy people. They don't work, so you know
they'll sleep until nine there. I think their day starts
with like a ten or eleven before it, so they'll
they'll get out there when they do. And look, I'm
a free speech enthusiast. I'm a free speech absolutist. I
don't care what you're protesting. Protest, do it peacefully, do
it on the sidewalk, don't do it on the highway.
(03:03):
Say what you want to say, hold up the sign
you want to hold up. It doesn't matter to me.
I just wonder, you know, obviously, and none of this
is organic, None of this is people funded. This is
all coming from Soros. It's coming from the globalists. No kings,
no kings, no kings. Okay, I understand that. Here's the thing.
Donald Trump, Yes, he's a strong president. And if you
(03:25):
juxtapose his presidency with Joe Biden, it's night and day.
Joe Biden was a puppet. He was asleep at the wheel.
He wasn't even running the show. But Donald Trump is
challenged by his own party, He's challenged by his courts,
He's challenged by his Congress. That is not a king. Yes,
he may be a strong, bombastic leader, but he has
checks and balances in place. His power is not unchecked.
(03:48):
Tell me about the governors in twenty twenty who would
arrest you if you set foot on a beach. Tell
me about the governors who would arrest you if you
went to church. Tell me about the governors It said
you could go out and riot, and you can firebomba target,
and we'll say that's okay. But if you buy tomato seeds,
we're going to come to your house. The gyms that
had to close, the hair salons that had to close,
but the pot stores and the liquor stores that could open,
(04:10):
the mod post stores that had to close, but Amazon
could still be in business. And tell me that's not
a little kingly. And where were the protests at that time?
There were some protests the what was the oh geez,
the interstate MAGA takes the interstate protests. We had one
of the guys on our show, and during the impeachment
they brought it up. Oh my god, these guys were
(04:31):
surrounding their capital. We had a handful of organic protests,
but we didn't have the uprising this country that we
should have. And this is so it's so manufactured that
it's laughable. But if that's what you want to do,
if that's what you want to spend your Saturday doing.
And I was just outside. It's hot today, man. It
is ninety some on degrees in Florida, which for those
of you who are not from a humid climate, that's
(04:53):
like one hundred and seventeen in Arizona. It is a
hot day. I'm inside. My ac is set to sixty
nine degrees right now, and I could even go cooler
than that. So I don't know why you want to
be out there protesting a king that we don't have.
But be my guest, you're.
Speaker 4 (05:09):
Doing it for money, I mean, and they're mentally deranged,
that's for sure.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
You know. I've been talking this week. I've been talking
to our friend Carlin Borsenko, and we've had her on
countless times. Remember we had her on a couple of
months ago, and she was saying, like you guys don't
know what you're in store for this summer. What do
you think we're I mean, we're predicting, and you know,
we'll see what happens. We could be wrong. We've been
wrong plenty of times on the show. But what do
you think is going to happen today? Eighteen hundred, Bob,
(05:35):
eighteen hundred protests? Judging by what we know about the left,
do you think we're going to see eighteen hundred peaceful
protests where everyone holds their signs and marches and abides
by the constitution as far as peaceful assembly.
Speaker 3 (05:49):
No, it's it's probably not going to be as bad
as it was in LA But they're just waiting for
an event to go nuts like they did in twenty twenty.
Speaker 4 (05:57):
But it's going to happen this summer. I think what.
Speaker 2 (06:00):
Specifically, what do you think is good? Well, let me
let me back that up for a second. So I
think you know, in the summer of twenty twenty, the
death of George Floyd was the catalyst for seven months
of fire and brimstone. This time, you know, BLM's been
replaced by the immigration cause, so now you have Hispanic organizations.
BLM's been kicked to the curb. It's funny, I will
(06:23):
say for a minute. And I was talking to our
friend Gunnar Eagleman last night and he put out a
very very funny ex post saying, if there's one positive
thing to come out of all the riots and all
the turmoil in the Middle East, as Pride Bunth has
completely been forgotten about. Yeah, have you have you noticed that?
Speaker 4 (06:41):
I didn't un till you just said that, Well you have.
Speaker 2 (06:44):
You probably haven't noticed it because you haven't even thought
about it because it hasn't been in your face like
it's been in years past. No one's talking about Pride
Bunth anymore.
Speaker 4 (06:52):
I haven't seen Gabe raise either on TV or anything.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
Well, I think they'll don't figure out a way to
mix Pride in with what's going on today. But man,
I'll tell you, I'd like to think that we're gonna
have eighteen hundred peaceful protests and like I said, protest
what you want, but you know, you know you're gonna
have agitators there. And the left wants that to happen.
They want they are the foot soldiers of the globalists.
(07:19):
They are there on the ground. They want to start
something and Carlin has said before, and she said in
our private conversations this week that what they want to
do is, you know, when they're throwing bottles, when they're
fighting with the cops, they are hoping that someone gets shot.
They are willing to sacrifice themselves for the cause. I mean, look,
a lot of these people, let's be honest, physically speaking,
(07:40):
they're absolute goblins. They're absolute goblins, like piercings here and there, tattoos,
hair that's not a color, bodies that are just horrific
people that dedicate their lives to that cause with that
much anger and that much hate in their heart. I
think a lot of it comes from needing a place
(08:00):
to belong. And I think some of these people are
so physically revolting and just don't care about themselves that
their lives have very little meaning. So they find meaning
in these high and sacred purposes that they go, I'm
going to dedicate myself to Antifa, and they will willingly
put themselves on the front line. They'll throw a bottle,
they'll charge a cop, and they want to get shot.
They want to get shot, they want to die. They
(08:22):
are they are the the Isis bombers of their time
and their costs. They want to die. They want to
be the martyr and they want to be like the
rallying cry, like you know, remember so and so who
you know threw a frozen bottle of hevey On at
a cop and you know got shot doing it. I
mean that's a projectile. I think that's what they're going
(08:43):
to try to do.
Speaker 3 (08:45):
That's what's going to kick it off. Like George Floyd
and you know you just these gobblin looking people. Yeah,
they ever wondering what demon looks like? It's note a
human being? There you go, because they look all the
you know the look.
Speaker 2 (08:59):
You look and you know, I know that you know
everyone's we're not supposed to to body shame or things
like that. I think that's a bunch of horseship. I
think that shaming has has made us stronger people. I
think that those of us who were bullied, I think,
and we've talked about this on the show so many times,
that the greatest changes that we make in our lives
don't come from a place of I'm feeling content. It
comes from pain. It comes from someone says something or
(09:22):
something happens and you're like, okay, now, you're thinking totally
transforms and you go on the path to health, financial stability,
you know, getting the education, you want, the job, whatever
your goal is. The impetus for that has to come
from a place of wanting, and it can't come from
a place of being comfortable. It can't come you're sitting
(09:42):
on the couch, you weigh four hundred and fifty pounds.
You're like, I think I'll wake up tomorrow and I'll
start my day. You know, something has to happen. And
you know.
Speaker 5 (09:51):
That Jesus Christ needed a push from his mother to
start his ministry exactly.
Speaker 3 (10:02):
You know.
Speaker 2 (10:02):
Look, you know good things come from places of shame.
But you know, these folks, I just think that they
are deep down. I mean, look, we have to, I guess,
try to, if not empathize, I guess, just try to
relate to these people, not as a group and as individuals.
Something has to motivate these people to find their belonging.
(10:23):
We are all seeking belonging, regardless of where that is.
We are tribal beings. We are as an evolutionary species.
We have found strength, we have found stability in numbers.
We are social beings. We crave people around us. We
crave companionship. We need to be in parts of communities.
We want to be a part of something because that's
(10:45):
how we survive individuals. You know, twenty thousand years ago,
you get eaten by a saber tooth tiger. If there's
twenty thirty of you, you have a chance. That remains
with us today, whether it's wanting to seek belonging in
a social group, a cause, whatever it is. So these
people are have felt isolated and rejected by mainstream society.
(11:05):
So they see a collective of people like them, they
find their strength and numbers. And that's where Antifa, that's
what these people could. These are not successful doctors and
lawyers and stockbrokers who on the weekend go set off firebombs.
These are the unemployed. These are the unloved. These are
the rejects of society that have sort of found themselves
(11:25):
and they've become quite dangerous because they have nothing to
live for. There's nothing to live for.
Speaker 4 (11:32):
A lot of them are rich kids. The parents have
just you know, turn them into a girl when they're
a boy, and you know, for social check marks. But
they did mapping with the cell phones, and a lot
of them are wealthy kids. The parents are very wealthy.
Speaker 2 (11:49):
They are, yeah, a lot of them are wealthy, college
educated white kids. And one thing that you know, affluent
parents do is a disservice to their kids. You know,
you have a generation, you know, maybe a first generation
that attains wealth and stability and they had to work
hard to get it, and the generation that actually works
hard to get it, they do a disservice to the
(12:11):
following generation because they're like, I want to give you
all the things that I didn't have. My dad couldn't
give me this, and I had to pull myself up
by my boot trucks. And we hear those success stories
and they're remarkable and we applaud those people as heroes.
But the children of the success stories, that's a tragedy.
They are the ones who have had everything handed to them,
who don't know what it means to work, to earn,
(12:34):
to fail, because every successful person will tell you that
the millions of times they failed. And when you have
a generation that, oh my god, I'm going to shield
you from the failure. I'm not going to make you
feel the pain that I felt because my dad couldn't
afford to buy me this, and I drove a beater
and everyone made fun of me, and it made me
motivated to become a rich guy, whatever the case may be.
(12:57):
Then when you give your kid that sixty thousand dollars car,
I think back to the pain that you might have felt.
You're driving your beat her to school and all your
friends are driving a new carse the pain that you felt.
And this is maybe a very superficial example, but the
pain is just as real that that feeling of seeing
other people having something that you didn't and that frustration
that you felt. Where do you think a successful person's
(13:19):
going to take that that's going to be the drive
that's going to make you succeed. So if you're a
kid whose parents have attained wealth in their lifetime, it's
not generational for them. It's a complete disservice for the
parents that give everything to the kids and the antifas, Yeah,
that's exactly what it is. A lot of them come
for these afflic families where mommy doesn't want to do
anything to affect you or insult you. And they don't
(13:43):
necessarily call it helicopter parenting where they lurd over their kids.
They call it bulldozering, where they basically bulldoze any obstacle
in their way. No challenge is nothing. Oh my god,
you got to be on the test. Let me walk
in and yell at the teacher at the private school
because it's their fault, instead of looking when I brought
home a bad grade, it was my fault. I feel
(14:03):
like the subsequent generations. Oh my god, my son is perfect,
My little Susie is perfect. It must be the teacher.
How are you raising your kids?
Speaker 4 (14:13):
I am.
Speaker 2 (14:14):
I am trying to raise my kids with accountability, respect, kindness,
hard work. I'm trying to instill that upon them. Now,
do my kids have a lot more than I had? Yes?
Speaker 4 (14:28):
Am I?
Speaker 2 (14:28):
You know, handing it to them? I don't think so.
But I've worked hard and I was able to give
them more than my parents gave me. But I'm also
they're in a private school, and I'm cognizant of that
type of parenting because it surrounds us the parents who
give everything to their kids, and I'm very very much
(14:48):
aware of that and trying not to do the same.
But I think you have to let your kids fail.
You have to let them fail, and as painful as
that may be as a parent, you have to understand
that they have to fall off the bike, maybe they
have to fail the test, maybe they have to not
make the team. You have to let them feel that loss,
(15:12):
because until you've experienced loss, you will never know how
to win. And parents, I know it's it's in our nature.
I mean they always say, you know when you when
your child is sick, when your child is not feeling well,
it's the most helpless feeling in the world. And when
you see them not achieve a goal, when you see
them fail at something, it is our instinct and you
(15:34):
have to you have to fight that instinct because you
want to protect your child. But at the same time,
you know that skinned knee or that bruised ego, it's
going to manifest itself tenfold. And there are little moments
in our lives that I believe set us in motion
for the people we're going to become. And it's not
the stuff we learn in the classrooms. It's the life lessons.
(15:57):
And I think that's a broader conversation than just what
we're seeing in the streets today. I think we do
have a generational issue. We do have a generation of
kids that don't know how to cope, that don't know
how to function in the world. That don't understand. I mean,
I was born in eighty one, so I'm technically a millennial.
But when people call me a gen X, I take
(16:19):
that as a compliment because I see the generation that
came before mine as being significantly tougher. And what are
the hallmarks of that generation? Latch Key kids? It was
the seventies. Both parents had to work those Oh I
was what eighty one. We I didn't have a cell
phone until I was in high school and then it
was a little Nokia. But you know, a generation where
(16:39):
you had to suffer a little bit, You had to work,
You had to kind of make your own world around you.
You know, you and your buddies on your bike at
four dollars between you. You had to figure out how to
entertain yourselves, figure out how to get things, figure out
how to where to go. We've talked about this before.
The problem with the phone and technology is that the
means of survival come to you. You don't have to
go to it. You have ever everything you need in
(17:00):
the palm of your hand. So, granted it's not one
hundred and fifty years ago. Granted we're not trying to
like traverse a mountain range to make it to California.
But you and your buddies might be sitting around going, Okay,
what are we going to do? How are we going
to achieve this goal? How are we going to use
our ingenuity, our creativity? How are we going to stimulate
that part of our brain to do what we want
to do? That part of humanity is no longer around
(17:23):
because we want food done Uber Eats, you want entertainment
done Netflix. Whatever you want is in the palm of
your hand. And that's a bigger issue. And that doesn't
discriminate politically. That's just a generation being raised by parents
on the right being raised by parents on the left.
That's why we have to get back to We got
(17:46):
to get back to just the simple pleasures in life. God, country, family.
We just can It's right in our faces. I feel
like we are missing that, you know, you know together,
this as a family, celebrating holiday together, sitting down at
the dinner table together, God forbid. Maybe a religious service
every now and then to remind you that, hey, there
(18:09):
there is a higher sacred purpose. It's not your political ideology,
it's not your group of friends, it's not your online community.
It's it's God. There's a higher.
Speaker 4 (18:18):
Purpose to what we're doing here, right.
Speaker 3 (18:21):
Yeah, we all came for a reason, and that's one
of the things that you got to figure out.
Speaker 5 (18:25):
It's many reasons, Like you came to be a husband,
you came to be a father, to have a job.
Speaker 3 (18:30):
There's many reasons why you came here. So it's something
that I pray about all the time.
Speaker 2 (18:35):
Well that but that's what God intended. So that that is,
we have to live the way that God intended for
us to live. Granted, as we advance through the ages,
that may take on a different perspective, but I think
the underlying theme has to remain the same. And one
of the things I was looking at something today and
I saw a video of a young woman, probably you know,
(18:58):
early to mid twenties, not altogether unattractive, like just spouting
off about how she hates America and this and that.
I'm thinking to myself, you know what, I don't feel anger.
I feel bad for you. Someone has put that garbage
in your head. I think at your age, if you
had a good man, if you got married, if maybe
(19:19):
you had a child or two, a nice home that
you could tend to and like living. And I don't
care what you believe in, but living as God intended
for us as humans to live, I think all that
anger would go away. Yeah, I really think all that
anger would go right away. And I think that anger
comes from a place of spiritual emptiness. And I think
(19:42):
all of us, regardless of who we are, regardless of
what we believe, are seeking that spiritual fulfillment, just like
we talked about people looking for their tribe, looking for
their belonging. You know, whether it's you're wearing a red
hat or whether it's hurling a fire bomb and a target,
we all have this innate human desire. We are born
with it. It is instinct, as much as you know
(20:02):
breathing air and you know eating, It is an instinct
to belong. And I think that when young minds are
poisoned with this scarbage that you know, you know, woen
and I don't need a man, Yes you do. You
do need a man, and men.
Speaker 4 (20:17):
You need a woman.
Speaker 2 (20:18):
We are we are, We are made of each other,
you know, God made woman out of man. We are
one being together and a man and a woman are
meant to be together and walk together in this life.
Nature has ordained. The only possible way that human life
can reproduce is a man and a woman. If you can,
(20:40):
you can change definitions, you can change ideology, you can
recreate science all you want. But one thing that every
human being, irrespective of race, political ideology, creed, background, whatever,
one thing every human being on this planet has a
common We were all born of a woman, every single
one of us from the beginning of time until thirty
(21:00):
seconds ago. We were all born of a woman, and
that woman became pregnant by a man.
Speaker 4 (21:06):
Unless you're Mary.
Speaker 2 (21:09):
There you go, Okay, that's the that's the one exception,
but a notable exception at that. But but that's that's
the thing that, like life, nature reminds us of how
we're supposed to live, and the fact that man and
woman have to get together in order to ensure the
generations that go on, ensure that our species survive. That
(21:34):
should tell us something, right there.
Speaker 4 (21:36):
Yeah, I thought of something. Why you're saying that? Yeah,
the other day something hit my windshield and I was like,
what is that.
Speaker 3 (21:42):
It turns out it was two bugs screw and I
was like.
Speaker 2 (21:47):
Hey, you know what, it exists in nature. It's all
around us, all the time. What the hell the I
live on a lake and the ducks have taken to
doing that in my pool. So I'm just like Jesus
there in the pool.
Speaker 4 (21:58):
I've never seen ducks do that. They do it.
Speaker 2 (22:00):
They are many, They are like rabbits, DoD they all
the time. And we had a couple of times we
actually had a couple of duck nests right on our
property and we let them be. And you know, I've actually,
I've actually so we've had we have a duck nest
right by my pool, and the ducks will hatch and
they've come back a couple of generations and they've used
that nest. And what happens is always the mama duck
(22:22):
will teach her ducklings to swim in my pool. Well,
the problem is the ducklings can't get out of the pool,
so inevitably, twice a year I have to jump in
the pool and rescue all the ducklings and fight off
the mother who thinks I'm a bad guy, and I'm
trying to convince her I'm saving your children. So I
got one hand here.
Speaker 4 (22:39):
Got one scoop in the ducks up.
Speaker 2 (22:40):
But that's what we get living in Florida. Don't you
have a screen enclosure to keep them out?
Speaker 4 (22:46):
No?
Speaker 2 (22:46):
No, I have a gate. I have a fence that
blocks us off from the water because we have alligators.
If we didn't have a fence, i'd have gaters in
my pool. So we have a fence on the yard.
But we have a pool. But not I think the
screen enclosures. I had one of my old house and
they just get covered in cobwebs. Man, they get covered
and covered in cobwebs. I actually had it taken down.
(23:07):
I hired some guys to come and they cut the
thing off the house. It's aluminum and they charged me
like nothing. They're like, could we just keep the illuminum?
Like yeah, take it. They take the illuminum, go sell it. No,
I don't do the screen enclosure thing. But the point
I'm trying to make is that we all have a
purpose on this earth, and I think it is to
meet someone who is going to be your partner in
life and provide for them. And yeah, a woman needs
(23:32):
a man, a man needs a woman. We need each other.
So all this new wave bullshit, all this feminism bullshit,
it's poison for the mind. And if you let it,
if you let it in, if you let it poison
your mind. And there's got to be this cognitive dissonance.
If you're a young woman and you're in college and
you're being told by this goblin of a professor, this unmarried,
(23:57):
sixty year old, miserable woman who didn't fulfill her godly
purpose on earth and become a wife and mother, who's
telling you, oh, you don't need a man. I awe,
you men sitting in this class, all you white men
especially are demons. And the people that absorb that and
believe that, there's got to be some cognitive dissonance. There
has to be a moment where you're sitting home going like, man,
(24:18):
I'd really like a boyfriend and oh my friend just
got married, and they feel that pang of jealousy. You know,
so good that's gonna be. That's gonna be out on
full display today, all those people. And look, you know,
like I said, I'm a free speech absolutist. You want
to go out and you want to protest, protest, whatever
the hell you want, man, protest whatever the hell you want.
Speaker 1 (24:39):
Just down the.
Speaker 2 (24:40):
Drinks, put the bricks down. Well, not just put the
bricks down. Who's putting the bricks out there. Who who, Hey,
anybody who's done any home improvement projects. Palettes of bricks,
palettes of cinderblocks are not cheap, right, Who's Who's got
the money to go drop off five, six, seven pounds
(25:00):
of brickss Oh yeah, Soros is yeah, yeah, she's.
Speaker 4 (25:06):
Party in California, the Democratic Party in California. But like
a ton of bricks, so like six months ago, I
wonder what they're gonna do with them.
Speaker 2 (25:16):
The the the son Soros, alex is getting married to
hum Abadeen. Yeah, today, Yeah, I think it's today or tomorrow.
I think it's today. It's I think it's somewhere like
Dan Tuckett or Martha's Vineyard or Campton's or somewhere real
elite where the Plebeians are not going to be invited.
Speaker 4 (25:36):
God, I hope they don't have a child.
Speaker 2 (25:41):
So we'll see. I'm gonna check right now and see
if there's any things going on with the protesting. Right now.
I turn on the news this morning, it hadn't started.
No Kings. Uh yeah, it looks like events have begun.
Oh there's a whole adjusted. Multiple not Kings protests have
been reportedly canceled. In Florida due to Lowe's turnout. So
that's a positive.
Speaker 4 (26:01):
Look.
Speaker 2 (26:02):
Hey, Florida doesn't mess around. And for two reasons, one
winforce the law and two there just aren't as many here.
There aren't as many antifa liberal socialists here. We are
a very very very red state. I don't think we're
coming back the other way.
Speaker 4 (26:18):
So that's Texas.
Speaker 2 (26:20):
Yeah, but you have like like the Brevard County sheriff
and all those guys that come out and say, like,
if you throw bricks and bottles of us, we're gonna
shoot you. I think that deters people. Uh And if that,
if that is a deterrent to showing up to protest,
then that tells you what your true intent was. Because
if it's your intent to go out and protest, go
out and protest. But if it was your intent to
go cause havoc, then you know, I think it's very
(26:43):
telling that now the turnout is significantly lower.
Speaker 4 (26:48):
In the heat.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
How about those Democratic uh cress people up in Minnesota
that got their head blown off.
Speaker 2 (26:56):
I just able they both passed away, sadly. I just
read about it like five minutes before we went live. Yeah,
so there were two there's a Democratic House. These are
House members, not national Congress people. I think the husband
was a state senator and the wife was a state representative.
They were Democrats. They were not Republicans. They were Democrats
(27:18):
that voted against their own party in voting to remove
illegal aliens from receiving medicaid, and they were killed.
Speaker 4 (27:28):
Gavin Newsom goes.
Speaker 3 (27:29):
I can't believe political enemies are now gilling publications, unlike
Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 (27:36):
You didn't say that with Donald almost got.
Speaker 2 (27:37):
Killed, Newsom. Man Newsom is, I think he's I think
he's ended any hopes he had of being president, and
which thank God for it, because we need to we
need to get him out of the conversation. Not that
I think he has a chance. I think outside of Californians,
and outside of a small percentage of Californians, I think
he's absolutely loathed. But God forbid, God forbid he got
(28:00):
in office. Oh you wouldn't, You wouldn't recognize this country.
He'd make Biden, he'd make Harris look like nothing. He'd
make it look like California. He would he would let
that be a model for the war, for the country
to see. But I think I think you're gonna see
bootaj Edge.
Speaker 4 (28:15):
Yeah, maybe maybe eat an Elon. That's a diffic credit.
Speaker 2 (28:19):
No, No, I think I think you're gonna see I
think it's well, I think it's definitely going to be
boodhaj Jedge. We've talked about that before. I think one
he they want to bring back white males, so they
want to put up a white male, and too he
checks the gay box. He's well, he's a well spoken guy.
I'm not gonna take that away from He's a well
spoken guy. But look at his tenure as Transportation secretary.
Speaker 4 (28:42):
Oh yeah, that was great.
Speaker 2 (28:44):
So with that being said, guys, we got one more
show next Saturday before we go on break for a
couple of weeks. I am going I'm gonna be in Washington,
d Actually, no, I stay corrected, So we are not
going to be here next Saturday because I'll be out
of time. We will be back the following Saturday, which
is June twenty eighth, and Matt will be our last
show for probably about a month because then I'm going
(29:05):
to be in Europe for about ten days and we
always take a little break over the summer before we
begin our next season, which I think is season seven.
If you can believe it.
Speaker 4 (29:14):
Where are you going in Europe?
Speaker 2 (29:15):
I am going all right, I am going from Basil, Switzerland,
up to Amsterdam. So I'm going Switzerland, France, Germany and
then held my wife and I the boys. The boys
can't come. The boys. No, my parents never took me
to Europe. I'm not about to start. They could take
their own kids to Europe. Then they're staying with them.
They're staying with grandma and grandpa. So it's a river cruise.
(29:37):
We did that ten years ago. I love. Yeah, if
I can river cruise, man, Ye, everybody get you get
the pamphlets in the mail every day.
Speaker 4 (29:43):
Everybody gets those, right.
Speaker 2 (29:46):
There's there's small budget. They're about two hundred passengers, and they're, oh, man,
it's the way to go. It's the way to go.
So we fly. We're gonna be over on the west
coast of Florida, celebrating fourth of July. So then we're
gonna fly from Fort Myners. We actually got reflect from
Fort Myers to Frankfurt, and then we fly a little
local airline to Basel where we take the boat and
(30:08):
up the Rhine River. Gonna do a little wine tasting
in France. I'm gonna go to gonna go to a
real German beer hall, and you know, raise my glass
and throast and know not the Disney version, the real version,
and oh man, just have a great time.
Speaker 4 (30:25):
Well.
Speaker 2 (30:25):
I love I love Europe, parts of Europe anyway. I'm
a big fan. I've been Eastern Europe a whole bunch.
I love Eastern Europe. I'd love to get back there too. Alrighty,
have a great week. Get guys, take care, be safe,
be well, and we will see you all when we
see you. Twenty eight.
Speaker 1 (30:42):
Boom Keep America, You keep America.
Speaker 2 (30:50):
We'll keep American.
Speaker 4 (30:51):
Gray