Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome in Clay Travis buck Sexton show, our number two
Friday edition of the program. We are happy to be
hanging out with you, and we've been talking about I know,
we just had an election in November. We've got a
couple of big special elections to pick congressmen in Florida's
first and sixth congressional district that are important. On Tuesday,
(00:24):
we also have a major judicial election in the state
of Wisconsin, probably the number one battleground.
Speaker 2 (00:31):
State in all the nation.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
Right now, Wisconsin decided by thirty thousand votes for President Trump.
Every single Senate seat comes down to the margins. Our
friend Derek Covedy lost by a tiny pinprick, our friend
Ron Johnson won by a small margin up there. I mean,
it is just an absolute battleground of all battlegrounds. And
we are joined now by the latest battleground race, which
(00:57):
is the Republican side, Judge Shimmel running for reelection, running
for elections of the Wisconsin Supreme Court. For people out there,
Judge Shimmel, who don't understand what the stakes are. All
over the country money is being spent on this race,
but certainly everybody in Wisconsin needs to get out and
(01:18):
vote because we know this is going to be close.
We've got a monster audience in Wisconsin. We love all
of you. We hung out with you at the RNC,
have had a fabulous time. Judge Shimmel, what do they
need to know about this race and its importance?
Speaker 3 (01:31):
Well, first off, it's great to be on with you.
I am part of that major audience in Wisconsin. Every day,
my lunch break, between my morning trial calendar and afternoon
trial calendar, I've got you guys tuned in every day.
So it's great.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
Thank you for that.
Speaker 3 (01:46):
Yeah, what's at stake today? What's at stake in this race?
The Liberals have taken over the Wisconsin Supreme Court and
they are using it as a way to take over
the United States Congress. Right now, my opponent was on
a national zoom call with billionaire liberal donors from across
the country offering up if she gets on the court,
she will turn two Republican congressional seats into Democrat congressional seats.
(02:11):
And now the House Minority Leader Hakim Jeffries just earlier
this week confirmed the same thing. They're using this court
to change the district maps for congressional seats. To jerrymander
them in two seats that are better for Democrats. The
other really interesting thing is as Hakim Jeffries complained about
these maps in Wisconsin, said they were jerrymandered. The maps
(02:32):
in Wisconsin for our congressional seats were drawn by Democrat
Governor Tony Evers. These aren't Republican maps. But what they're learning,
what they found out is that they move the maps
to make them harder for Republicans, and those Republicans still
won because they're because Democrat ideas, the liberal ideas are
not prevailing with Wisconsin voters. We're tired of this nonsense.
(02:54):
Well they got that, they got it handed back to
them last November. So now they're going to work harder
to make these It's even tougher by using the court
to do it. That's why this got nationalized.
Speaker 1 (03:04):
What would also have what wo were the other implications
for Obviously, the congressional issue is front and center right now.
My understanding is Elon is going to be helping the
campaign in this, and this is truly getting national level
attention right now because Wisconsin such an important state, such
a critical swing state for both congressional control in the midterms.
And then, as we know, in the next election cycle,
(03:26):
Wisconsin's going to be a battleground again. In addition to
the congressional gerrymandering concern What are some of the other
things that will come before this court, and if it
were a left leaning court, could be problems to take
Wisconsin in the wrong direction, whether it's just in the
day to day business of it or in the next
(03:46):
presidential election cycle.
Speaker 3 (03:49):
Well, this court's already been messing with voter integrity laws.
They created a new way of looking at our Wisconsin
statute that permits these ballot drop box that can be
put out. The legislature mid did not authorize that. This
court decided they want them because it opens up opportunities
for fraud. It opens up all sorts of opportunities for
(04:10):
ballot harvesting, which would be illegal in Wisconsin. But those
are the things they want, they want to get rid
of that. We have got major battles dealing with the
relative powers between the legislative and executive branch in Wisconsin,
similar to what's going on at the national level between
President Trump battling out between what is his authority as
the chief executive versus what some of these district courts
(04:32):
are doing. We're seeing those same kind of battles happening
in Wisconsin. They're going to go after our voter ID law.
They're going to go after our if we call it
Act ten. It's a law that you may remember back
in twenty eleven, all those huge protests at the Wisconsin
Wisconsin Capital, those are over Act ten. Act ten put
(04:53):
some limits on the negotiating powers of public employee unions.
Has nothing new with private sector unions, just public employee
unions who were effectively negotiating with themselves. We're looking estimates
say that that's going to cost Wisconsin taxpayers. Well, we've
saved that law has saved them in over thirty billion dollars.
(05:13):
We're looking at that being turned right back to taxpayers
if that comes down. These are the issues that are
going to be in front of this court. Opponent was
the lead lawyer going after AT ten. When she was
in private practice. She was a lead lawyer going after
our voter ID law. She called it traconian. These are
all issues that are going to end up in this court.
And she's out signaling file these lawsuits and you'll get
(05:35):
a good turnout.
Speaker 1 (05:37):
We're talking to judge, bradschmmel. If Trump's voters turn out,
you will win. Democrats very often are better at the
special elections, at these non traditional let's call it that,
voting times. What is your message to people out there
who voted for Donald Trump and want Trump's agenda to
(05:58):
be implemented, because, as you said, if they rewrite these
house districts, basically what Democrats are doing is they're thinking,
we'll take away the House from Republicans and that will
be the roadblock to Trump's agenda.
Speaker 2 (06:11):
Have I gotten that right?
Speaker 1 (06:12):
But I think that's important for you to kind of
lay out for people who may not understand the larger
stakes here.
Speaker 4 (06:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (06:19):
I think that's why President Trump has weighed in on
this race. When we talked last Friday before he announced
his endorsement, he asked me straight up, Brad, what do
you think about activist judges? And I told him, mister President,
the whole reason I'm running is to end the reign
of activist judges on our Wisconsin Supreme Court. We have
to restore our courts to objectivity judges who will follow
(06:41):
the law, not make the law from the bench. And
that was when President Trump said, well, good, then Brad,
You've got my phone complete endorsement. We have to prevent
the movement that is restoring America from bypassing Wisconsin because
we've got partisan judges on our Supreme Court who are
just doing everything they can and to put up a
roadblock to everything that conservatives try to do to make
(07:04):
our states stronger and better and more prosperous and safer.
My opponent is a horrible Madison leftist who has had
a terrible record on a criminal sentencing. She goes way back.
She was chief legal counsel for former Democrat Governor Jim Doyle,
who did a lot of damage to our state. She
(07:24):
was leading the charge on all that as his attorney.
Speaker 1 (07:28):
Speaking to Brad Schimmel, Judge Simmel, who is running for
this critical Wisconsin State Supreme Court seat, and this election
is coming up in just a matter of days. It
is very tight right now, and it's very important. We're
not just the future of Wisconsin as a state, but
the future of the United States Congress and the control
thereof for the Trump agenda. So as goe with Wisconsin,
(07:50):
perhaps so go with the Congress. It is very important
for all of us to understand what these stakes are
and to that end. To that end, Judge, I'm wondering
what kind of money are the Democrats thrown into this
and what are some of the We know that this
is one of these situations where they're going to pretend, oh,
it's just all about Wisconsin from the Democrat side, But
(08:12):
they're getting New York money, Hollywood money, all over the
country they're piling in. I'm sure. So what are the
numbers like and what are you seeing?
Speaker 3 (08:20):
How about this number four out of five donors to
my opponent don't live in Wisconsin.
Speaker 2 (08:27):
There we go.
Speaker 3 (08:28):
That's crazy, That is shocking, right, But another number that's
great for me. I've got over seventy five percent of
the sitting sheriffs in Wisconsin are publicly endorsing me, meaning
Democrat and Republican sheriffs, because they know my work as
attorney general and as a former district attorney in one
of our biggest counties in the state. I've got every
single law enforcement organization in Wisconsin it's publicly endorsing my campaign.
(08:51):
That means that means the organization's representing over sixteen thousand
frontline law enforcement officers are publicly backing me. She's got
out of state people trying to buy this Supreme Court.
I've got the people who take care of public safety
in our state who are backing me.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
We've got people listening all over the state of Wisconsin,
but in particular WISN are incredible affiliate in Milwaukee. We've
been number one for a long time. They do phenomenal work.
Judge Schimmel, do you think people out there are aware
enough of what's going on with this race? Do you
get the sense that the base is in the same
way they were in twenty twenty four aware of the stakes,
(09:30):
or even with that money that's being spent, a lot
of it against you, do you think that a lot
of people still don't realize the stakes at play here
and even the fact that this race is happening.
Speaker 3 (09:41):
I knew that it was going to be tough to
get that men's message to penetrate that this April election
is every bit is important as November. So I got
in this race sixteen months before election day to make
sure I got campaigned in all seventy two counties of
our state. I have I'm traveling constantly for this last
sixteen months, going and getting faced a f of voters
and I think it's worked. I've never seen conservatives this
(10:04):
fired up about a court race. They get it we're doing.
We're doing six to eight rallies every day, and at
these rallies we're getting huge turnouts. I ask people if
you lost any of your energy from November fifth, and
they all yell out, no way, not announced. We are
with you, Brad. We're fired up. And here's the great news.
All we have to do, because this race has so
(10:26):
much smaller turnout than November elections, if we turn out
sixty percent of President Trump's voters from November fifth, I'll
win this thing. And sixty percent is not a bad
number to have to hit.
Speaker 1 (10:39):
No, do anything you want, anything you want to tell
anybody about the day, the voting, voting hours, the website
to go to to contributor help out or anything like that.
We just we got a huge audience Wisconsin fifty wisn
number one there. Thank you all wis and listeners. What
do people need to know to make sure we get
this done and bring you over the finish line?
Speaker 3 (10:58):
Well, check us out at Shimmel for Justice dot com,
s C H I, M E, L F O R
Justice dot com and you can find out how you
can help us make sure we bring home to win.
Today is you can still go vote early today in
most communities, and in Milwaukee they can vote all the
way through the weekend, but most communities can't afford to
(11:19):
have clerks work all weekend. So for most of my
most of your listeners, today is the last day to
vote early and then on Tuesday, and we've got to
get this done. This is going to be easy. There's
the lines will be short, there will nothing bad is
going to happen, and you're going to be able to
wake up on April second feeling great that you were
part of a movement that's going to save our state,
(11:39):
just like they were part of a movement to save
our nation back on November fifth. We've got to do
this again, and this is a turnout race. Got to
get our people out. Every vote is going to count.
You talked earlier about how close some of our races are.
This one is going to be absolutely as tight as
all those previous races. Show up and we'll get this done.
Speaker 1 (11:58):
Judge Shemy will get it done. We appreciate you listening,
and we love all of you in Wisconsin. We're asking
you one more time. Keep the battle going and help
keep Donald Trump able to do the job that you
elected him to do as the chief executive. Judge, thank you,
have a good weekend and good luck on Tuesday.
Speaker 3 (12:15):
Thank you so much.
Speaker 2 (12:16):
Take care, Judge.
Speaker 1 (12:18):
Bradshammel, Wisconsin, Wisconsin Natives. You did it for Donald Trump.
You did it for Ron Johnson. You need to do
it for Brad Schimmel. Get out and vote and make
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Do it.
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Speaker 5 (13:45):
Stories are freedom stories of America. Inspirational stories that you
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Speaker 1 (13:59):
All right, well, wec come back into Clay and Buck.
I wanted to get to some of our talkbacks here.
Remember we love this talkback feature. We love our live
calls too. It's just we'd take all of the above.
You know the phone number, but for talkbacks, download that
iHeart app, the best audio app anywhere. It's on my
front page of my phone. I use it every day.
It's free, it's awesome. And you go to the Clay
(14:20):
and Buck page, you press the little microphone, you send
us a talkback. We hear them all, we see them all.
We don't get to play them all because there's so
many of them, but we'll play as many as we can.
And like I say, if you want to get your
talkback on the air, start with something like Clay and Buck,
you were such scholars and gentlemen. You were so handsome
and fantastic. I mean, you know, something like that. That's
a good start to things. Or just make fun of
(14:42):
Clay because then I'll definitely want to play it on
the air. We have podcast listener from Daytona Beach, Helen,
writing in about remember we have this critical six congressional
seat six Congressional District special election seat play AA the.
Speaker 6 (15:00):
The listener Helen here in Daytona Beach, and I've been
aware of the race and early voting is now and
I heard at my square dance meeting the other night
that the Republicans are lagging behind the Democrats in responding
right now to this race. So we need to get
out there and vote early for this for Randy.
Speaker 1 (15:19):
Fine, we do, and the square dance a good place
to spread the good news. Clay gotta tell everybody about
this one. Have you a square dance? You're from Tennessee.
I don't think so. I don't think nothing against people
who go out in square dance. I don't think I've
ever been I love Is that something a Manhattan guy
thinks you all like the same way that people assume
everybody in Japan knows karate, Like if I assume everyone
(15:41):
in Tennessee square dances, am I being a coastal elite?
Speaker 5 (15:45):
Well?
Speaker 1 (15:45):
Is square dancing different than wine dancing? I will admit
to not being an expert in the dance community. So
wine dancing was a thing that was popular for a while.
Maybe it still is. Square dancing. Is that a varied
variation and I think an older school variation of line dancing.
I'm not really an expert in this, so I do
(16:06):
know they still do line dancing at some like country bars.
Speaker 2 (16:10):
Producer, Ali, you're very cultured. Can you wait?
Speaker 1 (16:12):
Do you know the difference here? And you know, you
know yoga and these these creative things, what about this
square dance? Yoga is not very similar with square dance.
Speaker 6 (16:21):
You guys put me on the spot.
Speaker 7 (16:22):
I actually don't know the difference.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
I'm a New York though, Yeah, we don't. There's not
a lot of square dancing in New York. Not really,
that doesn't surprise. We got some great to other talkbacks.
By the way, BB wants to know this what I
was calling for earlier? Do I want to sleep on
the couch here?
Speaker 2 (16:37):
It is way my guy? Why are you trying so
hard to sleep on the couch?
Speaker 1 (16:43):
Look, my wife can't park, and I'm actually, I think
calling attention to a larger issue that SUV designers should
be aware of, which is women who are not tall
can't see over the hood of the big SUVs, and
therefore they're probably doing billions of dollars in dance image
trying to park at Chick fil A parking lots. I'm
just trying to save America. One more CC.
Speaker 2 (17:05):
What you got, Clay Travis.
Speaker 8 (17:07):
This is Rick from Kentucky. Do you know what Tennessee
wars orange? It's a universal color. They can wear it
to the ball game on Saturday, go deer hunting on Sunday,
pick up trash on Monday to satisfy their community service,
go blue bock.
Speaker 1 (17:23):
Do you even know why our beloved listener there, Rick
from Kentucky, just out of nowhere, decided to attack the
Tennessee Volunteers Big game, No big game. It tames off
a little bit after seven Tonight on the East Coast,
Tennessee Volunteers America's team is playing the University of Kentucky,
and I have Tennessee to win, so I am going
(17:45):
with your home state of Tennessee on this one. I
love Kentucky too, though this is kind of picking between
two of my favorites. This is a tough well in
Our beloved boss, Julie Talbot is a big time Kentucky wildcatch.
He's going to be sad tonight. I feel bad for
because Tennessee is going to be Kentucky. And so is
our caller there who just said, and then you know what,
We're gonna be able to go pick up garbage and
our orange outfits on our parole release.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
What do I got to hit here?
Speaker 1 (18:08):
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Speaker 2 (18:24):
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Radio do it Today. Welcome back in Clay Travis buck
Sexton Show. Appreciate all of you hanging out with us
as we are rolling through the program lots that we
have been discussing. We've got a bunch of people reacting
(19:11):
to a wide variety, including our boss Julie Talbot, who
said about University of Kentucky grad We'll see who's crying
later tonight. And I just have to say I feel
bad for She's been an incredible boss for us going
into the weekend. I hate that Michael, her phenomenal husband,
is just gonna have to be cradling her and she's
(19:32):
crying later tonight, Tennessee eliminates Kentucky in advances to the
Elite eight. I just feel bad for. By the way,
I'm gonna have to find a place to watch this
because I'm gonna be in Memphis at a lacrosse tournament.
Who's actually favored to win this one? I'm just curious.
I have absolutely Tennessee is a four and a half
point favorite, But Kentucky has beaten Tennessee twice today, So
(19:55):
that's a bit of a bit of a mess for
for Tennessee. You know, really, it's gonna come down to
three point shooting, as like every basketball game does.
Speaker 2 (20:05):
Now.
Speaker 1 (20:05):
Kentucky has shot much better from three in the first
two games than they have on the season. Tennessee is
shot worse. So I'm not gonna lie. I'm a little
bit nervous because having your season end is tough. Having
your season in to Kentucky is I don't know, that
would be absolutely brutal. Speaking of brutal, you shared this
and it's gone megaviral on social media? Do you know
(20:28):
this girl named Zoe has a girl named Zoe? That's
all we know? Girl named Zoe? Was this initially on TikTok? Like,
where did this video come from that it initially went megaviral?
Speaker 2 (20:39):
Do you remember or no? I think it's either TikTok
or Instagram.
Speaker 1 (20:44):
That's usually where the insane lib women stare into the
camera and share their crazy political philosophy and remind us
all while the birth and marriage rates are plummeting in
this country. Okay, so we've talked a lot about this
on the program. Young men, young women, failure to get married,
not having as many kids historically, young men overwhelmingly now
(21:05):
voting Trump, young women overwhelmingly voting Kamala. I want you
to listen to this woman, this Zoe, who is explaining
she was dating a man from Indiana. She calls him
a redneck. He says he's independent. He says he is
socially liberal and fiscally conservative. And that is this is
what you say when you want to when you want
(21:26):
to spend some time with the crazy lib chick, you know,
you say, I'm vote socially liberal but fiscally conservative anyway.
But I do think this is probably something that maybe
you and your own life are experiencing, or your kids
or grandkids are dealing with. This failure of men and
women to come together. There is a seismic gap when
it comes to politics, and this chick, I'm gonna be honest,
(21:47):
sounds completely and utterly awful, But you can judge for yourself.
Here's Zoe explaining relationship status. When it comes to politics.
Speaker 7 (21:56):
Everyone knows that I'm a liberal woman. My brother's gay,
all my friends are gay also like abortionary.
Speaker 8 (22:00):
Female rise eh.
Speaker 7 (22:01):
But anyways, so I would like always ask him. I'd
be like, what, like what's your politics?
Speaker 2 (22:06):
Like you who do you? Where do you lean?
Speaker 7 (22:09):
And he was just like, well, like, socially I'm a liberal,
but economically I'm a Republican.
Speaker 6 (22:15):
That okay.
Speaker 8 (22:16):
Also, he's a twenty eight year old man.
Speaker 7 (22:18):
That's the first red flag because if there's a twenty
eight year old man and he's single, there's a reason.
Speaker 3 (22:21):
That he's single.
Speaker 7 (22:22):
But anyways, so then I'm like, well, like what makes you,
you know, economically republican? Because like I could give you
a whole bunch of facts right now that proved that
you shouldn't be. And he was like all of his
infos from his friends, And I was like, you get
all your information from your friends, obviously you can't trust them.
You need to do the research yourself. And if you
do the research, I told him, I was like, I'll
support you based on your decision if you actually research
(22:44):
it yourself, Like I won't care if you're a Republican.
But anyways, and so he was like, Zoe, I have
much better things to do than research politics, Like I
have way more important things to do.
Speaker 1 (22:57):
Okay, I'm having flashbacks to first dates in New York
over many, many years of being a single guy, and
this this mentality of I'm sorry, I just know everything,
and like, why do you think you know anything about politics?
And like abortion rights, gay rights, women's right.
Speaker 2 (23:12):
Like just the whole thing.
Speaker 1 (23:14):
This is what it's like to be in a major
Democrat urban center and out on the scene. And this guy,
whoever he is from Indiana, he dodged more bullets than
Neo in the matrix. I mean, he is so lucky
that this did not work out. I watched the whole
video that you posted because I was, you know, doing
prep this morning, and I so, first of all, this
(23:38):
is a little bit ties in with what I talked
about at the University of Chicago, the thing that went megaviral.
I think a lot of these twenty something year old women,
I don't know how old she is, twenty four to
twenty five.
Speaker 2 (23:50):
First of all, everybody's.
Speaker 1 (23:52):
Always older that she looked older than that to me,
you know, you think older, Well, she was saying he
was twenty eight. I was assuming that she was probably
within a couple of years of him. Maybe she's older them,
maybe she's also twenty eight or whatever. But twenty eight
is not that old, by the way, for a guy
to be single. I'm not sure that is a major
red flag. If she had said forty eight he's never
been married, I'd be like, a, you know, maybe you
should maybe he got a little bit of an art
(24:13):
Nothing against twenty eight. There are sixty eight year old guys,
usually with boats here in Miami, who are going out
with twenty eight year old So I get it. But
I do think if you're a girl and the guys
in his mid forties and he's never gotten married, probably
a little bit of a red flag in general.
Speaker 2 (24:31):
Now, you didn't get how old were you to go?
Speaker 1 (24:32):
Mary Clay Travis getting a little dancing around the minefield
here a little bit, buddy.
Speaker 2 (24:38):
You know, some of us I did to just wait.
Speaker 1 (24:40):
We didn't just get We didn't have the love of
our life fall into our lap. In law school. Some
of us had to go out there and you know,
hunt for a while. So twenty eight, thirty eight, whatever,
But let's go here to the essence. I am a
little bit sympathetic because I think a lot of twenty
young twenty somethings are more and you'll look back on
(25:02):
some of the things that you thought when you were
twenty or twenty five or fifteen or whatever the age is,
when you get to be forty five or fifty or sixty,
and you'll say, boy, I was really dumb. I didn't
have the life experience to have learned enough. She, I
think is and I think a lot of women are
setting themselves up for this way. They are thinking that
(25:23):
they want a man that is one type of man,
and they're either not going to be able to find
that guy, or maybe even worse buck, she's going to
find this effeminate, left wing loving man and she's actually
going to end up hating him. Because I'm just telling you,
(25:45):
I don't believe there are any women out there that
actually want to end up with feminine men. I don't
believe that kind of category of women exists. I think
they claim that they do, and then they realize that
they're basically living with another woman and he's emotionally unstable
and he's not manly, and they don't have a loving
(26:08):
relationship because what they don't They don't want somebody who
is similar to them. They want an actual man, and
they don't know it well at all. It all adds up,
and yes, I do have trauma, trauma from many years
of being in New York City and trying to convince
usually very attractive but very left wing women on dates.
Speaker 2 (26:29):
I'm sort of leaving libertarian these days. That's nice one.
Speaker 1 (26:33):
By the way, I will say this too, how many
of those girls do you think you could have eliminated
if you didn't see them? Because when I listen to
that girl, as opposed to watch her, she's kind of cute.
If I just listen to her, I'm like, I would
I want to get a nail gun and just put
it into my head rather than have to listen to this.
But I think there are a lot of men out there,
(26:54):
maybe the vast majority of them, that are willing to
put up with awfulness beyond beloe. Well, because the girl's pretty,
Like if you just had to listen to her, oh
of course, you would be like, I'll never go on
a date with this girl. I see this, and I
don't think this is controversial, though people pretend like this
isn't necessarily true.
Speaker 2 (27:10):
We all know it's true.
Speaker 1 (27:12):
Women make bad decisions about their or rather, women are
blinded by and then make bad decisions because of men's
money and status and men. I'm speaking in the greatest
of generalizations here, but men make bad decisions and are
blinded because of women's attractiveness. Okay, that is I was
just speaking about the guys who are in their sixties
(27:32):
with the boat with the big fancy boats here and
the twenty five year old girlfriends. By the way, in
Miami Beach. That's not the that's happening everywhere. Yeah, it's
like this is not something that anybody even really notices.
It's happening all over the place. But yeah, the guy
who owns the boat, you got to spend time with them.
That's the thing, you know, it's the it's the Bill,
the Bill Belichick lay. They're going full full Bill Belichick.
I mean, I think it actually makes sense biologically right,
(27:54):
because women again biologically are driven primary. But I think
about it, I mean, it's gonna be a head play, Travis.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
You know, Caveman.
Speaker 1 (28:05):
Women are driven by a desire for security and uh
and health and safety and success for their offspring. And
the wealthier and more powerful man can theoretically provide that right.
So biologically that makes sense. And men like young women
because young women are more likely to be able to
have babies. This is why we all exist. Sorry, that's
(28:27):
my big take, Clay. Uh yeah, this is this is accurate.
But okay. So the ideology though, notice she lays out
all these things her far left politics. Part of it
is toxic masculinity, alpha manliness. All of those things are
contrary to her political beliefs. So if you are an
(28:52):
alpha male who, let's say, believes in even things that
are not necessarily that political, but things like differentiation of
the sex, is that men should be protectors, that men
are generally going to be bigger and stronger, that men
should be the primary earner in the household, any of
those sorts of things are going to run a foul
of her beliefs, and so that's why she's going to be, oftentimes,
(29:17):
I think, miserable trying to find and this is her
slash all women that have similar beliefs to her, because
they are excluding as a matter of politics, the kind
of man that women are generally biologically geared toward liking
and at the end of the video, which we didn't play,
She's like, and I've been thank well ever since. And
(29:37):
it was just sort of the funniest because like, yeah,
no surprise, you've been single ever since.
Speaker 2 (29:42):
But it is in.
Speaker 1 (29:43):
Fact highly ideological white women age call it, you know,
twenty to forty five in America, who are really now
the base of the Democrat Biden Kamala party. That's who
they can count on and if they went sorry, college
educated white women twenty to forty five college educated is
(30:06):
an important component because that's when the indoctrination happens, that's
when they learn all this stuff. They also often are
ending up single now, and this is what we were
talking about with doctor Laura, Like Membercy got really fired up.
These are also the women sometimes that want to have
children and they go to sperm donors, and instead of
being able to find a man that they can actually
(30:28):
have a relationship with, they're flipping through binders trying to
find guys that they can have a baby with that
they never meet and that their kids have no relationship with.
And I think they're just making a series of bad choices.
But because they have made those choices themselves, they oftentimes
need larger societal issues to have created those choices for them, right, Like,
(30:54):
it's almost like their security blanket is the world is
so misogynistic and awful that I have no other option.
Some of these women are going to get married, and
by the time they have babies, they'll look back on
themselves and say, boy, I was a moron. By the way,
a lot of men get married look back on themselves
and say, boy, you know I was kind of a
moron too. I mean, I think that's the common trajectory.
(31:16):
It's why age adds wisdom, because you have lived through
every life experience and you can analyze it better at
fifteen than you could at fifteen. And so I hope
that some of this is going to happen. But the
other thing is, like posting these videos, does she think
that this makes her look really likable? Because are there
(31:37):
other women that are like Slay Queen? Yes, girl like?
Actually to me, I watched the video and I just
felt sorry for her, and it made me find her
profoundly unlikable. Yes, all true. Speaking of keeping women safe,
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Speaker 5 (33:34):
Safe Stories are freedom stories of America, inspirational stories that
you unite.
Speaker 2 (33:41):
Us all each day, spend time with Clay.
Speaker 5 (33:44):
And by find them on the free iHeartRadio app or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
Welcome back in to Clay and Buck. All right, so
we got some calls coming in.
Speaker 1 (33:53):
We got a lot to dive into here and a
third hour, got some fantastic guests including Kirk Cameron of
Growing Paine's Fame fame back in the day.
Speaker 2 (34:02):
Uh and we also are going to be.
Speaker 1 (34:04):
Joined by Steve on his new run for he's got
a cool accent and he's in a sharp mind. So
we'll talk to him in just a little bit here.
But we've got a call that fall of falls right
in with what we're just talking about. Hayden and Charleston,
South Carolina. Hayden, you've dealt with crazy libs. What's going on?
Speaker 8 (34:26):
Man?
Speaker 4 (34:28):
Not too much here in Charleston, South Carolina and Hatty Toddy. So.
I broke up with my girlfriend last weekend. She's surprised
for she's super liberal. We would always have cordial conversations
about politics. I was trying to teach her what that
she's actually Republican. But she surprised me with she hoped
(34:52):
that Elon and Trump would both get shot or die somehow.
Speaker 2 (34:58):
Whoa was she drunk or how did this come on?
Speaker 1 (35:01):
Like you're just chilling hanging out, next thing, you know,
she wants trumpet Elon dead, Like how does that conversation happen?
Speaker 4 (35:07):
Well on on the front porch. Actually, uh, just before noon,
so very sober. I sit on Twitter and check some
things and wanted to show or something really funny about Trump,
and she exploded. It's like you know, I don't want
to hear anything about Trump. I despise him and Elon
(35:28):
and I hope that.
Speaker 5 (35:28):
They both, you know, gets shot.
Speaker 2 (35:31):
How old is she.
Speaker 4 (35:34):
Thirty nine?
Speaker 2 (35:35):
Oh no, oh no, they baite Hayden, thanks for the call.
Speaker 1 (35:39):
Good move thirty nine year olds before noon, no alcohol,
being like I hope trumpet Elon gets shot and get shot.
Speaker 2 (35:47):
You gotta cut bait. You gotta say to hurry this guy.
Speaker 1 (35:50):
You could tell that he he it's like he just
broke out a shawshank and the rain is coming down
on his face and he could taste the freedom.
Speaker 2 (35:57):
You know, he's good, he's doing fine. Oh yeah, that's
a tough one to get into. It's one thing if.
Speaker 1 (36:02):
You got like a drunk twenty two year old. Remember
we talked about this off air. I think, look, people
do dumb things when their college age, get drunk, say
dumb things.
Speaker 2 (36:11):
Their lives shouldn't be over. If you're almost.
Speaker 1 (36:14):
Forty and you're rooting for Elon and Trump to get killed,
you gotta screw loose. And if somebody is saying that
to you, you got to run in the opposite direction
from them. And I say that, Look, Biden was an
awful President, the idea that you want him shot, I mean,
you got serious issues if that's where your mind goes
in any way. So I think he's dodging literal, maybe
not literal, figurative bullets there by being able to get
(36:36):
away there. We got Kirk Cameron coming up, we got
Steve Hilton coming up, and more amazing Clay and Buck
coming up.
Speaker 2 (36:44):
So you know, get up, stretch, come back to us
in a moment.