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August 8, 2025 55 mins
Angie Wong joins The Anchormen
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Now it's time for the Anchorman Podcast with Matt Yates
and Dan Ball.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
Hello and good evening, Welcome to the Anchorman here on
One American news network. I am your host, usually a
co host, Riley lewis filling in for Dan Ball. Actually,
Dan is on a long, overdue and much needed vacation,
so he's out of town this week and it will
be me driving this bus. So I want to say
thank you for stopping by and tuning in. I sincerely

(00:34):
appreciate it. We have a very special guest on tonight,
and I have a very special co host who I
will introduce in just a moment. However, I want to
start by saying that we do these every single week,
two episodes, so Matt Gates does one on Thursdays and
then Dan Ball and I do one on Fridays as well,
So thank you for tuning in. Those are available on YouTube,

(00:54):
rumble x, truth Social, wherever you find your podcasts, and
I am filling in just for this week. Dan will
be back next So having said all of that, joining
me for this very special edition of the Anchorman podcast
is David Pollock, who's filling in for Dan Ball in
Real America this week.

Speaker 1 (01:13):
We're both filling in for dan Ball. You're filling in
for dan Ball. I'm filling in for dan Ball. We're
all filling in for dan Ball.

Speaker 3 (01:19):
I like it. This is the Anchormen with Matt Gates
and dan Ball.

Speaker 1 (01:22):
And I'm not Matt Gates or Dan Ball and neither
of you, but we're both dan Ball.

Speaker 3 (01:28):
Did you see this coming?

Speaker 2 (01:29):
No, I did not plan this at all.

Speaker 3 (01:31):
We're all dan Ball.

Speaker 2 (01:32):
However, it's great to have you. And for those who
haven't heard of you before, just if you want to
give some quick background about who you are and what
you're up to, yeah, please do.

Speaker 1 (01:40):
I was listen, I was sweeping outside and they said, hey,
we need somebody that could fill in for dan Ball.
And I said, okay, what do I have to do?
They just sit there and yell at people and sometimes
use profanity. I said, I'm your guy, and so they
dressed me up in his suit and here I am.
I mean, that's my story, or the alternative story that
they told me to say under extreme duress, is that

(02:03):
you can find me on x or every other social
media platform at David Pollack USA. I do politics, I
do commentary, I do news, and this is who I am.
And it's been an honor to fill in for Dan
all week and hang out with you guys in the
beautiful ola and studios. And I think I sold some
subscriptions this week.

Speaker 2 (02:22):
I agree with that, And if I could, you've been
doing a fantastic job. Thank you, really well done. Thank
you big fan. From what I've seen, Thank you.

Speaker 1 (02:29):
You guys will release the people you're holding hostage that
I care about. You said you would do that at
the end of the week. If I did a good job, right,
we'll talk about it. We'll talk about it good. But
we're I think we're I think we can work this out.

Speaker 3 (02:38):
Cool.

Speaker 2 (02:39):
Having said that, let's jump right in because we have
a very special guest and a very fascinating topic for
you tonight. A lot of topics, actually, but this is
one that's a lot of people are paying attention to
this and for good reason. Happening in the Big Apple,
in the quintessential American city, New York City, of course,
where we have a self avowed democratic socialist names Zo

(03:00):
run Mom Donnie sweeping the whole place by storm unexpectedly,
very surprisingly me. Yeah, and we have a New Yorker
joining us, and why wait, So, without further ado, joining
us here on the Anchorman Podcast is the anchor woman herself,
Angie Wong. Angie, how are you today?

Speaker 4 (03:20):
I am the New Yorker. Yeah no, I didn't realize
you could curse on the show, you know, he was
just listening to your monologue, like really casual. Let me
just like untuck my shirt.

Speaker 2 (03:29):
Yeah no, no, yeah no. Well we try not to
get no, no, no, but even the idea, can.

Speaker 4 (03:36):
You say profanity?

Speaker 3 (03:37):
No, that's the word.

Speaker 2 (03:43):
However, I do I want to set the stage for
just a moment, and we want to get into your background,
of course, your upbringing, where you're from, where you are now,
what you're doing, Angie. But I do want to just
set the stage for this main conversation about what's happening
in New York, because clearly this guy so randmm Donnie,
he's tapping into something. I don't know exactly what it is,

(04:05):
but everything he stands for is antithetical to everything this
country was built upon. And I don't want to overstate
that this is a really interesting and pivotal moment for
America's most iconic city and one of the most iconic
cities in the whole world, something a place that you
know very well, being from Queen's I believe. So we're

(04:25):
going to get into that, but I want to set
the stage for just saying, there is clearly something he's
tapping into. I don't know exactly what it is, but
there's an appetite, a misguided one for socialism, communism. He's
maybe somewhere in between those two things. And I want
to get your initial thoughts about what in the heck
is happening politically in New York City right now.

Speaker 4 (04:44):
Yeah, And I've been doing a lot of soul searching
on this one too, because I know New York. I
love New York. That's my birthplace. So when I was
growing up in New York, in my high school, there
was probably at least forty six different languages being spoken,
and it was a public scho New York City, and
everyone just had to kind of get along because there
were so many differences from Queens, where it is truly

(05:08):
the melting pot. It's if you look at Queens, it's
probably got the biggest diversity in all of America. So,
you know, but back then, you had to get along
because you had to sit in the same classrooms with them,
and you had to be at the same problem with
them in the same graduation, and you grew up together,
so you didn't really even see color so much. It
was just like, you know, everyone got along and we

(05:30):
ate each other's foods, and we asked about each other's
languages and where they're from. And it was truly a
blending of cultures, which was so beautiful and such a
weird experiment that kind of didn't always work but worked
out somehow. This, this Zoron Mondami's future of New York City,
has nothing to do with blending. It has nothing to

(05:53):
do with assimilation. This is a complete takeover of culture
in New York City. And that's what makes this so
scary because it's not about bringing in another generation to
benefit and have everyone kind of you know, live happily together,
which is how I grew up in New York City.
This is really just a you know, we're just going

(06:15):
to take whatever we want and insert it into your life.
And that's what I'm seeing over and over again. And
that's what the Left loves to do. They like to
make you do what they want or shame you for it, right,
And this case, not only is he going to shame
you for it. He's going to take New York City
money and put into the programs that he wants to
put it in and basically change New York City culture.

(06:38):
So that I'm not okay with because anyone paying the
ABSORBENTI prices to live in New York City doesn't want
to change the culture. We love our culture. We pay
money to be in that culture. But in this case,
he wants to turn everything upside down and make it
his way. That's what New York City voters need to understand.
This is not a good thing. This is not assimilation.

(06:59):
And we've seen it in London. We've seen it in
different cities in the UK. We've seen it in Paris.
That's a preview, you guys, and I hope people wake
up to this, agreed.

Speaker 2 (07:10):
I want to bring David in in just a moment
because and the reason I wanted to talk about this. Sincerely,
I've been to New York once in my whole life.
I'm an outsider. I'm not from there. I don't understand
exactly the culture and how it works. However, I want
to broaden this out for a moment and get your
thoughts because we were talking about this earlier. It says
a lot about where the Democrat Party is right now.

(07:31):
I thought after a historic defeat in November, in which
their candidate was the first one in nearly a century
to not flip a single county across the whole United States,
they would moderate. Yea, they would reflect and think, you know,
maybe the policies that we're pushing just aren't meeting the
American people where they are. Maybe we're not running on

(07:51):
a campaign that inspires people. Maybe what we're selling is
just not good. You know. It wasn't a messaging problem,
it was a policy problem. Their whole platform was rotten
to the core. I thought maybe they saw that just
for a moment right after the election, we were talking
about this. Clearly they've doubled down on the radicalism. They've
gone in a direction I did not expect. So I
want to get your thoughts about about that, David. What's happening?

(08:14):
Well the party?

Speaker 1 (08:15):
Okay, Well, first you're approaching it from somebody who's reasonable.
You have to understand what their whole focus is. It's
not really about the policies. It's about the destruction of
the United States. When you talk about build back better,
their intent from the very beginning, has always been to
destroy America. They started with tearing down our statues and
our monuments. They started with tarnishing the reputations of our

(08:35):
founding fathers, all to get to the Constitution of the
United States. You have we the people sitting on your
guitar right there. The idea is, the Constitution is the
last thing in the United States standing in the way.
You say, it's Donald Trump. The Constitution is the last
thing standing in the way between the radical left, the
Marxists that want to take this country and their ability
to do so. And so what the goal of the
radical left, the goal of Mandani and the goal of

(08:56):
Elizabeth Warren, the goal of AOC and Bernie Sanders and
all these other lunatics around the country that are trying
to hold onto power, isn't about actually promoting any policy.
Their goal is to divide us so severely on issues.
And I do and they're so smart the way they
do it. Right, Find a radical Muslim, put them in
a place like New York City, make him a Marxist,
get people to say, oh my gosh, this is radically

(09:19):
And I'm not saying there isn't a part that play
there there is, but the core focus is to divide us,
divide us in our best cities, divide our people, and
like like like, we all know New York is a
fantastic city with fantastic people, and after nine to eleven
you saw the result. I lived in New York City
and I could tell you there's no better people in
the entire country than in New York City. Unfortunately, they're suffering,

(09:40):
suffering under terrible leadership. And the reason why it's terrible
leadership is because what we've been seeing with the jerrymen
talk about jerrymandering always can congressional districts. You see it
in the States, you see it across the country. The
Democrats cheat, that's how they take power, and then they
take that power and then they screw everything up. Then
they blame us for it, Blame racism, Blame America. And
the goal is to replace our American values with this

(10:00):
broken Marxist ideology that is trying to find a home
in the United States since it escaped Nazi Germany in
the nineteen forties.

Speaker 3 (10:06):
But you know what, we're paying attention to it. So
that's my take on it in five minutes or less.

Speaker 2 (10:11):
That's interesting.

Speaker 4 (10:12):
That's pretty good, you know, So can I add to that?
Because you know, I hope you don't mind. So I
actually really did a deep dive into understanding Mondanie and
why he's so appealing to New Yorkers and why people
would vote for him. Now, I have friends that I've
spoken to that are my friends that I grew up with,
some of them who is going to be voting for

(10:35):
Montani and some and two of them are Jewish. So
I'm like, what is going on here? So I did,
I said, why are you voting for him? One of
them is actually a former co host of mine. I
used to have a radio show in Washington, DC and
he's a socialist Democrat and I'm the Maga Girl and
we had a great little show where we actually discussed issues.
So I asked him, I said, Ted, why are you

(10:56):
voting for Montani? Why is he winning? And he said, well,
you know, he grew up in New York City and
he goes because it's been decades that we had to
go pro Israel. Anything that veered from a pro Israel message,
you are labeled an anti semi You can't even question it, right,
You just have to believe the narrative, like you know,

(11:18):
to the dot and he goes. You know, New Yorkers,
you know, by definition we're pretty rebellous. We like to
question things, and we like to challenge authorities. That's we
feel like we have that right growing up in New
York City. So a lot of it comes from that
as well, just like decades of just you know, having
to believe one narrative, having our president also pushing that message,

(11:40):
and not being able to look at both sides of things.
So I think you're seeing the pendulum swing that way.
And of course New Yorkers, you know it's expensive. We
like free stuff, and that's what they're selling as well,
free everything. And you know, as we all know sitting here,
nothing is free. Someone's paying for it, and I think

(12:00):
Trump has made it clear that he's not paying for it.
So you know, good luck, New York City. Your taxes
are about to jump way up.

Speaker 2 (12:07):
Here's the thing Number one. I do genuinely wonder how
did we get to a place in America where one
of the most divisive issues on both sides is what
a foreign country is doing in a faraway place. That
is really interesting to me for a lot of reasons.
I'll just say that regardless of what side you're on
of that issue. However, here's the thing about Mom, Donnie,

(12:30):
and I want both of you away in here because
I resent his policy platform, his messaging so much with
every fiber of my being. But I got to give
the guy this. Like any other opportunistic politician, he's identifying
real issues. The cost of living in that city is
too high. That's fair for the average person. The overall

(12:53):
quality of life does seem to be decreasing in a
lot of different ways. It is hard to have a family,
it can be tough to run a business. I'm not
trying to empathize with them, but the problem is you
have someone who highlights real issues. People don't understand how
his platform would make those problems a lot worse. But
I think that's why he's tapping into something with people,
because he does talk about kitchen table issues, that working people,

(13:15):
that families, that parents actually care about, cost of healthcare,
cost of food, how much does it cost you to
heat your home in the wintertime. Those are real, genuine
problems that a lot of people in this country care about.
After four years of Biden inflation, people are looking at
their pocketbooks. They're looking at taxes, inflation eating into their savings,
making it really difficult to generate any kind of wealth.

(13:36):
And he understands that he's tapping into that. We all
saw his dumb hulalflation video, right, He's tapping into something
that's real, but people don't understand that what he represents
will make everything so much worse. So you have to
connect the dots. And I'm waiting for someone It's just
my opinion, so you guys can weigh in, but I'm
waiting for someone like Cuomo or Adams or Curtis Sliwa

(13:57):
to connect those dots for people so we can save
that city from being destroyed, because I do think a
Mom Donnie victory in November would be catastrophic for the
Big Apple. I firmly believe that.

Speaker 3 (14:07):
I'll say this quickly. We felt for this. Now we didn't.
I didn't vote for Obama.

Speaker 1 (14:11):
People fell for this during Obama, like, oh, here's this
eloquent guy. He looks a little bit different culturally, you know,
he's not what we voted for. This is he sounds,
hopefully feels like he really understands our issues. New York
is expensive. The reason why Housing is unaffordable in New York.
Isn't because of greedy capitalists. Housing is expensive in New
York because the government keeps getting involved in the private market.

(14:33):
Real estate would be cheaper if people couldn't afford rent,
But real estate can't get cheaper if the government keeps
subsidizing rents and then taking taxpayer dollars to pay that
subsidize rent. The answer to all of these problems is
getting government out of the picture, not creating new government
to fight the problem that they created. That's what the
opponent to Mundani or whatever his name is, that's what

(14:54):
you say. You say, Hey, rent's not gonna get cheaper
when you insert more government. And because rent's expensive because
governm is in it, it's it too expensive to drive
in New York City.

Speaker 3 (15:02):
Yeah, but why is it expensive to drive in New
York City?

Speaker 1 (15:05):
Because you're paying tolls, you're paying congestive fees, you're paying this,
and you're paying that. The answer is get government out
of the way. This is as old as anything. This
is why conservatives win. We just need to do a
better job telling people that if you're sick of suffering,
get government out of your life.

Speaker 3 (15:18):
That is the answer.

Speaker 1 (15:19):
Not trying to sit there and fight on their rules
and on their turf and talk about all these social programs.

Speaker 3 (15:23):
And how do you would fix them? I would remove
them all. That's the secret in my opinion.

Speaker 2 (15:27):
Well said, I agree with that, Angie. What do you
think about that?

Speaker 4 (15:30):
That's pretty good? Uh? Yeah, good luck with that in
New York City, where everyone's dependent on something. I mean
it really is. I mean, look, there's so many angles
I can take on this. Ultimately, you know we are.
We have to be prepared for a mandani win. I know, Riley,
that pains you, pains me as well. I mean we

(15:51):
really see the Trump DOJ preparing for this. I mean
they're ready starting to sue New York City, and that's
really just the walk up to Supreme Court later on
to basically strip any city from calling themselves a sanctuary
city because there is federal supremacy that trumps any sort
of city council or mayor's rules. Right. So I think

(16:14):
we're already seeing that just in case, because look at
all the real estate, all the banking, all the wealth
that goes into New York City. There's no way an
anti capitalist is going to do right by New York City,
And you know, there's I feel like with Mondana, he
is a great salesman, but look where he grew up.
He grew up in Uganda, and he just came back

(16:37):
from his third wedding to the same woman, but third
wedding party in Uganda. And when you see the disparity
between rich and poor in that country, you kind of
get a preview of what he's thinking about for New
York City, because that's his basis for governance. Right you
have the super poor who is walking or riding a

(16:58):
bicycle and if best, riding a you know, a bus,
and then you have the very wealthy with the armed
guards and the luxury cars, and you know, so that
is kind of how that government is set up. I wonder, though,
how Mandani is going to think of New York because
I don't really see anything other than free, free, free,
which he can't do anyway. I mean, free rent or

(17:19):
rent stabilization, free food, all this stuff. It's like, where
is the money coming from? You already heard Trump said,
no way, it's not coming from federal government. So right now,
you know, I just came back from New York just
a few days ago. People in the Bronx and in
Queens and the outer boroughs. You know that would normally
be subsidized, whether it be snap benefits or other benefits,

(17:42):
they're seeing fifty to one hundred dollars less every single month.
Why because that money has been quietly moved out to
supporting illegal migrants in New York City.

Speaker 1 (17:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (17:55):
Yeah, they're just quietly moving that money around, so you're
ready like, and they're of course blaming it on Trump, saying, oh,
Trump cut in the big beautiful bill or whatever. The
rhetoric is, right, No one pays attention. They just said, oh,
you know Trump is bad. Okay, fine. The reality is
it used to be on Thanksgiving or the days around
Thanksgiving that you would get a free turkey if you were,

(18:16):
you know, being subsidized. No, all that went to the legals. Now,
all those hotels, all the healthcare, everything is now going
to illegal migrants who are camping in New York City
and being supported by New Yorkers and the taxpayers. So
New York state taxes will go up, whereas the federal
dollar may. I don't know what Trump's plan is for that,

(18:37):
but he's certainly saying I'm not going to be giving
any federal money into this stuff. So Mondani's going to
have a really, really good difficult time. I wonder if
Eric Adams, Cuomo or Curtis Leewa can actually make it.
I've been studying their numbers. Mid July polls came out horrible.
Like I even say, it's just so bad. And here's

(19:00):
the thing. They won't drop out why because the minute
you drop out of the mayoral race, they have to
give back all their donations to do that. Okay, yes,
a lot of them are in debt. They have to
pay people and consultants and whatever else, you know, feed
their cats.

Speaker 3 (19:16):
And that's expensive.

Speaker 2 (19:17):
So well, I was just gonna say, so Adams, So
the the immigration issue is interesting, correct me if I'm wrong.
I thought he was pretty popular among New Yorkers up
until they started housing illegal immigrants in the Roosevelt Hotel
and having people be busted in every single day, thousands
and millions of dollars in free meals, free food, free clothing.

(19:41):
You get to a place where people don't want the
food to being given, so they're just throwing it out.
And you see trash bags on the streets just full
of food that people have discarded Meanwhile, you have people
on the streets of New York citizens we were born
and raised there, who were just living in squalor, and
it's really sad and there's no way to justify it.
And then the Trump administration comes in and says, we're

(20:01):
going to crack down on this problem because it's just
disgusting and unacceptable. And he sort of flips and says, Okay,
we'll all meet with Tom Homan and Trump's porters are
and we'll talk about addressing this problem no more, you know,
enabling this, this mass invasion of our city. It's just
it's not acceptable. But I don't know if it was
too late. And so I do wonder based on that
Pole data you're talking about, I saw that Angie Eric

(20:23):
Adams doesn't seem popular anymore. Maybe he never really was,
but I do wonder you're looking at the field right now,
Zoe Ran. Obviously, the whole Democrat machine is behind him,
Bernie Sanders, AOC, Elizabeth Warren, the whole Democrat, socialist New
Left movement, they're all behind him one thousand percent at
least publicly. Maybe they have concerns behind closed doors, but

(20:43):
they keep it to themselves. So as far as the
public knows, everybody on the left is backing Mamdani. You
look at the right, though, you've got or even just
outside that bubble. Adams I think as an independent, now
Cuomo as an independent. They both have a lot of baggage.
Courtisly as a Republican with probably not much of a shot.
I wonder, of all those people in the field, who's

(21:06):
the most likely to actually run a decent campaign against
Mom Donnie, Who's the one that we should put our
resources behind.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
Nobody, No, I mean none of them. No, And she's
completely right. New York City has lost their mind. And
the only reason why they don't like Eric Adams is
because they found somebody further left than him. And remember
what happened to Eric Adams when he said I'm gonna
do something about immigration. They try to put him in jail.
So where we're at in New York City right now
is all the people at common sense left. They came

(21:34):
to places like Florida, and they came with any place
that they can go to escape that nonsense. Hopefully they
vote differently. The people that are left in New York
they buy the bs. These are echo chambers. They sit
around and they believe the garbage that they make up,
and then they just tell each other and then they
out virtue signal each other, and then they end up
in this environment where they can't even see the truth anymore.

(21:56):
And all you talk about how where they get to
fund all these policies. It doesn't matter the pose these policies.
And then when the policies fail, it's not gonna be
their fault. It's because the rich people didn't pay enough
and people are suffering because the rich people didn't pay
enough taxes to pay for all these programs. Even though
the programs could never be funded. There's not enough money
in the world to fund them. At the end of
the day, the reality is that New Yorkers are going

(22:16):
to elect this guy. They're going to suffer, They're going
to blame everybody else, and then they're gonna try to
flee like any other parasite when you suck your host drive.
But guess what we need to do. And I talked
about this with Mike Crispy yesterday on the show. When
they elect Monomi whatever this guy's name is, when they
elect to Zohan, when they do it, we need to
build a wall around New York and we need to
leave them there and then they can't leave. It's like

(22:38):
we talked about this yesterday in The Bronxtail. If you
ever seen The Bronx Tail, there's a scene where these
bikers come in, they try to smash up the bar,
and then they go, Okay, now you just can't leave.

Speaker 2 (22:45):
Click.

Speaker 3 (22:46):
We need to do that in New York, no emigration out.

Speaker 1 (22:49):
If we need to build a wall around New York,
around well, maybe about California, some good parts, I like
San Diego. But we need to build walls around these
places where the Liberals take over and ruin it, so
people can't flee and ruin anywhere else. Let's keep them
there and then let a conservative come in and say
we're going to save you, and then we'll.

Speaker 3 (23:04):
Take down the wall.

Speaker 1 (23:05):
The Great Wall will fall once we restore America back
to these plays.

Speaker 3 (23:09):
That's my plan. So he's going to win.

Speaker 2 (23:11):
So you think New York City is too far gone?
Is that?

Speaker 3 (23:14):
I think?

Speaker 1 (23:15):
I think that the people who for somehow keep winning
elections in New York City are too far gone.

Speaker 3 (23:20):
I think New Yorkers are great. I think some are stuck.

Speaker 1 (23:23):
They're the ones who can leave left and then for
some reason, the ones who who vote, Yeah, they've lost
their mind.

Speaker 4 (23:27):
Okay, Yeah, I'm looking forward to two months from now,
on November seventh, the day after the election, and we
have them on Donnie Mayor. I want to blame someone, Honestly,
let's play the blame game, because right now we have
two months to go. Who are we blaming? I hate
to say it. I mean I'm a party girl, but

(23:47):
where is the New York GOP.

Speaker 3 (23:49):
Yat Why aren't they.

Speaker 4 (23:50):
Pouring money in support, buying every billboard, doing everything they
can to push their candidate. That's what's really angering to
me because as someone who's a very low level committee
woman here in Miami, that's exactly what I'm doing all
day long. That's my part time job. You know, that's
what I was elected for. So you know, where's the

(24:11):
New York GOP in this? Where's the RNC in this?
I mean, this is the biggest race in all of America.
This is going to be a preview to what we
see in other cities, perhaps maybe even all of the
Democratic Party or are okay, and I'll twist your minds
a little bit. Are they doing this intentionally because they
know that Mondani is going to be so sloppy as

(24:32):
a mayor and just creates such awfulness in that city
that they're going to be able to win future races
like the governor's race in New York City in twenty
twenty six and other races say, hey see, we tried
this weird social experiment. It blew up in our face.
We can never have that again. I don't know, but
either way, I can tell you that GOP is raising
a crazy amount of money on this guy because and

(24:55):
I think both sides are. I mean, this is a real,
real fight, But I would like to blame what's going
on with the Republican Party because you know, you're supposed
to be helping out your guy, and so far I
have yet to see it.

Speaker 3 (25:07):
That is the point of the century she just made,
right there.

Speaker 1 (25:10):
The point of the century she just made, because that's
all the Republicans care about. Fundraising. That's all they do
is fundraise. They go and get the candidates. Look how
much money this candidate rate. It's not about whether or
not they can win. They did this with the Santas
DeSantis is raising all this money.

Speaker 3 (25:23):
He's not gonna beat Trump. You're wasting the money. But
in New York.

Speaker 1 (25:27):
The reason why the Republicans are just fundraising off of
this is because they don't have the messaging. They don't
know how to beat this guy, because they can't sit
down and articulate conservative principles anymore, because the GOP is
still running around trying to figure out who they are
in the wake of Trump or.

Speaker 3 (25:39):
We like Trump, or we like the GOP? Who are we?

Speaker 1 (25:42):
But we can fundraise and then they can take that
money and put their establishment candidates and races where we
need to start building a bench of real conservatives that
can actually come up with the messaging to beat socialists
like this. Instead, we have the same people running the
same elections, losing every time while consultants get rich and
Democrats keep winning.

Speaker 3 (25:59):
That is the point of the day. You killed it.
We don't need to talk anymore. Let's just send the show.

Speaker 4 (26:03):
Let's drink.

Speaker 3 (26:06):
We're gonna need to and eat with our hands.

Speaker 4 (26:09):
And that's you know, and that's right, because you know
it is true. I mean, I'm not gonna name names,
but you know I'm running the same people over and
over again on the same ballots in New York. And
one of them was a former Democrat I ran a
candidate against her. Now she's a Republican, right, so it's
like it doesn't matter. It's like they're just they know,
you know, New York. Unfortunately, in New York, you know,

(26:29):
it's very, very hard to win as a Republican. People
have I have helped braces like Ina Ernerkoff and Vicky Palladino.
They won their city council seats. You know, there are
ways of doing this, but you have to put some
elbow grease, you have to put some money into it.
It's almost as if you know, they don't really care.
So hopefully, hopefully we're going to bring on some real

(26:50):
leadership into this once the finger pointing begins. So I'm
starting the finger pointing brigade. I don't like to be
a nagger, but in this case, it's like we did
it to ourselves and this is what you're going to get.
So I hope there's some logic and thought into this
and that we're not going to repeat it again in
twenty six.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
Well, even the logic aside, because I think the point
you're really highlighting for me is the lack of a fight.
You can't guarantee a win at the ballot box. That's
not what this country is about. And I accept that
every election comes with a lot of risk.

Speaker 3 (27:18):
You work hard.

Speaker 2 (27:18):
Anyone who's ever worked in a campaign, mayor's office, city council, county,
board of supervisors, congress, whatever it is. If you've worked
on any kind of campaign, you understand there's a big
gamble on the table. That's just a fact, and you
go into it accepting that. And I would argue there's
a lot of beauty to that. Actually, it makes you
hustle if you care and you really want it. Like
anything in the private sector, nothing's guaranteed to you. That's

(27:42):
a beautiful thing. The opportunity is there, but you have
to earn it, and that's a wonderful thing in my opinion. However,
I just am sick of seeing the lack of urgency.
Where is the sense of urgency? This is America's most
quintessential city. You were going to let a socialist. I
think he's a communist quite frankly, but regardless, what he

(28:04):
represents is antithetical to everything this country was built upon.
The founding fathers, in my opinion, would be rolling in
their graves. And yet we're just going to let him
steal New York City. We're just gonna let him waltz
in and take the city without a fight. Where is
the opposition? Where is the door knocking the events? I mean,
people like Brandon Struck are great at this. He is
a legend. What he's doing is incredible in my opinion.

(28:24):
But why is he the only one? We need a
million Brandon Strocks. You know, where are they?

Speaker 1 (28:29):
You know why he's the only one who was Brandon Strock?
He was a Democrat? Who is Donald Trump? He was
a Democrat. All of our strongest, most enthusiastic, hardest working
grassroots people were Democrats who came to the Republican Party.
I mean, look, even in the administration, Tolcy Gabbard a Democrat.
She's our hero right now with what she's releasing right

(28:51):
RFK Junior making kids healthy again a Democrat. These are
Democrats who said these people are nuts. They came over
to the Republican Party and said, well, these people aren't
doing anything, so they care enough to leave the party
join another one. And they get here, they're like, why
aren't you guys drinking out of the keg.

Speaker 3 (29:08):
We're having a party and nobody's participating. This is the issue.

Speaker 1 (29:12):
The issue is the only people that give a I
don't know, give a damn. I could say that on YouTube,
you can say the only people that give a damn
are the people who just got here and they're like,
wait a second, we need to work. But guess what
the GOP is doing. And I will name names and
I will point fingers, because you know what they do.
When these people come up, these former Democrats, the g
newp which I'm calling them, the GOP is threatened by them,

(29:32):
and they put them down. These people will raise hundreds
of thousands of dollars, going door to door, sweating passionate,
putting their lives on hold.

Speaker 3 (29:39):
And what does the GOP do. I've seen it in
states like Florida. You know what they do.

Speaker 1 (29:42):
They raise millions of dollars from their big pocketbook donors
and they put them out of business, and they take
establishment hacks, stick them in a seat where New Yorkers
get sick of them, Floridians get sick of them, and
you know what happens to them. They get beaten and
the AOC's of the world end up taking charge. And
then you have eloquent people who fit a mold of
the lead US leftists who don't actually have to live
in the in the in the garbage that they vote for,

(30:04):
and then they win because Republicans need to get out
of the way of the gnupie. Let people who give
a damn about this country fight and win, and we
need to get behind him.

Speaker 3 (30:13):
That is my opinion. I think that's the problem.

Speaker 4 (30:15):
Why he's one hundred percent right everybody.

Speaker 2 (30:20):
Right, I don't think that's I think that's a fact. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (30:24):
Now, and we've seen it over and over again. We
have such great new blood coming into the party. We
should be poor. We should have the welcome mattter for them, right.
We should be enjoying this, especially the young folks that
are coming in. I love their energy, I love their beliefs.
I mean, we want it. We should be cherishing this.
But instead, you're right, we squeeze them out because you know,

(30:45):
you have to wait in line.

Speaker 1 (30:46):
Right.

Speaker 4 (30:47):
This guy, this other guy, he's been here fifteen years,
he's been donating, you know, one hundreds of thousands of
dollars to us, and he's been at every one of
our meetings. So he's got to be next. No, this
is a completely different party now, I mean I'm going
to argue that the New Republican Party was the old
JFK Party, was it not. I mean a lot of that,

(31:07):
A lot of the basis in our grounding is of
that kind of cut so, and David's absolutely right. I mean,
people who've left the Democratic Party, they were hoping that
Republican Party, the New Republican Party, is going to be
their new way of life because no one can go
this far left anymore. The socialists have taken over the
Democratic Party. You know what, let them have it. Given

(31:28):
what I'm seeing with the jerrymandering lines, Guess what if
Democrats do not win this next round, maybe even the
New York City race, They're going to be the permanent
minority party for a long long time. And we're seeing
that with the jerrymandering in at least seven different states
that I'm looking at, Potentially we could pick up thirteen

(31:52):
to fifteen GOP seats. That's what I'm excited about. And
if this thing with Scotus comes down the pipeline in
October where rules that you can't do race based jerrymandering,
and then you have Trump who just today had announced
that we're going to be doing a census recount and
we're leaving out all the illegals things. I mean, can

(32:13):
we just say bye bye to the Democratic Party because
they can't play their games anymore?

Speaker 2 (32:19):
But that's the thing to David's point, to both your points.
Even if we find ourselves in a situation where people
they walk away from the party just like Brandon did,
and the GOP has this golden opportunity to pick up
more seats in Congress that say, if you don't fill
them with the right people, it's all for not if
we're not, we have to fill them with America first,
patriots who are willing to fight for this country. That's

(32:39):
what my big takeaway from this. I want yours too.
If we're not willing to fight, because we're in a
battle for the soul of America. In my opinion, this
country's under attack in a lot of different ways. I
think it's very obvious the people who care most about
its roots and protecting them are treated with contempt and hostility,
and they're marginalized. And I see that very obviously. It's
all over the place, and it's been happening for a
long time. But if we're not willing to metaphorically fight

(33:02):
for this country and in some ways literally sure, but
if we're not willing to fight for it, we're gonna
lose it. And that's my point. That's my frustration with
the GP is they're just not putting up any kind
of resistance. There's no opposition. I don't know why. I
don't know if it's because they're timid and weak or
compromised and corrupt. I would love both of your thoughts
about that. But this whole opportunity, everything that we've worked

(33:24):
for in the last eight years, even the last four years,
all the pain and suffering we saw under Biden, were
in this golden moment, and it seems like we have
one man who's fighting hard, President Trump, and a few
people around him. But it would be heartbreaking to see
a squador this opportunity.

Speaker 1 (33:38):
And for what I'm going to disagree with you, I
think the Republicans are fighting hard against other Republicans. That's
who that the only people that they seem to find
the courage to fight are other Republicans.

Speaker 3 (33:49):
We know this right now in Washington, d C.

Speaker 1 (33:52):
In the modern age of president's administrations, Donald Trump has
the most unconfirmed appointees with.

Speaker 3 (33:59):
A Republican Senate.

Speaker 1 (34:01):
They're sitting there giggling, giggling to not give him his
recess appointments. Gets who gets recess appointments. Barack Obama gets them,
but not Donald Trump. From the Republican majority, we fight
each other harder than we fight them.

Speaker 3 (34:14):
That is the issue.

Speaker 1 (34:15):
You saw the Young Republicans convention in Nashville over the
weekend on Friday. They were taking the keeping delegates from
voting because you have two factions, the America First faction
fighting the establishment faction in the Young Republicans, and that's
the future of our party, and they're fighting each other.
Republicans need to stop fighting Republicans and the only way
that's gonna happen is if we fight back and win.

Speaker 3 (34:35):
And yes, theoretical fighting.

Speaker 1 (34:38):
We're not talking about, of course, you know, but at
the end of the day, that is the problem.

Speaker 3 (34:42):
And I'm curious to get your take same.

Speaker 4 (34:44):
Yeah, you know, I was just at the Florida Freedom
Something convention.

Speaker 3 (34:48):
I forget oh yeah, with the dinner got the award, right, Yeah.

Speaker 4 (34:51):
So Ron de Santis was saying exactly the same thing
Dave was saying, is that we got to stop fighting
each other because we want more and more wins, and
we are on the course of winning. The only people
who's gonna stop us from winning are ourselves, right, And
it's like there's enough for everybody. There's so many seats available,
there's so many leadership roles. But of course, you know,
we're in the game of fighting. This is politics, it's

(35:12):
it's the fight club. So I you know, I get it.
I don't think that there's any question at this point
that we are a mega party. At least for the
next three and a half years. We're gonna be full Maga.
And if people are still pushing back on this, I
don't think they're gonna win. But you know, that's the
course of things. I do. I saw what happened in Nashville.

(35:35):
I'm really just embarrassed by what happened there. I mean,
these are good young Americans. They all want to do right,
and it's just it's a power fight.

Speaker 2 (35:44):
I get that. But I do wonder maybe I'm wrong here,
But I do think some of this. The point is,
I do think there is a deep, deep divide in
the GOP. I'd like to think it's a maga party
and it's a maga movement.

Speaker 3 (35:54):
But I don't know no, it's not a mega party.

Speaker 2 (35:56):
I think I think a lot of Republicans out there
to test what's going on with the America.

Speaker 1 (35:59):
The Republicans hate. Okay, let's be honest. Let's just be honest.
Right And I look, and I thought, and I live
in Florida. I live in Florida. Ron de Santis was
a fantastic governor. See I said that past tense. He's
still governor. Ronda Stante was a fantastic governor during COVID.
He said, you know, we're not going to do this nonsense.
He was an America first governor. And I love the

(36:23):
fact that Ron de Santis says we need to stop
the infighting.

Speaker 3 (36:25):
I agree. Who ran against Donald Trump in the primary?

Speaker 1 (36:30):
Ron de Santis in the state of Florida, where you
literally had the federal government raiding marl Lago. But vike
Ramaswami was down there with a sign saying this is wrong.
Where was DeSantis going?

Speaker 3 (36:41):
Wait?

Speaker 1 (36:41):
Wait what political advisors? Wait, I can become president? Okay, cool,
I'm just gonna say, dad sho.

Speaker 3 (36:46):
President Trump should have done it.

Speaker 1 (36:47):
I agree with Rond de Santis president, I mean a
governor DeSantis, But didn't you put your money where your
mouth is, Dude, like, don't run against Mega. And then
when you're sitting next to President Trump after he got elected, go, yeah, Mega's.

Speaker 3 (36:58):
All good because that's not what we need.

Speaker 1 (37:00):
Stand with MAGA because that's not honest, that's not genuine.
And you are right. The GOP doesn't like Trump. They
couldn't wait to get rid of Trump. And the day
he lost the election that I'm not sure, well, I
can't talk about that on YouTube. After that, the day after,
what are Republicans do, Well, it's time to move on.
Well that's really disappointing. It's time for us to move

(37:21):
on and find somebody who can win. And the day
they lost it, the day they lost the primaries, Republicans
lost the primaries, when they literally gave up the House
just to just.

Speaker 3 (37:30):
To hurt President Trump, well, oh they am. We're really
gonna have to move away from this.

Speaker 1 (37:34):
They have sabotaged him from day one. They would do
anything they can to get rid of him, because what
does he do? He holds them accountable to the America
First messaging that they hate because the GOP and the
Democrat Party, the old ones, not the far left, they're
the same people. And they can't wait to sit together
to Capitol Hill Club and share a stake together while
they laugh at our taxes going up and the whole
world eating our lunch. That's what happened until Donald Trump

(37:55):
became president, and they're gonna wait him out, treat him
like a lame duck, and that's why we have to fight.

Speaker 2 (38:00):
All said, well, then the question, though, becomes, how do
we fight bringing back to New York City? What needs
to happen? Because I don't think it's too far gone.
I think Mom Donnie has a good chance of winning,
but I don't think it's inevitable. I resent the idea
that it is, and I'm hearing tactically on the ground
because we still have time. There's still time between now
and November. I believe that we can turn things around.
I just don't know how. So Angie, as a New Yorker,

(38:23):
how do we appeal to people? I think David said
something earlier about actually articulating conservative principles and values. Let's
try that, try that, But I mean, how do you
reach people? Because like, for example, Mom Donnie is very
good with social media. He had that dumb whole inflation video,
but it just went viral instantly. It was all over
the internet. It spread like wildfire. He knows how to

(38:43):
use social media to his advantage. Why don't we see
Republicans doing the exact same thing.

Speaker 4 (38:49):
That's a really, really good question, because we've got a
lot of money in the bank to do it too.
So here's my remedy for New York City. I have
run New York City races. I think I ran five
until I was a little bit successful, and one little
sliver of Manhattan turning it red. That was Chinatown. Here's
how we did it. We went to the small business owners.

(39:11):
They are completely about business and getting government out of
the way. And none of the socialists crap right. They
would like to see their business thrive. That's their survival.
Even so, I would target the business owners who care
very much for a capitalist society, none of this like,
you know, take more money out of my pocket and
feed everyone who's not working. I would also obviously target

(39:33):
the Jewish community if we got Hut the Jewish voters
of New York City to come out and vote on
November six. Guess what, you already have a vote for
some other candidate whoever, whether it be an independent or
a Republican, right, So it's a math game. At this point,
you get the Burrows out. The Burroughs do not care
for this guy. Maybe Brooklyn and certainly the AOC parts

(39:57):
of Queens and the Bronx, but you're you know, it's
really numbers game. And the other place that they've gone
into so so like really just infiltrated are the college campuses. Right,
So you have college kids who have temporary residencies in
New York City, who are from outside of New York

(40:18):
who are able to vote in New York City races.
So we got we gotta target that as well, and
maybe even I don't I doubt it's going to happen
in time, but you know, maybe if you don't live
here more than X amount of days per year, maybe
you shouldn't be to be able to vote in New
York City races. So you've got all those structures that
the Democrats have built a firewall around between young voters,

(40:42):
those who want free everything, and you know, just like
the generally the people who are not working, I mean,
they have the numbers and they know it's a numbers game.
I think if I saw right, Mondani got five hundred
and thirty seven thousand primary hits. That's huge, that's probably
I've never seen numbers like that, and I've run a
lot of races there, and you know, there might be

(41:04):
a mandate to have someone like him. So maybe we
New York City hasn't hit rock bottom yet. Maybe they
have no idea what this feels like. But here's what
AOC was very successful in doing. In getting a Mandani
to have such a prize in New York. She has
quieted Chuck Schumer. Chuck Schumer cannot open his mouth in
New York City and he can't defend his Jewish base

(41:26):
because there's such a rise in a Mandani so much
so that he's kind of just kind of stayed, you know,
over here to the sidelines. And you know what, AOC
is eyeing that seat. I think she is ready to
pounce on him.

Speaker 2 (41:40):
That's interesting we think about that.

Speaker 3 (41:43):
I think she's exactly right. This is what's terrifying. By
the way, I'm Jewish, right, I'm Jewish.

Speaker 1 (41:50):
I'm not a great Jew. I just you know, I
was born in that way. But here's the deal. I
like bacon, I like crab. I mean, sorry, we don't
believe in hell, but I appreciate it. As long as
I have a seafood buffet there, I'll be happy to you.
But here's the deal. The reality is, and they this
is what they do. Right The Democrats forever tried to

(42:11):
blame the right for being the party of anti Semitism,
when literally, right now, if you're a Democrat you can't
even be Jewish or even talk about Israel. I mean,
this is how far it's gone and how disingenuous they are.
I don't like how the Jewish people will always end
up at at the bottom of this and the last
people to blame it has bad consequences, I know, but
I agree Chuck Schumer, as phony as he is, he

(42:33):
still laughs at the dinners, at the Al Smith dinner,
he still laughs at Trump's jokes. He still did business
with Trump. He's not a radical, so of course they
want to replace him with a radical. Why do you
think Pocahontas was out there going, oh, you know, I
support this guy because she wants to pretend she's a radical.
She doesn't know what she's She's whatever she has to
be while she drinks her fake beer. But at the
end of the day, the party is moving far left

(42:56):
they're moving radical left, and whoever is as radical left
as they are, that's who they want on the ticket.
And so anybody who stands in the way of the
radical left agenda is on the chopping block. And Chuck
Schumer is one of him. By the way, he put
cheese on a rawburger. So that is so not kosher
for so many reason.

Speaker 4 (43:15):
But can I take that point and zoom it out
even further? Okay, So let's look at twenty twenty eight here, right,
We've got the AOC's, the Bernie Sanders, the Pocahontas, maybe
even Mondani, who even knows. At this point, We've got
that fracture of the Democratic Party on the who else
is trying to get in? You have the Josh Shapiro's,
the John Fetterman, the Ron and Manuel. This is a

(43:38):
real headache for the Democratic Party because you have two
sides that are like oil and vinegar, almost right, And
I don't you know, that's what we're seeing really brewing
underneath this mayoral race in New York City is like,
who is going to control the Democratic Party? Now I
said this and I can't say this on YouTube, but
he who controls the money controls the party, and we

(44:00):
know it's still Obama and uh, it's very eccentric billionaire
that I can't mention on YouTube.

Speaker 3 (44:06):
You know, so you can't say that anymore.

Speaker 1 (44:08):
By the way, I got warned on I said the name,
and I got warned.

Speaker 2 (44:13):
I think we all know.

Speaker 3 (44:14):
Yeah, it's we need to come up with a boogeyman.
Can we call them the boy Bimore Baltimore.

Speaker 1 (44:19):
Yeah, Voldemore, the boogeyman, whatever you want to call them,
more Boldemore, everyone knows.

Speaker 2 (44:24):
Yeah, okay works. But I just to bring it full circle.
I'm glad you said that. Angie. We started off by
talking about November of last year, the historic defeat for
Kamala Harris and the the radical left U in this country,
and for some reason they've doubled down. I don't understand it.
I still am left wondering why. I want to. I
want to get both of your thoughts about it, because

(44:45):
it was a clear rebuke. You had people from barber
shops and the bronx Amish farmers in Pennsylvania, young college kids.
This coalition we've built, including former Democrats like RFK who
warned about the party as they left it. This is
the broadest political coalition of ever seen, the one that
President Trump built in this last election. It's remarkably diverse
for a lot of reasons. That cuts across lines that

(45:06):
I thought you never could cut across. It's really dumbfounding
to me, actually, But yeah, I just so, I just wonder.
Obviously the Democrats are doubling down on the anti Americanists, communism, socialism,
whatever it is. They're going down this rabbit hole even
further now after suffering a historic defeat with Kamala Harris,
and I just want to know what the logic.

Speaker 1 (45:27):
Is why I'm going to be very clear to the
people who are gonna the bots that are going to
scrub this video. I am not saying there is anything
challenging any election integrity. When I'm saying the word cheat,
what I don't mean is that there was any cheating
involved in the election. To be very very clear, the
reason why there was a rebuke in twenty sixteen, right,
and what did they do? They created a fake Russian

(45:49):
narrative to make it seem as if Trump was colluding.
The only reason Trump won was because it colluded with Russia. Russia, Russia, Russia.
How many hundreds of millions of dollars. How many people
went to jail for a fake Russia hoax that we're
finding out now that we always knew by the way,
that now the media is somehow telling us about like
it's new when we knew that they manufactured this entire
hopes just to trick people. The whole reason for this,

(46:11):
the whole reason was to trick people in the thinking
that people didn't actually vote for Trump Orre's policies. Then
you have twenty twenty four. Do they go, yeah, we
really need to reflect on why our radical policies were not. No,
they're pivoting again, and they're suggesting that, oh, Trump only
one because of this Trump, only one because of racist Trump,
only one because of this Trump. They don't even have

(46:34):
the ability to intellectually take a step back and understand.
And because they change the rules, they move the goal post.
They do this constantly, so they don't actually have to
reflect on why they lost. They just have to change
the reason why they lost, and it's never their policies,
as their policies suck.

Speaker 3 (46:49):
The reason why they're.

Speaker 1 (46:50):
Gonna not lose next time is because they're gonna flee
Texas to avoid redistricting. They're gonna do whatever they have
to do to make sure they win, regardless if people
vote for them or not.

Speaker 3 (46:59):
That's why. So they're in denial on denial, they're in strategy. Okay,
they're in strategy.

Speaker 2 (47:05):
Okay, that's it. That's interesting.

Speaker 3 (47:06):
Hopefully they gets past the censors.

Speaker 2 (47:09):
I think it will. I think it will. Angie, what
do you think about that? What is your answer to
the question of why they keep doubling down on a
losing agenda.

Speaker 4 (47:18):
Oh, because they're getting paid. Someone is paying them point blank, right.
I mean, they know that bathroom policies don't work with Americans.
They know all this like gender affirming stuff doesn't work
with Americans. They know that anti cop rhetoric doesn't work
with Americans, but yet they keep doubling down. It's because
someone is paying their bills and someone's paying their campaign finances.

(47:42):
And we're going to get to that when President Trump
gets to act blue. We're going to see a lot
of interesting foreign players involved in here. So all that
stuff is coming down the pipeline. It can't come fast enough.
It's got to come before the midterms. Yes, the Texas
redistricting thing is really interesting. And people fleeing to Illinois,
and you know, Kathy Hockel aiding and baiting, just dodging.

Speaker 2 (48:05):
The eies as if they're not employees of the people
being funded by tech twelve dollars. Well, its completely egregious. Personally,
I would like to see arrest there. I don't know
if it'll happen. We'll see, you know, but borrow's a day. Yeah,
that's right.

Speaker 4 (48:16):
Tomorrow is the day, and we're I think Ken Paxton
because he's also trying to run for something. It's going
to happen. It's gonna be a great show. But here's
the thing. If Texas actually goes forward and redistrict redistricts,
they gop gets five extra seats. I mean that's I mean,
it's pretty clear. Florida is doing the same thing. Three

(48:37):
to four seats, Ohio two to three seats. If their
governor wants to go that way, Missouri, Kansas, Kentucky and
probably missing a couple, we're going to gain a lot
of seats. That's why Texans the reps there, the Democrat
reps who fled, they can't go back because they know
this is not about five seats. This is more about
fifteen seats, so they would literally lose the Democratic Party

(49:01):
for generations to come if they went back to Texas.
They rather get they rather get arrested than to lose
for the Democratic Party. That's how severe this whole episode
is when you really pull out and see what is
at stake here. California can't save them anymore. Illinois, they're
a disaster in all the Democratic kind of controlled states.

(49:23):
They've gerry mandered it in a way You've seen the
maps to the point where they've squeezed out every single household.
There's no there's no wiggle room left. They've done it all.
It's now Republicans turn to actually do the same and
gain as much seats. And you know, I think we're
going to see that. And you know what, President Trump,
he's not going to say it. I'll say it for him.
He is going to destroy the Democratic Party for years

(49:44):
to come after he's done in his four year term
because he is so like just like he wants to.
I can imagine how angry he is after what they've
done to him and his family that he wants to
decimate them. That's the kind of New Yorker he is.
I cannot wait where's my popcorin?

Speaker 2 (50:00):
Yeah, well, I would agree, and I would add, just
by the way to what they've done to President Trump, everybody,
every American should be upset about that. I mean, what
they've done to him is just there's things I want
to say that I won't, but it's just disgusting and disheartening.
And it's sad to me that that's even partisan. The
way they've treated him and the view about that it
should not be. It's disgusting. I wouldn't care if it
was Joe Biden or AOC. It doesn't matter to me.

(50:22):
It's just disgusting. That's the whole point, the whole nexus
here is that we're losing our country, the thing that
we had from the very start, and that's it's worth
fighting for being an American. And I just it's deeply
disturbing to me. And there's so much that shouldn't be partisan,
border security, fiscal responsibility. I don't understand how he got
to a place where common sense is partisan, but it's
disgusting to me.

Speaker 1 (50:42):
Well, and it's also it's also what we're fighting for.
And you talk about the redistricting, you talk about all
of these things, the law fair against the president. You
talk about everything to put his family through. Yes, After
the twenty twenty election and after they started going after Trump,
what happened around the world. Look at Brazil Ill, look
at Venezuela, Look in Romania, look across Europe where the

(51:05):
Mega movement is now taken the same thing. Like, wait,
if we could put people in jail in America, we
could do it anywhere. Registeresting is a perfect example. If
Texas is allowed to get away with just avoiding a quorum,
they'll do it in every state. This is what this
was the point I was making before. They don't care
about the policies because all they have to do is
change the rules. They don't need people to like their policies.

(51:25):
They just need to make it impossible for anybody with
any different ideas to win. And so this is what
we have to do with This is what we're fighting for.
What we're fighting for is a fair shot at winning.
And if we had a fair shot at winning, we
would always win because no, their policies stink and nobody
would vote for him. And two Angie's point a second ago,
She's like, it's time for us to do what they're doing. Actually,

(51:46):
We're just trying to make it fair. Their little districts
still like have like a district like bends around and
gets like John and Peoria and then goes around and
gets Bob and like. We just want squares that actually
represent the voting demographics of the places people live. We
just want everybody to have a fair shot, because we
know that if people had a choice, they would choose America.

Speaker 3 (52:09):
And this is what we're fighting for.

Speaker 2 (52:10):
Well said and a great point to end on. Oh look, Angie,
we could go, we could go all night, honestly, but
we're coming up against time here, so we.

Speaker 3 (52:19):
Don't have enough whiskey. We don't next we don't have
any whiskey.

Speaker 4 (52:22):
You guys, the show is this.

Speaker 3 (52:23):
This is Dan's fault. He left town. He didn't leave
us any where the Dan and met. We have no whiskey.

Speaker 2 (52:31):
But before we let you go, Angie, really quick for
people who want to know what you're doing now, they
want to follow you, they want to stay in touch
with you. Where can they go? What do they need
to do?

Speaker 4 (52:40):
Yeah, I mean, guys, come over onto X. I'm all
over the place there. You can follow me at Angie Wong,
what am I doing? I'm helping our races win in
Florida here twenty twenty six could not come fast enough.
And we also have our own mayoral race in November,
so lots of door knocking, lots of you know, people pleasing,

(53:00):
and lots of getting out the vote efforts.

Speaker 2 (53:02):
Okay, and thank you for your time tonight, Angie. We
really appreciate it. And people go check her out. She's incredible.
She makes the rounds here on o AN as well,
and want American news, so be sure.

Speaker 3 (53:11):
Thank you for that awesome chat.

Speaker 2 (53:13):
Absolutely so we will have you back of course my
show The Real Story, Real America, You'll make the rounds.
And just thank you so much, truly.

Speaker 3 (53:21):
Thank you.

Speaker 4 (53:21):
Guys. Next summer're drinking please please amen?

Speaker 2 (53:24):
Yee yes, we'll fix that.

Speaker 3 (53:25):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (53:26):
Okay, all right, I want to say thank you to
you all day. Having this was fun.

Speaker 3 (53:32):
It was fun.

Speaker 2 (53:33):
Yeah, and thank you for bringing the facts and the
heat tonight.

Speaker 3 (53:36):
I appreciate I did my best to be Dan. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (53:38):
Well I think you did a bang up job. Thank you,
and just really quickly as well. We have some housekeeping
things to do, one of which is if people want
to get in touch with you, follow what you're.

Speaker 1 (53:46):
Doing at David Pollack USA on every platform x instance
TikTok at David Pollock USA.

Speaker 3 (53:51):
And plus I'll still be here through Monday filling it
for Dan.

Speaker 2 (53:53):
And then you have your own show, is that right?

Speaker 3 (53:54):
Do the David Pollock Show.

Speaker 1 (53:55):
And yeah, we are relaunching on a new network soon,
but I self produce you if you can, David Pollock,
yous say you can see all my stuff.

Speaker 2 (54:01):
Perfectly, okay. And then as for the anchorman, I am
once again your host, Trilie Lewis filling in for Dan
Ball normally a co host, but thank you for tuning
in if you've made it this far. So we have
new episodes that drop every week, twice a week on
Thursdays and Fridays, and you can find us on YouTube,
rumble x, Facebook. We're all over the place, so like, subscribe, comment,

(54:22):
share with your friends. We don't have a guest picked
out for next week yet, but Dan will be back,
so if you have any ideas, please let us know
in the comments. We're very curious and all feedback is
also welcome. So we appreciate that these episodes drop at
four pm Pacific seven pm Eastern. And I want to
say really quickly as well. Thank you to One America
News Network. Thank you to the Herring family for everything

(54:43):
they've done for us. It's nothing but opportunity here. This
is an incredible family we have going on. Thank you
to the editors, our director behind the scenes, our producers,
everybody that helps out. It is a team effort and
I want to say good night and thank you all
as well. So we will be back next week, but
thank you for sticking with us. This has been The
Anchorman Podcast with Riley Lewis here on One American News Network.
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