Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's Leland Conway sitting in for Tony and Dwight. They're
(00:02):
out apparently trying to rob a bank, so you're stuck
with me for a couple of hours on the program. Today,
Scott Jennings is going to join us local Louisville boy
that we are all very proud of because we see
him just absolutely kick a tail against liberals on CNN
all the time. But he's got a new book out
(00:24):
called The Common Sense Revolution. We're to talk about that
and his conversations about that book with President Trump. I
want to get started with this though. I just this
story has bugged me since it happened. Six year old
Logan Tipton, who was mercilessly killed by Ronald Exantis, murdered
cold blood. If I remember the details on this, I
(00:47):
remember this shook me to my core. I think we
had already moved to Colorado at that point when the
story actually happened, but I was extremely tied into that
story for whatever reason. It just when this guy, I
think he drove from Indiana, this Ronald Exantis guy, and
just went nuts on this family and killed this precious
(01:11):
six year old kid and attacked the rest of the
family and as you know, a little while ago, the
Kentucky Parole Board ruled that he would basically get out
of jail early. And according to the Parole Board, they
call it mandatory re entry supervision. And so the parole
(01:34):
board is saying, well, you know, state court of the
state law, we hadn't let this guy go. Well, he's
already back in jail. Apparently he requested to serve his
what do you call it, mandatory re entry supervision in Florida,
So they sent him down to Florida. Florida accepts him,
and then he fails to regsture as the convicted felon,
(01:58):
and so they arrest him again. And now he's being
extradited back to Kentucky. He's apparently over lagrange, and I
guess they're gonna make him finally serve out the rest
of his of his sentence. But he was he was
ruled insane. And I gotta tell you so. So I
(02:20):
live in Colorado now, and we have two interesting stories
that are similar to this, and I there's part of
me that says, Okay, you say that you have to
let this guy out, but that doesn't make any sense
to me. And if there's a state law that says
you have to let this guy out. When I watched
the interview, I can't remember which Lexington TV station it
(02:42):
was on, but they interviewed the dad, and I was
just like, you could just feel the heartbreak and the
anger and the frustration in this guy's voice and in
his face. And as a person who teaches self defense
(03:06):
and firearms and home protection and all those kinds of things,
I get really hot about this stuff. And I get
really hot about the fact and I tell people this
all the time in classes that the justice system is
not what you think it is. I grew up in
in America where you were innocent until proven guilty, and
(03:27):
it wasn't until maybe ten years ago that I realized
that's a fantasy. And I grew up in America where
a criminal would be punished, and it wasn't until ten
or twelve years ago that I realized that that was
a fantasy. The system is not set up to protect victims.
Very few states. Some states are better than others, but
(03:49):
very few states the justice system is actually set up
to protect the victims. And I was surprised when they
let him out. I was surprised. I was like, wait,
this is my home state of Kentucky. They're letting this
guy out. This happens in California, this happens in Colorado,
(04:09):
this happens in New York. And this happens in Illinois.
Doesn't happen in Kentucky. What is going on? So we
had this guy in Colorado. This the two stories. I'll
tell you real quick. Dude is a I think he
had forty nine previous arrests. Ten of them were violent convictions, convictions,
(04:29):
not just arrests. Ten of them were violent. He was
a registered sex offender. Okay, goes to a public park,
kidnaps a kid, tries to tries to kidnap a kid
in broad daylight, and they the kid is able to
(04:53):
wrestle away and escape. It's all caught on camera. You
could see the guy trying to as a kid was
like nine. You can see the whole thing happen, no
question about it. Witnesses video everything. They arrest the guy.
(05:15):
Within three or four days, he's back out. And it's
worse than that because you're thinking, well, okay, they just
did you know he got bail or whatever. No, No,
they dropped the charges. They dropped the freaking charges. This
guy is caught on camera forty nine prior arrests, ten
(05:40):
violent felonies, registered sex offender caught on camera trying to
steal a nine year old kid. They let him out
because they said he's incompetent to stand trial. The charges
are dropped, and the dude to this day is wandering
(06:02):
around Denver, Colorado. Right now as I speak, he's wandering
around around the same time another guy domestic violence incident,
gets mad at his wife, drags her behind his car
to her death. A week later, Oh, he's incompetent to
(06:23):
stand trial. To this day, dude is out there living
a free life. I expect that in a state like Colorado, right,
I don't expect that in a state like Kentucky. The
law's got to change, and I am, but I'm furious
that this. And it's kind of funny because he goes
(06:45):
right back into jail and we get him back and
I guess now he's going to serve out the rest
of his time. But it's a little confusing too, because
I was reading the story on lax eighteen dot com
and it said Exantus Will was extradited back to Kentucky
on October twenty ninth and has remained in the Kentucky
(07:05):
State Reformatory since. Kentucky Online Offender look Up reports that
xantus current expected time to service is June sixth, twenty
twenty six, with good time. Does that mean they're going
to let him back out again with good time?
Speaker 2 (07:23):
Like this?
Speaker 1 (07:28):
This is so frustrating to me. And I don't know,
I don't know, I don't know what it's gonna take
for this is this is something that we talk about
how Trump has kind of stopped wokeness and all that
kind of stuff, and that's great, but the justice system
is obviously still steeped in it. And we see that
(07:50):
with the way the justice system tries to stop Trump's agenda,
and especially around the border issue, right like, especially around immigration.
And so it's clearly we've got activist judges across the country,
and clearly some of those judges are you know, they're
putting their politics ahead and in some of these cases
(08:12):
that the situation in North Carolina with the guy that
stabbed the young girl in the neck, the Ukrainian immigrant
that happened like was right before Charlie Kirk was assassinated,
and that one, that one concerned me on a deeper level,
because you know, I watched this story unfold when they
(08:34):
let Ronald Exantus out, and obviously it was clearer that
Kentuckians were pissed, right, It was like, I mean, I was,
but I mean it was clear in the state. I
just I mean, I was able to see the comments
and you know, read the article. I could tell that
you were pissed. The thing that worried me about the
situation in North Carolina. And there's been another situation in Chicago.
(08:57):
A guy with forty eight arrests set a woman on
fire the other day. And his last arrest was he
knocked an individual out randomly, just walked up and cold
cocked him and knocked him out cold. And now he
set a woman on fire. That guy like forty some
odd arrests, and the situation in North Carolina. What bothered
(09:21):
me about that is we had video and the same
thing happened in Chicago. He's like nobody helped, nobody helped,
They just sat around. Are we desensitized to this kind
of violence? I mean, we'd like to think we're not,
But how is it that a judge? So here's here's
my proposal. Okay, and I know this is a little
bit wild and a little bit over the top, but
(09:43):
I don't even know if it really is. Maybe it
isn't I think, Okay, this is an over generalization because
there are loopholes in the law. We have created a
layered legal system now, so this may or may not
be realistic. But doesn't it feel like the right thing
(10:04):
to do that when we have a judge. Let's say,
let's say if if one of these people that gets
arrested for doing something like this and then gets let go, like,
for instance, the guy I mentioned that they try to
kidnap the kid, Let's say down the road, he actually
does kidnap a kid and sexually assaults them. Shouldn't we
(10:26):
doesn't it feel right that maybe the judge that let
him out, maybe whoever was involved in the decision to
determine that he shouldn't they go to jail, Like shouldn't
they serve some time? Right at the very least, shouldn't
they lose their job? And this, by the way, there's
a bigger what's interesting about this is homelessness ties to this, right,
(10:49):
Like why do we have so much homelessness? I do
a regular show for iHeartRadio in San Diego, California. Now,
don't hurt me. I'm a missionary to California. I'm just
trying to you know, believe me. There's actually surprisingly number
of conservatives in the area. But the problem we have
out there with homelessness is nuts. It's absolutely nuts, and
(11:11):
they're everywhere, and there's nothing being done about it. And
part of the problem is the vast majority of homeless people.
And I know we have the problem in Louisville two.
The vast majority of homeless people are either drug addicted
or mentally ill, or a combination of both. Because a
normal person who's in their right mind does not choose
to live on the street, and you don't have to
choose to live on the street in America, like the
(11:33):
number of people that are homeless because they fell through
the cracks is very few. It's a very and I
know the homeless advocate people that make money in the
industry are gonna disagree with me, but there's very, very
small percentage. Maybe I would be surprised if it's ten percent,
because I've worked with these people. We work with an
organization called the Alpha Project in San Diego and we
(11:54):
actually go down to the homeless camps in San Diego
and talk to these people and try to get them
the help they need and then get them on a pathway.
But it's this this organization that I work with is
hand up, not a handout, right, Like they don't you
have to get clean if you're going to come into
their program, and then they will. They will feed you,
they will shelter you, they will educate you, they will
help you get a job, but you have to be
(12:15):
clean coming in. You can't bring your drugs with you.
So we go down into the homeless camps and we
actually talk to these people. And I remember one time
we went down into the homeless camp under the interstate
Interstate five there near the coast, and it was there
was like a whole little city. And I talk to
these people and like they when you tell them, hey, man,
(12:37):
you gotta leave that behind, they go, I'll just take
I'll just take the food you're bring in and leave it. Right.
They're making a choice to stay down there.
Speaker 2 (12:46):
Now.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
I did get one girl to commit, and I hope
that she's doing well. But the point is most of
them choose that lifestyle because they're either addicted or they're
mentally ill. And we don't have an institution to put
those people in. If you if you are addicted to
drugs and so you're fighting a mad genary dragons and
you're you're chasing people with machetes and you're getting naked
in the middle of the street, you need to be
in an institution. And we don't have an institution. So
(13:07):
we don't If if rod On Xantis is incompetent to
stant or incompetent to serve out his thing, if he's
if he's not guilty by reason of insanity, right, then
then you you have to put him in an institution
because you don't travel one hundred and ten miles and
stab a kid to death so hard that it breaks
(13:28):
the knife or bends the knife and then attack his family, right, Like,
you don't do that if you're in the right mind.
If you're supposedly insane, you're either evil or you're insane
or both. So we got we got to bring back institutions.
And I know that scares people, but I don't know
how else to deal with that. Right, if there's some
law that's saying these people have to be back out
(13:48):
on the street where they're a danger to themselves, in
society man, Come on right, all right, lost to get
to today. We'll dive into that a little bit more.
But coming up at the bottom of the hour, Scott
Jennings is going to join us, local guy. You see
him on CNN. He's on a book tour right now.
We caught up with him in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. He's
gonna talk about his new book, Common Sense Revolution. It's phenomenal.
(14:11):
So we'll get into that. Leland Conway sitting in for
the Great Tony and Dwight on news Radio eight forty whas.
Like I said, Tony and Dwight are out trying to
rob a bank somewhere, so I may be putting together
a GoFundMe for their bail a little bit later, So
Leland Conway sitting in for Tony and Dwight, News Radio
(14:31):
eight forty whas. Come up in just a few minutes,
Scott Jennings is going to join us. Louisville boy, we
all see him on CNN. It's like the only reason
to watch CNN actually is to watch him just absolutely
destroy liberals on the air. But wrapping up this conversation,
I was frustrated when I saw the headline yesterday that
Ronald Exantis, the crazy dude who drove from Indiana to
(14:54):
stab and kill a young six year old precious Childgan Tipton,
back in twenty fifteen, was let out. Obviously, we knew
that he had been let out and was I guess,
doing his supervised whatever they call it, down in Florida,
and then failed to register as a felon, which then
(15:16):
triggered that he lost that status, and now he's back
in prison. So he was sentenced to a combined twenty
years and served about ten of that and then was
let out. And I don't it's not very clear whether
this guy will be done again next year and they'll
(15:37):
let him back out again. I don't know. But the
Kentucky Parole Board is not taking responsibility for this. They're saying, hey,
you know, we had to let him go. It was
a state law or whatever. And I'm like, well, change
the damn law right because the system right now seems
to be seems to be set up to protect the
criminal and not to protect the victim. And this is
(16:02):
why you have to understand that you're your first line
of defense. Because the look, I love our police, I
love our law enforcement officers. They're phenomenal, but they don't
get there before the crime happens. They have to come
after we call them, and that can take minutes and more.
(16:23):
And so if you're not prepared to defend yourself and
your family by whatever means possible, right, it's not a
system that is set up to protect you. And we
see this in we see this more in blue states
around the country. So I was a little surprised that
the system is set up that way in Kentucky, and
it's got to change. And I can only hope that
(16:47):
I can only hope that the legislature gets together and
fixes that because this is to me, this is this
is I just man, it's very frustrating. It's very frustrating
because I see these stories all over the place, especially
in California, right, Like you see people that have done
incredibly heinous things. What they're doing in California, they have
these they SVPs. These are sexually violent predators. They're letting
(17:11):
them out now into they'll serve their time, and then
they put them out in like regular neighborhoods and they
pay the government pays their rent so they can have
a place to live. So they take a sexually violent
predator and set an SVP. Psychologists have said, look, those
people can't be fixed. That's like, that's like a pedophile.
(17:31):
It's not. They're not. They can't recover from that. It
can't be changed, it can't be healed or whatever. It's
a mind problem that's broken. Their brain is broken and
they can't be fixed. And so their solution is, well,
let's just rent them a house in the middle of
a neighborhood close to a school. Like, what are you
talking about. It doesn't make any sense. There was one
(17:52):
guy that just got put back in jail because he
violated prole of course, and he referred to himself as
the Boulder, that most rapist, That's what he had a
name for himself. And he would he would he would
get women tie up their husbands or their boyfriends and
make them watch him rape them and then slit the
woman's throat like and make them watch it like unbelievable.
(18:16):
And that dude government's gonna pay for his rent. It's wild.
That's got to stop, all right. We'll talk to Scott
Jennings coming up next. Leland Conway in for Tony and
Dwight on News Radio eight forty wajs Leland Conway sitting
in for Tony and Dwight. Scott Jennings, we see him
on CNN. He's a local boy, started here in Louisville, Kentucky,
(18:37):
and has been involved. He was a former assistant to
President Bush, been involved in Republican politics for a long time.
And really cool. He he just wrote a book called
A Revolution of Common Sense. Super cool and I caught
up with him today on his book tour in Fort Lauderdale, Florida,
and so we had an opportunity to talk to him
(18:59):
here on news radiohas It is Scott Jennings on the
line with us, and it's it's really been kind of
cool Scott, because you're You're a Louisville boy and uh
and I'm a Kentucky boy, and it's kind of fun.
How to watch what you've been able to do. You've
now got a national radio show. We see you on CNN,
and your new book is out, A Revolution in Common Sense?
(19:21):
What led what led you down the path to this book?
And why this book in particular, why common sense? I
don't know. I can't It seems like common senses everywhere,
everybody's operating on common sense right now, Scott, I mean,
come on, well.
Speaker 2 (19:36):
It's thanks to the President. And the reason I came
up with the title a Revolution of common Sense is
because that's a phrase that President Trump used in his
inaugural address. He said We're gonna have a revolution of
common sense. And you know, when that hit me in January,
I thought, well, that is the perfect way to brand
his political movement. Yeah, and he's a Republican and mostly
(19:57):
he's a conservative, but really what he pitching the voters
is I'm going to try to do the common sense thing,
you know, in doing the book. I went with the
President to Michigan on his one hundredth day in office,
and he said to the crowd in Michigan at a
big rally, whether you're left or whether you're right, or
whatever you are, it's just common sense. And the crowd roared.
(20:19):
And I think that branding has appealed to people who
don't think of themselves as being overly political. They just
want the government to try to be smart and stop
being stupid. That's what I mean. Basically, that's what Trump
is pitching, and so I thought that's going to be
a great book title. Of course, it also harkens back
to Thomas Pain, one of the revolutionary figures who wrote
the pamphlet Common Sense, who we quote on the book Flap.
(20:42):
So I'm excited to have it out and it's going
great so far, and everyone's been super kind to buy
it and say nice things about it.
Speaker 1 (20:49):
Well, and I should mention the subtitle, which is how
how Donald Trump stormed Washington and fought for Western civilization.
And it's interesting you tie that to Thomas Pain. Thomas Pain,
you couldn't really put him down to like a particular ideology.
He was a founding father, so to speak. He was
one of the rabble rousers and one of the passionate
(21:09):
writers of that time. But he had views that you
could consider this day to be a little bit on
both sides of the isle, and if you really stop.
And the left is seemingly uncapable of this because of
the Orange Man bad syndrome. But I sometimes marvel at
some of the policies that Trump has that really do
cross the aisle, at least they would have twenty or
(21:31):
thirty years ago when people still got along. I mean,
can you imagine if he was president in nineteen eighty eight,
when the Democrat Party and Republican Party actually still talk
to each other.
Speaker 2 (21:40):
Well. It's interesting because even though the elites of the
parties may not communicate, the voters do. And Trump actually
has great appeal to lots of people who used to
vote Democrat. I mean, I talked about my dad in
the book. He was an old Clinton Democrat, a union guy,
was a garbage man and a factory worker. He was
the first person to tell me Donald Trump was going
to be the next president of the United States, and
(22:01):
so and so. I actually think at the at the
grassroots level, at the regular person level, you do have
a lot of crossover. And maybe it doesn't reach the
elite level, which is sad and unfortunate, but just at
the at the layer of average, everyday working Americans, I
do think they're talking to each other, and they're all
asking the same question, why does government do stupid things
(22:23):
all the time? And and and these are the like
this is what Trump. Trump's one of his main abilities
is to just say what everyone else is already thinking.
You know, we had been living in sort of a
culture where everyone was afraid to say out loud what
we knew. We were all thinking, whether it was on
the trans issues, or on DEI or on immigration. I mean,
(22:44):
you know, there was so much going on in our
society under Biden, and they sort of operated a culture
of fear, like you're not allowed to say out loud,
what the common sense thing here is. You know, we
were talking about Thomas Pain the book Flap. I quote
Thomas Pain who wrote, in common sense, a long habit
of not thinking a thing wrong gives it a superficial
(23:06):
appearance of being right. Oh wow, And on some of
these some of these ideologies we were just discussing. That
was the leftist plan. If we just make them accept
boys and girls' sports long enough, if we just make
them accept DEI long enough, everyone will just assume that
it's right. And you and I both know it's not right.
And Trump came along and busted it up.
Speaker 1 (23:27):
Yeah, that's a that's a really great point. And I
love that quote because it does seem like it's Also
it's also the way you know, spiritual warfare works in
a lot of ways, right, is if if the devil
could tell you a lie enough, right, then it seems
as though it's true, and it seems as though it's okay.
And we had this facade for the last four years especially,
(23:47):
and I think during COVID it really ramped up. But
this facade of well, maybe not everybody thinks this way,
but certainly if I speak up, I'm I'm gonna get
punished for it.
Speaker 2 (23:58):
Right.
Speaker 1 (23:59):
It was all almost like this weird syndrome that took
over the whole country. And for some reason, you know,
somehow Trump was able to sort of bust that up.
I mean, I saw the rallies. I'd reported on several
of them, and you know, it's it's funny when I
see things that he says and the left freaks out
about him, and I'm like, if you understood the context,
you would also understand that halftime he's joking, He's tolling
(24:22):
you right now. You know, he's trying to get that reaction,
and he sort of told America, hey, it is okay
to speak out against this nonsense. I mean, I think
that's what his campaign symbolized in a lot of ways.
Speaker 2 (24:35):
Absolutely, he took the wet blanket of uncommon nonsense off
of America, and he stopped the momentum of these people
who wanted to transform our culture. I mean, you know, you,
as you said, if you let something lay out there
long enough, if you enforce it long enough, it eventually
just becomes part of the firmament. That's the liberal plan.
(24:57):
That's what they do to him. On narratives. You know,
if you tell people long enough that Rugsha stole the
twenty sixteen election, people will believe it. And by the way,
one whole political party believes that nonsense. It's the same
thing on Epstein. If you tell people long enough that
Donald Trump has something to do with this, people will
believe it. That's their plan. Now, the evidence, as you know, Leland,
is that Trump had nothing to do with it, but
(25:18):
a lot of Democrats might have, but the narrative. So
it's sort of the enforcement of narratives. Hey did you
know you can wake up in the morning and change
your gender? Hey, hey, did you know that it's more important,
you know, what your race or your gender is than
what your talent level or your work ethic is. If
you could enforce these narratives over a long period of time,
(25:40):
you can just sort of make them part of American
culture or America's political firmament. And Trump busted it up.
And you know, there's a lot of non political people
out there who don't think of themselves as partisans at all,
that they cannot stand the enforcement of narratives and media
does it. Democrats do it, liberals do it. It's part
of the progressive plan, I think to change America.
Speaker 1 (26:03):
Yeah, I feel out in my bones right now. When
you're you got an opportunity to meet with the I
know you've spent a lot of time with the President.
You spend a lot of time with him on the campaign.
You you you talk with him regularly. But you did
get to go to the White House the other day
and and you met with the President. What What is
he like? What was that conversation like?
Speaker 2 (26:26):
Well, it was good to see him, because when I
met with him and pitched him on the book in February,
I said, if you'll cooperate and work with me here,
I'll have this delivered by the end of the year.
And I did it so well.
Speaker 1 (26:37):
If you tell Trump something like that, you better deliver
because it's oh.
Speaker 2 (26:41):
He'll remember. Oh, let me tell you something. I'll give
you a nugget from the book. I interviewed several of
the cabinet members and the one thing I heard from
one of them was, you can tell Donald Trump we're
working on it one time. But if he tells you
to do if he tells you to do something, you
get one chance to say, we're working on it, mister president.
But the second time he asks where it is, it
(27:03):
better be done. Wow.
Speaker 1 (27:05):
Yeah, I get that feeling, so for me, So for me,
he knew.
Speaker 2 (27:08):
I was working on this book, and so to walk
in there in November and show him a copy and say,
you know, here's the delivery. Interestingly, he loves the cover.
During the writing process, I didn't know what to put
on the cover. He was a million photos of him,
and so I asked him, you know, what's your favorite
photo of you from this first hundred days? And that's
the one he sent back. And so I handed him
(27:29):
the book.
Speaker 1 (27:30):
And he was like, this is the greatest cover, that's all.
Speaker 2 (27:34):
And I said, I know, I know, I said, I
might be a mediocre author, but I'm good at marketing.
Speaker 1 (27:38):
Sir, Yeah, that's hilarious. That's hilarious. Well, I doubt you're
You're not a mediocre author, because I've read your stuff.
So let give us a little insight into the man
that is our president. I mean, Kentucky voted super overwhelmingly
for for for President Trump. Give us some insight into
the man, because you do know him. I was watching
(27:59):
a video of him and and Kai, his granddaughter the
other day on the golf course, and it was this
like superhuman moment and it was kind of real, and
it was it, you know, I mean, he's a showman,
and the showman had dropped and you were just seeing
the grandpa and I thought, you know, this is the
problem that we've lost in politics, is that we don't
see our political opponents as human beings. Here he is
(28:21):
just chatting with his granddaughter about her dreams and what
he wants to do next, and what he will do
after he's president, and all this kind of stuff. Give
us some insight into the man away from the lights.
Speaker 2 (28:32):
Well, I think you raise an interesting observation about caricatures.
I experienced this with President Bush when I work for him.
The caricature of the media portrayal of these people is
often completely wrong, and it's done to make you feel
poorly about them. Right with Donald Trump, the caricature would
be of some honery mean person who doesn't listen and
(28:53):
is the opposite of warm and honestly, I found that
to be completely and totally false. Man and is warm,
He is hospitable. He is funny. I mean he is funny, dude,
Like in person, this guy is funny. He's a professional
tal snapper. But he's solicitous. I watched him meet with
his advisers and his cabinet members. He solicits opinions. He's
a great listener. He listens to everything, and he has
(29:17):
his people sort of hash these issues out in front
of him. He asks good questions, but he absorbs these
debates and he absorbs this back and forth. And then
he's very decisive, which is not like Biden. Biden was
famously indecisive, and that leads to weakness. But being a
good listener and being decisive leads to strength. But personally,
this guy, he's solicitous and he's hospitable. You know, he's
(29:38):
from the hospitality industry. He's forever asking people, you know,
are you thirsty? Can I get you this? Can I
get you that? You know? He gave me the hat
off his head once from my own dad. He was like,
do you want my hat? I said no, but my
dad would love it. The guy took the hat off
his own head and signed it for my dad. And
so he's really he's really engaging. And you know, Bill Maher,
who's not a huge Trump fan, but you know, had
(30:00):
dinner with him a few months ago. He came away
thinking the same thing, like, look, you know, I like
Donald Trump. He's actually okay to talk to and he's
a pretty fun and engaging guy. But you know, the
media caricature is the opposite of that. And of course
they do that for a reason, because they're trying to
grind a political acts instead of tell you the truth.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
Yeah, all right, before I let you go quick, two
quick questions. One, I want to go back to the
Epstein thing real quick. You mentioned, you know, they're bending
over backwards. I thought it was funny that the only
email that they presented that mentioned Trump was actually Epstein
whining about Trump kicking him out of Marloco. So I mean,
there's no there there because they would have released it
(30:39):
in the last four years. Is this about to be
troubled waters for the Democrats.
Speaker 2 (30:44):
I think they have blundered into a major problem, which
is we're going to find out just how tight in
Epstein was to several senior Democrats. We already see it.
Larry Summers is now his life is wrecked over it.
Hakeem Jefferies was fundraising with Epstein. Epstein was programming a
member of Congress plasket. That won't be the last example.
I mean, remember something like ninety percent of Epstein's political
(31:05):
donations went to Democrats and he hated Trump. Trump excommunicated Epstein.
Epstein hated Trump, and Trump got rid of him, but
the Democrats never did. They never got rid of this guy.
And we're gonna find out the depths of it. I
think they've made a major mistake. I mean, Republicans kind
of called their bluff on it, but now they got
to live with it. So you see what happened.
Speaker 1 (31:24):
Well, and I think it's good for the country that
these are coming out. Last thing, What do you hope
people get from your book? A Revolution of Common Sense?
How Donald Trump stormed Washington and fought for Western civilization.
It's available on Amazon. The hardcover's only twenty bucks. I
love it. What do you hope people get out of this?
Please read it?
Speaker 2 (31:39):
By the way, Yeah, look, I want people it's kind
of history book. I want people to understand how consequential
the first one hundred days of this presidency was. When
you're a Republican president You've got the media, the Democrats,
and the entrench federal bureaucracy trying to stop you. They
try to overwhelm you, and Donald Trump said nope, I'm
going to overwhelm them. Wow. And it is a story
of how a Republican resident refused to take what normally
(32:03):
happens to Republicans lying down. He hit Washington before it
ever got out of bed, and it had a consequential
result for our country.
Speaker 1 (32:09):
He was much more ready this time, wasn't he He
was ready?
Speaker 2 (32:12):
Well, was ready to go.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
Don't want to give away too much, but what's the
number one accomplishment you think he had in that first
one hundred days. Was it doze or was it something else?
Speaker 2 (32:21):
Dose consequential? But to me, it's by far immigration.
Speaker 1 (32:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (32:25):
The border is closed, yep, we're enforcing federal law and
it's still I mean today we haven't had a federal
an illegal crossing in five months. I mean, it's it's
amazing what the guy did. So no, it's and that
was the number one thing he promised when he first
started running ten years ago.
Speaker 1 (32:40):
Yeah, and so he is he is.
Speaker 2 (32:42):
It's it's amazing. So it's immigration.
Speaker 1 (32:43):
To be well, thanks for taking a little minute or
two out of your crazy busy book schedule, your book tour.
Can't wait to get my hands on it and read
it all the way through cover to cover. Appreciate you, Scott,
You're the man. Thank you so much for your time today.
Speaker 2 (32:56):
Thanks Leland. Take care of Bell.
Speaker 1 (32:57):
Yeah, Scott Jennings is always a good to talk to
him again. Hometown boy from Kentucky and now on CNN
and in Trump's office and everywhere else. Just holding the
liberals at bay. I love his common sense and the
way he speaks for the common man, like you and
like me. Hey, it's an honor to sit in for
Tony and Dwight today. Just got a report they were
(33:18):
successful in robbing the bank. They were not successful in
getting away, so I guess we're gonna have to raise
some money for their bail. That coming up as well
as AI. There's a new threat to your job by AI,
and we got to get into this. Dante King is
going to join us. He's an expert in this field.
How can you prepare for your job being taken away
(33:39):
by our digital overlords in the future? What will you
do with yourself? That's coming up next hour? Leland Conway
in for Tony and Dwight on news radio eight forty
whas