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October 12, 2024 36 mins
Elon Musk tells Tucker Carlson he understands if Kamala wins, he's going to be prosecuted. Kash Patel, Senior Adviser to President Trump for National Security and Intelligence, calls from President Trump's bus tour of North Carolina. Clay takes a call from an early voter.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Look Man Hour number two Clay Travis buck Sexton Show.
Appreciate all of you hanging out with us as we
are rolling through. Buck is traveling to California to get
ready for the Bill Maher Show on Friday. He left
the day early because of Hurricane Milton hitting Florida. Of
course he is in South Florida. Many of the airports

(00:21):
are being shut down. He will be back with us
tomorrow from LA I am solo with all of you.
We're going to talk at the bottom of this hour
with Kash Patel, who is on a Trump bus tour
in North Carolina. We'll hear what he is seeing on
the ground there, and then in the third hour we'll
head up to Wisconsin where Senator Ron Johnson will give

(00:41):
us the absolute latest from that battleground as well. But
I will say one of the biggest changes for twenty
twenty four compared to twenty twenty is Twitter slash X
allowing more of a bottom up as opposed to top

(01:02):
down narrative cycle to dominate. And a lot of you
out there, I wouldn't want to say that you're nattering
nabobs of negativity, as a phrase was used. I think
in the nineteen seventies to describe media.

Speaker 2 (01:17):
But on a regular.

Speaker 1 (01:18):
Basis, I will hear from you they're gonna cheat, They're
gonna cheat, They're gonna cheat. And it's a form of
nihilism because if you buy into the fact that they
cheated in twenty twenty, then you believe they're gonna cheat
in twenty twenty four, and ultimately what it does is
depressed turnout because you believe there is no way to win.

Speaker 2 (01:38):
Now.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
I think Trump has been smart by saying we have
to make this win too big to rig. That is,
if you think about a dam, and you think about
the cartoon where a cartoon character is constantly trying to
plug all the holes popping up.

Speaker 2 (01:54):
In the dam.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
We have to broaden the number of states where they're
are major turnouts. That is driving Trump victories, and I
think we're headed towards doing that on election day, but
also more importantly in many ways in the run up
to election day, banking as many votes as possible, because again,

(02:16):
you know that Republicans are going to show up in
bigger numbers on election day. Some of you right now,
I haven't even checked the emails, but I know you're
telling me that you're going to refuse to vote early
despite the fact that me encouraging all of you to
do it. Republicans always win on election day. What we
want to do is limit the lead that Democrats have

(02:39):
from absentee ballots and mail in voting, and we want
to turn out higher propensity turnout from low propensity voters.
A lot of Trump voters show up for elections involving
Trump and don't show up for other elections. He motivates
people to get out to the polls. But another major impact,

(03:01):
and I do think you can give credit to places
like Georgia. Governor Brian Kemp I think has strengthened the
elections of Georgia to a massive degree. I think that's
one reason why Trump is going to win Georgia. Flip
it back. I think you can speak to a lot
of the work done in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan from hardworking

(03:22):
people who are trying to make the elections more secure
and more reliable. But also I think you can point
to Twitter and what has happened there is instead of
in twenty twenty when the Hunter Biden laptop came out
and you had massive censorship takeover that story came out

(03:43):
and the fifty one intelligence agents put out their lives
and Facebook and Twitter and Instagram and everybody was out
there restricting your ability Facebook to see all of the
true stories, and that may well have swung the election.
Elon Musk bought Twitter, and Twitter now is a much

(04:03):
more open and free marketplace, and a lot of people
out there hate it in traditional media because what it's
doing is it's democratizing the news. One of the things
I have learned, and I ran a media company so
I can take you behind the curtain quite well, is

(04:24):
there's a lot of arrogance from people who run media
organizations in that they believe they should get to dictate
what the news stories are. And really the conflict between
Trump and much of the media has been partly over
so called fake news, but really it's about what Trump

(04:47):
wants the story to be versus what the CBS is,
The New York Times, the Washington Post want the stories
to be the gatekeepers for what is allowed to be.
He talked about have gotten used to over the decades,
being able to decide yes, this is news, no this

(05:08):
is not. For instance, New York Times basically hasn't covered
at all allegations that Kamala Harris's husband slapped a woman
so hard it forced her to spin around, and that
he got his nanny pregnant, to say nothing of the

(05:28):
Daily Mail coming out with a story saying that Doug
im Hoff, Kamala Harris's husband, was a misogynist in his
workplace and didn't treat women fairly in his law firm.
Trump has rightly pointed out they cover every allegation against
him anybody, even if there's basically no evidence that had happened.

(05:50):
It all got covered against Trump. Nothing covered about Doug
im Hoff at all, by and large in the New
York Times. That's because editors at the New York Times
and the Washington Posts, they sit there at the top
and they say, no, that's not a story. Yess, this
is a story front page, all of our resources behind it.
Their power to dictate what you see is incredibly powerful

(06:16):
in the way that it sets the narrative of what
conversations are discussed. Twitter disrupts that because it allows you
and me and many other people out there to share
the stories that we think matter, and it allows them
to trend. It is a bottom up as opposed to
top down perspective. Well, talking to Tucker Carlson, Elon Musk

(06:42):
understands that in doing that, he is substantially challenging the
power of the legacy media outlets and also the Democrat
Party in general. And so he was in this conversation
with Elon Musk just recently saying, look, I understand that
if Kamal Wa wins, and I said this recently on

(07:04):
the Peers Morgan Show, I've said it on this program,
I've said it on Fox News, I don't have any
doubt at all that if Kamal Will wins, she will
try to prosecute Twitter slash X and they'll try to
put Elon Musk in prison.

Speaker 2 (07:22):
Listen to cut eighteen. How can they let.

Speaker 1 (07:27):
X continue in its current form, in its current role
in American society.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
They won't.

Speaker 3 (07:33):
They will try to shut it down by any means possible.

Speaker 2 (07:36):
What do you mean by any means possible?

Speaker 3 (07:38):
I mean with either by it, I mean they'll try
to pass laws, They'll try to prosecute the company, prosecute me.
I mean the amount of LOWFA that we've seen taking
place is outrageous. I mean the I mean, I have
many examples, but like the Department of Justice. For example,

(07:58):
Launce's a huge lawsuit against space AC for failing to
hire asylum seekers. Come on, yes, not a silent those
graduate soilum seekers.

Speaker 1 (08:11):
Okay, So that's Elon laying out what I think is true,
which is they will come after his company. And I
think this is so important. Elon is a bit like me,
and I bet a bit like many of you that
are out there listening. I'm open to being persuaded I'm wrong.
I don't know what percentage of us in the American

(08:33):
population are willing to admit that we're wrong. But I
will tell you this as a side note. Your wife
or husband. You may think I love you is the
three most powerful words in America or in the world.

Speaker 2 (08:52):
I'll tell you it's not.

Speaker 1 (08:53):
In a relationship, the three most powerful words are.

Speaker 2 (08:57):
I was wrong. Think about it.

Speaker 1 (09:01):
There is nothing my wife loves more than me saying
I was wrong. If you have been married very long,
especially if you are a man, I will guarantee you
your wife is happier when you say I was wrong
than when you say I love you. Not talked about enough,
But that is relationship advice for me.

Speaker 2 (09:24):
I love you.

Speaker 1 (09:25):
You probably said it so many times it flows by.
It's not to get out of jail free card. I
was wrong, very powerful. I'm willing to admit when I'm wrong.
I'm willing to acknowledge that when data changes, I can
be wrong. I think you can't be a successful person
in life and particularly in business, unless you're willing to

(09:49):
consider that your prior opinions might have been wrong.

Speaker 2 (09:54):
In some cases.

Speaker 1 (09:56):
Guys, Elon spent forty four billion dollars to buy Twitter
because he believes that his ultimate goal of putting man
on Mars and making us a multiplanetary species cannot survive

(10:16):
the woke mind virus. And I was thinking about this recently.
You guys know, I went to Italy. I want to
go back. I had never been. I took my family.
We went to Italy about about a year and a
half ago. And I love to travel because it challenges
your mind. It makes you see different perspectives. And as

(10:38):
I was walking around all through Italy and I was
looking at this magnificent structures, one of the things that
I was most incredible art. One of the things that
I was most struck by was the Renaissance. Wasn't a
new way of thinking. It was in many ways a.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
Return to an old way of thinking.

Speaker 1 (11:04):
We have this idea that progress is linear and things
always get better, but actually, if you study history, that
isn't always true. Sometimes you have to reclaim the eternal
truths in order to allow progress to occur. And I'm

(11:26):
not trying to speak for Elon, but what I see
in all of his moves, Hey, I'm going to be
better at sending spaceships to a space than NASA, even
though they have a sixty year head start on me. Hey,
I think I can figure out a way to propel
cars better than the combustion engine. I'm going to design

(11:48):
a brand new electric vehicle. I think that we need
to have a full fledged marketplace of ideas in order
to allow the full fruition of American excellence. Those three
things are actually very much connected, and they all tie
into the ultimate goal that he has, which is, Hey,

(12:11):
I want to put man on Mars, and I want
it to become a colony. And I just want all
of you out there to think about this in the
context of space. I was born in nineteen seventy nine.
I was not alive when we walked on the Moon
in nineteen sixty nine. But many of you listening to

(12:34):
me right now were You may remember sitting down on
the television on the floor, in front of your television
on the couch, and I bet you remember the innate
sense of American optimism that walking on the Moon created.
If I had told you that in twenty twenty four,

(12:54):
far be it from having like life on the Moon
or having people on Mars, that we would be trying
to figure out how to send people back to the Moon,
would you have believed it.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
You wouldn't have.

Speaker 1 (13:12):
You would have thought progress would have been massive in
America's space age exploration. Yet from nineteen sixty nine to
twenty twenty four, I'm talking to you right now, basically
we haven't moved at all. We've just kind of stayed

(13:32):
where we already were. That's fifty five years no progress
at all. In fact, we're trying to go back and
do things that we've done before, and we're gonna have
to spend a couple of years, I think, until twenty
twenty six and we can even get people.

Speaker 2 (13:47):
Back on the moon.

Speaker 1 (13:49):
Elon's looking at that and saying, no, we have to
change this. And to me, the only way you grow
is by challenging your pride opinions and making sure that
those prior opinions can withstand the logic and attacks of
other people's opinions. And that, to me is the essence

(14:11):
of why X and Twitter is so powerful, because what
many people in positions of power at the New York Times,
the Washington Post, CBS, NBC, ABC, what they want to
do is kurtail restrict what you are able to argue
because they decide that it's misinformation or disinformation because it

(14:31):
challenges their power.

Speaker 2 (14:34):
And what Elon is doing is.

Speaker 1 (14:36):
Saying no, I want the full fruition of the American
people to be able to have their voices heard. And
the bigger and better the conversation is, the farther our
achievement can go, whether it's putting people on Mars, having
a fully functioning actual republic here, or finding ways to

(14:58):
combat than this necessity of using oil and gas. He's
a hero, he's also public enemy number one, and I
think he's right. If Kamala Harris wins, she's going to
try to put him in prison, what does that say
about what the Democrat Party has come to represent in
this country? I think it is incredibly important that we

(15:22):
have these conversations, and if Trump wins, I think a
big reason why is going to be because Elon has
brought back a marketplace of ideas in America. Look, I
am headed up to New York City on Sunday and
on Tuesday, I'm not going to be on the air.
Buck is going to be here solo because I'm going
to be mceing and helping to raise money for Tunnel

(15:44):
to Towers at their big golf event in New York
City where they raise millions of dollars. And they do
it because they want to be able to take care
of people like US Navy Lieutenant Bradley Foster. He was
born and raised in California. Inspired by his dad's servis,
Bradley felt a deep calling to serve his country as well.
He became a pilot in the US Navy, underwent air

(16:07):
and combat training, later awarded the National Defense Service Medal.
His goal was to be the best pilot and leader
he could possibly be, while also being the very best
husband and father to his wife, Beth and baby girl Audrey. Tragically,
Bradley's promising life was cut short by a helicopter crash
off the coast of San Diego. Tunnel of the Towers

(16:29):
provided the family with a mortgage free home in his honor.
Bradley's death is a stark reminder that freedom isn't free.
It comes at a steep price, sometimes the ultimate price
for heroes who serve our country and our communities. Show
your support for heroes like Bradley and their families. Donate
eleven dollars a month to Tunnel of the Towers at
T two t dot org. That's tea the number two

(16:52):
t dot org.

Speaker 4 (16:53):
Two guys walk up to a mic he anything goes,
Clay Travis and Fuck Sexton. Find them on the free
iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker 1 (17:06):
Out to North Carolina. Find out what Kosh Patel is
seeing with the Trump team there as they barnstorm the
state of North Carolina, where many people, in particular in
western North Carolina are still recovering from the disastrous impact
of Hurricane Helene.

Speaker 2 (17:22):
We will break all that down.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
With you and get the absolute latest from the ground there.
Also again in the third hour, we'll be joined by
Senator Ron Johnson. We'll head up to Wisconsin. We'll take
some of your calls as well. Eight hundred two two
eight A two if you want to weigh in on
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Speaker 2 (18:50):
Welcome back in.

Speaker 1 (18:51):
Clady, Travis buck Sexton show. Appreciate all of you hanging
out with us. We're joined now by Kosh Patel. He
is the former chief of staff for the Department Defense
and an advisor to President Trump for National Security and Intelligence.
He is on the Trump forced forty seven bus tour
currently working its way through North Carolina. Over the next

(19:13):
three days, they're going to be going to places like Wilmington, Fayetteville,
Rocky Mount, Gastonia, Concord, as well as Winston, Salem and Burlington.
That is all over the place, not western North Carolina. Cosh,
I'm gonna get to that eventually. But what are you
seeing on the ground in North Carolina?

Speaker 5 (19:33):
Hey, it's great to be with you. Thanks so much
for having us on, especially during the tour. What I'm
seeing is crowd showing up and Trump forty seven volunteers
showing up in precing captains. We're registering voters, We're doing
training sessions on voter integrity. We're seeing Americans come up
to me and say, we've never really participated in the process,
but we're all in for President Trump and we want

(19:54):
to do our part. So I'm really seeing a lot
of energy everywhere we go, and we've got great folks
with us, like Governor Kim Reynolds and Hogan Gidley and
Laura Trump's going to be around. So it's going really well,
and we're going to keep going as far as we can.

Speaker 1 (20:08):
Trump won North Carolina in twenty twenty. I believe it
was the closest state that he won. It's considered a
battleground in twenty twenty four. It's the only state that
Trump won in twenty twenty considered to be a battleground
in twenty twenty four. What needs to happen for Trump
to win North Carolina in particular, given that many people

(20:29):
in western North Carolina, which is a strong foundational base
for Trump, are struggling in the wake of Hurricane Helene.

Speaker 5 (20:37):
Yeah, and we'll be out in western North Carolina next
week with the bus tour. But what needs to happen
is we have to get our folks out to vote,
our folks to register serves in North Carolina. He got
one more data register and early voting starts next week,
and we've got to start banking those votes. It's not
election day, it's election season, and whether you like it
or not, that's what we have to do. We're here
to motivate our folks and to remind them that Trump's

(20:58):
Force Agenda forty seven and Trump's Agenda forty seven would
have had the folks in western North Carolina better served
after this natural disaster terrorizer community would have had a
better serve when it comes to the border and illegal
immigrants coming here. And I'm reminded while I'm in Sayetville
here just down the street from Fort Bragg, which I
know you and I are both very familiar with, that
these folks continue to serve, especially turn out some of

(21:21):
America's finances in North Carolina. And so what we're doing
is just trying to remind them that we are here
with them, and we need them to turn out more
than ever. As you said, the margins or razors in
and it's going to come down to one or two
counties in this state.

Speaker 1 (21:35):
I want to hit you with that part you just
said again. Early voting starts next week. I've been hammering,
Buck has been hammering everybody. Get out, get your votes
banked as early as you possibly can. What does it
do to help the Trump campaign in these battlegrounds or
anywhere else.

Speaker 2 (21:52):
If you get your vote in early.

Speaker 5 (21:54):
That's a great question. And people just think, oh if
I wait, it's it's just as good. No, because once
you vote early, your vote is banked and we see
the results in terms of tabulations, and we can direct
resources to folks that haven't voted yet, and we can
direct our focus on others that are maybe sitting it out,
and maybe some of the gun owners in North Carolina.

(22:16):
And yes, I'm speaking directly to you that. I'll just
give you an example in Georgia where I was last week,
one hundred and fifty thousand Georgian gun owners did not
vote in the last election, and I got to believe
the overwhelming majority of those folks want Donald Trump in
office and not Kamala Harris to take their guns away.
So it gives us space to go out and get
to the rest of the community. So if you have

(22:37):
the ability to early vote, it is critical because our
resources are precious when the donations are coming in. But
then we can utilize that for other voters and activate
folks that have never participated in the voting process. That's
what I'm seeing. I believe in my heart that's going
to make the difference for Donald Trump in places like
North Carolina.

Speaker 1 (22:55):
Gosh, what do you think when you see Kamala Harris say?
There isn't And I wrote down the quote because I
want to make sure I have it right. There is
not a thing that comes to mind when she has
asked what she would have done different than Joe Biden
as she tries to run to be her own president
here in twenty twenty four.

Speaker 5 (23:11):
You know what I think, Lay, I think, say their names,
Say their names, say Lake and Riley, Say the names
of the countless Americans who have been murdered and raped
across this country, and the drugs that have torn in
and killed our children across this country, And say their
names to Kamala Harris's face, and ask them, how can
you possibly say something so disgusting and vile as you

(23:34):
wouldn't have done anything differently. You had an opportunity to
save American lives. You had an opportunity to keep our
streets safe. You have opportunity to safeguard our children and
empower law enforcement. And she's says she wants another twenty
million illegals here. She wants to metastasize that vile, hatred
form of criminality that they have basically weaponized intentionally. It's

(23:55):
not neglect. They made an intentional decision to disregard American
safety and too many families have been crippled by it.
And so I just go out everywhere I go and
I try to remind the folks of the people that
have been devastated the most, and more is coming if
you put her back in office.

Speaker 1 (24:10):
You mentioned what happened with the thirteen that were murdered
by a terrorist in Afghanistan in the midst of our
chaotic withdrawal also, and it's not getting a ton of attention,
but I think it's important and you could speak to it.
There was just an arrest of one of those Afghan
refugees that was not vetted evidently very well, who was

(24:32):
planning a terror attack on election day here in the
United States. We know that we've let in thirteen thousand
convicted murderers, sixteen thousand rapists at the southern border, but
we also brought a lot of people in from Afghanistan
as a part of that chaotic withdrawal. What was your
reaction when you saw that one of those individuals was

(24:53):
planning a major terror attack.

Speaker 5 (24:55):
You know, it's unbelievably disturbing, and it reminds me of
pre nine eleven Days where folks are setting up in
staging here. We ran that which were all based on
intelligence and not political deadlines, and we had a vetting
process in place that we handed off to the Biden administration.
They chose to ignore. So what happens a terrorist comes
here in plots to kill innocent Americans and maybe even

(25:16):
President Trump. That's just the one we know about.

Speaker 6 (25:18):
Clay.

Speaker 5 (25:19):
Remember the dhis Secretary of New Yorkist who's out shopping
for sweaters yesterday, instead of giving the people of North
Carolina relief, allowed these people to come in and basically
said we're not going to check them properly, and that
leads to a disaster situation when they admit to us.
Ray and Mayorkus told us under oath and Congress that
they are a dozen or two dozen known foreign terrorsts

(25:41):
that they have no entered our country, and they lost them.
THEIDAHS has lost them. Now I believe that number to
be way higher than just a few dozen, when you
take in the account of the twelve million plus of
legals already here, and they are setting up sleeper cells
throughout the country, and I'm glad we caught the one,
but Clay, it's just emblematic the fact that so many
folks have not been caught because Harris and Biden have

(26:04):
simply chosen to ignore the safety of Americans and jeopardize
our communities. And if that's not enough to motivate you
to get out and vote for the future of our
children and our next generations, I really don't know what
is I'm glad you brought it up. You're right, no
one's really talking about it and really should be headline news,
but of course the mainstream media will bury it. And
thank god we have great shows like yours with such
a big audience to make Americans aware of the catastrophe

(26:25):
that is awaiting us if we allow these policies to continue.

Speaker 1 (26:29):
Hurricane Milton's going to hit tonight according to the most
recent updates, but Hurricane Helene already has ripped through Georgia,
North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, South Carolina. A lot of people struggling.
What are you hearing from people on the ground in
North Carolina about FEMA, about the support structure that is
existing there. How are North Carolinians talking to y'all as

(26:51):
you work through the entire state.

Speaker 5 (26:54):
Well, it's really simple. It's not misinformation or disinformation to
say the services they need, the safety ving need, the
food and as they need, or not here. They're not here.
Is a fact that the Biden Harris administration didn't even
show up and President Trump came the very next day
to hand out food aida in water. Now, look for
my time at the Department of Defense, we could have
prestaged the National Guard, had we been in charge, we

(27:14):
could have prestaged FEMA and DHS assets on the ground,
not just vehicles and helicopters, but also prestage life support
and water and food and created temporary shelters. They chose
not to mobilize those assets. And you don't have to
believe me. On FEMA's own website they have given five
hundred million dollars five hundred million dollars to illegal immigrants,

(27:36):
and they've given fifteen to those in disaster relief. And
if that's not enough, the bill of the proposal for
budget they just sent to the Ukraine for eight billion
dollars and one hundred and fifty million to elevenon just
this week included natural disaster relief for the Ukraine, not
North Carolina, not Georgia, not any of the other states
you mentioned. And so it is an intentional failure by

(27:57):
this leadership in Harris and Biden and to disregard American
safety for political purposes and then steam roll it as disinformation.
North Carolina's are coming up to me and saying Donald
Trump would have staged it, and he's right. We would
have staged it with the DD and every other agency,
and we would have fully mobilized the US government to
be ready for it and not driving it in or

(28:18):
mailing it in by a headline from the New York Times.

Speaker 1 (28:21):
Gosh, I'm gonna let you finish with a challenge to
everybody out there, why should they vote early twenty seven
days from the election in North Carolina and Georgia and
all the different battlegrounds out there.

Speaker 5 (28:31):
The reason is the same for every single state, register
and vote early, whether it's my home state of Nevada
or any of the state we're talking about, because once
you vote, we can shift our resources and our focus
to those that haven't voted. Our resources are limited. We
are not the source machine that prints money and dumps
it into every community. We are the machine that puts
Americans first. And if you put out your vote, then

(28:52):
we can go register even more voters and we can
drive more voters to the boost. And that's on the
communities too. We need you to go find ten people
you don't know, not the folks you know, and get
them to vote and remind them what's that stake. It's
not just our generation, it's the future generation of this country.
And we don't want illegals. We want our kids to
have a safe future, a college education and the American dream.

(29:13):
That I an immigrant, son of a lawfully emigrated family
from a dictatorship in East Africa and living the American
dream thanks to Donald Trump. And that's waiting for everybody
if you return them the power. And that's why you
got to vote early.

Speaker 1 (29:26):
Gosh, you'll be in the administration. I think there's a
good chance. In the meantime, he's all throughout North Carolina.
Kashpersche at the time. We'll talk to you soon.

Speaker 5 (29:34):
Thanks so much, and grab government gangsters. Betseller you'll love it.
Let's stay down the deep state together.

Speaker 2 (29:39):
We will do that.

Speaker 1 (29:40):
That's Kosh Pattel on the road in North Carolina. Look
in today's world, where rising crime threatens families and violent
crimes is crazy taking place every twenty six seconds on average,
how you choose to protect yourself and your family becomes
an important decision. And that's why I'm happy to tell
you about Saber Pepper projectile launchers. Only sixty eight caliber

(30:03):
launcher with seven projectiles out there on the market, forty
percent more than other brands. That's superior home defense. Let
me just tell you we've got guns in the Travis house,
but we also got teenagers.

Speaker 2 (30:16):
And I don't know how many.

Speaker 1 (30:17):
Of you out there have teenagers in your house, maybe grandkids,
maybe kids, but you don't always know where they're going
to be. Sometimes they have curfew, sometimes they make it.
Sometimes they may try to sneak out. If you remember
being a teenager not always listening to mom and dad.
Maybe you don't want to risk using a gun if

(30:40):
you hear something go bump in the night because you
feel fairly safe, But maybe you would like to be
able to use something that would deter in the event
that you're actually in danger, but not cause someone to
have a permanent life altering issue like could if you
use a firearm you could use the pepper projectile launcher

(31:02):
and if you use it, it will take care of
anybody in the area who is trying to do you harm.
But also it's non lethal, so it will not kill someone.
And maybe you don't have the same nervousness about using that.
You can have it as a supplement in your home.
They also have all sorts of pepper sprays right there

(31:23):
you can put on the keychain. And maybe you got
a daughter going off to college, maybe you got kids
coming home riding the bus in middle school, high school.
I used to have one of these on my keychain
back in the day. They've got incredible things to help
make your home safer and your family safer. Go check
them out at saberradio dot com. That's sab r E

(31:44):
radio dot com. Go look at all of their different offerings.
We got them all in the house. You can also
call eight four four eight two four safe to protect
your family today. That's sab r E saberradio dot com.
These guys family owned. You're gonna check them out today.
Saberradio dot Com. Welcome back in Clay Travis buck Sexton Show.

(32:06):
Appreciate all of you hanging out with us. We have
got several different callers who want away on a variety
of different subjects. I want to tell you Buck will
be back with me tomorrow. He is flying to Los
Angeles to get ready for the Bill mahershow on Friday.
But I am drinking my Crockett coffee right now. And
we've got a great offer for all of you. If

(32:28):
you go to Crocketcoffee dot com right now and you subscribe,
and you use the code book, you will get an
autograph copy of my most recent book. If you would like,
you also get incredible coffee that will help propel you
through whatever challenges you face in a day. All sorts

(32:48):
of data out there that coffee is probably the healthiest
thing you could possibly drink if you want caffeine.

Speaker 2 (32:53):
I'll be honest with you.

Speaker 1 (32:55):
I didn't drink coffee until about five years ago at all.
I was a mountain dew guy, and I understand some
of you out there are going to make fun of me.
I absolutely loved mountain dew. I drink it all the time.
My wife would tell me, hey, you need to drink
soda less, not healthy, filled with sugar. I wouldn't listen.

(33:15):
For most of my life, I was a soda guy
a coke guy. If you're in the South, I would
drink mountain dew. We call everything coke. I stopped, by
and large. Now there's going to be a photo out
there somewhere me drinking mountain dew. I still get it
occasionally if I'm out for dinner or at a fast
food restaurant something like that, but by and large I
have switched soda and gone to coffee, way healthier and

(33:41):
way better. And if you love America, which I do,
and I bet most of you do, should go to
Crocketcoffee dot com. Put in book when you subscribe, and
I will sign personally, probably with a pin just like
the one that I'm holding right now. I'll sign the
book for you and you can read the book and
you'll have my autograph. If that's not desirable to you,
we still have great coffee, and we're going to be

(34:03):
doing some cool events for the Alamo. Going to go
down this spring at some point for our subscribers and
give you a special invite to an event that we
will put on there. I can't wait. I'm excited to go.
So if you love American history, if you think this
is the greatest country, that's ever existed. Why give your
money to people who don't agree with that. Crocketcoffee dot

(34:27):
COM's the coffee that loves America. And you can get
a copy of my most recent book, American Playbook if
you use the code book when you subscribe at Crocketcoffee
dot com. Well, let's take a couple of your calls.
I will go to Tom in Cincinnati. You said you
voted early in Ohio. Polls are open. What do you
want to tell people?

Speaker 6 (34:47):
Well, Hi, Clay, First, I've never voted early. I've been
voting since nineteen seventy six, every second their first Tuesday
of them up November. Never voted early until I listened
to you guys of your take on it.

Speaker 1 (35:02):
Well, thank you for going and voting early. I think
it's a tremendous thing you can do.

Speaker 6 (35:07):
I was there fifteen minutes after the polls opened yesterday morning,
and the amount of people that were there was phenomenal.
But it wasn't a at the county vote, so there
was plenty of boots. But my real take on the
whole thing is the ballot itself. I went to vote,
and I got to president, and the very top line,

(35:28):
said Harris Waltz. I looked all the way down to
the bottom of the page there. I didn't count them,
but there had to be at least eight, maybe ten
other names. No Donald Trump or JD. Vance. I had
to scroll down to the next page to find out.
And I voted, obviously. But the woman across from me,

(35:51):
an elderly woman, got all confused and she was complained.

Speaker 2 (35:56):
She said, where is he?

Speaker 6 (35:57):
I can't vote for Somebody had to go show her
out of scroll down the ticket to find Trump Vans.

Speaker 1 (36:06):
Okay, I appreciate you letting me know that all of
you should know Trump and Vans are on there. If
you're having trouble when you are voting finding them, ask
for help. My wife is going to be working at
one of the polls here. She also wanted me to
tell you a lot of ballots are still going to
have RFK Junior on them. Do not vote for him.

(36:27):
He is out of the race. Just because he's on there.
They weren't able to withdraw his name from everywhere. This
is important. Get your ballots in

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