Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
If you remember, the first image was the picture of
Jesus as a resurrection ac club. I found a church
that had been converted to a boxing ring.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
So the image pans.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
Down from Jesus onto Rocky being hid. And at that
moment he was a chosen person. And that's how I
began the journey. Something was going to happen. This man
was going to go through a metamorphosis and change lives.
Just like President Trump, we are in the presence of
(01:08):
a really mythical character.
Speaker 3 (01:10):
I love mythology, and this.
Speaker 1 (01:12):
Individual does not exist on this planet. Nobody in the
world could have pulled off when he pulled off. So
I'm in awe and I'll just say this and I
mean it. When George Washington defended his country, he had
no idea.
Speaker 3 (01:32):
That he was going to change the world, because.
Speaker 1 (01:35):
Without him, you could imagine what the world would look like.
Guess what we got the second George Washington, he rushed
the issues.
Speaker 4 (02:45):
If that doesn't get you ready for your Friday, I
don't know what will Ryan Schuling live back with you
taking your tax five seven seven three nine. Thanks to
Zach Seegers on the other side of the glass helping
us today and Kelly Kuchera as well, who has come
up with our Friday Fool of the Week nominees. But
on the opposite end of that spectrum, how about Sylvester
(03:07):
Stallone and mar A Lago. I was just inspired to
put that together, the story that he told about the
church and about Rocky and about that character arc and
what was a calling for that character. That's a movie
that Sylvester Stallone wrote himself. And just the knowledge, Kelly,
that you go back to one of my favorite movies
of all time. I don't care how hokey it is.
(03:29):
Rocky four was awesome. Both Slide Stallone and Dolph Lundgren.
They're each one of us conservatives.
Speaker 3 (03:36):
And I love it. What did you think of Stallone's
comments there?
Speaker 5 (03:41):
Cal oh goosebumps, so right on, and I just love that.
You know, more of these Hollywood types are starting to
emerge out of the darkness, and I'm looking forward to
seeing more.
Speaker 4 (03:53):
I think there are a lot more than we even
know about. In fact, I know that I've had that
conversation with Deborah Flora, who's friends with Gary Sinise, and
he is part of one of the founding members I
believe of friends of Abe Swabia, the conservative members of Hollywood,
and I heard recently from Joe Rogan on his podcast
Kelly that there are a lot of celebrities that reached
(04:15):
out to him, thanking him for publicly endorsing Trump, something
they felt they could not do. But when you see
a slice stallone, you see a lot more of these
celebrities coming out and it's no longer verboten to support
Donald Trump. He's a winner, he won, he won the
popular vote. I think this matters. I think there's a
culture shift in America happening right now. And my thought
is if all of those Hollywood celebrities that agree that
(04:38):
we're making these texts and calls to Joe Rogan, if
they all came forward, the whole Hollywood is all liberal
myth would come crumbling under the weight of itself.
Speaker 5 (04:49):
Possibly, But I still think there's that Hollywood influence that
keeps people in the dark. But it's getting better, and
I will agree with you to a certain extent, but
I think there's a lot of stigma out there and
people are still very fearful to come out and actually
say what they truly believe.
Speaker 4 (05:07):
Five seven thirty nine. You can send those texts along.
I'm just so heartened and excited and optimistic and enthusiastic
about this next Trump administration.
Speaker 3 (05:18):
This part two, the sequel to the first.
Speaker 4 (05:21):
Trump presidency, I think is going to far outshine everything
and anything that the President did during his first term
in office, as forty five, as forty seven, when he's
had these four years in between to build a coalition,
to refine his approach, to fine tune who he entrusts
(05:43):
and appoints to his cabinet. Remember, Kelly, I've had this
conversation with you, I've had it with Lauren Bobert and
with many of our listeners as well, that my number
one concern about Donald Trump was that he was not
surrounding himself with people who would carry forward his cause,
who were on board with a Trump agenda, and who
are not just using that opportunity for personal advancement.
Speaker 3 (06:05):
And I love these headlines.
Speaker 4 (06:07):
Look at this Trump considering fierce loyalist Cash Ptel to
lead FBI.
Speaker 3 (06:12):
Yes, please, that.
Speaker 5 (06:14):
Would be an interesting one. And what did I say
to you to allay your fears about that?
Speaker 4 (06:21):
I don't remember exactly, but go ahead and remind our
audience and.
Speaker 5 (06:24):
Me I said to you this is going to be
a different Trump. You're not going to see people who
are going to be pushing him around because he's not
a true politician. And as you could see just by
his cabinet, he doesn't have true politicians. He's got people
that are on the cuff, that are kind of people
that made their own way in life, people like Elon
(06:46):
and the vague rfkj RFK Junior and Tulsi Tulsie another one.
Speaker 3 (06:53):
So I'm very very excited.
Speaker 5 (06:55):
I think I agree with you. But I did say
that to you since you don't remember, because you never
remember anything I saw.
Speaker 4 (07:01):
I do remember you now that you mentioned that in
those terms. But it is true, and it's so much better.
I am pleasantly surprised Donald Trump has made measured picks.
I think in large regard, there are some that would
be considered more traditional, like a Marco Rubio for Secretary
of State. That makes sense. I think that's a slam dunk.
But some of these outside the box picks. One in
(07:22):
particular that I said I absolutely love is Pete Hegseth
as Secretary of Defense. You know, get it out of
the hands of the military industrial complex and those that
are compromised This is one of your big hang ups
about politics in Washington, Kelly. They are bought and sold
by the special interests, and Pete Hegseth will be beholden
to no one except President Trump and the American people
in leading our military.
Speaker 5 (07:43):
Isn't it so refreshing to have to say that? It's
just awesome? And you know, the other thing is about
the what Elon and the biker doing, you know, with
keeping things sufficient. That's going to be something really really
nice to see and I'm looking forward to it. And
good luck Department of Education on that one.
Speaker 4 (08:03):
Goodbye Department of Education. I mean, at this point, I
am so encouraged, Kelly, that I think they very well
may eliminate the Department of Education. People here the oh no,
the world is crashing down a putt that was an
invention of Jimmy Carter's bloated administration in nineteen seventy nine
and enacted in nineteen eighty. We didn't have the Department
(08:25):
of Education before that. And can you honestly tell me
that our educational system in America is better now for
having had the Department of Education than before we had it?
Speaker 6 (08:36):
Well, of course not.
Speaker 5 (08:37):
And I can attest to it because I raised two
kids in the public school system and it's atrocious what
they're teaching these kids, and it does it needs to
be returned back to the stays, or better yet, returned
back to the parents to actually have control of their
students' education.
Speaker 4 (08:54):
Like anything else, the more local your government is, the
more it is responsive to your particular needs. And the
needs of somebody in Grassland, Michigan are very different than
those of Greenwood Village, Colorado.
Speaker 3 (09:07):
Or at any point in between.
Speaker 4 (09:08):
There's not a one size fits all approach that is
working as a solution for our national education crisis.
Speaker 3 (09:15):
And we do have a crisis.
Speaker 4 (09:17):
Look at the performance of our students on the worldwide
stage against other countries. Other countries, I might add, that
spend a lot less per student in terms of dollars
per student than we do here in the United States.
Where is that money going. It's a special interest group.
It's a partisan special interest group. The Department of Education,
in lockstep with the American Federation of Teachers, the Unions,
(09:40):
Randy Weingarten, these are all divisive political, partisan organizations that
our national government is being funded by taxpayers to fund
basically democratic campaign operatives and Yeah, remove that entirely, blow
it up, get rid of it. The waste, fraud, an abuse,
(10:00):
and excess of departments like that that simply line the
pockets of those unelected bureaucrats within. Get rid of those jobs.
Cut the government, doze Department of Government efficiency. The Vake
Ramaswami promising by July fourth, twenty twenty six, the two
hundred and fiftieth anniversary of our nation, that he and
(10:21):
Elon Musk will have their final findings of what can
stay and what needs to go. We need to cut
our budget. We need to cut our deficit spending. We
need to cut our national debt and the interests accrued
on that debt that Representative Thomas Massey wears as a
pin that continues to cycle and increase by the minute,
by the second.
Speaker 3 (10:42):
The government was never meant to be as big as
it is right now.
Speaker 4 (10:46):
We were founded on a limited government, the power of
the people over those who would govern them by consent
of the governed only, and that we vote them out.
We weren't there to pump in money to the Department
of anything. I mean fill in the blank there, but
doctor Anthony Fauci that he's allowed to exist and allowed
(11:07):
to gravy train off the government dime and payroll in
US taxpayers funding his vacations and photo shoots. But what
is this guy done over the last five, ten, fifteen years,
What has he contributed?
Speaker 3 (11:19):
What has he really done?
Speaker 4 (11:22):
And it's all about excess and we got to cut
the fat.
Speaker 3 (11:26):
And you know, Ross Perrot kind of started down this road.
Speaker 4 (11:29):
I think Donald Trump had some ambitions along these lines,
but even his first term he did not carral spending.
I believe there will be a different approach this time around.
And it also extends to health and human services. And
as excited as I am about Pete Hegseth as our
Secretary of Defense. Incorporating Robert F. Kennedy Junior into this
administration in such an influential and pivotal role, I think
(11:53):
is a home run by Donald Trump as well.
Speaker 3 (11:55):
And I wanted you to hear this Robert F.
Speaker 4 (11:58):
Kennedy Junior making this video, and he said, there's like
a hundred substances he could make a similar video about
in his quest to make America healthy again. And in
this one he tells the harrowing tale of tartrazine. Really
want to hear from Alexa on this. I know this
is in her wheelhouse and area of expertise, but listen
to RFK Junior as he explains why there are literal
(12:20):
poisons in our everyday foods, especially for our children, that
are not present in many nations overseas, developed nations overseas.
Speaker 7 (12:30):
This is what most Americans innocently put into their bodies
these days, and most alarmingly, in the bodies their children.
And a so coincidence that Americans die earlier than Canadians
or Germans, or Italians or Japanese or Koreans or Australians
or most any other comparable country. And it wasn't always
(12:51):
that way. Until the early nineteen nineties, our life, in
conspectancy was the same or better than other developed countries.
Then suddenly more and more Americans began suffering from chronic diseases,
from obesity, cancer, diabetes, kidney disease, Alzheimer's heart disease, and
all kinds of autoimmune diseases. Our maternal mortality rate sword
(13:15):
the eyes of any developed country on Earth.
Speaker 2 (13:18):
Same with infant mortality.
Speaker 7 (13:20):
Like the frog and the slowly boiling water, we didn't
really notice as we got sicker and sicker we've grown
now to accept chronic disease conditions as normal. But now
in twenty twenty four, we're finally waking up to this
cataclysm and we're asking ourselves, how in the world did
this happen? Well, a big part of it is our diet.
Restaurants that serve contaminated food are fined or shut down.
(13:43):
But when it's the government that approves the poison stark food,
a few people get very very rich, and the toxins
end up in every supermarket asle let me show you
what I mean. Dorito's cheese Ites, cat and crunch gummy bears.
Everyone knows these are jump foods, so maybe you wouldn't
be too surprised to see that the ingredients include a
(14:05):
lot of poisons, including a harmful yellow dye called tatrazine
or yellow dye number five.
Speaker 2 (14:11):
What you may not know is that this dye was
originally made.
Speaker 7 (14:14):
Out of this sludge, this left over when you turn
coal into coke for blast furnaces. This cold colts are
and I've actually sued many big industries or legacy contamination
of col tar all around the country because it's so
toxic and it's so harmful to the environment in human beings.
A century ago, it was just an obnoxious industrial byproduct
(14:36):
that everybody was trying to figure out.
Speaker 2 (14:39):
Ways to get rid of.
Speaker 7 (14:40):
One of the ways that they did that was by
paving roads. But then a British chemist figured out that
the cold tar could be used to derive fabric dye.
And if fabric dye, why not food Food manufacturers began
using it to cover up the discoloration of low quality
foods that they wanted to pass off on unsuspecting customers.
(15:01):
They didn't know back then that this yellowed eye tartrasine
causes tumors, asthma, developmental delays, neurological damage, add ADHD hormone disruption,
gene damage, anxiety depression in testable injuries.
Speaker 2 (15:20):
Well, we know it now.
Speaker 3 (15:21):
We've known this for decades.
Speaker 7 (15:23):
That's why tartisine is heavily restricted in other countries.
Speaker 2 (15:27):
In some countries, foods.
Speaker 7 (15:29):
With tartrasine have a warning label that it may cause
ADHD in children. Today, it's made from petroleum, not colts
are Either way, it's crazy to add this to your
kids' favorite foods. It doesn't even change the flavor. This
yellowed eye isn't just a junk food. Isn't the foods
that we consider healthy. Isn't everyday kids snacks like popcorn,
(15:50):
mac and.
Speaker 2 (15:50):
Cheese fruit snacks?
Speaker 7 (15:52):
Is in sports strings like gator and so called vitamin water?
Is they even added to chicken broth, to corn, to
pick a mustard and the yogurt. And so, of course
our kids get sick and we lovingly feed them chewable
vitamins which have surprised Partrasing, And so the cycle continues
until the coughs an asthma kick in, at which point
(16:14):
you go to pick up some coughs serum and yeah,
you get it Partrasing. I've been picking on targescin today.
But that's just one of at least one hundred chemical
poisons that our health agencies allow into our children's food.
I can make a video just like this to talk
about red forty bha, bhd, potassium, bromate, chemical after chemical,
(16:37):
and on and on and on. If just one of
them can cause all of these problems, imagine what they're
doing in combination that has never been studied. If we
took all of these chemicals out, our nation would get
healthier immediately. We'd have fewer sick days. We'd have better focus,
we'd have less anxiety, our kids would learn more easily,
(16:58):
we'd lose weight, we'd have more energy, we'd have fewer
tumors and longer lives.
Speaker 3 (17:04):
It's not all darwark.
Speaker 2 (17:05):
Over the past.
Speaker 7 (17:06):
Sixteen years, the government has banned eight chemical additives that
cause cancer, genetic damage, asthma, and many of the other
self conditions as targising does.
Speaker 2 (17:16):
And you know what's interesting, All eight.
Speaker 7 (17:18):
Of those crucial steps forward in our kids' health were
taken under President Trump. But the Democrats who claim to
be all about healthcare have stood by watching other countries
ban these poisons and make our kids sick, asthmatic, hyperactive,
and depressed. They left them on every supermarket shelf in America.
They even used your tax money to put them in
(17:40):
your kids' school lunch. So they're big food and their
big egg donors probably gave them all that golden handshake
and the big money hug, and they're big pharmat donors
probably call them up.
Speaker 2 (17:50):
And thank them also, because.
Speaker 7 (17:52):
Now they're going to make billions selling out at all
prozac and rescue in nailers. Enough is enough, Resident Trump,
and I are going to stop up the mass poisoning
of American children. Together, We're going to make America healthy again.
Speaker 3 (18:11):
Kelly Caacerra.
Speaker 4 (18:12):
Who is RFK Junior beholden to or controlled by no bady?
Speaker 3 (18:18):
That's the point.
Speaker 4 (18:20):
He is an extension of the whole Donald Trump m
O mantra philosophy of government.
Speaker 3 (18:26):
And why do you think the.
Speaker 4 (18:29):
Appointment of RFK to head our health and human services
terrifies so many in the establishment and in the media
that we're watching here. That reaction alone should tell you
it's absolutely the right move for America and for Americans.
And I could not be happier than to have RFK Junior,
who is only beholden to us to make America healthy again.
(18:53):
We'll take this time out, Heidi Ganall coming up next,
the one to eighty from Jared Polis.
Speaker 3 (18:57):
What gives on Ryan Shuling Live?
Speaker 8 (19:05):
Democratic Secretary of State Jenna Griswold's office was not going
to tell county election clerks in the public that they
had accidentally leaked voting machine passwords. Nine News Investigates has
obtained an audio recording where Griswold's chief deputy tells the
clerks that they were not going to be told because
it would cause a media frenzy. Griswold only notified the
(19:25):
clerks and only changed the passwords after that security breach
was revealed to the media in the public. That security
breach came out five days after Griswold's office learned about it,
when the Colorado Republican Party broke the news and asked
for an investigation. The passwords had been inadvertently posted on
her website in the hidden tab of a spreadsheet, sitting
there for months. Clerks were upset to find out about
(19:47):
it through the news. Griswold told me that day that
she hadn't decided whether the public was ever going.
Speaker 3 (19:53):
To be told.
Speaker 8 (19:54):
Nine News investigates got a hold of an audio recording
of Griswold's top deputy speaking to the clerks just minutes
after I talked with Griswold that day.
Speaker 9 (20:02):
Josh, I appreciate that you're expressing an upset and Chris,
I'm pissed off and it's really hard not answering media
questions the way I actually want to.
Speaker 1 (20:16):
Okay, I.
Speaker 9 (20:20):
Will tell you. All I can do is be as
transparent as I possibly can't. We were not going to
tell counties because we could not tell counties without becoming
the media storm. It has become.
Speaker 3 (20:33):
Chris, No, it.
Speaker 2 (20:34):
Is not.
Speaker 8 (20:36):
The clerk there saying it's Bull's.
Speaker 3 (20:39):
A Democratic clerk.
Speaker 2 (20:40):
We should mention.
Speaker 8 (20:41):
Election security experts say that the leaked passwords alone were
not enough to compromise Colorad's voting system. Secretary Sat Griswold
initially brushed off the incident, said that her office would
be investigating itself. The governor then called for an outside
investigation that's now happening. Griswold's office says that she regrets
that the clerks found found out about this from the
media five days after she learned the leak, but her
(21:04):
office reiterated to us today that telling the clerks without
quote determining the full scope of the issue, and having
a quote unquote outreach strategy that would have posed with
the stacy is a significant risk.
Speaker 4 (21:15):
Comrade Kyle nine News back here on Ryan Shieling Live
with You, and I don't know why there haven't been
calls from the left. You heard from that Democratic clerk
there who was nonplused by the excuse and the answer
given as to why they had to find out about
this password leak and the entire story from the media
and not from Griswold or the Secretary of State's office itself.
(21:40):
Where are the calls for Griswold to resign? Well, we
go to somebody who's been covering this from the jump
and very well, I might add in front of the
story even for Rocky Mountain Voice, and that is former
GOP nominee for governor here in the state of Colorado,
Heidi Ganal.
Speaker 3 (21:53):
Heidi welcome, Hi Ryan, great to be here, Great to
have you with me.
Speaker 4 (21:58):
And we'll get into Jared Poulis and just moment, but
I really wanted to get your take on what you
just heard and what they're leaving out.
Speaker 10 (22:06):
Well, it's not surprising to me she's hidden so much
from us, as have other officials in this process around
our elections. My whole press conference, what two months ago now,
started with the lie that Jenner Griswold told us about
our voting systems and Wi Fi remote access. That quote,
I don't have it right in front of me, but
she basically says, the voting machines have been stripped of
(22:29):
any capabilities to connect to remote access, so there's no
way anybody can get access to our machines. Oh wait,
maybe just Douglas County. Oh wait, maybe just twelve counties.
Now it's oh wait, maybe fifteen counties. They can't get
their stories straight there. This is just another example of that.
We never did get any answers on the post office
discrepancies of the thirty thousand ballots, on deliverable ballots that
(22:52):
are missing, or the issues with the dropboxes. So it's
just a long list of issues that are really troubling
for the voters of Colorado.
Speaker 4 (23:02):
And let me follow up on that, Heidi, because I
have not liked our voting system ever since I moved
here in November of twenty eighteen. I prefer voting in person.
I prefer a system that makes that a priority, hand
counted paper ballots, voting on the day of the election,
not having mass mail out ballots to just anyone willy
nilly without them requesting it, the chain of custody of
(23:24):
those ballots. I know that's a measure that you've been
very much focused on when you look at the results
in Colorado for this election, which seemed to be an
outlier compared to the rest of the country.
Speaker 3 (23:35):
I'm sorry, but people are going to.
Speaker 4 (23:36):
Have questions, especially after the scandal that broke in Jenna
Griswold's office.
Speaker 10 (23:41):
Right, Yes, and I think we should ask really tough questions.
And it's darn time they provide some transparency around these
issues if they're going to claim that we're the gold
standard of elections, which is laughable at this point after
what happened in Mason County with the signature of verification
and these leaks, and now to cover up attached to
the leaks, and then hiring an attorney or a legal
(24:05):
firm that's in bed with them to do the research
and do the It's not an audit, it's just a review.
Everything around our voting system needs to have an outside,
independent forensic auditor look at the various parts of our
system and make sure it's okay.
Speaker 4 (24:21):
Yeah, maybe Attorney General Matt Gates will launch an investigation
along those lines coming up in a month or so,
Hidigan all our guest, and just one final point on
this matter.
Speaker 3 (24:30):
What I just heard. It just bowls me over, Heidi.
Speaker 4 (24:34):
How these organizations, these departments, companies, even professional sports teams,
doesn't matter who it is, they're so terrible at crisis
Management're like, well, we didn't want this story to break
out and become the media frenzy that it is.
Speaker 3 (24:46):
Well, it did.
Speaker 4 (24:47):
And if you had nip this in the butt and
gotten out in front of it and been transparent and honest,
you blunt the force of whatever it is that went wrong.
I'll just put it in your terms, Heidi, if something
like this happened when you were running a camp bow,
there was some controversy or your client list had leaked,
you would want to get in front of that and
own it.
Speaker 3 (25:05):
Right.
Speaker 10 (25:07):
That's right, that's right. That's about being a good leader.
Speaker 3 (25:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 10 (25:11):
No one expects our leaders to be perfect, but they
expect us to admit when we've done something wrong or
made a bad decision and fix it and be very
honest about it. That will earn you way more credibility
than trying to cover it up, hide things, gaslight us.
And we're all so sick of that. We just told
you in the election, how sick of that we are
(25:31):
by voting you know, the rest of the country's vote,
and Arry red Colorado so much unfortunately.
Speaker 4 (25:38):
Yeah, Heidiganella joining us, and she ran head to head
against Jared Polis last time around in the race for governor.
And you don't need a weatherman to tell which way
the wind blows, but a weather vane you could use.
And Jared Polis because he seems to be influenced by
the outcome of this election somehow, and he posted the
following on X that made my jaw drop, my head spin.
I got a little nauseous, might have thrown up a
little bit, because he's just done a total one to eighty.
(26:00):
Here he was seeing you who wants to have measles
come back? And ripping our FK Junior in a previous
post on X. And then there was this one yesterday
that drew scorn from all sides of the political spectrum.
The left was hammering, how can you approve of RFK Junior?
And the right people like me, You're like, oh wait
a minute, You're the one that was saying that we
were selfish bastards and that we should wear a damn mask.
(26:20):
And yet he says this quote, I'm excited by the
news that the president elect will appoint Robert Kennedy Junior
to Health and Human Services. He helped us defeat vaccine
mandates in Colorado in twenty nineteen and will help make
America healthy again by shaking up HHS and FDA.
Speaker 3 (26:37):
I hope he leans into personal.
Speaker 4 (26:39):
Choice on vaccines rather than bands, which I think are terrible,
just like mandates. But what I'm most optimistic about is
taking on big pharma and the corporate ag oligopoly to
improve our health. Before you mock him or disagree, I
want to share with you some quotes that he follows
through the show.
Speaker 3 (26:56):
They why I'm so excited now.
Speaker 4 (26:58):
He had to issue a subsequent after getting called out
from all sizes, and he said the following here regarding
my thoughts on Robert Kennedy Junior. Science must remain the
cornerstone of our nation's health policy, and the science backed
decision to get vaccinated.
Speaker 3 (27:14):
Improves public health and safety.
Speaker 4 (27:16):
But if as a country we follow the science, we
would also be far more concerned about the impact of
pesticides on public health, ag policy on nutrition, and the
lack of access to prescription drugs due to drug high prices.
This is why I am for a major shakeup in
institutions like the FDA that have been barriers to lowering
drug costs in promoting healthy food choices. Lest there be
(27:38):
any doubt, I am vaccinated, as is my family. I
will hold any HHS secretary to the same high standard
of protecting and improving public health.
Speaker 3 (27:48):
Heidi, what do you make of this?
Speaker 10 (27:51):
It's infuriating. I mean, I was a regent during COVID,
one of nine people overseeing a five billion dollar university
system led by the state of Colorado, which is Jared Polis,
and we were trying so hard. Chance Hill and I,
my fellow regent, were trying so hard to stop the
mandates and to allow for exemptions for religious exemptions, especially
(28:12):
because as a regent you oversee the University of Carro
Medical School and you have a couple of board seats
on uc health and we were usually able to be
influential on that front, but could not budge see you.
And I reached out to the Governor's office. I reached
out to the Attorney General's office. I was trying to
get someone to help us get see you to back
(28:32):
off of our students and faculty and would not budge
on it.
Speaker 3 (28:37):
It wasn't Governor Polis.
Speaker 4 (28:39):
I mean, ultimately at the top of this power pyramid,
responsible for the firing of healthcare workers in our state
who refused to get the COVID vaccine that he claims
we should have personal choice regarding.
Speaker 10 (28:50):
Absolutely and in one of the debates I called him out.
He went after me on women's right, you know, about
the abortion issue, and I said, let's talk about women.
What about the rights of the women the university healthcare system,
women that were fired or had to leave their jobs
because they wouldn't get your experimental vaccination And he just
(29:12):
got off flustered and didn't know how to answer it.
I'm like, you can't have it both ways. If you
want women to have choice over their bodies, they get
to have choice over whether they take a vaccination or
not without your grimy hands forcing them out of their job.
Speaker 4 (29:26):
And it just seems like he feels he can change
positions on this and none of us will notice. Well
a lot of us notice in a response to that,
And that's why I wanted to hear from Heidi Ganal today.
And as you hear, she knows exactly where Jared Polish
stood on this very issue, no matter how much he
tries to cloak and dagger it from here. Find out
more at Rockymountain Voice dot com. She is Heidi Ganal. Hidi,
thank you so much for your time today and have
(29:47):
a great weekend.
Speaker 10 (29:49):
Thanks Ryan. Happy Friday, Happy Friday.
Speaker 3 (29:51):
Indeed, and to your text, we go.
Speaker 4 (29:52):
When we come back, our nominees for our Friday Fool
of the Week as assembled by Kelly Gucera, I'm Ride
Sholing Live, decide who are Friday Fool of the Week.
Will be back here on Ryan Schuling Live, and without
further ado, we go to Princeton Professor. And that's another
(30:13):
hint that you don't want to send your kids to
Ivy League schools Eddie glad Day, trying to reason with
Stephanie Ruhle, who was saying, Look, people voted in their
economic interest.
Speaker 3 (30:23):
That's why Donald Trump won. Note says Eddie, there's.
Speaker 11 (30:27):
This sense right that whiteness right is under threat. The
demographic shifts the country is all of these racially ambiguous
children on Cheerio's commercials are confusing the hell.
Speaker 3 (30:38):
Out of me, Eddie.
Speaker 12 (30:40):
A lot of people voted because their life's too damn expensive,
and it was here and they voted for you're.
Speaker 11 (30:46):
Telling me, Stephanie, that all of these people who believe
that their lives that bread is too high and eggs
are too high, that they voted for a convicted fella, Yes,
a guy who said we can grab the peace.
Speaker 2 (31:00):
They voted for this God.
Speaker 12 (31:02):
I'm not defending it, but I think there are tons
of people that don't pay attention to and I'm not
defending it, don't pay attention to politics at all. But
while we live in the most prosperous country in the world,
people are saying life's not fair.
Speaker 10 (31:15):
I'm not doing well.
Speaker 12 (31:16):
My son's still living in the basement. I can't seem
to get a job. I don't like the statistical of
voting for something else.
Speaker 3 (31:21):
And I love you. I love you, but I do
not believe that. I cannot believe that.
Speaker 11 (31:31):
And the reason I think you believe it is because
you don't want to believe that that's what's really motivating them.
Speaker 3 (31:37):
What is It's always the case we people.
Speaker 11 (31:41):
Don't want to believe what the country actually is because
if they believe it, they're gonna have to confront within them.
Speaker 4 (31:48):
Oh, I don't believe that they.
Speaker 3 (31:51):
Voted for a crook.
Speaker 11 (31:52):
So a person who they know is feeling from just
doing everything to undermine the co so called country that
they love, and they're telling us the bes it's economics.
Speaker 3 (32:03):
We know that's not true. We know that is true.
Speaker 4 (32:06):
And I have Harry Enton to explain why that's exactly
the case with minority voters coming up in our next segment.
To start our number two, we've moved now to doctor
Amanda Joy, a clinical child psychiatrist I believe, MD for sure,
and she was on with joy Anne Reid saying, look,
if your family voted for Donald Trump, just to snub
(32:26):
them at the holidays.
Speaker 13 (32:28):
So I love that you asked this question because you
know there is a push I think, just a societal
norm that if somebody is your family, that they are
entitled to your time. And I think the answer is
absolutely not. So if you are going to a situation
where you have family members, where you have close friends
who you know have voted in ways that are against you,
(32:51):
like what you said, against your livelihood, and it's completely
fine to not be around those people and.
Speaker 3 (32:58):
To tell them why.
Speaker 4 (32:59):
I think that's horrible, but okay, we'll go with that.
And then Don Lemon he thought X was an airport
and he needed to announce his departure.
Speaker 1 (33:07):
Hi.
Speaker 6 (33:08):
Everyone, Hi, I have loved connecting with all of you
on Twitter and then on X for all of these years,
but it's.
Speaker 3 (33:14):
Time for me to leave the platform.
Speaker 6 (33:17):
I once believed that it was a place for honest
debate and discussion, transparency and free speech, but I now
feel it does not serve that purpose. In addition, starting
this Friday, November fifteenth, ex is implementing new.
Speaker 3 (33:30):
Terms of service, which, among other things.
Speaker 6 (33:33):
States that quote all disputes be brought exclusively in the
US District Court for the Northern District of Texas.
Speaker 3 (33:40):
Or state courts.
Speaker 6 (33:41):
Located in Terrence County, Texas.
Speaker 3 (33:43):
End quote.
Speaker 6 (33:44):
The full terms of service can be found on my
written statement or on the X website.
Speaker 12 (33:49):
Now.
Speaker 6 (33:49):
As The Washington Post recently reported on exce's decision to
change the terms, this quote ensures that such lawsuits will
be heard in courthouses that are a hub for conservatives,
which experts say could make it easier for X to
shield itself from litigation and punish critics.
Speaker 4 (34:06):
Kind of like when the roles were reversed and the
Liberals controlled then called Twitter and went after their conservative detractors.
So the tables turn and Don Lemon, he's out, and
he felt the need to announce that, So submit your vote.
Eddie Glaudday, Princeton professor doctor Amanda Joy, MD, or Don Lemon,
who is our Friday Fool of the Week, added bonus.
(34:29):
JP Sears is coming to Comedy Works next weekend, and
if you vote for the winning nominee, you'll be entered
to win tickets to go see him at Comedy Works
South on Ryan Schuling Live