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May 14, 2024 37 mins
Jerry Seinfeld has some advice for everyone as he talked at Duke University. 

Trump talks again from the NY courthouse after another day of testimony against him.
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(00:00):
Appreciate you tuning in. You canjoin by text five seven seven thirty nine

(00:04):
start at Ryan if you would please, and I'll be keeping tabs on the
real time cross examination of Michael Cohenby the Trump defense team. Now they're
going after him. You would imaginevery hard about his perjury on the stand
when it came to the congressional hearingsthat he copped to that he served time

(00:24):
for. He's been disgraced, he'sbeen disbarred, and this is the star
witness from Alvin Bragg. And theleft is freaking out, and you can
tell by the proportion of their freakout exactly how concerned they really are.
We played Freid Zakaria from CNN overthe weekend and him basically admitting that these
were politically motivated prosecutions and persecutions ofDonald Trump that only serve to fire up

(00:51):
his base, to make the middlequestion the fairness of the charges. And
while there might be a cheap sugarhigh for the left, we got him
in the corps, we got him, We're embarrassing him. It's just so
shortsighted in my mind. If yourreal objective on the left is to win,
and further evidence to that, wetalked about the New York Times Siena

(01:11):
polls from over the weekend that showedTrump leading in five of the six battleground
states and in Michigan. That oneis again a razor thin margin, just
one point plus Biden. A lotcan change between now and November. We
are less than six months away fromthe election. But a Morning Consult poll
just released late last night this isnational popular vote, has Trump plus one

(01:34):
forty four to forty three. Andeven though that's within the margin of error,
keep in mind that Hillary lost theelection when winning the national popular vote
by more than two points. Bidenbarely won the electoral college, winning by
about four and a half points inthe national popular vote. So if Trump's
ahead at all, or even ifhe loses by one, let's say in
the national popular vote, the risingtide lifting all votes scenario and analysis of

(02:00):
this would say that with the statepoles taken into account, I would much
rather be in Donald Trump's position rightnow than I would be in Joe Biden's.
And the thing I keep coming backto, and this is kind of
dovetailing off of a conversation that wasongoing where I had a lot of fun
with this yesterday John Caldera filling infor Dan Kaplis, and he'll be there
again today. And we were makingfun of Kelly because she didn't watch Seinfeld

(02:23):
in the nineties and one of theonly gen X people I know who just
never watched it. She said whenthe theme song would come on, the
only reason she recognized it when Iplayed it yesterday was because as soon as
it would come on the TV,you would leave the room or turn the
television off. Right, Kelly,So you know that one of the deputies
outed me, oh, because ofwhat you said on that show see good

(02:46):
News travels Fast. So I notonly got my butt kicked yesterday a little
bit, I also got my buttkicked today. Well, you know what
I'm going to do. We're goingto go through the entire Jerry Seinfeld commencement
speech at Duke. Now. I'mgonna break it down into parts. But
this is done mainly for your benefit, Kelly. I'm doing this for you.

(03:07):
Great thanks too, Like a publicservice. I'm providing You're welcome to
you right about the wit and wisdomof one Jerry Seinfeld and the reason this
is important to me. There's gonnabe an overarching theme to today's program,
because you know, we get intothe nuts and bolts, the hot and
heavy, the lawfair against Trump.These are serious topics. I try to

(03:29):
have a humorous spin on them whenI can. Oh, you're you're judging
me a real time right now.Wow, Okay, your MIC's open,
just so you know that, Jesse, you got this right. I can
go walking when he's doing all thisso, oh my god, jeez.
No, No, there's a point. There's a method to the madness here,
though, is that humor is importantin life. And when I found

(03:51):
out that there was a walkout stagedat Duke's commencement by the pro Hamas Nicks,
the students on campus that really knownothing, and one of the biggest
things I've said, and I meantthis about when I was a college student
too, is that we didn't knowwhat we didn't know. We still at
this point in life, no matterwhere you are, you of learning to

(04:12):
do, you don't know what youdon't know. It's up to you to
be a student of life, evenafter school. Because they don't know what
Jerry's stance is on Israel. Allthat Jerry has done publicly, he's been
non vocal about it. He hasn'tcome out, you know, in favor
of net and Yahoo or anything that'sgoing on in Gaza. Nothing like that.
All Jerry Seinfeld did as far asI can find, And if you

(04:33):
found something differently out there, sendit to me. Five seven seven three
nine. Start at Ryan was afterthe attacks of October seventh, which did,
indeed, in fact happen, whicha lot of these pro Hamas types
are either outright denying or ignoring oneor the other. Jerry then did go

(04:55):
visit Israel in support of the Israelipeople. He is a Jewish person,
but he hasn't made it again.I cannot find any public commentary on the
war itself or on the conduct ofthat war, just that he probably,
I think it's safe to assume supportsthe existence of Israel. That what I

(05:16):
just defined is what pro Zionism means. So when an anti Semite tries to
bifurcate their stance, oh, I'mnot anti Jewish, I'm not anti Semitic,
I'm just anti Zionist. What they'resaying to you, whether they know
it or not, and that's aquestion, is that they do not support
the establishment of a state of Israela Jewish state for the Jewish people.

(05:39):
They're against that, and from theriver to the sea, Palestine will be
free. They're okay with the obliterationof Israel. That is what that stance
means when they're anti Zionist. Ifyou're a Zionist, as I am,
then all that means is that yousupport the right of Israel to exist.
And these students walked out on JerrySeinfeld speaking, in my view, simply

(06:02):
because he was Jewish. That's aproblem. And what they missed out on
were some real nuggets of wisdom thathe was able to encapsulate in a speech
that wasn't very long. And itgot me to thinking about, you know,
who are the people that have asense of humor and who are those
that are humor less? And moreand more we're seeing is the people on

(06:26):
the left. They're not funny anymore. Doesn't seem like they're having fun anymore.
Their very existence or definition of happinessdepends upon what happens to an orange
man that they hate. Imagine beingso obsessed with one individual that he defines
your happiness or discord. I can'timagine that. I can't relate to that

(06:47):
and that the people that are trulyhaving a good time. You look at
these Trump rallies and the people thatattend that the one that just happened in
New Jersey that had at least eightythousand people in New Jersey, a blue
state. The people I talk to, by and large who support Donald Trump
are happy warriors. They love DonaldTrump, they love going to the rallies,
they love supporting him. They loveAmerica, they love this country.

(07:11):
Jerry didn't get political in this commencementspeech, but I think some of the
kind of tones that he set andthe themes that he expressed, they kind
of spoke for themselves. So I'mgoing to get into this and snippets to
the degree that I'm able over thenext two segments, I want to kind
of space it out, give youa chance to hear them, and give
you my response to them. Butthis first one is kind of lead off

(07:33):
to The speech is very key becausehe talks about his three keys to life.
I will give you my three realkeys to life. No jokes in
this part. Okay. They arenumber one, bust your ass, number
two, pay attention, number three, fall in love. Number one.

(07:55):
You obviously already know whatever you're doing. I don't care if it's your job,
your hobby, relationship, getting yourreservation at M Sushi. Make an
effort, just pure stupid, noreal idea what I'm doing here. Effort.
Effort always yields a positive value,even if the outcome of the effort

(08:16):
is absolute failure of the desired result. This is a rule of life.
Just swing the bat and pray isnot a bad approach to a lot of
things. This is spot on,and from my experience it is. If
you go full out one hundred percentin one direction and you're not sure of
what the result is going to be, you might fail. The rug might

(08:37):
get pulled out from under, youmight fall flat on your face. But
you learn so much just from thatexperience of did you give it your all?
And I've talked about this with myfriends, including Kelly, that I
haven't been a parent, I've beenan uncle. But if I did have
a son or a daughter, andlet's say they want to participate in sports,
that'd be fine, not going topush them. Though I didn't.

(09:01):
I was not pushed to play sports. I wanted to play baseball. I
begged my dad to play baseball.They wouldn't let me play t ball because
they thought I was too hard onmyself, that I took losing in failure
too hard. But I enjoyed thegame so much. I finally talked them
into letting me play coaches pitch,which when I was like eight years old,
and I loved it. I hada zest for it. I had
a passion for it. I wantedto do it, and I became a

(09:24):
pretty good baseball player. My dadworked with me, but he was never
like, you've got to play baseball, and you got to go to these
camps, you got to be onthis travel team. He was never like
that, but he encouraged it oncehe saw that I had a passion for
it. So I think, youknow, you have these experiences in life
where you find out what you're goodat and maybe what you're not. And

(09:45):
there might be something that you're goodat but you don't care that much for
it, and there might be somethingthat you're really passionate about, Like Rupert
Pupkin wanted to be a stand upcomedian. Robert de Niro will come back
up in this conversation, by theway, in the movie King of Comedy.
It's from like nineteen eighty three andhe worshiped Jerry Lewis and he wanted
to be a comedian, but hewas terrible at it. You got to
find these things out. You've gotto go out there, put yourself on

(10:07):
the line and discover whether or notyou can sink or swim. And if
you fail, that's fine, thenyou find something else. But his that's
the first key that he said isjust bust your ass. And that's true,
and that's something in our society.This whole notion of equity really concerns
me because it assures an outcome andno matter what your effort level is,

(10:28):
no matter how hard you work ordon't, you're entitled to something that there
was something in your life. Ifyou've been discriminated against, you have an
excuse, you have a reason asto why you failed. It's never on
the individual, it's on the collectiveas to why you failed. And that
is a cheap cop out, that'sall that is. And I don't want
to poison the minds of young people. This is why I think it's so

(10:52):
important. Somebody like Jerry Seinfeld,Yes he's seventy years old, but giving
this address to young people, youknow you have your only you can hold
yourself accountable to your success. Youare responsible for your own success. My
biology teacher, mister Bob Stowe andgrass Lake used to tell us all the
time, you pack your own shoote. Meaning if your parachute doesn't open when

(11:15):
you jump out of that plane,that's on you because you didn't pack it
correctly. You gotta be prepared,you know. Remember when the boy Scouts
used to exist. That was theslogan right be prepared. Seentil gets to
the second part, Pay attention inlife, and this one's a little more
humorous. Number two. Pay attention. If you're in a small submersible that

(11:35):
looks like a giant kazoo and goingto visit the Titanic seven miles down at
the bottom of the ocean, andthe captain of the vessel is using a
Game Boy controller, pay attention tothat. What are you checking out down
there? Oh? I see whathappened. This ship sank. Now I

(11:58):
understand why it never into port.If the fish where you are have eyes
like Shelley Duval and a bendy strawwith a work light hanging off their head,
you do not belong there. Ifthe fish are going I can't see
a goddamn thing. You won't either. Yeah, he's talking about the Titanic

(12:18):
Explorer vessel and that it wasn't thejuice wasn't worth the squeeze in terms of
the risk involved and what was thereward. And this is all kind of
on the spectrum of what you needto pay attention to in life. I
found this out too, not exactlythe hard way, but it's opened my
eyes watching the experience of my mom'sdeath. She died of esafagiel cancer.

(12:43):
I feel she should have been diagnosedfar earlier than she was. There was
an evolution of deterioration. She hada side effect of acid reflux from bariatric
surgery. She was always coughing andswallowing and had some of that kind of
regretsgitation happening. And in my view, she had a doctor that wasn't that

(13:03):
invested or involved in my mom's health. There should have been an endoscopy done
far sooner. Now I know I'mrelitigating this and my mom is gone,
but the point of the matter iswhat I learned from that was there's an
evolution from that. If you havesevere acid reflux, that's a big deal.
It's not just an inconvenience, oryou should be on pepsid ac or

(13:24):
you want to prevent it. Yeah, and if it happens, no big
deal. It is a big deal. It erodes the lining of your esophagus.
It increases your chances of cancer.There's an intermediary step there called Barrett's
esophagus. I've learned all of thisand the research I did once my mom
got sick. But the point ofthat I'm making here is you have to
be your own strongest advocate for yourown success, for your own health.

(13:48):
The doctor's not going to do itfor you necessarily. If you have a
great doctor, you're lucky, maybethat will be the case. But for
your own health, you have tolook out for you. Here's Jerry talking
about falling in love. It's notnecessarily what you think of that meaning number
three, fall in love. It'seasy to fall in love with people.
I suggest falling in love with anythingand everything every chance you get. Fall

(14:13):
in love with your coffee, yoursneakers, your blue zone parking space.
I've had a lot of fun inlife falling in love with stupid, meaningless
physical objects. The object I lovethe most is the clear barrel, bigpen
a dollar twenty nine for a boxof ten. I can fall in love
with a car turn signal switch thathas a nice feel to it, a
pizza crust that collapses with just theright amount of pressure. I have truly

(14:37):
spent my life focusing on the smallestthings imaginable, completely oblivious to all the
big issues of living. Find somethingwhere you love the good parts and don't
mind the bad parts too much.The torture you're comfortable with. This is
the golden path to victory in life, work, exercise, relationships. They

(15:03):
all have a solid component of puretorture, and they are all one thousand
percent worth it. They're worth it, meaning anything that's worth having is not
necessarily going to be easy to getThere's going to be a path to get
there, There'll be torture along thatpath. Is it worth it? Is
this pursuit going to pay off ina way that's going to be fulfilling to

(15:24):
me? And that what you justheard. If you know Jerry Seinfeld comedically
at all, is central to hiscomedy. He's always making these random observations
about the most innocuous things, butfocusing on them because it's a way of
appreciating the small things and not worryingtoo much about the big things, because

(15:45):
if you spend your time and yourlife just worrying about the big things,
then you're not going to take thetime to smell the roses and enjoy the
small things in life, the smallthings that give you pleasure. They don't
have to be big things, butit all adds up to one big thing.
This is another good one where hekind of weades into the waters of
the wopness talking about privilege. Privilegeis a word that has taken quite a

(16:08):
beating lately. Privilege today seems tobe the worst thing you can have.
I would like to take a momentto defend it again. A lot of
you are thinking, I can't believethey invited this guy too late. I
say, use your privilege. Igrew up a Jewish boy from New York.

(16:30):
That is a privilege. If youwant to be a comedian. Thanks.
If I messed up a funny storyaround my relatives, they would go,
that's not how you tell that joke. The prostitute has to be behind
the drapes when the wife comes in. You went to duke. That is

(16:51):
an unbelievable privilege. I now havean honorary doctorate, a Humane letters degree
from Duke University, and if Ican figure out a way to use that,
I will. I haven't figured anythingout yet. I think it's pretty
much as useful in real life asthis outfit I'm wearing. But so what,
I'll take it, He'll take it. It was a nice day,

(17:14):
it was a nice gesture. Hischildren, I believe at least one,
if not two, are attending Duke. So he's bestowed upon with this kind
of honorary degree. And no doubtJerry Seinfeld has probably donated a lot of
money and this is some kind ofappreciation for it. But what he's gonna
get into next, and I'm gonnahold off on the sound clip here because
we have to go to Brake,are this notion of guilt because when he

(17:37):
talks about privilege, that goes handin hand with what I've talked about often
on this program, which is Idefined it primarily as liberal white guilt.
And I was new to this.I was not raised in a way that
was taking into consideration race or theimbalance thereof. I was just taught to
treat people well, no matter whatrace they were, no matter what their

(18:00):
backgrounds were, and that that feelingwould come back to me. I never
felt guilty about being white. Idon't define myself as being white, but
I was made to feel like Ishould feel guilty about something that I have
no control over, which is mymelanin content Mara Jerry Seinfeldt's commencement address at
Duke because I think it's worthwhile inhearing he around six point thirty camp.

(18:26):
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(19:30):
Master Services, and tell them Ryansent you embarrassed about things we should be
proud of and proud of things weshould be embarrassed about. When I was
writing my TV series Thanks What aCrowd So on my staff in the nineties,

(19:53):
we had a lot of Harvard guys. They were fantastic, But I
could never understand why these guys wereso embarrassed about being from Harvard. They
would never talk about it, theywould never mention it. I'm not talking
about Harvard now, I'm talking aboutthe way it used to be. You're
never gonna believe this. Harvard usedto be a great place to go to

(20:14):
school. Now it's Duke playing withthe home crowd there. Jerry Seinfeld back
with Ryan Shuling on six point thirtyK Howe and his commencement speech at Duke
in Durham, North Carolina, thatI felt was worth revisiting because when I
did it, it was because ofthese students who walked out on him.

(20:37):
And the nearest deduction I can comeup with is simply because he is Jewish
and they're assuming things about him.Yes, he supports Israel. Yes he
visited there in the wake of theOctober seventh attacks. Who wouldn't, but
that they made a judgment on himat that point, that he supports genocide,
which is a term that's been bastardizedover these last couple of months plus.

(21:00):
Did you see the UN The UnitedNations came out and acknowledged that the
death toll numbers, the casualty numbersthat they were reporting were off by about
one hundred percent, that you shouldput cut them in half. And the
other part about that these numbers arebeing supplied by Hamas and they're nice round

(21:22):
even numbers like forty thousand or thirtyfive thousand, just so happens to come
right to the thirty five Comma zerozero zero of the number of civilians or
whoever else in Gaza have been killedby Israeli strikes. And the thing about
people who have not endured war,and I haven't really for the most part

(21:44):
myself, other than our war againstterror. Remember that after the attacks of
nine to eleven and the United Statesmilitary going into Afghanistan to try to hunt
down Osama bin Laden and the warin Iraq which was misguided. We did
not get in a war, thankfullywith the Soviet Union during the Cold War
the nineteen eighties. But from thestories I heard from my grandfather talking to

(22:10):
him about serving in World War II, that was a time of immense sacrifice
and many innocent people died, Manyinnocent Germans died. And that's not to
fault the Allies or even in ourbombing of Hiroshima, Nagasaki, it was
either the estimates were lose one millionmore Allied soldiers, mostly from the United
States, Japan refused to surrender.I'm not celebrating the bombing of Hiroshima,

(22:36):
Nagasaki. They are tragic things,but Japan was to blame. They refused
to surrender. This is after Hitlerhad killed himself and Japan the Emperor kept
holding out, and those two bombsforced them into submission and the war was
won. War is ugly, Waris dirty. The job of our military
and any military in a war isto kill people and break things, not

(22:59):
to kill innocent people, not withintent, and that's not what Israel is
doing in Gaza. But the collateraldamage is unavoidable when your enemy is not
a traditional fighting force but a terroristorganization that builds tunnels and bunkers underneath schools
and mosques and hides themselves like cowards, underneath and behind children and innocent civilians

(23:22):
and civilian deaths for them. That'sa strategy. That's a strategy of Hamas.
The Palestinians are being used as humanshields. There is no conceivable way
that Israel can wage, fight andwin a war in Gaza eradicate Hamas without
civilian casualties. They are going tohappen. They are the fault of Hamas.

(23:45):
This war did not exist before Octoberseventh. But we have these people
on the left that live in afantasy world suggesting that we can fight and
win a war, or Israel canfight and win a war with no civilian
casualties whatsoever, and especially once yououtline the opponent as I just did,
and what it takes to be ableto win that war. I'm not even

(24:07):
a big fan of dropping the pamphlets, because what's to stop Hamas fighters from
cloaking themselves as civilians once those warningsare given and them getting out along with
the civilians and clearing out of Gaza. The element of surprise is so important
in war that the enemy doesn't knowwhen you're coming or how you're going to

(24:29):
attack. But no Israel is supposedto telegraph every move that it makes.
That doesn't make any sense. Butindependent of all of that, Seinfeld stresses
that the rich, the wealthy,the powerful, the privileged. There are
many, especially those on the left, that feel guilty about this for some
reason. And I would never showthat much envy towards somebody if they are

(24:52):
a legacy student, a duke,I mean more power to them. I
wish I was too. Just meansI've got to work a little harder to
get where I knowed to go.But I haven't encountered anything in my life
that has stopped me short of myown effort or lack thereof ability or lack
thereof. And I got to say, I've had a lot of successes in
my life that I'm thankful for,and that, yeah, I'm proud of

(25:15):
because I work damn hard to getthem. Nobody gave them to me.
I wasn't entitled to them. Therewasn't any equity provided for a guy from
a rural town in Michigan who grewup basically middle class, solidly middle class,
I would say, but not higherthan that, seinfeld On that you
didn't fake your fabulous education. Youearned it. Be proud of it.

(25:37):
Don't just drop it on people rightbefore you serve and pickle ball. Okay,
Duke twenty four coming at you.But if it comes up, if
someone asks, don't say it lookingdown, stubbing your toe in the dirt.
When someone asked, where'd you goto school, you say I went
to Duke. Watch them take thatuncomfortable hard swallow. AI, on the

(26:02):
other hand, is the most embarrassingthing we've ever invented in mankind's time on
Earth. Oh so you can't dothe work? Is that what you're telling
me? You can't figure it out? This seems to be the justification of
AI. I couldn't do it.This is something to be embarrassed about.
The ad campaign for chat GPT shouldbe the opposite of Nike. You just

(26:22):
can't do it. Making fake brainsis risky. Frankenstein proved that he was
so dumb he thought a monster neededa sport jacket. It's not a wine
tasting. We're terrorizing villagers. Noone's gonna tell you. I'm sorry,
mister Stein. It's jackets only thisevening. What I was stunned to learn

(26:47):
is talking to a colleague and longtimefriend who works in news radio back home
in Michigan, is the advent ofusing AI to replace original newswriting. That
they'll just type in a topic,chat GPT or whatever will spit out a
news story and that'll serve as yourcopy to read. I was totally blown

(27:11):
away by this because I wouldn't thinkto do it, because I am so
much of a control freak, Iguess, and that I want to write
my own words. Nobody else isgoing to speak for me, and no
chat bot is going to fill inthe details. And if it's this,
Seinfeld hits it right out of thepark here that we're just too lazy to

(27:32):
do our own work anymore. Ihave no doubt. I used to teach
audio production and the projects that thestudents would do if they had the technology
then that we have now, Idon't know how much of their work would
even be original. They could justbasically copy and paste. And we're seeing
that in academia with papers and plagiarismgoing all the way to the top and
the presidents of the universities. Butagain, I'm too proud to use someone

(27:56):
else's words as my own. Iwouldn't want them speaking for me. And
here Seinfeld's wisdom on AI. WhatI like is we're smart enough to invent
AI, dumb enough to need it, and still so stupid we can't figure
out if we did the right thingmaking work easier. This is the problem.
So obsessed with getting to the answer, completing the project, producing a

(28:18):
result, which are all valid things, but not where the richness of the
human experience lies. The only twothings you ever need to pay attention to
in life are work and love,things that are self justified in the experience,
and who cares about the result.Stop rushing to what you perceive as

(28:41):
some valuable end point. Learn toenjoy the expenditure of energy that may or
may not be on the correct path, and that is to reinforce the point.
It's not about the destination. It'sabout the journey, what we learn
along the way. And it mightsound cliche, but it's true. There's
so much that you learn about yourselfand the pursuit of excellence. And we

(29:03):
have it in the Declaration and ourfounding documents about we're not guaranteed happiness,
We're guaranteed the pursuit of happiness,and that pursuit is up to each one
of us. And that individual rightand that individual power that you have over
your own agency in life. Ithink we're losing that, and we're deferring
to letting others dictate to us howour lives are going to be led.

(29:27):
We'll take this time out. I'llpunt the rest of Seinfeld's comments to our
two as we start there. Andthere's other comedians I'm going to get in
do. There was a tay totay between Bill Maher and Bill Burr comedians
there on the mar Pothead podcast thathe does. But Donald Trump making remarks

(29:48):
right now in the wake of MichaelCohen's cross examination, which looks to be
continuing through Thursday. They'll have anoff day tomorrow. We'll get to those
comments when we come back. Muchmore still to cover here Ian shuling on
six point thirty k out the NewYork State Supreme Courthouse in New York City.
President Trump made these remarks following thecross examination of Michael Cohen by his

(30:11):
own attorneys that will continue on Thursday, after tomorrow's off day. As much
as you know, I'm under agag order, so I can't it's really
answer those very simple questions, andyou're asking it. I'm under a gag
order. If nobody's actually seen anythinglike it. But we talk about subjects
we're allowed to talk about. Wouldlove to not be in the gag order.

(30:33):
I'm the Republican nominee for president,a lady in every poll, and
I have a gag order. SoI think it's sttally unconstitutional. I will
test that this will be tested becausethis should never happened to another candidate or
another person. What's happening here andtoday we had a very I think of
every good day and fort to seewhat's happening, and you'll have to report

(30:57):
it because they can't about it toomuch. But I think it's a very
very good day. The voters aregetting at John McLaughlin probably number one hold
number with Fabrizio John and Laflin isprobably the number one in the bolster.
And voters are getting it and theydon't like the idea that the courts are

(31:19):
deciding the presidential election. Well,so far my numbers, we're leading by
a lot, as you know,against Crooked Joe Biden. Charlie Hurt,
the great person, good reporter.The problem for Democrats is that the extensive
calling them shows that the voter seatthrough their scam and don't like what's going

(31:40):
on. Watching one hundred thousand enthusiasticpeople gather along a Bodwark, New Jersey
beach is Saturday, as you probablyso, to support former President Trump one
Saturday, even give you some ideahow terrified Democrats are Probato, Well,
I'm not saying it that he's sayit. I don't think they're terrified of
anything. They're fascists. Whatever happens, they cannot face him with the fair

(32:06):
and honest election. There's no wayanybody else is going to be Trump,
and they're using election interference to tryand do it. And he then goes
because they lose and they know itif it's a fair election, basically saying
they lose and they know Jeff ZellenyCNN, I don't CNN, as I

(32:27):
took for the voters across the countryand the Savannah ground story in the Straits
States, many of them aren't payingattention. The reason the president is having
trouble. President Biden is having problemsis because young voters, voters of colored
and inflation. Young voters, votersof color and inflation. That is a

(32:49):
problem for Biden. Byron York WoodedPerson the reporter journalist for months ever said
hope that the specter of Trump ontrial will cut into the former president's support
now or in the fifth week?Can you believe I've been in here for
five weeks in set a campaign.It's a shame, which of course is

(33:12):
their dream. It might not beworking out the way they anticipated, but
that's what they wanted to do.Keep me in here as long as wells
long as possible. Now we're inthe fifth week of the trial with wall
the wall goverage and it appears tohave not affected Trump's support at all.
A real Clair Politics analyst showing trendaywrote recently, the political science literature is

(33:35):
pretty consistent that this is the timewhen the electorate's views are about the election,
and it starts to hearten and basicallythey say, we're doing really when
they see or of the polls.Alan Dershowitz, you great gentlemen, this
is election interference at the most obviousand every American, no matter whether you're
on the Trump team or against him, whatever political affiliate it is. And

(34:00):
he goes on to say he's aDemocrat, he can't be right about everything
because he's making a big mistake.If you're Jewish and you're a Democrat,
and that includes Alan Herscha Hershey,w's you're going to have your head examine
there you see what's going on withIsrael. But he goes, I'm a
Democrat. You should be equally concernedabout how the legal system is being weaponized

(34:23):
and abutised for partisan purposes. Rememberthis. All over the world they're watching
this trial and they're seeing what athis racists and a big distrace to New
York. You know, I lovethis state, I love this city,
and they've got to get it back. They've got to get the legal system
back because businesses are leaving. Peopleare playing, but businesses are leaving because

(34:44):
they can't go through what I'm goingthrough. Speaker Mike Johnson was here a
little while ago. He says,just apply common sense. Take a look
at what's happening. Just apply commonsense. A great gentleman, Victor Davis
Hanson. None of the five criminalcase is currently lodge against woman President Donald
Trump, by the way, allgoing through Washington. This is all election

(35:07):
interference by Biden. Have ever hadMeyrior? None of them have had Mayrior.
These criminal and civil trials are merelythe continuation of extra legal efforts of
the last eight years to destroy presidentialcandidate and loup opposing him in a transparent
election. Enemies like China and Russianow boasts that America's new political prosecutions are

(35:30):
similar to those of their own system. And even more so, that's Victor
Davis Hanson, President Trump right there. You heard him outside the courthouse.
I think the key point that wasmade Jeff Zeleny of CNN that the average
American is not even paying attention tothis trial because how does this trial affect
the lives of everyday Americans. Theanswer is it doesn't, and that's what

(35:53):
Biden is counting on because he's gotnothing to run on much more. Our
number two straight ahead, Ryan schulingback with you on six thirty k.
Home. You got some fix themup issues at your home, whether it's
a new air conditioning unit you're lookingfor, you've got some plumbing needs.
They might need to go down.You want an excavation service. You don't

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know where to turn. Master Serviceshas it all covered for you. Great
service at the guaranteed lowest price.Master Technicians all professionally licensed and experience and
they're available twenty four to seven.The regular hours run from eight am to
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