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November 30, 2024 36 mins
Topless French women protesting. Deep diving into the mucky math. Jack Smith drops election interference case. Clay explains why he left the Democrat Party.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to today's edition of the Clay Travis and Buck
Sexton Show podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
Welcome back in Clay Travis buck Sexton Show. We're going
through actual data open phone lines if you missed the
first hour. Now that the twenty twenty four election, pally
is basically finished, finished enough for the New York Times
to have in its Saturday newspaper the headline that Kamala

(00:25):
is going to get seven million fewer votes. Now that
that is out there, I'm just asking a question. Can
anyone in America explain how Joe Biden got eighty one
million votes and Kamala couldn't get more than seventy four million.

(00:46):
Where did the seven million votes that Joe Biden got
in twenty twenty go in twenty twenty four. That's particularly
the case when the overall number of people who can
vote has increased. So again, I think this is really significantly,
hugely important, and I've been wanting to talk about it

(01:09):
for a while.

Speaker 1 (01:09):
Buck Away in, We're going to.

Speaker 2 (01:11):
Have a real discussion about this because we don't believe
in shrinking sometimes from difficult or controversial topics. It's how
we met talking about COVID. Buck Is out by the
way this week Monday Tuesday, I'll be in Solo buck
Is with his family already starting Thanksgiving as many of
you are. We appreciate all of you listening all over
the country, indeed around the world. If you can't have

(01:33):
a conversation about a controversial topic, ask yourself why that is.
Why would adults not be able to talk about controversial things,
Who benefits from that? And why do they try to
restrict your ability to do so. I don't expect that
you're going to agree with everything that I say. After all,

(01:55):
some of you enjoy playing the flute and think that
that makes you more attractive. You're a man to women.
I think you're crazy if you want to make that argument.
But you can try. You can even put on tights,
and you can go up and down your street, marching
along playing the flute, just hoping that chicks are going

(02:17):
to come out of doors and line up behind you.

Speaker 1 (02:19):
And maybe you're right.

Speaker 2 (02:21):
Maybe you are just an unbelievable magnet for the opposite
sex and I'm totally wrong, and flute players get all
the chicks right. I'm willing to accept that I'm wrong,
mostly always right, but I'm willing to accept the fact.

Speaker 1 (02:37):
That I'm wrong.

Speaker 2 (02:38):
After all, have been married for twenty years, and I've
been told, trust me as any man who's been married
for twenty years, that you are frequently wrong on everything.
So I'm willing to accept that I am wrong. Open
Foam Line producer Greg is right there. I believe is
there a single person who is willing to argue in

(03:01):
America today or even around the world. Maybe a Monuel
Macrone wants to pick up the phone over on the
Shaunsey Lese in Paris. Maybe he believes that Joe Biden
got eighty one million votes and he knows that we
have the best radio show in the country, even better
than anything that they have in France. Although I will
say I'm gonna have some fun with this. I kind

(03:22):
of like the way the French women are protesting. Did
any of you see the video that I shared. French
women have decided that they should protest topless.

Speaker 1 (03:33):
I'm more willing to listen, just gonna be honest with you.

Speaker 2 (03:38):
For all the women out there who disagree with all
my opinions, if you show up and protest topless, I'm
gonna be honest with you. I am more likely to
consider the arguments that you are making French women, by
the way, a lot less fat than American women, sorry,
American women. Sage Steele pointed that out in the comments.
If you look at all the topless French women, not

(04:01):
saying they're all beautiful, not a lot of fatties. They're
in better shape somehow over there than they are here.
I'm just saying the left wing protesters that went topless,
a lot of them not gonna be that good looking.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
But I'm still willing to listen.

Speaker 2 (04:18):
So France, Manuel Macrone, if you happen to be listening,
I salute the French women who are topless protesting in
your country right now. I wish that's something that American
women would adopt. They want to have the massive women's
march to protest Trump, and all of them want to
go topless.

Speaker 1 (04:32):
I'm more likely to consider their argument. But why can't
anybody call in?

Speaker 2 (04:40):
People are gonna clip this, They're gonna be like Klay
Travis is an election denialist.

Speaker 1 (04:43):
I'm not really. I'm just asking where are those seven
million people? How is not.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
One person in America willing to call in right now?
And we got a lot of leftist Louns who listen
every day and they clipped the show and they're like.

Speaker 1 (04:58):
Oh my god, did you see what what here? Book said?
That's how they talk.

Speaker 2 (05:03):
Not one of them call in. Can we call the
White House? Can we see if Jill we'll we'll sign
up for Joe and say yes. Eighty one million people
love might Now even she's gonna make that argument New
York Times. I'm citing their data. I was waiting for
them to put it out there. The headline is, Kamala
gets seven point one million fewer votes. Trump gets two

(05:27):
point five million more votes. If I went and I said, hey,
do you buy this? In twenty sixteen, Trump got sixty
two point nine.

Speaker 1 (05:36):
Million votes, he barely got over Hillary.

Speaker 2 (05:39):
In twenty twenty, after America had four years of Trump,
Trump got seventy four million votes, eleven million more votes
in twenty twenty than he got in twenty sixteen.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
I buy that.

Speaker 2 (05:54):
I think a lot of people were skeptical of Trump
and they came around. I didn't vote for Trump in
twenty sixteen. I try to be as honest with you
as possible. I voted for the libertarian Gary Johnson. There's
probably some of you out there listening right now who
did the same. I'm admitting it publicly. Katie called in
from Alaska in the first hour. She admitted that she
voted for Biden in twenty twenty. Trump goes from six,

(06:17):
it's an open We're not gonna judge, it's open for him.
You can call in eight hundred and two two two
eight eight two sixty two point nine million votes twenty
sixteen for Trump. A lot of you liked what you saw,
including me. You became a Trump voter in twenty twenty
seventy four million Trump votes, and then in twenty twenty

(06:38):
four Trump took it to seventy seven million. He increased
the number by three million. Does the Democrat side of.

Speaker 1 (06:47):
The ledger make sense?

Speaker 2 (06:50):
Barack Obama Best Democrat politician, most popular Democrat politician of
all time, sixty nine and a half million votes in
two thousand and eight. Bot I do I think he
smoked John McCain. I think a lot of you out
there listening. I was one of them, younger, youthful. I
think a lot of you out there listening to me

(07:11):
right now voted Barack Obama in two thousand and eight.

Speaker 1 (07:14):
I really do.

Speaker 2 (07:15):
In fact, I bet there might be a million Obama
voters listening to us right now who voted Trump in
twenty twenty four.

Speaker 1 (07:23):
That would not stun me at all.

Speaker 2 (07:25):
Okay, twenty twelve, Barack Obama sixty five point nine million votes.
The thrill is gone a little bit. Mitt Romney got
sixty point nine million.

Speaker 1 (07:38):
I buy it.

Speaker 2 (07:39):
I buy Obama losing support in twenty twelve because hope
and joy wasn't coming through, was harder to get his
base out. Twenty sixteen, Hillary gets sixty five point eight
million votes, nearly identical to Obama twenty twelve.

Speaker 1 (07:57):
Makes sense again.

Speaker 2 (07:57):
Remember populations increasing, so the number of voters in each
of these elections a bit more. And then suddenly Joe
Biden gets eighty one million out of nowhere, he gets
sixteen million more votes than Hillary Clinton.

Speaker 1 (08:13):
I don't buy it.

Speaker 2 (08:14):
And then seven million fewer votes suddenly show up for
Kamala in twenty twenty four. If you're just looking at
this data, you star twenty twenty on the Democrat side
and you say, boy, this doesn't really add up what
is going on there? New York Times broke it down.

(08:36):
Not only did Kamala lose seven million votes in twenty
twenty four, they went into the battleground states and they
compared Arizona. Kamala Harris went down five percent in her
vote total. Donald Trump went up six percent. That's an
eleven point swing in Arizona. Again, things that make you

(09:01):
go hmm, eleven point swing. Everybody in Arizona knew Trump
in twenty in twenty twenty four, suddenly he's eleven points
better in Arizona. Georgia, Kamala actually went up. She improved
her numbers compared to Joe Biden. Trump went up eight. Okay,

(09:25):
somewhat interesting. Trump went up eight, took Georgia out of
the battleground area, won by one hundred thousand some odd votes.
How about Michigan, Trump went up six, Kamala went down three.
A nine point swing towards Trump in terms of these

(09:46):
are percentages. Doesn't that make you raise your eyebrows a
little bit? Michigan a nine point swing. Y'all voted for
Trump in twenty sixteen, so you liked them already, you
knew him in twenty and you swung nine points in
twenty twenty four. Nevada, Nevada twelve point swing to Trump.

(10:17):
Kamala Harris went up point two. So basically, Kamala produced
the exact same number. Trump numbers skyrocketed. That's a little
bit of an interesting one. That's one I would star
and say, hey, that's something more substantial going on. That's
Hispanic dudes being like I'm done with Democrats and that

(10:38):
should be alarming. That's my thesis there. North Carolina four
point swing to Trump. Trump went up five, Kamala went
up one. I trust North Carolina numbers. I do because Watley,
the RNC chair was there. Pennsylvania six point swing to Trump,

(11:01):
Kamala went down. She couldn't post the same numbers that
Biden did. Wisconsin three point swing to Trump. Now, these
are battlegrounds. This is where most of the money was distributed.
All fifty states. Trump improves on his numbers from twenty twenty.

Speaker 1 (11:24):
All fifty states. Kamala is down again.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
Not an eyebrow raise from anybody. The New York Times
has this data. I'm reading it from you. They have
a huge map. I'm holding it up for you. Harris
received seven point one million fewer votes. Trump received two
point five million more votes. Where did the seven million

(11:51):
Kamala voters go?

Speaker 1 (11:52):
Some of them swung.

Speaker 2 (11:54):
But we're still talking about millions and millions of people
that were not willing to show up and vote for Kamala,
who supposedly voted for Biden. Can one person justify the
eighty one million one person in America right now? I
believe the answer is no. So far, I'll take some
of your calls and we come back open for him.

(12:18):
Explain how your boy got eighty one million legitimately, honestly,
without any shenanigans, without any rule breaking, without any legality issues.
Millions listening right now, not one Biden person, not one.
Joe is the greatest president since George Washington. Not one

(12:40):
of you out there.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
Hmm. Interesting, Let's talk about rapid radios for a moment.
Right now.

Speaker 2 (12:46):
You will have, by the way, a full forum to
explain to everyone why Joe Biden is the greatest president,
the most popular president to ever run for office in
the history of the nation.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
Not one person, not one of the eighty one million. Interesting.

Speaker 2 (13:03):
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Is that right?

Speaker 1 (13:08):
I don't even know what day it is. I think
that's right, don't panic.

Speaker 2 (13:11):
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(14:28):
Clay Travis here, Happy Thanksgiving from all of us at
the Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show.

Speaker 1 (14:34):
Some of you are saying, what took you so long, Clay?

Speaker 2 (14:37):
Why did you not weigh in on eighty one million?
I wanted to see the twenty twenty four data. I
was skeptical of the eighty one million in twenty twenty,
but I wanted to see what happened in twenty twenty four.

Speaker 1 (14:53):
And now we have.

Speaker 2 (14:53):
That data, and Trump's political career is over. But we
have twenty sixteen, twenty twenty, and twenty twenty four that
we can all look at, pour over and analyze. There's
no way to explain the Democrat eighty one million votes
in twenty twenty in my opinion, based on rational adult
analysis of the facts. Ashley in Virginia wants to weigh in.

(15:18):
She says she has three big points, Ashley, what you
got for me?

Speaker 3 (15:22):
All right? Point number one is, since we're going by
the numbers, can you counter the number of votes with
the amount of liberals that died of COVID Because as
far as I know, more liberal liberals died of COVID
in the at least in the news that I saw
than conservatives.

Speaker 1 (15:39):
Point number two is.

Speaker 3 (15:40):
I challenge you to listen to Locomotive Breath with Jethro
Tall and not think that that is a cool flute
solo in the middle of the song. And number three
is that fringe women may be center, but they do
not shave their armpits.

Speaker 2 (15:55):
All right, I'm gonna take these in reverse order. You've
made three compelling arguments, Ashley. I appreciate you listening and calling.
In one, based on diligent review of the topless French
women in the protest outside of the Louver, they all
shaved their pits. Now, I was not focused on the
pits initially. To be honest, when I see topless women,
they tend to get the boobs, tend to get my attention.

(16:17):
I did go back and look though, in in order
to be a great journalist and to be honest with
all of you, I may have watched a couple of times,
and I have to tell you they shave their pits.

Speaker 1 (16:26):
So you're wrong on point three.

Speaker 2 (16:28):
Maybe they only shave their pits because they knew they
were going to be topless. But I do remember that accusation.
I think it's a scandalous one. Based on my astute review,
diligent review of their protest, that is not true. Point two, Ashley,
if you had to pick a man to date based
on an instrument that he played.

Speaker 1 (16:49):
Where would the flute rank?

Speaker 3 (16:52):
I mean, trot was cool?

Speaker 2 (16:55):
Okay, if I give you, if I give you the drums,
the guitar, and the flute, which man are you picking?

Speaker 3 (17:06):
It's a family show. But I'm just gonna say I
think that I think that a flute player could be sexy.

Speaker 2 (17:15):
Okay, I gave you three instruments. The fact that you're
refusing to answer is in and of itself. I think
the answer and then uh, yes, you're right. Everybody who
the COVID Thank you for the call. By the way, Ashley,
really good call.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
The COVID death numbers.

Speaker 2 (17:30):
I mean, I'm sorry, Like this is another thing where
you have to be honest and rational. If you got
in a car accident and you died, which I wish
no one would ever die. No one hates death more
than me, they counted you as a COVID death, like
the entire era that.

Speaker 1 (17:51):
We went through.

Speaker 2 (17:52):
If you died with like eighteen different illnesses as many
people do, you went down as a COVID death. I
just I can't believe we still and I know you're
making fun of it as well. Great call from Ashley,
By the way, although all the flute players are, she
did not defend.

Speaker 1 (18:10):
You see how quickly she just tried to pivot.

Speaker 2 (18:13):
Pivot shift does like when Kamala got asked about the
border pivot shift.

Speaker 1 (18:18):
I want to tell you what I have to talk
about right here, Chalk.

Speaker 2 (18:21):
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(18:43):
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Speaker 1 (19:03):
Get hooked up today. We've got a lot of you
went away.

Speaker 2 (19:12):
And I'm gonna ask Producer ally, I haven't been able
to keep tabs on everything, as you guys have been deluging.

Speaker 1 (19:18):
Us with reaction, But I do want to hit you
with some news.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
It is Thanksgiving week, probably going to be a slower
week for news, but this just happened in the last
ten minutes. Jack Smith definitely ties in with everything we're
talking about. Has dropped his Washington DC case against Donald Trump.
So the Judge Hutkin case, the one that was going

(19:41):
to prove beyond the shadow of a doubt that Trump
was guilty of a variety of different offenses related to
the twenty twenty election, is now dropped. South Florida dropped,
New York City and Atlanta cases on life support. Doesn't
this tie in with the what happened in the twenty

(20:03):
twenty election narrative? Think about where we are in addition
to it collapsing from a law fair perspective, because I
think it actually benefited Donald Trump in the political arena.
They were going to put Donald Trump in prison for
the rest of his life if he had lost this election.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
That was their plan.

Speaker 2 (20:23):
Now maybe they would have ended up pardoning him. Who
knows what the end result would have been. I don't
claim to know the full political calculus here. They thought
it would harm him. It didn't because enough good Americans
out there were willing to recognize that we had crossed
the rubicon in trying to put your chief political opponent
in prison for the rest of his life as an
awful precedent to set and is what has happened in

(20:45):
many banana republics around the world which no longer have
functional democracies. And many of you out there recognized that
the actual threat to democracy wasn't a riot on January sixth.
It was Democrats and their Department of Justice trying to
put prison President Trump in prison for the rest of
his life.

Speaker 1 (21:05):
But they just dropped all charges.

Speaker 2 (21:09):
I mean, I know it's not going to get a
lot of attention because much of the media is totally
rigged in favor of claiming that Trump is Hitler and
a unique threat to American democracy and all of that,
but all of us should recognize they spent years saying
Trump challenging the legitimacy of the twenty twenty election was

(21:34):
such a threat to our country that he needed to
spend the rest of his life in prison, and as
soon as he wins reelection, they drop all the cases.
How much stronger evidence do you need that all of
this was political bs, which is what Buck and I
told you for years, and I know what many of

(21:56):
you understood to be the case. But if this was
really it's an important case, you wouldn't drop it right now.
You would try and accelerate it while you still have
some form of political power until January twentieth, when Donald
Trump raises his right hand, rolls into the White House
and becomes President of the United States. I hope Jack

(22:18):
Smith has to answer questions about what he tried to do.
I hope Merrick Garland has to answer questions about what
he's trying to do. Look, they rigged the twenty twenty election,
I think based on the data. Now you can disagree
with me. We can argue about what rigged means, to
what extent is rig criminal, to what extent is it

(22:40):
on the borderline with harvesting ballots and all this stuff.
But we still have open phone lines, millions of you
out there listening. I believe the answer is zero people
have called in to tell us that Joe Biden got
eighty one million legal and lawful votes in twenty twenty.
Seems kind of important to me, Ali, I know there's

(23:03):
a lot of people weighing in and uh. In fact,
I've got one of these right now that I wanted
to read because I thought it was particularly well said
VIP email from Alex. The narrative in twenty twenty around
Biden's record breaking eighty one million votes was that Americans

(23:24):
were so sick of Trump they showed up in record
numbers to vote against him. That's his opening sentence. Let
me say that's one hundred percent what the narrative was.
Are we supposed to believe those same voters couldn't be
bothered to show up to stop the exact same Donald
Trump again in twenty twenty four, even after January sixth.

(23:47):
I mean, I think that's a very good email that
succinctly asked questions that adults should be asking.

Speaker 1 (23:53):
Again, Alex, if so many.

Speaker 2 (23:56):
People out there, eighty one million people were uniquely threatened
by what Donald Trump represented in this country, how would
you not still believe that in twenty twenty four, when
everyone in the media that you listened to was beating
that he's hitler drum, He's going to be a dictator.

(24:19):
How would that not have worked? Again, if you were
so convinced in twenty twenty that Trump was a unique
threat to American democracy and had to be replaced such
that people didn't show up to vote for Joe Biden,
they showed up to vote against Trump, why didn't that

(24:41):
happen in twenty twenty four. I think it is a
fabulous question that there isn't a good answer to, much
like you know what Trump. When Buck and I went
down and interviewed Trump at mar A Lago right after
the invasion of Ukraine happened by Russia, that interview got
a lot of atten.

Speaker 1 (25:01):
We came on and we said, and I've never heard
a good argument for it.

Speaker 2 (25:06):
If Trump were truly in the pocket of Vladimir Putin,
if Russia Russia Russia was a thing, if collusion existed,
and Trump were the Manchurian candidate, why did Vladimir Putin
wait until Trump was no longer president.

Speaker 1 (25:23):
To invade Ukraine? There isn't an answer.

Speaker 2 (25:29):
You know how, when you ask someone who pays attention
to foreign policy say okay, I'm just going to accept
the premise of your argument. There's an aspect of the
law you get trained where they say, hey, for purposes,
For instance, to avoid summary judgment. Summary judgment will get
a case dismissed. You have to presume that all the

(25:49):
factual allegations.

Speaker 1 (25:51):
In a complaint are true.

Speaker 2 (25:53):
And if you can get a case dismissed a lot
of times, you have to do that by saying, Okay,
even if everything in here is true, they still haven't
made a case. So if you presume everything is true
about what they tried to say about Trump and Russia,
say okay, you know, I'm going to go into the
Rachel Maddow fever dream world where Trump is a Russian asset?

(26:20):
Why didn't Russia invade Ukraine then when Trump was in office?
Why did they wait until Biden was in office. They
don't have an explanation. They don't have an explanation at all.
And my question for you would be similar with this
Jack Smith case and also for the eighty one million

(26:40):
how can you explain the math? And this is why
I say I wanted to wait. Some people wanted to
jump in the waters really early, and we got a
lot of those emails from people saying, why are you
talking about the election numbers? I'm like, okay, well they're
still counting and we can agree that it's ridiculous that
we have election season and it takes three weeks on
Saturday when I'm reading left wing media as I do

(27:05):
every single day to prepare for you this show, because
I want to know every argument, up and down, backwards
and forwards.

Speaker 1 (27:13):
When I am.

Speaker 2 (27:13):
Holding up key to Trump's win, big losses for Harris
across the country, and they have a huge map and
it's showing that Kamala Harris got seven point one million
fewer votes. I think it is a worthy question to ask,
where did those voters go? If they were so motivated
to vote against Trump? Wouldn't they have been more motivated

(27:36):
in twenty twenty four, because remember the election happened before
January sixth. It's a great question asked by one of
our VIPs. When they don't have answers, When they do
not have answers for the questions that you are asking,
that should be a moment of introspection for you. You

(27:59):
should ask why when they don't try to argue against you,
when they say you're not even allowed to have that conversation.
This is why I ended up changing, frankly, the way
I vote. I'm a data guy. I would look at arguments,
and people would say, well, you know, cops are killing
they're just executing black people all the time. Well, that

(28:21):
sounds awful. Let me look at the data. Oh, you're
telling me that seventy five percent of the people that
are shot and killed by police every year are white,
Asian or Hispanic. Man, If cops are really just trying
to kill black guys, it's, by the way, only men
who get shot, by and large, they're doing a really

(28:42):
bad job of it. If your goal was to be
racist and legally kill black people, man, it seems like
a lot of work to go become a cop. Bust
your asset training, do that for years, that job for years. Also,
you can one day kill black guy like that seems
really inefficient, And that's why I would say, okay, well,

(29:06):
let me presume that you're telling the truth here. If
you think the cops are racist, aren't they way way
more sexist? So what do you mean, Well, you know,
like ninety five percent of people arrested or male men
are only half the population. Why are women just out
there committing crimes like crazy?

Speaker 1 (29:28):
And cops don't care?

Speaker 2 (29:30):
It has to be sexism, right, And they get really
quiet or you can bring up age. Why are all
these old women? Why are grandmas just committing crimes of violence?

Speaker 1 (29:44):
I can't even go to the mall.

Speaker 2 (29:46):
Without an old woman picking up or walker and just
knocking people out. Oh, old people don't commit very many crimes.

Speaker 1 (29:54):
No they don't. Oh women don't commit very many crimes.
Oh no they don't.

Speaker 2 (29:59):
Well, so it's not agism and it's not sexism. So
why are they racist? Well, young men commit the vast
majority of the crime. That's what the data shows, right,
And it's not even just young men, it's men. Hey,
I guess it depends on how you define young. Right,
I'm forty five. Some of you would say I'm young.

(30:19):
If you're eighty five, i'm a young man. If you're twenty,
I'm an old dude. Right, But almost all violent crimes
committed by men sixteen to forty ish, and overwhelming amounts
of violent crime are committed within that sixteen to forty
age range by young black men. Young black men represent

(30:43):
about six percent of the overall population, less than that
two or three percent, and they're committing over half of
all violent crime. So if you wanted to address violent crime,
the police would typically be responding to violent crime. The
data doesn't support at all the idea that police are rasis.

(31:04):
But when you would have that conversation, people would say, well,
this is not really a conversation we should have. Racism
is just bad, and you are enabling racism if you're
actually diving into the data and looking at the numbers. Well, here,
I think we have to look at the numbers on
the eighty one million votes, and there should be alarm

(31:26):
bells going off about what happened in twenty twenty and
Jack Smith suddenly dropping the race, dropping the case. Oh
the race is over now, there's no point in figuring
out what happened Again, I think you should be contemplating
to yourself, Wait, why and what does the data set

(31:49):
that we now have from twenty twenty four tell us
about twenty twenty rational reasonable analysis of two thousand and
six twenty twenty In twenty twenty four, when Donald Trump
was on the ballot all three times, the one that
you would star that stands out is what happened in

(32:11):
twenty twenty. And when they try to restrict what you
can talk about, Oh, we got to censor this, that's
election denihilism. Oh if you're asking about police violence, that's racism.
Why do they not want to have actual conversations about
actual numbers. Oh you can't, that's anti vaccine talk. When

(32:35):
it came to the COVID shot, Oh you can't be
anti masking, you're anti science. Notice what happens. They don't
actually engage in the debate. They just try to restrict
your ability to even engage in the debate by telling you, Oh,
that's misinformation, that's disinformation. Well, let's actually debate the issue
at hand. It's the entire purpose of the country's Bill

(32:59):
of rights. It's why the First Amendment is first. No, no, no,
you can't do that. We do it a lot here.
You might not always like what we say, but the
First Amendment is alive and well here thanks to Rush
and thanks to our three almost four years now talking
to you every day. How many other places can you
say that in media?

Speaker 1 (33:17):
Not very many. Uh.

Speaker 2 (33:18):
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Speaker 1 (34:36):
Hey, it's Buck Sexton from our home to yours. Have
a wonderful Thanksgiving from the Clay and Buck Show.

Speaker 2 (34:42):
Still, not a single person who wants to call in nationwide,
worldwide even and defend Joe Biden as getting eighty one
million votes legitimately in twenty twenty. But a lot of
you want a weigh in variety of different topics. I
want to tell you again I switched because my cat
mug was too embarrassing. I'm now drinking out of a

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Speaker 4 (35:34):
Man, I hear everybody talk about You know that there
wasn't fraud in the twenty twenty election. However, if you
look back on it, that's what the mask were about, and.

Speaker 5 (35:45):
You take it today. There's just as much COVID today
as there was, which is called the flute. But back then,
with that mask on, there was a visual representation that
there was something to be scared of, that you couldn't
go vote. That you need a mail in your ballot,
and mailian bounding was how they committed the frog. But
if you take it a little bit.

Speaker 6 (36:05):
Further and go back to the twenty sixteen election, I
believe that's why there was so much shop from Hillary
Clinton and the other ones when they realized that they
lost because they cheated, but they didn't realize how many
people were going to show up to not only vote
against the Democrats, but to stick the finger in the
eye of the Republicans are like, hey, listen, we're tired
of you establishment guys. We're voting for Donald Trump.

Speaker 1 (36:27):
I appreciate the call.

Speaker 2 (36:29):
What I would just say is, if you look at
twenty eight, twenty twelve, twenty sixteen, all of those votes
are within a few millions, same thing basically of Republicans
as well. And then suddenly in twenty twenty, Joe Biden
gets sixteen million more votes than Hillary.

Speaker 1 (36:47):
The math ain't mathoing for me.

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