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March 7, 2025 • 39 mins
The guys put the micoscope on the Liberal Paramecia in Congress
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
General, Are you ready to get going?

Speaker 2 (00:04):
I am, sir. Once again.

Speaker 1 (00:08):
The re era I'm calling us the re era are
era reindustrialization, renewal, rejection. I feel like I feel like
Donald Trump has a sense of duty. Does it seem
like there's a more of a little spring and his

(00:31):
step than his Trump won.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
I think he looks at this and says, look, I've
got you know, four years, and it's diminishing every day.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
And these are dog years, yes, I mean the pace
of what's happening here, these are dog years.

Speaker 2 (00:48):
Absolutely. And you know, if I were ever elected president,
I would get a you know, big glass jar and
put a marble in for every day that I would
be the president, or jellybean or jelly bean, and I
would take one out every day at the end, you know.

Speaker 1 (01:03):
And I thought, you put jelly beans in, Yeah, you
put them.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
In, but that you take them out so that you
can see that the level of the marbles going down
as you are winds forward.

Speaker 1 (01:13):
Oh, I would I would put my jelly bean. I'd
put a jelly bean in every time I do something
positive for the country.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
I'm just talking about. So you have a constant visual
reminder of how much time you have left to do
what you said you were going to do. Well.

Speaker 1 (01:27):
I guess I'm a A. I want to build from up.
I want jelly beans to go in. You want to
fill the jelly beans and then pull them out one
at a time.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
I need them?

Speaker 1 (01:37):
Yeah? Reindustrialization?

Speaker 2 (01:39):
M hm?

Speaker 1 (01:40):
Did I am I hearing this right? That we that
that Trump team has attracted almost two trillion with a
T which stands for trouble. Now two trillion dollars of
investment in the American can heartland not California, right, not

(02:06):
not the Beltway, the heartland? Am I hearing this right?
This is these plants are coming to Red states.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
It's amazing how much Piper, It's amazing how much cheaper
it is to build in Iowa and Ohio than it
is to build in New York City.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
Or you want to go how why would you want
to go build there? I look, Vivik's going to run
for governor. Dave Yost is running for governor. We already
know that the VEK is going to be advocating for
no income tax in Ohio. I'm hoping Dave Yost will
put that on his platform. I think at some point
in time in the very near future. Before the end

(02:45):
of this decade, Ohio will be an income tax free state.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
I think we should start with no income tax for strippers.
I think that's no tear.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
Yeah, there's no tax on tips.

Speaker 2 (02:56):
It's fair. I mean they have they have a big
clothing budget, and I think it's fair.

Speaker 1 (03:01):
Lap dances. Is that a Is that a tip? That's
a lap dance at tip? Or is it not a tip?

Speaker 2 (03:07):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (03:08):
I think if there's no tax on tips probably gets
in the way of the lap dance because a tip
is for service already performed. Here. This is you're paying
for a lap dance in real time. So I think
the no tax on tap tips is bad for lap dance,
the lap dance community.

Speaker 2 (03:26):
I think you're probably right about that.

Speaker 1 (03:27):
So AnyWho. The law of unintended consequences. But reindustrialization, it's
it's coming. It's already moving at a breakneck frenetic pace.
The big Taiwan semiconductor announcement automotive, that's almost a national

(03:48):
security issue with Taiwan because got China's attention, isn't it.

Speaker 2 (03:52):
In Ninety eight percent of the chips that used in
the world other than lays are made in Taiwan. And
you know, if Taiwan were to be taken over or
in a war, those factories destroyed, that knowledge is frankly lost.

Speaker 1 (04:08):
I think we should Why wouldn't we, Why wouldn't Lays
or whoever owns Lays Freeedo Lay. I think, build a
great big chip plant in Taiwan.

Speaker 2 (04:16):
I think that's fair.

Speaker 1 (04:17):
Yeah, potato chip plant. Right.

Speaker 2 (04:19):
Of course they call them crisps or something like they
do in England, which is ridiculous.

Speaker 1 (04:23):
The reindustrialization is coming back to the heartland. It is
happening in Ohio and er ill a Lucky Palmer. You're
going to hear more and more about this guy, Lucky
Palmer and his squad of geeks and engineers that are
figuring out how to do unmanned drones, unmanned other aerial vehicles,

(04:44):
even unmanned submersi, submersives, submersibles, submersibles. Thank you so, at
least it looks like warfare if when the next wars happen,
don't need to result in scalps being taken from a
youth of any country, any nation. Of course, let's not.

(05:06):
Let's call these wars. At this point in time in
American history, what it is. These are wars that can
be avoided.

Speaker 2 (05:14):
These are investment opportunities for.

Speaker 1 (05:15):
Wealthy now, investment opportunities, and little teaser. We're going to
break down exactly what we believe and I think exactly
what we believe is happening in Ukraine, Russia. Putin Zelenski
State Department, the whole history there. We're going to cover

(05:35):
that a little bit later in the show. Please stick
around from that, especially if you've got a friend or
a family member that is still advocating for Ukraine and
Zelenski and they think that everything Trump's doing is bad, bad, bad.
It's somehow this is about spreading democracy in Ukraine that
it was such a joke. We're going to cover that
in a little bit. To stick around for that. But

(05:57):
the reindustrialization, this is, this is real stuff. These are
going to be real jobs. Yes, Americans, Ohioans, Midwesterners, You're
going to need to probably catch some training, get some education,
get ready for these jobs. But these these plants and
industries are coming back. They're coming back here. We're reshoring

(06:20):
the old, we're bringing in the new and a lot
of money, the investment money coming in. It's going to
help your infrastructure. It's going to help your schools, it's
gonna help your property values rise, it's gonna help with
the build out. Look at the build out of John
Glenn Airport. True our new terminal. We're now the fastest

(06:40):
growing city in the United States. Did you hear that?

Speaker 2 (06:42):
I did not hear that. I thought that my waistline
was the fastest growing entity.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
Were apparently now the fastest growing city in the United States.
And we broadcast here from the heartland. This is Columbus, Ohio.
iHeartMedia six to ten WTVN for the defense of the
American People. I am Attorney Brad Kaffel, and that is
Attorney Eric Willison. Everyone still asks who's the general? Who's
the general? We put him back in the I'm not
going to say we're gonna put in the closet. I

(07:06):
don't want you to think that we're gonna We don't
stow you away in a mop closet. But everyone wants
to know who the general is. No one's allowed to know.

Speaker 2 (07:14):
Well, I'm a man of mystery.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
You are intrigue, right. This is also a time walk
in closet stormy in. This is also a time of renewal.
Does it feel like a sense of national renewal.

Speaker 2 (07:27):
It absolutely does. It's a time of thinking about things
in a very different fashion where we go there to
Washington and we say what can we get rid of?
Not what can we grow? And we get away from
all of these these Democrat talking points about oh, we're
going to invest in this and invest in that.

Speaker 1 (07:48):
Government doesn't make anything.

Speaker 2 (07:50):
The government doesn't invest anything.

Speaker 1 (07:51):
It takes your money and puts it where they want.
And you're the We have been broadcasting on our show
for many years about the crony capitalism, the marriage between
big this, Big that, and their puppets in Congress who
sign off on little paragraphs and omnimus bills and create

(08:14):
NGOs which are nothing more than pass through entities.

Speaker 2 (08:20):
All right, That means the money comes in because right
through that.

Speaker 1 (08:24):
NGO to another non profit agency pass through and then
eventually lands in someone's personal bank account.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
Right And you need like a like a supercomputer or
an AI to figure all this out. Oh, oh yeah,
that's what's happening. You got one of those. That's what's happening.
So you have you need a rocket scientist to figure it.

Speaker 1 (08:46):
Une dollars ten million dollars goes to X Y Z, right,
it moves to that executive agency, and then the check
is cut through the banks to the NGO. Boom, right
out the ng O to the nonprofit. That nonprofit it
has a leadership team that averages salaries of five hundred
thousand dollars. And those people might be on a couple

(09:08):
different boards for different entities.

Speaker 2 (09:11):
Brothers and cousins of those who are the ones who
passed the legislation for.

Speaker 1 (09:16):
The kind of yeah, yeah, it's a soup kitchen for
the Beltway class and Americans. Man, by the time twenty
twenty six gets here, next year the midterms, you do
not want to be the Democrats. And after the brig,
let's put a little microscope. Remember when we were in
great school, the little microscope, you know, twist the dial

(09:38):
getting We're going to bring those little bugs into focus.
Let's take a closer look at who these people are,
what's left of the Democrat Party. They're scary little buggers,
aren't they they are. We're bringing the microscope in on
the old school nineteen fifty sixty seventy microscopes in the

(10:00):
petri dish. Yeah, and you put the film on it,
and you put the glass on top of that and
take a.

Speaker 2 (10:05):
Look, and you scrape something off of your hand or
off of your teeth, and people are going, oh, my goodness,
that's in my mouth.

Speaker 1 (10:11):
That's what I saw with the Democrats at the State
of the Union.

Speaker 2 (10:15):
Paramesiums, What paramesums?

Speaker 1 (10:19):
What the hell's a parimesum.

Speaker 2 (10:20):
It's the type of germ. It's a single celled creature
that might not be a germ, or I think the
plural might be parimesa.

Speaker 1 (10:27):
For hey, look that was political jiu jitsu on Life
TV the State of Union, and it's our first it's
our first chance to comment on that before we comment
on that. The difference between Trump forty five and Trump
forty seven is that I don't think he's watching the
news at the level he was before. Now I understand

(10:48):
why the guy was glued to the news because, like,
what in the because the war was happening right outside
his window, I mean, like it was coming at him.
So in twenty seventeen, twenty eighteen, I'm like, why is
Trump just sticking around? Why is he commenting on the
news all the time. He kept calling it fake news,
fake news, fake news, Like, dude, do your job well.

(11:11):
Now we know that's where the revolution was happening. That
was the coup. The coup was coming at him, and
he didn't totally realize the coup was coming at him,
but the coup was happening on CNN, on MSNBC, there
were elements of the coup on Fox News. They were
the coup was all over Washington Post, the coup was

(11:33):
all over New York Times, and he just lost his
crap because that was catching his attention. It's like, this
is Nutso guys, this is fake. It's not true. So
he had to pay attention to the news, and all of.

Speaker 2 (11:50):
That served a definite purpose. By the way, I mean, now,
no one trusts CNN, no one trusts MSNBC, no one
trusts CNN.

Speaker 1 (11:57):
I haven't heard, and I'm paying very close attention to
what's going on because I still don't like the world's
richest man right there where he is.

Speaker 2 (12:06):
But I love it.

Speaker 1 (12:08):
I'm okay, I'm okay. I like what's what's going on.
I'm cool with that, but I just don't like. I
don't like that much money in the halls of power.
But it is what it is. Right now, Why does.

Speaker 2 (12:18):
He do you think that he's really there to make
a profit.

Speaker 1 (12:22):
Not at all. But he has outside influence and we
just gota keepn eye on. I don't look. If the
shoe was on the other foot, if this was Biden
and Bezos or Kamala or whatever her name is, and Cubanos,
Cuban and Mark you, we would write we be looking
for our pointy Boyonette Bayonets to pull the ends of

(12:44):
our rifle.

Speaker 2 (12:44):
I don't think I would, because I would know that
that Bezos or Cuban or who's the guy on Facebook
zucker but Zuckerbergs. The thing is they would only be
in an advisory capacity and that's all that Muscats. He
has no power to.

Speaker 1 (12:59):
Do any I'm like I said, I'm cool with it.
I like everything's happening. Finally we have someone that is
going in that is bulletproof, politically bulletproof. We have at
least two individuals in there that are politically bulletproof, which and.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
Personally bulletproof as far as people going after you financially
you're not going to bankrupt Elon Musk.

Speaker 1 (13:21):
And physically bulletproof for Donald Trump, yes, I've never seen
anyone dodge a bullet matrix style like.

Speaker 2 (13:27):
That fight, fight fight, he says, So we know who's.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
Not politically bulletproof, and that's um A Newsom. Pardon me
in California.

Speaker 2 (13:36):
This is an easy mistake to me.

Speaker 1 (13:38):
Now is saying on a his gottle podcast because he's kind,
he's trying to he's gonna he has his own podcast.

Speaker 2 (13:44):
He's gonna try to broadcast Brown.

Speaker 1 (13:46):
Now he's gonna be he's gonna try to brow out
in twenty six and twenty eight rather and he's rebranding.
Newsom's rebranding. No one's falling for it, zero zilch, nada.
To Donald Trump. The difference between Trump forty five and
Trump forty seven many, but a big diff is he's

(14:06):
not watching the news, he's not reading the newspapers, he's
not reading the press clippings. And if he is, he's
not coming unhinged. He's now surrounded by men and women
who are loyal to the cause, not to him.

Speaker 2 (14:20):
That's a key difference. There a bunch of big government
Republicans last time, and now those guys are all gone.

Speaker 1 (14:27):
He found men and women who had been rowing in
the same direction as the rest of us and Donald Trump,
and more importantly, they were rowing in this direction before
Donald Trump was ever president. He just needed to find
the right school of fish.

Speaker 2 (14:47):
He found it absolutely.

Speaker 1 (14:48):
It took a little while this little fish finder to
get around, but his first fish finder in sixteen, he
was just looking around the Beltway.

Speaker 2 (14:58):
Well, yeah, you'd pull people like Ryan's previous as your
chief of staff. You'd pull up people.

Speaker 1 (15:04):
They're all sorts of you go fishing. I went fishing
last week down the Keys. We brought on a big
red snapper. Oh man, a beautiful two big, beautiful red snappers.
Can't keep them. Had to go back bring in something
that I can't keep, giant fish, amberjack. You don't want

(15:25):
to eat that, I mean, So take me where I
can go find big fish that fight that I can
put on ice filet and cook up tonight with little
salt and pepper. Trump forty five was stuck with with
junk fish. His fish finder was over junkfish, and he

(15:46):
had the wrong He was over the wrong school. Now
he knows where the honey hole is, and he's pulled
out leadership that we already know by their prior writings
where they come from. They are loyal to the cause.
And Donald Trump, that's a big diff That is a

(16:06):
huge diff Now, this little this the state of the Union,
the political jiu jitsu that was on live TV. General.
I don't know if I texted you. I texted a
handful of friends at night that had the feeling of
an A Trump's Gettysburg address. It was like his address

(16:28):
to the nation on what was going to happen. Whether
you like it or not. It's a sense of duty
and you're gonna have to bear with me. That's what
I took away from it, right.

Speaker 2 (16:42):
I think that a lot of to jump back for
a moment to get into the people that you've talked
about that Trump has surrounded himself with. Now you know,
everyone says, well, you know they're going to get there
and they're going to try to benefit themselves. Well, I
think that the people that are there, whether it be
Cash Bettel or Pam Bondi or this the guy that
runs a treasury or any of these people, they're there

(17:04):
to benefit themselves by making the United States greater.

Speaker 1 (17:08):
Now they're making deals that are in the American people's
best interests.

Speaker 2 (17:12):
And they're benefiting themselves.

Speaker 1 (17:14):
They don't have benefactors. Lutnik's not there because someone someone,
some organization put Lutnik there. Uh, he's these these men
and women are there because they have proven their stripes,
They've earned their stripes, and they're ruining for the cause
and the causes of the American people, both Democrats and

(17:37):
Republicans and independence everybody, because everybody's getting ripped off, right,
the the money laundering, the kickback, the briberies, the extortions.
I'm sure some murders are thrown in here left and right.
Everyone has been a victim of what's been happening. And

(17:59):
I'm I'm going to take it back to well, we
can go back to twenty fourteen, for sure, we can
talk about that because that's where the pardons start. So
we're gonna put the microscope on the last decade and
a little bit where also we still got to put
the microscope on these looney bins that sat down. Let's

(18:19):
talk about that for seven before Trump even really got rolling,
brilliant he said something to the extent I know that
nothing I say will make you happy. It was over
before he even got rolling these people.

Speaker 2 (18:35):
And then but then he proved it because he saluted
the little kid up THEREJ Daniels.

Speaker 1 (18:41):
You know, with the Bregent Daniels, please.

Speaker 2 (18:43):
Yes, thirteen Special Agent Daniels thirteen brain surgeries to for
his cancer, and even that they could not applaud he
not just said what he was going to do, then
he did it.

Speaker 1 (18:57):
These people make aoc look mean stream. They would root
for cancer if Trump funded research to cure it, because
that's essentially what they did. Mike dark Horse, John Fetterman
is keep an eye on him. He's looking and sounding
actually normal like the rest of America. I was waiting
for Senator John Fetterman to get up and walk across

(19:22):
the aisle and have a seat with the Republicans. This
is for the defense of the American people. I am
Attorney Brad Coffel. That is a general. A couple quick
shameless plugs. First, if you have an unwanted government intrusion,
someone government agent wants to come talk to your son

(19:44):
or daughter, maybe you and you're not really in the
mood to talk to the man about something.

Speaker 2 (19:51):
They used to call him nosy police officers.

Speaker 1 (19:54):
If you get the knock on the door, just say hey,
I've done nothing wrong, happy to talk to you. I
just like to talk to a lawyer. First, get some
get some counsel. Right. That's even if you haven't done aything.
If you have anyone. If the man shows up at
your door, don't talk to the man. Let your lawyer

(20:14):
do the talking for the man. Especially if you're innocent.
We can do a whole show on that. Just get
a hold of a lawyer to We will do a
little talking for you. If the school wants to expel
your kid for something, give us a ring. Love doing.
I love doing the school cases at this stage of
my career. Don't call us if you want to sue somebody.

(20:37):
We don't do that stuff. But if the man shows up,
we're there for you. A plane close, especially if a
plane close, agent show up your serious, serious stuff. Second
shameless plug and you can reach up. Six eighty four
eleven hundred is my law firm's number. And if you

(20:57):
want the general, we can hook you up with the
general as well. If you want to comment on the
show I have, I'm opening up my ex formerly Twitter.
It's at Brad Kaufel and substack at Brad Coffle. I
haven't looked to see how many subscribers. When I first
announced my substack, I had seven subscribers. I haven't looked

(21:21):
to see how many I have now, But we're gonna
put some more stuff on there. Second shameless plug maybe
third is Chesz, Rown, Chevrolet, Buick GMC.

Speaker 2 (21:31):
What would be shameless would be not to buy your
car there.

Speaker 1 (21:34):
Family owned serving Central Ohio for over fifty years. It's
right up there in the turning blue County of Delaware.
And maybe it'll go red again, but it was red
that it goes purple. Now it appears to be blue.
Chevy Buick GMC. And by the way, general there are
some Chevy, Buick and GMC are cranking out some really

(21:55):
cool designs. They are love them. And my favorite pick
up truck is at Sierra. I love the Denali suv
as well.

Speaker 2 (22:06):
That they didn't they rename the Denali the McKinley.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
That's right, the GMC. You're so good, the GMC McKinley. Well, uh,
hey uh. If you don't want to write a check
for your new or used vehicle, that's cool that they
will do on site financing right there for you. And
if something goes wrong, got the warranty, They got the

(22:31):
service center right there. You got it everything you need
to know. The customer reviews for a car dealership are
I mean in the same line with a five star hotel.
I mean, it's nuts to have so many high marks,
high reviews from Chess Round customers online. Crazy crazy, but

(22:53):
check out Che's Round. They are closed on Sunday, of course,
and people, as all businesses should be closed on Sunday.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
There are people who think like you too, and so
you know that your your money is going to a
place that does nice things for the community, and that
they sponsored this show and they're they're they're helping to
get this message out for a reason, correct, because they
know that if this message gets out far and wide,

(23:21):
the United States will be better off.

Speaker 1 (23:23):
And you know, they never even asked us to do anything. No,
they we put out a call for sponsorships and we
had a bunch we picked from this We picked this
family and didn't really know them at the time, met
them and really fantastic people like them, love them. But
they never asked for one thing in return. They never

(23:44):
even asked for us to mention them on air. There's
no written agreement, nothing which.

Speaker 2 (23:48):
Makes us want to spu you know, sponsor them and
and give them the problems that they need business.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
And that they deserve your word is your bond handshake
is as good as an enforceable cond We need to
get back to that. Keep it local. Speaking of local,
you mentioned Special Agent DJ Daniels. These people that sat
down to the State of the Union in general are
anti first responders. Think about that. They would sit down

(24:16):
for first responders if they wouldn't stand up for anybody
else in there, except for keep prolonging the war in Ukraine.
These people are anti first responders.

Speaker 2 (24:29):
This goes, by the way, all the way back to
the twenty sixteen version of Trump when he got in there,
I think it was the third State of the Union address,
and he talked about how we had record low African
American unemployment, record, low Latino unemployment, record, low female unemployment,
and all of them just sat on their hands because

(24:51):
they're not about is it well, they're not about that.
What they're about is getting credit for that. They don't
want Trump to get it.

Speaker 1 (24:58):
What is it? What is there a modus operandi? What
is their code? What is their DNA? What makes me
take Schumer and Pelosi out of it? They're just political
hack opportunists. They'll say and do anything they needed to
do to stay in power. Same thing with Gavin Newscombe
A pardon me, Gavin Newsom What about these other people

(25:22):
that are there like this, this crocket lady al what's
his name?

Speaker 2 (25:28):
The al Green?

Speaker 1 (25:30):
Al Green? Who that guy who got escorted out waving
the kne wasn't your brother's sergeant at arms?

Speaker 2 (25:36):
He was. He was the sergeant of Arms for the
United States Senate for about two years, okay, Deputy sergeant
of arms before that for about ten years.

Speaker 1 (25:45):
So would he have been involved had he been there
in showing mister what's his name out the door?

Speaker 2 (25:53):
No, because that's that's the house. That's the house, and
he was the Senate and the Senate is a smaller chamber,
so they can't when they do a combined and a
group of them, they have to do it over in
the house because the house has more room.

Speaker 1 (26:04):
General, can you give our listeners any of your insight
as to what is ticking in the minds of what's
remaining the remnants of the Democrat Party.

Speaker 2 (26:16):
These people didn't come here to help you. They didn't
come here to make life better for you. They dropped
into your radio voice there. Well they I mean, they
came to enrich themselves. They came for these projects like USAID.
They came for this slush fund and to go in
with seventeen dollars in their bank account and leave with

(26:37):
seventeen million. That's why they are there. And they see
Trump as an existential threat to these things.

Speaker 1 (26:44):
So the Crocket person fake? Look her up real quick.
What's her name, Jasmine Crockett, Jasmin Crokat. I'm gonna look
her up real quick.

Speaker 2 (26:52):
But it's as fake as a three dollar bill, and
they they're out there try and get till the two.
It's not that the two dollars bill is a real thing.
If mister Jefferson has to be consulted, let.

Speaker 1 (27:06):
Me look for Congressman Jasmine Crockett represents portions of Dallas. Okay,
so this is on the folks in Dallas who put her,
voted her into office. I'm going to look up some
more information. But she's making TikTok videos. I don't I

(27:27):
don't care, right, but they're tone deaf? Is what is
their operating code? I don't think they're there just I
don't think Crocket's there just for the paycheck.

Speaker 2 (27:38):
I think you're wrong. Well, not the paycheck, certainly, that's
what they're paid is execrable compared to what they desire.
What they want is the money and the trappings that
come from the power.

Speaker 1 (27:50):
Why, well, everyone else, what's wrong with that? Look? Jasmine
Felicia Crockett is an American attorney politician. She got sworn
in January twenty twenty three, so she is running for reelection.
She's got Southern Dallas County, Central Dallas, Dallas love Field Airport.

(28:14):
That's up there by Highland Park. That's she represent Highland
Park and that's Bush Territory. She was born in Saint Louis, Missouri,
nineteen eighty one. She got a Bachelor of Arts at
Rhodes College two thousand and three. She went to law

(28:34):
school at the University of Houston Law Center, then became
a public defender, went out and started her own practice
specialized in civil rights and pro bono cases. Pro bono
also known as not getting paid for activists with Black

(28:55):
Lives Matter movement. So essentially she became she was a
lawyer advocating on behalf of BLM.

Speaker 2 (29:01):
She's like a community organizer. Does that sound familiar?

Speaker 1 (29:05):
And then in twenty twenty she made it into the
State House and then into the House. All right, So
that's her all right, anyway, that's the new Democrat Party.
After the break, let's let's continue to take a look

(29:26):
at I want to take a look at Ukraine and
give you guys some history that I think is beyond dispute. Actually,
I've put a different perspective on Zelenski and Trump. So
there's a There is a Texas Democrat congresswoman named Jasmine

(29:49):
Crockett who's caught my attention, and I'm sure she's caught
your attention if you're paying attention. She is recently, she's
in her first term in Congress. She's from Dallas. Our
last segment, we went into her a little bit of
her background. Can you check to see if she's related
to Davy not Davy Crockett. She's essentially a She left

(30:11):
the politic Defender's office started her own private practice. And
there's really no line between being unemployed and private practice
of your lawyer. Unemployed, self employed and private practice are
the same. It's just a matter of whether or not
you got any money to make it down the phone
ringing and then pro bono representation for activists associated with
Black Lives Matter movement. I'm going to guess that maybe

(30:35):
there was some funding to the BLM there in Dallas,
and I'm going to guess there might have been some
funding that lifted young miss crack Crockett into the US
House of Representatives. So let's take a look here real quick,
biling down our microscope on this Crockett Representative Crockett. The

(30:57):
incumbent was named Eddie Bernice Johnson. Eddie Bernice Johnson. He
announced his retirement in twenty twenty one. Crockett declared her
candidacy for this congressional district with Johnson's endorsement. That helps
she gets the Democrat nomination. She wins the general election

(31:20):
in twenty twenty two, she gets pressed into service and
the worst Congress ever, the one hundred and eighteenth, and
she was a freshman Democrat. Twenty three, twenty four. She's
been a vocal, very vocal against President Trump. That's fine,

(31:41):
that's politics, that's democracy. She's labeled the Trump is an
enemy of the United States, criticizing his actions is undermining
American democracy. She's walked out of Trump's speeches, and now
she is getting challenged by a Republican named Shoulden Daniels,

(32:05):
who has criticized her as a performer rather than a leader.
I get that. Go on your TikTok, join your CCP TikTok.
I'm sure she's on the instagrams as well. You can
catch her on the YouTube's. But put up Congressman Jasmine
Crockett and you can see who the face of the
new Democrat Party is. She's of the Congressional Black Caucus.

(32:28):
Is there a Congressional White Caucus? There is not, And
the Congressional Equality Caucus and the Congressional Progressive Caucus. All right,
so that's the face of the Democrat Party. But then
on the other end of the spectrum, you've got Pocahontas.

Speaker 2 (32:50):
Or Focahontas as they call her sometimes.

Speaker 1 (32:52):
What do you know about Pocahontas.

Speaker 2 (32:54):
She also was a lawyer. She was a teacher at
Harvard for a while. I believe Harvard Law School. I
believe she taught bankruptcy law, and from what I have
discerned from some bankruptcy law attorneys that I know, early
in her career she did write some very interesting law

(33:16):
reviews and things like that regarding bankruptcy. So she has
some mental talent. But she has completely sold out everything
that she had ever believed in.

Speaker 1 (33:28):
She you know who we're talking about. This is Elizabeth.

Speaker 2 (33:29):
Warren, Senator from Connecticut.

Speaker 1 (33:31):
And she is the when you look up Karen in
the Urban Dictionary, it's her picture right. And she was
the one who claimed to be part Native American and
so that she would get or Native American. They are
indigenous to this land. I don't think they I call

(33:52):
indigenous people.

Speaker 2 (33:53):
Well she claimed to be.

Speaker 1 (33:54):
Well, native Americans would be the call it the holist.

Speaker 2 (34:01):
No, Native Americans were the people that were here before
the colonists was then called America. Well no, but when
did they come here? Of course they came here as well.

Speaker 1 (34:10):
So whose only did they take mammoths? Whose land did
the native indigenous people take?

Speaker 2 (34:15):
Well, there's there's a lot of interesting studies going on
where they've found skulls that are fifteen, twenty thirty thousand
years old that actually bear Caucasian features.

Speaker 1 (34:26):
Oh and so better burn that book.

Speaker 2 (34:29):
Well, what happens is that the Native American tribes take
control of these under a treaty, and won't I.

Speaker 1 (34:36):
Didn't even talk about this for show prep. How do
you know this?

Speaker 2 (34:38):
I've read this back in nineteen ninety eight.

Speaker 1 (34:40):
Oh my gosh, nineteen ninety eight. I wasn't reading anything.
I was, oh gosh, okay, let's get back on truck.

Speaker 2 (34:46):
But the point is that she claimed to be an
American Indian and it turned out when they did her
DNA that she has less American Indian in her than
Trump does.

Speaker 1 (34:56):
Was that the same lab that tested that looked at Kennedy's.

Speaker 2 (34:59):
Schoo No, I don't think so. But her claim to
being a Native American was that her grandmother told her
that she was and that she had high cheek bones.
These are quotes.

Speaker 1 (35:13):
All right, here's what I'm pulling up here on my
personal assistant known as chuch Ept for my quick and
I disclose my sources of information for you guys if
I can't authenticate what I say. So this is chuch
ept says. She was born in nineteen hundred and forty
nine in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Probably not a hot bed

(35:38):
of liberal of leftism.

Speaker 2 (35:41):
Would you say, well, it depends how close you are
to the college there. And by the way, on the
skulls kennewick Man, that was that's right, was the skull
that they found in upstate Washington. You're really smart and
the the as soon as it was found to have
caucazoid features. The native tribe grabbed it and would not

(36:03):
allow further analysis.

Speaker 1 (36:06):
Is that a joke?

Speaker 2 (36:06):
No, that was there's a big lawsuit about it, kennawick Man.
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (36:11):
All right, let's go back. So how did Elizabeth Warren
wind up where she is right here? Turns out, so
she's born in nineteen forty nine in Oklahoma, So she
is twenty in nineteen sixty nine. Where is she in
sixty nine? She is at the University of Houston and
then Rutgers University for law.

Speaker 2 (36:33):
She was born when.

Speaker 1 (36:34):
Forty nine, so in sixty nine she's most likely at
the University of Houston. And I don't know what University
of Houston would have was like during the Vietnam War era.
I'm gonna guess she was probably anti war and not
without reason and not without reason. And then she winds

(36:56):
up teaching after she gets her law degree at Rutgers
and then winds up teaching law at University of Houston,
University of Texas, Penn Havd. She wants to be really
smart and becomes a leading expert in bankruptcy law. So

(37:16):
she finds her way into politics because of her zeal
for consumer protection and financial regulation. Okay, cool with that.
She was instrumental. It says here that in creating the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau following the eight financial crisis.

Speaker 2 (37:37):
Okay, which is now about to be shut down.

Speaker 1 (37:39):
We need the eight GFC. And then she makes it
to the Senate. In twenty twelve, beat a Republican becomes
the first female Senator from Massachusetts.

Speaker 2 (37:51):
No, no, no, surely from Connecticut.

Speaker 1 (37:53):
No from Massachusetts. First female senator from Massachusetts. This is
what it says here. Let me go back, let me
jump from a Chuck GPT to Wikipedia.

Speaker 2 (38:05):
I think it's Connecticut, but I am often wrong, but
never in doubt.

Speaker 1 (38:12):
She replaced Scott Brown, who was Massachusetts. I am wrong,
you are anyway. So she's in the Senate. She's all
about economic equality. I'm okay with that. We talk a
lot about that. The corruption. But she's been there for
over a decade. Where has she been talking about the

(38:34):
way's fraud and abuse? That would be my questions for
her if she was on the show. You've been there,
you're an expert in finance, and you want regulations. How
about some regulations on the on Congress and these agencies
and he's NGOs.

Speaker 2 (38:51):
How about maybe it's the regulations that are causing all
of this.

Speaker 1 (38:54):
Yeah, anyway, after the break, we have one more segment. Yeah,
that's the segment before we're done. All right, next show,
we're going to dive into Ukraine and we want you
to know more of the history so you can start
to get maybe a little bit non mainstream media take

(39:16):
on Ukraine, the history and Russia. All that jazz and
let's see what happens in the world. Thanks for listening.
I'm Brad Kauf on that general
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