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October 30, 2025 • 31 mins
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
For two of the four years under Biden. We got
so much of our stockpile went to Ukraine. In his
address to the generals in the admirals when he pulled
them all in Secretary Hegseth talked about the vision of
how wars are won. He knows way more about this
than I do. I'm not coming off as he made
knows more about war than Hegseth or anybody in the

(00:22):
Trump administration. But he was talking about our lethality. We
have to be fighters, and yes, that is so true.
Always talk about the Chinese get up and eat glass
for breakfast, and we had a rainbow trans shows on
our military basis. Our military went woke. They're unwoking it.

(00:43):
But so much of it is already infiltrated. But I
don't think any of that matters. If we had all
rambos in there, yeah we need that. But if we
went to war, let's just say with China, would we
have brave soldiers? Yes, we would, we do. We have
those probably on both sides. There would be bravery, but

(01:08):
that's not going to be the main cause of winning
a war today. And we can go back to other
wars man throughout history. It's about production, it's about factories,
it's about technology, what prepares a country to win a war,
all those things. At the start of World War One,
there were a lot of people in Europe that thought
that it'd be over and they'd be home by Christmas.

(01:30):
That was the big thing about this. That's not how
that turned out. Man. They weren't home before Christmas, of
because nineteen fourteen went on for four more years, killed millions.
In World War Two, the tank battles. You just heard
that military advisor guy the audio I was playing, you know,
he said, GM Chevrolet. They used to make tanks and

(01:55):
cars and trucks, but they had that capability. We don't
have that anymore. In World War two, the tank battle,
the opening ten days, Germany lost three hundred tanks in
the first ten days. They were making eleven thousand a year.
But they could not keep up with the United States
of America. They couldn't keep up with Britain, they couldn't

(02:17):
keep up with the Soviet Union. And just like in
World War Two, we're seeing what's happening the war in Ukraine,
its force in destruction. I think Russia think that thought
their tanks and their warships would crush them, and maybe
they had that World War One mentality it'd be over
in a few days. Ukraine fought back because we funded

(02:39):
them to fight back. Russia alone has had a million casualties.
A million people have died just on one side, probably
more than that. The Ukrainians have used drones missiles as well.
They've bombarded each other with these long range strons. Now

(03:00):
the drone warfare, isn't that amazing? How in this war,
how it has affected it. The United States and China
we have what appears in the United States a more
capable military. Right now, we're more technologically advanced, but with
I think China would outturn our replacement weaponry at a

(03:22):
pretty quick pace because think about it, they make everything
over there. What do we make in America? Now? Where
are our factories? We have areas where our factories were
that were called the rust belt. So even if we
had to churn it up, we'd have to build it first.
When it comes to building ships, our shipbuilding industry in

(03:44):
twenty twenty four, what percentage of the world ship tonnage
did the United States build? Take a guess percentage wise?
Zero point one. Guys, we've been decimated zero point one.

(04:06):
The US, we've allowed our shipyards to close. And just
because we build a shipyard, do we have people that
have the expertise of building ships? For zero point one?
Have we lost generations of shipbuilding people? Rosie the Riveter?
I mean, we do have a few shipyards that supply

(04:26):
the US Navy. I'm not saying we don't know how
to build a ship, but we would have to recreate
all these guys. That would take years if we were attacked. Now.
I think about these things a lot, I really do.
China controls ninety percent of the world's commercial drone production,

(04:48):
again ninety percent, and a lot of these components right
now are in the Ukraine War on both sides, the
Ukrainian and the Russians. But China could I would side
they want to have that technology on. We got lucky
with technology in World War Two because it was too

(05:09):
late in the war when the Germans hit the Allies
with something brand new. What's that a jet fighter. The
Messer Schmidt had four thirty millimeters cannons. It was faster
than the American P fifty one Mustangs, almost impossible defeat,
but it was slow. It required a long runway. We

(05:30):
had the technology as well. We had jets that we
were testing, but we have seen now they have AI
powered fighter jets. There's a company in the US called
Shield Ai. We know that the Chinese have spent years
of building up over there as well. They have what

(05:52):
they call carrier killers. They're capable of destroying a US
aircraft carrier. They can hit airfields across the Pacific. Now,
a US defense technology firm said they built a way
to fight back. This company, based in San Diego, Shield
Ai has a new AI piloted fighter jet that can
operate without runways, doesn't need GPS, doesn't need constant communication links.

(06:16):
It's an aircraft that can think and fly and fight
on its own. And this is what they have announced
that we have, So we have something beyond this, but
it's called the x bat x dash Bat takes al vertically,
can go up to fifty thousand feet, It can fly
two thousand miles. It can execute strike air defense missions

(06:39):
as an on board system, can operate from ships or
out an island somewhere or is somewhere that you've just
put together that you need this places that a traditional
jet can cannot take off. They did say the speed
remains classified. If this new threat appears, they said that

(07:02):
it has to ask a human for permission to engage
the expat. Does the expat it would? I don't know
the cost of the F thirty five, all the costs
of those jets. They're saying this is much much cheaper
because now with military you could flood the skies with

(07:23):
all these smart drones with well, that's probably what's happening
in Ukraine right now. We just don't get to see
a lot of it. You really have to go outside
US media to see anything. I think the last thing
I watched was some British guy. He was embedded with
Ukrainian forces in a tank I think, or an armored vehicle.
Crazy dude. But yeah, these well the Chinese, Russians, the Americans,

(07:46):
we can do these smart bot swarms they're calling them.
Russia has successfully tested a nuclear powered cruise missile unlimited range,
and they did this on Sunday. I you know, we're
living the life like, hey, all right, fris So say
it's going to be taking on poise, what are we
doing this weekend? Or we got the time change and

(08:08):
we don't even know how close we can be to
something going boom. I you know, I was born in
nineteen sixty six. We've had some oars, but we've never
had that Cuban missile crisis moment. Feel nobody that around
my age. There are those that older that remember that
I missed that by a few years. But that kind
of world on the EDGs feel, but we really are,

(08:34):
he said. Putin said the message Russia remains a global
military competitor, especially on nuclear weapons. You got Trump lifting
restrictions while Wall Street Journal reported on Ukraine using long
range missiles. They can go deep inside Russia. We're one
deep inside Russia. Strike and they said that was a
NATO back missile and they fire on Poland or Germany

(08:57):
or something. And then Secretary Headset is in the eating
real quick and Trump drops everything he's doing. JD. Vance,
Vice President Vance comes back from the turning point. USA
Secretary of State Rubios in there. It only takes a spark,
and if that spark happened, I am really, really, really
really concerned with our industrial base. Yeah, I think it

(09:23):
should say. We've talked about it for a long time.
How it takes away American jobs, the rust belt, it
turns into people doing opioids, and on government assistance. Yes,
it's decimated America, but the long term ramifications of that,
could we right now fight a one theater war and
keep it supplied. We won World War Two because guess

(09:45):
what we had oil? We had oil. Now we got
reserves everywhere that could pump that up. But that takes
a while. See what I'm saying. I just feel like
we're not We're not ready. And President Trump is over
there to get us ready with the rare earth minerals
that we are going to need for this ex bat

(10:05):
all this technology, all these drones. We're gonna need those
rare earth minerals. We do not have them. They have them.
This is the Trevor Cherry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.
President Trump, after all that said, he didn't even think
he would get to heaven. Come on, you heard Charlie,
Yes you can, President Trump. Vice President Vance, of course

(10:29):
Eric and Kirk, Charlie's widow has said what a rock
Usha Usha Vance has been for her. Jade Vance's wife.
Turning point, USA held a big event in Oxford, Mississippi.
And who's speaking, Well, Erica spoke and let's go listen
to Vice President Vance.

Speaker 2 (11:08):
Oh, miss I got a question, are you reay?

Speaker 1 (11:25):
Is that like their college chap? I think it is oldness.

Speaker 3 (11:28):
Yeah, that was impressive. They told me that would be impressive,
and they are exactly right.

Speaker 4 (11:38):
So let me say. Let me say a few words
of thank you.

Speaker 3 (11:42):
First to my dear friend and the widow of my
dear friend, Charlie Kirk. Erica, you have been such an
amazing inspiration to the entire country. How much do we
love Erica Kirk. She's done a hell of a job.

Speaker 1 (11:57):
I'm tuessing, tessing.

Speaker 3 (12:00):
I want to thank We have a couple of Mississippi
senators here. We have both Senator Roger Wicker and Senator
Cindy Hyde Smith. Thank you guys for being here. We
have the Governor of Mississippi with us. We got an
all star crowd here. Governor, thank you for being here.

(12:25):
And most importantly, we have got over ten thousand students
from across Mississippi. We are proud to have you and
we know that you are the future of Charlie Kirk's legacy.

Speaker 4 (12:36):
So thank you for being here.

Speaker 3 (12:45):
You know I got I got this whole speech written,
and I'm not gonna deliver any.

Speaker 4 (12:48):
Of what I had written.

Speaker 3 (12:49):
I'm just gonna speak from the heart, because that's what
Charlie would so often do. And I, you know, when
I think about what we lost six weeks ago, it
feels like forever ago. When I was in a meeting
in the West Wing and one of my staff members
came in and said that Charlie had been shot, and

(13:11):
then I looked at my phone and I saw all
the text messages and realized that my dear friend had
been very seriously injured. Now in the West Wing, at
that time, we actually thought that Charlie had a chance.
We didn't know that he was eventually going to pass away.
There were initial reports from the medical team that maybe
things were going okay, and of course, eventually Charlie took

(13:32):
his last breath and went home to be with his
Lord and Savior. I remember thinking at that moment, first,
of course, about Erica and the children they've got. Their oldest,
their daughter is very similar in age to our youngest child,
and I remember thinking, what a terrible tragedy for that family.
And the second thing that I thought was what a

(13:53):
terrible tragedy for the United States of America. Because Charlie
wasn't just a political figure. He wasn't a guy who
went around campus and said very interesting things and hosted
all of these debates. He was a person who, particularly
to the young people of this country, to all of you,
he had the very best advice. And I think that's

(14:15):
the most important way for me to honor Charlie, which
is to.

Speaker 4 (14:17):
Repeat that advice something I found true in my own life.

Speaker 3 (14:21):
Charlie wanted all of you, whatever life path you chose,
whatever career you chose, whatever you ultimately did for a living,
Charlie wanted you more than anything to invest in the
things that were worth having, to build a life that
was worth building.

Speaker 4 (14:39):
And that started. The most important advice he ever.

Speaker 3 (14:42):
Gave you was fall in love, get married, and start
a family. And I can't honor Charlie without repeating that
most important advice. Now, most of you are probably too
young to have found the person you're gonna spend the
rest of your life with. Some of you are lucky

(15:04):
enough to have found that person already. But I will
tell you, if you're as lucky and blessed as I
have been, it hits you like a ton of bricks.
And I have found that person, and my lovely wife, Usha,
our second lady who is here with us today. She's
sitting in the audience somewhere, I don't know where, But
I love you, honey, and have children.

Speaker 4 (15:27):
That's something Charlie also always told. I grew up in
a generation. I'm forty one years old.

Speaker 3 (15:33):
I'm a millennial, and if you're being uncharitable, you would
call me a geriatric millennial, which I really hate. I
really hate being called a geriatric millennial. But here I am,
at forty one, talking to all of you like I've
got great wisdom. Here's the thing. The one regret, the
only regret that I really have in my entire life,
and I've made plenty of mistakes, but the one regret

(15:55):
that I have is that, frankly, I wish we had
start having kids sooner, because when you're a young father,
you realize what an incredible blessing they are. But they're
also very exhausting. And I know here at all, Miss,
we like to party a lot, and I know.

Speaker 4 (16:11):
It all Miss.

Speaker 3 (16:11):
Occasionally some of you will have a few drinks on
a Friday or Saturday, or hopefully not a Tuesday night,
but I'm sure that happens from time to time here
in sec country.

Speaker 4 (16:22):
But here's the thing.

Speaker 3 (16:24):
When you go out until three in the morning and
wake up at six am per class.

Speaker 4 (16:30):
The thing that I've learned in my old age is.

Speaker 3 (16:32):
That incredible energy God actually meant it for another purpose,
and that purpose was to help take care of a family.
So while you're young, have those babies, if you're able to.
That's something Charlie said all the time. But if you
think of that advice, if you think of that advice,

(16:55):
Charlie wanted you to get married. He wanted you to
fall in love. He wanted you to build a family.
He wanted you to find a vocation. That was the
advice that he gave on campuses. But that's not just
about you. That's also about our country and about our government.
Because while you have the freedom to live life as
you so choose, I have got a responsibility as your

(17:15):
vice president to make the American dream as accessible as possible.
And this is why, my friends, this is why we
care about all the things that we care about. Why
do I care so much about having a secure border
in the United States of America, It's because I believe
that when you let in a flood of illegal immigration,

(17:36):
what it does is it drives down the wages of
young people and makes housing unaffordable for the entire American population.

Speaker 4 (17:43):
That's why we close down the border.

Speaker 3 (17:53):
The lamps will say our immigration policy is about hating immigration,
hating immigrants. We don't hate anybody. We love our fellow citizens,
and because we want them to have the American dream,
we shut that border down the very first day that
Donald J.

Speaker 4 (18:08):
Trump was the President of the United States.

Speaker 1 (18:11):
It's racist.

Speaker 3 (18:18):
I care about you being able to afford a home,
which is why we fought so hard to fix the
broken policies of the Biden administration.

Speaker 4 (18:26):
I want a lot of you.

Speaker 3 (18:27):
I'm sure there are military veterans in this room right now.
I'm sure there are a lot of people who will
join the military in the future, and we're proud of you.
But part of America First is ensuring that we never
ask you to go and do the American people's business
unless it is in the interest of the United States
of America.

Speaker 4 (18:47):
And that's how we honor the sacrifice of our truths.

Speaker 1 (18:50):
Yeah, shut up, fee.

Speaker 3 (18:56):
And that's why, my friends, what's why we care so
much about free speech. As Charlie lived and died for
the basic principle that we ought to be able to
talk about our differences, we ought to be able to
debate them, and we ought to have faith that the
best way to make sure that the best idea wins
is to actually just have a discussion. And that is

(19:17):
what this event is all about. That is what Turning
Points USA is all about. And I am so proud,
and most of all, I'm so grateful to each and
every person, whether you're a Republican or a Democrat, for
coming out and honoring one of the most important parts
of Charlie's legacy, because we're going to have a discussion tonight,
and that's what Charlie would want us to do.

Speaker 1 (19:38):
This is the tremortary show. Condom Valley's power talk here.
Here he was talking about the New York City mayoral
debate and the act sents. Well, let him describe listening.

Speaker 5 (19:55):
On another note tonight the New York City mayoral debate
last night, But I'm less interested in what the candidates
actually said, and I'm more interested.

Speaker 1 (20:03):
And why we keep doing this.

Speaker 6 (20:05):
Governor Affairs port Meliss Russo, Senior politics editor at Politico,
Sally Goldenberg and Telemundo forty seven anchor Rose Arena Breton
this is a two.

Speaker 5 (20:14):
Hour debate, all right, So we have talked about this,
and I don't just I just don't get why we
do this, who started it, when this started? But whenever
it is a Spanish name, we are all suddenly required
and expected to shape shift into the perfect Spanish accent.
Normal everyday news people do it all the time. They
forget years of training, They forget their non regional addiction

(20:35):
that Telemundo anchors. By the way, Rose Arena Brenton, just
say Rose Arena.

Speaker 1 (20:39):
Breton's racist.

Speaker 4 (20:40):
I know.

Speaker 1 (20:41):
I'll listen to Rob say your name like be American
about it? Why you got an act like you're in
Mexico City about it? I guess what do you say?
But the point that he's making is we only do
it with one category. Ennerdy is that Irish. Let's say
his name Irish. He makes some great point, He's funny.

Speaker 5 (21:00):
Listen, for whatever reason, we all feel the need to
pronounce it like we're living in Mexico, like we're living
in a country where Spanish is the native tongue. That's
not the case here in the US. Or also not Yeah,
he said it. I couldn't understand what.

Speaker 1 (21:12):
He was saying.

Speaker 5 (21:13):
As I've said before, I am Irish, And if I
was moderating that debate, would the host to introduce me
as Robert James Finnerty. Don't you know that it's a
lad that is Robert James Finnerty. If the host was Chinese,
would they then introduce that person with a Chinese accent?
I don't think so, So stop doing it when they're Spanish.

(21:34):
Just stop it. Also, we don't need to say all
three names when they are Spanish. No one describes me
as Robert James Finnerty. I'm just Rob Finnerty. We don't
need to say kill mar Abrego Garcia. It's just killmar Garcia.
I don't know who started this, but enough's enough. Stop,
just stop.

Speaker 1 (21:52):
I know Alexandria Cassio Cortes, he's a bullfighter or something. Bullfighters.
In political assassins, we say all three names. Think about
it all the politically Harvey, you know, we say we
say all their names. All right, Yeah, they're they're still
working and the Democrats are making a big deal. We're here,
we're on the Capitol. Listen to Jake mount Flapper tapers

(22:15):
he and in here. He had a new Mexico Democrat
Congresswiman on time and here she is talking about how
Trump's starving American children.

Speaker 7 (22:20):
This should the Democratic senators from New Mexico, your home state,
vote to open the government so that these SNAP funds
are not at risk.

Speaker 8 (22:30):
Let me be clear. The administration is choosing to starve
American children with money that they already have appropriate the
White House. This is a choice by the White House.

Speaker 7 (22:48):
This is also this is also a choice by Senate
Democrats to not vote to open the government.

Speaker 1 (22:53):
Yes it is to go Jake wait to mile flap
it out there, Yes it is. Yes, it's the Democrats.
They're saying they got this extra money around. California is
among the states su and the Trump administration over the
SNAP funding cuts during this this shutdown. Here, let this
Democrat woman be clear.

Speaker 8 (23:10):
I let me just be clear. The money for contingency
plans is sitting there. That is why the states are
suing the White Houses withholding funds from three weeks worth
of SNAP funds. Yeah, yeah, well you may not be
a big deal to you, but.

Speaker 1 (23:23):
Let's a big guilty for Gris.

Speaker 8 (23:27):
This is a big deal that literally are feeding their
children short shows accounts.

Speaker 4 (23:33):
It's a short term.

Speaker 8 (23:34):
At the end of the day, people need to be
able to feed their families, and Saturday is when those.

Speaker 4 (23:39):
Funds are also.

Speaker 7 (23:41):
Congress, why not asking the Senate Democrats from New Mexico
to vote to open the government so that the SNAP funds.

Speaker 8 (23:49):
I am here in the House of Representatives. It is
shut down. I am fighting to get the government reopened.
I am fighting to get funding put back into SNAP
that is already existent. And I am fighting for the
American people. I am here. But show me a single
Republican that is here. Not a single one is here
to make sure that Americans are fed on Saturday. That
is why I am here.

Speaker 1 (24:09):
That's why I am here. Jake, I'm a Mancherryan candidate.
I am MK ultra. I will not answer your questions.
I will say there's nothing we can do. There's absolutely
nothing because Chuck Schumer's told me so. Chuck got triggered.
Listen to listen to Chucky boys shooter.

Speaker 9 (24:27):
It's not wait a minute, excuse me. It is not
a dispute. It is fact. They can use it and
the Republicans say it okay, but there's you know, only
five or six billion, and it's not cost eight billion
monthly just to administer.

Speaker 4 (24:39):
I mean, if anything of it only lasts, it.

Speaker 9 (24:41):
Does not cost five or six billion to administer. There's
enough money to start feeding people right away. Six billions
a lot of money, and they're using it for other things.
Twenty billion for Argentina, hundreds of millions for Christy Nomes
playing who are we kidding here?

Speaker 10 (24:57):
Yes, what happens once it runs out?

Speaker 9 (24:59):
It only lasts two three weeks and in the class fall.
Then the bottom line is they can fund it just
as in twenty nineteen, just as another shutdowns for a
long period of time.

Speaker 11 (25:10):
And they also give the contingency fund, which is six
billion dollars, which gets you nearly a month. Three weeks
runs out, then they can pass Senator Luhan or Senator
Holly's bill, both of which we support. We know that
there'll be sixty votes for that. Why aren't they calling
it up. They're not calling it up because the House

(25:30):
isn't here to pass it.

Speaker 3 (25:32):
That's the way it works.

Speaker 11 (25:33):
The House would have to come here, they probably would
have to vote on the Epstein file.

Speaker 1 (25:36):
At Senator Klobacher going it now into the Epstein files.

Speaker 11 (25:40):
Listen to this, But they're choosing to let kids go
hungry instead of having to vote on the Epstein files.
There's no doubt about it. They have been out for
six weeks on vacation.

Speaker 9 (25:50):
Just think if they have all this money for Argentina
and all this money for other things, they have enough
money to keep funding SNAP and they know it. And
I just want to say what Luhan said, Johnson just lies.
He lied about on immigration on the undocumented. He's lying
about this. He just outright lies, plain and simple. It

(26:13):
is not illegal and his own president has done it.

Speaker 1 (26:16):
That means they get extra money to buy things. Matt
Wall said, the people who are funding the programmer are
living more modestly than the people who are on the program.
Absolutely outrageous and disgusting.

Speaker 5 (26:28):
There are forty two million people in this country that
need food stamps on a weekly basis, and we're saying
people deliberately instead of Americans because most of the people
that are on food stamps aren't even from this country.
Forty five percent of Afghanistan immigrants are on food stamps,
forty two percent of Somali if, thirty four percent of

(26:51):
every immigrant from Iraq, twenty three percent of Haitians, fifty
nine percent of all illegal aliens are collecting food stamps,
meaning that most of the people getting food stamps from
the US government and the US taxpayer are not even Americans.

Speaker 1 (27:09):
You know what King Caerrey would do here, I would
say the program should not be allowed to restart until
every recipient reapplies and they're approved, and let's get some
stricter standards on this. I mean, forty two million. I
would think, if you're legit and you really need it,
and I'm not against it, people need help. If you're

(27:29):
really legit, you would welcome this audit. How did this happen?
Why did this happen?

Speaker 6 (27:35):
September they passed it, They voted for the Democrats, all
of them voted for it. In December, they passed it,
They voted for it in January, and they voted for
it again in March. What's changed is a putal co environment.
They're base demanded that they shut down the government, and
they shut it down. And now they're looking to play
the to play the blame game and try to pin

(27:56):
it on Republicans or try to pin it on the President,
when even CNN's own poll shows that they're losing at
that argument because American people aren't fools, but they play
them like they are.

Speaker 5 (28:07):
Well, I mean, just to follow up on Dana's point,
I don't know how we ended up with one or
eight million Americans.

Speaker 1 (28:12):
That's right, gopplemental benefits. I don't know how that happened.

Speaker 10 (28:14):
Assisted Trevor Cherry Show on The Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (28:18):
It's called Deliver Me from Nowhere. It was projected at
an opening highest twenty five million with a fifteen million
worst case scenario, nine million weekend debut. It costs sixty
million to produce, another fifty million to promote. So let's

(28:38):
do the math here. Let's see they break even. Point
about this is going to eed about two hundred million
dollars to break even on this. Bruce Springsteen, bad Boy
thought everybody want to go out and watch a a
bio on him. The Freddie Mercury Bio movie grossed about
a billion with a b worldwide. Bob Dylan grossed one

(29:01):
hundred and forty million, Elton John hit one hundred ninety
five million, and Bruce Ringsteen weekend debut of nine million.
And again they were hoping twenty five fifteen million worst
case scenario. Well that's what happens. Bud Light when you
lose part of your fan base. Your fan base was
the working class. They weren't the Jasmine Crocket AOC, Chuck Schumer,

(29:25):
Nancy Pelosi group. No, Bruce, I think you knew. The
people that supported you liked your music. They actually counted
the days until Friday so they could listen to your music,
crack a cold pbr and play some pool. But then

(29:48):
you turn on your fans, Bruce, you sold out, buddy,
Oh yeah you did. You stabbed him in the back.
You just stabbed us all in the back, said we
were fascists and racist because we voted for Trump. Well
yeah he said all that. Uh he he left his fans.
That's that's why that happened. Well he went, well, well,

(30:10):
go oh go Broke, Colbert, Howard Stern or Springsteen. Listen
to what the Washington Press Corps is doing. Speaker Johnson
here talking about all the posts that they've been putting out.
They probably go to the Media Research Council the White
House does and get some information because they track this stuff.

(30:32):
Listen to this.

Speaker 10 (30:33):
Five to one margin. The Capitol Hill Press Corps has
tweeted more about the House calendar during the shutdown than
the negative consequences of the Democrat shutdown, than the troubles
that we have, the hardships that are being experienced because
of the troop pay and Wick funding and flights grounded
and snap funding. You guys are writing more about the

(30:54):
House calendar than the real pain that's being inflicted on
the American people.

Speaker 1 (30:57):
And now they don't care. Congress and Brian mass I
like him. He's a black Republican, so we know what
that means. Rights. Yeah, here he is. He's good down
in Florida to say.

Speaker 6 (31:07):
They're going to prioritize funding feminism in Africa over the
food stamps of their own people.

Speaker 10 (31:14):
This assistant Trevor carry Show on The Valley's Power Talk
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