Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
The twenty twenty four air Quote election show, General, How
you doing.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Like you're doing very well, sir.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Good to see your cherubic and chubby and cheerful. Did
I say chubby, cherubic and cheerful face? I did not
say chubby.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
I think that chubby would be accurate. I don't think so.
You look good morbidly chubby.
Speaker 1 (00:23):
You know. I was down in Oxford, Mississippi last weekend.
Had to rinse off all the whatever's in the air
here and the battle for the control of the Levers
and the Imperial City. Get down to Oxford, Mississippi, got
a daughter down there, met some good newho good friends,
(00:45):
tell they're going to be good friends from Texas, lone
Star state, the Republic of Texas. And it's nice to
travel and run into other people that have the identical
thoughts about the world and our country as you do.
So you know, it's not just you and your friends. True,
(01:06):
it's not just you and your little social network when
you actually run into people.
Speaker 3 (01:11):
I run into people Texas last weekend.
Speaker 1 (01:15):
This weekend, we're in Knoxville, Tennessee, University of Tennessee and
we're gonna meet some meet some friends from Arizona, Actually
listeners from Arizona.
Speaker 3 (01:26):
We're gonna meet, and it's just.
Speaker 1 (01:29):
Nice to know there's there, There are a lot, there
are millions of us out there. We're not Nazis, we're
not fascists, We're not garbage. Although I absolutely cannot ever
imagine if seeing uh Donald Trump and a trash truck
with that trash fest, I've never seen political capitalization like that,
(01:53):
So much juice that quick, so much juice for the
little squeeze. Anyway, make a run out of Oxford, Mississippi
last weekend where it's still the United States of America
and it's run by Americans and America first, and they
(02:14):
get it. I just hope the coastal elite don't find Oxford,
Mississippi got under and ruin it. But we have this
presidential election Tuesday, Tuesday, that's right, we have the mk
ultra baby grown into presidential candidate Kamala Harris. More on
(02:35):
that in a second, and then the interviews and places
Kamala won't go. And the major paper is not endorsing
Vice President Harris, while po La Times USA today the
nation what's going on here?
Speaker 2 (02:53):
General? Well, you know, campaigns run what are called internal polls,
and these are the most accurate of them all because
these are the polls where they don't want to be sugarcoated.
They don't want to be given a nice sheen. They
want an accurate picture of what's going on state to
(03:14):
state because there's money involved. This is are they going
to put more money into North Carolina if it's a
lost cause, they're not going to do it. The polls
that you see in the newspaper, those polls are there
not to measure public opinion, but to shape it. Number
one and number two to give you an impression that
this is a neck and neck race so that you'll
(03:35):
tune in to their programming.
Speaker 3 (03:37):
Yeah on Tuesday night. Good point. I didn't thought about.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
That, and you'll click on their clickbait whenever they say,
you know, neck and neck in Pennsylvania, this, that, and
the other. There's no money. There's no money in saying.
I mean you look back in the nineteen ninety and
then how I'm sorry nineteen eighty, how NBC News had
to pretend that this was a neck and neck race
between Reagan and Harder byeballs On and it was a landslide.
(04:02):
As a matter of fact, there was a controversy that
they had already called it before voting had finished in California,
and a lot of people heard that Reagan won and
they just turned and walked away, both Reagan supporters and
Carter supporters, because what's the point in waiting through the
long line if the thing is already decided.
Speaker 1 (04:17):
How do you explain that Vice President Harris is not
getting endorsement of Washington Post, La Times, USA today, that
vice president running for president won't go sit on the
largest number one podcast in the world. Joe Rogan didn't
show up for the press dinner Alfred Smith. And it
(04:43):
has to be so obvious to people now that she
is a puppet of the machine.
Speaker 2 (04:49):
In the closing days of a campaign, you can know
when a campaign is dead because they stop going to
places that are quote unquote close races, like North Carolina.
She's pulled all all of her money out of North Carolina.
Right now, she's conceded the state to Trump.
Speaker 1 (05:03):
Well, it looks like it's going to be it's got
to come down to Pennsylvania.
Speaker 3 (05:06):
Arizona. I don't think I think Arizona is.
Speaker 2 (05:11):
A mandatory. Trump is up by five in Arizona. When
was the last time that Kamala went there.
Speaker 3 (05:15):
I yeah.
Speaker 4 (05:16):
I mean you look at her travel and she's she's
in places like Texas. Why it appears as though she
has surrendered Arizona and the electoral college map Trump needs
the way the math adds.
Speaker 3 (05:30):
Up, he needs Arizona.
Speaker 1 (05:31):
So it's a it's an interesting dynamic on how the
people that are I'm gonna say running her campaign. The
people are running her and the people that are running
her have been running her her whole life. Let me
share this with you. So she she is born in
San Francisco. Her parents are there in the sixties. Both
(05:54):
parents are Berkeley professors. She winds up graduating at a
mont High school in Montreal because I think her mom
took a professorship in a Canadian university. She goes back,
comes back to the States, Howard University for college, and
then Berkeley for law school. Now Berkeley is a very prestigious.
Speaker 2 (06:14):
Law school used to be.
Speaker 1 (06:17):
And just like Obama, they graduated in the same year
law I believe the same year law school. I believe
she graduated at Berkeley in eighty nine. He graduated at
Harvard in eighty nine. I could be wrong on on Obama.
They both graduate from very prestigious law schools at the
exact same time both become one becomes president and the
(06:40):
next is on the on the brink of potentially becoming president.
Speaker 3 (06:44):
You go, what, okay, what what do they do?
Speaker 1 (06:46):
What do these future leaders do after they graduate from
very prestigious law schools.
Speaker 3 (06:53):
Well, we know what he did.
Speaker 1 (06:54):
He decides to go become a quote community activist in
Chicago and right autobiography when.
Speaker 2 (07:02):
He's thirty, an unknown guy writing an autobiography.
Speaker 3 (07:05):
So that's weird. And then what does she do?
Speaker 1 (07:09):
She graduates from Berkeley Law eighty nine and instead of
going to a big San Francisco, Chicago, New York firm,
And I'm sure she had many offers Asian African American
woman of color, attractive law school, grad nice law school.
(07:29):
Every door's open for her, Every federal judicial clerkship is
open for her, just like Obama all doors were open
for him. He decides to go to Chicago. She's instructed
to stay in San Francisco.
Speaker 3 (07:43):
So she is in her.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
Mid to late twenties now in San Francisco, and she
goes into the lowest entry position for lawyers, which is
the prosecutor office or the public Defender's office. But she
goes to Prosecutor's office there in San Francisco, she's twenty nine.
She finds herself somehow sexually attracted to a sixty year
(08:14):
old married man who just happens to be the Speaker
of the California Assembly.
Speaker 2 (08:22):
Willie Brown, Willy Brown.
Speaker 1 (08:25):
So I like, I wonder what's going on there? So
I hop on chat GPT and I write. I asked
chat GPT write a persuasive argument that Kamala Harris used
Willie Brown for political expediency. Chatt chat GPT said, quote,
I'm sorry, but I can't assist with that request.
Speaker 3 (08:46):
All right, I'm just saying, I'm just saying these are facts.
Speaker 1 (08:49):
Another fact, she at twenty nine, thirty thirty one years old,
draws the attention of one Nancy Pelosi. Nancy's there in
ninety four. She's there in ninety four, she's got the
affair with Willie Brown. And Nancy Pelosi is the person that,
(09:12):
in addition to others, elevated her to become Attorney General
and then made her way into Congress the Senate.
Speaker 2 (09:20):
In fact, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
And then where did who was professor blazey Ford. Where'd
she come from? The one who was supposed to have
had been raped by then Judge Kavanaugh.
Speaker 3 (09:32):
Remember where she's from, Professor blazey Ford.
Speaker 2 (09:35):
I knew it was out in California somewhere.
Speaker 3 (09:37):
Yeah, Sam, whose fingerprints are all over this? Nancy Pelosi?
Remember wonder why Nancy Pelosi never ran for president?
Speaker 2 (09:48):
Yeah? Well, a lot of power in the House of Representatives.
Speaker 3 (09:54):
All right.
Speaker 1 (09:55):
Attorney Brad Koffel and Attorney Eric Willison effectually known as
the general in general. As I mentioned the top of
the last segment, we were in Ole, miss last week
visiting one of our kids, met listeners and friends and
future long term good friends I believe, from the great
state of Texas. Going to meet some listeners from Arizona
this weekend. We go down to Knoxville, Tennessee, and everywhere
(10:19):
we go, I get three questions when I run into
people that recognize my name, my voice for the show.
Number one, I listened to your show. Number two, I
love your show. Number three.
Speaker 3 (10:31):
Who's the General?
Speaker 1 (10:32):
Like? We can't talk about it. It's like fight club.
He could be anybody, can't he can't find the general.
That's fight club?
Speaker 3 (10:38):
General?
Speaker 1 (10:38):
I asked you during the break, do you know who
Kamala harris campaign manager is?
Speaker 2 (10:43):
And I did not.
Speaker 3 (10:45):
Her name is.
Speaker 1 (10:45):
Julie Chavez Rodriguez, the granddaughter of labor leader Caesar Chavez.
Speaker 2 (10:53):
Who is fallen from favor with the Democrat Party.
Speaker 1 (10:56):
You know who Joe Biden's twenty twenty four campaign manager was.
Twenty twenty four campaign manager was Julie Chavez Rodriguez. So okay,
all right, So we have her campaign manager as a
family deeply involved in Marxist ideology, and the training ground
for this is at least on the left coast.
Speaker 3 (11:16):
You see Berkeley.
Speaker 1 (11:18):
We have a presidential candidate who's a Berkeley baby, Berkeley
law stayed in San Francisco, did not use Willie Brown
for political expediency, and then accelerate, and then she had
a Nancy Pelosi pushkin a tush push through the upper
echelons of state government, and California has never been better
(11:42):
and now been pushed up into DC.
Speaker 3 (11:46):
Our nation's never.
Speaker 1 (11:47):
Been better, never and under this leadership, this style of leadership.
But meanwhile, the American Heartland and the rest of us
were Nazi garbage. The political rhetoric from the Democratic Party
I'm not even sure this counts as rhetoric, but to
call someone Nazi, fascist, racist, Yeah, and this is not
(12:07):
just this is the Democrat Party. The state media outlets
are publishing is and then the real centralized control outlets
are are are shaming the larger state media outlets for
covering the garbage comment made by Biden.
Speaker 2 (12:23):
Well, this sort of debating is easier than thinking.
Speaker 1 (12:26):
So nearly half of the American population are mindless Nazi
stooges who want a fur for president. So we have
a color revolution right now, Orange, We have a current
color revolution. Well, now we know they're they're they they
this the they, whoever they are, they have instigated a
(12:49):
a color revolution here in the United States. Take a
look at what color revolution means and how the machine
has done in other countries. And it is it's a
it's a it's it's it's it's lawful. It's everything but warfare.
But it's five G warfare. It's law fair censorship. But
(13:10):
this color revolution is attempting to defeat the political opposition,
which is to bring that populous President Donald Trump back
into the White House. Before we go any further, general,
let's just tidy up this Nazi Hitler, Trump, Maga epithet,
and first state the facts. Forty million people died in
(13:33):
Europe during World War Two because of what Nazis started
and initiated.
Speaker 2 (13:39):
And let's remember they're not Nazis, they're National Socialists.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
Sixty plus million or displaced or relegated to refugee camps.
Speaker 3 (13:50):
I'll to find some.
Speaker 1 (13:51):
More phrases and words freight, by the way, you know.
Speaker 2 (13:55):
What fur means means leader doesn't know.
Speaker 1 (13:57):
A ruthless leader. You know who is a ruthless leader?
Former Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi. Do you know
the adjective used to describe Nancy Pelosi more than any
other adjective, ruthless? What makes a leader uh go from
leader to fure is you put the word ruthless before her.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
She is entirely without ruth She is ruthless.
Speaker 3 (14:22):
She used to know a ruth like that.
Speaker 1 (14:26):
When Michelle and I were looking at our names for girls,
Ruthie was in there.
Speaker 2 (14:31):
That's very biblical.
Speaker 3 (14:32):
But I saw the furor.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
Step out of the shadows when she went full rage,
full blast on then Judge Kavanaugh. And that's when we
mentioned she reached back into They got our of San
Francisco and brought forward, uh, another activist to try to
who came in and lied to come Congress to try
(15:01):
to keep then Judge Kavanaugh from ascending to the Supreme Court.
Speaker 3 (15:05):
These people are ruthless. They lied to courts, they planted
evidence they have. I mean it goes on the crime.
So what what she personally and secretly either instigated designed
approved against President Trump? Then Biden? They turned on Biden.
Speaker 1 (15:28):
They had to get You got to asked why did
Joe Biden pick Kamala Harris. Now you start to look
at it and I start to understand, Oh, he didn't
really have a choice.
Speaker 3 (15:37):
He didn't have a choice.
Speaker 1 (15:40):
You look at how Joe Biden went from last to
first in the primaries.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
Ah, this is the woman who called him a racist
during those primaries.
Speaker 1 (15:49):
Joe Biden was picked by the machine because he if
he won and and he did, you know, according to them.
Speaker 3 (15:57):
And many others, Uh, they knew he was a one
term guy, maybe.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
One term and if he didn't get through the first
term or they didn't twenty fifth amend in him. They
had their MK ultra baby all grown up, ready to
be president. Prosecutorial experience African American Indian depends on the
audience and Attorney General Peter Dues there in Congress. The
(16:28):
troika of Pelosi, Schumer and Obama and countless henchmen and
hench women and hench days have had DC under siege
since two thousand and nine, and now they want it permanently.
Speaker 3 (16:43):
So I.
Speaker 1 (16:46):
Have to So the title of this show, We're going
to call this one Rage against the Machine, the twenty
twenty four election. And I'm going back and I'm reading
lyrics from Rage Against Them and also rockers and otherwise
(17:07):
political outcasts or social outcasts from the seventies, eighties and
nineties who were anti establishment for clues and what were
they so angry about Rage against the Machine?
Speaker 3 (17:18):
What are they? Were they? Now?
Speaker 1 (17:19):
I know they've sold out, now they're ultra woke. But
this is the band that had parental advisory stickers.
Speaker 2 (17:25):
On their music thanks to Tipper Gore.
Speaker 1 (17:28):
Parental advisory stickers on Rage against the Machine?
Speaker 3 (17:33):
What was it?
Speaker 1 (17:34):
Rage was talking about titled of the song Killing in
the Name, protesting the American imperialism into across the world.
And you know, eventually we all came to like that's enough,
that's enough. Going into other countries and telling them, here's democracy,
(17:56):
whether you like it or whether you like it or not.
But it wasn't really it was us putting our leadership,
our people in there so that we had forward operating
non military bases in the form of other states.
Speaker 2 (18:10):
Here are your leaders, vote for them.
Speaker 1 (18:12):
You know you have the fifty first state, I would
say is Israel. The fifty second state right now is
looking like Ukraine. Rage against the machine killing in the
name they that was big in the in the nineties.
They got a somehow they got a permit to film
on the steps of the New York Stock Exchange. That
(18:32):
was in nineteen ninety nine. That didn't go over very well.
They were there with protesting the Wall Street and the
cronyism that was happening there. We were all making money
in the late nineties on the stock Everyone your shoeshine
was making money. But they were trying to tell us
(18:52):
these these old punk rockers, these young guys, yeah.
Speaker 3 (18:55):
They were mad.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
I thought they were mad because they hate their parents,
or maybe they got on their heads as babies, or
their babysitter gave too much robitussin.
Speaker 3 (19:04):
I thought they were just angry kids.
Speaker 2 (19:07):
You go back and.
Speaker 1 (19:08):
Read some lyrics Dala Roach's slogan earing statement for the defense,
rage against the machine.
Speaker 3 (19:17):
Brothers and sisters, Our democracy has been hijacked. This is
rage against the machine. This is what these guys were saying.
They knew this stuff a couple of decades before.
Speaker 2 (19:27):
The rest of us.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
In general, I want to look at this election from
another angle that I don't really I don't see anyone
else talking about and asking the people to take into consideration.
So let's I think we need to take into consideration
who will be president, and in the Senate and the
House making laws and policies for AI, machine learning, quantum computing, biotech.
(19:57):
All these next four or five years, major developments are
going to happen. Biotech, crisper. You know what crisper is, Yeah,
extended reality, the metaverse, six G energy storage, solid solid
state storage, hydrogen, robotics.
Speaker 3 (20:20):
And my new favorite word of the day.
Speaker 1 (20:22):
Robots, cobots, collaborative robots that are going to work alongside us.
I'm down with that. You're kind of a cobot, sure, yeah.
Drone technology, automated planning, harvesting robots. Well, we're going to
see robots in the farms. We will have. We have
(20:44):
blockchain that needs to be dealt with, Web three, decentralized technology, NFTs,
non fungible.
Speaker 3 (20:53):
Tokens are going to come back. And then the.
Speaker 1 (20:55):
Biggie is central bank digital currencies, biggie, biggie.
Speaker 3 (21:00):
Who do you want? Uh?
Speaker 1 (21:02):
And those those absolutely are going to be front page,
top of the.
Speaker 3 (21:09):
Fold on our.
Speaker 1 (21:10):
Papers, those technologies and developments. And we need to make
sure that we have the right people in Congress, in
the Senate, in the White House that.
Speaker 3 (21:23):
Can steer us through this.
Speaker 1 (21:25):
I truly, can you imagine take what the Democrats have
done to cities that were up and running, that were solid,
they were doing well, and Democrat policies got in there
like sand in a gearbox. Right now, we have a huge,
major tech evolution coming. You do not want these people
(21:50):
and their ways of governing have to corruption to mess
this up. You just can't. Uh, you just can't. So
that's an angle that really bears consideration. Now I've often
mentioned my kids are in college. You've got one in college,
(22:11):
you've got another one on the way soon, and ultimately.
Speaker 3 (22:15):
A third my kids are all out of state.
Speaker 1 (22:20):
We had to get their apps and tee ballots, and
then we consult with them, and I, you know, kids
know my show. They don't listen. They hear me and
my friend, my friends and I pardon me. They hear
my friends and.
Speaker 2 (22:32):
I rattling on, thank you.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
And I don't know how much they absorb and how
much they tune out. I don't know how much turns
them off and potentially puts them facing the other direction.
So I thought it was incumbent to sit down and
create a text to send to my kids with the
input of my wife.
Speaker 3 (22:58):
And I just want to share some snif it's with you,
all right, you want to hear sure, So.
Speaker 1 (23:05):
It can't be parental sermonizing, and so I have to
hedge against that. And I've got to put some facts
in there. And then just I got to find the
lowest common denominator. It's like arguing to a judge jury.
And I say, as you grow into and out of
your twenties and thirties, you'll see some issues become more
important than before, and vice versa.
Speaker 3 (23:27):
Politics just did.
Speaker 1 (23:29):
Not seem important to me when I was your age.
I can never understand why the older folks got worked
up about politics. Your mom has been even less interested. However, Mom,
and Dad believe this is the most dangerous time in
our country's history since nineteen forty. Here's why I thought,
(23:50):
do I have to let them know what was going
on in nineteen forty? But I didn't insult it intelligence,
So here's why I continue. I now know what I
did not know when I was in college and even
my thirties. Mom and I have discussed this text thoroughly
and we are in total agreement. America surged to the
top of the history books after World War Two because
we were Americans first, all races, and our policies put
(24:13):
those same Americans first. We protected American businesses and products
were made here. The country did not spend more than
it had. We actually lowered income taxes. When Republicans were
in the White House, they might have fudged a little
bit on that, but there's some truth in there. We
kept illegals out of our country as best we could,
(24:34):
and demanded that they apply, get vetted, and then come
on in special work or education visas. They had to
show they could support themselves financially if we let them in.
Had our parents and grandparents not done this, then well
your childhood would have been very, very different. Now When
we were kids in the seventies and eighties, Americans were
(24:55):
not divided like we are now, not even close. Sure,
there were Vietnam protests, there were civil rights movements. We
had Republican presidents and Democrat presidents. In fact, I voted
for both Democrats and Republicans. But the American people have
been battling to keep big government from growing so big
it needs seventy five percent of our income to pay
(25:17):
its bills. After big business moved American factoring to China
and Asia, the American people have complained we got sold out.
We were told that we would have access to the
billions of Chinese consumers, but instead it was to get
near a cheap, near slave labor. Prices really haven't gotten down,
(25:40):
inflations off the charts, and American may products sold to
Chinese don't exist other than companies that make them in China,
like Apple. So China has taken this windfall since I
was in college and boosted its navy from almost nothing
to the biggest ned in the world. China has a
(26:01):
one hundred year plan to destroy America. That plan was
actually published in nineteen forty nine. It is very real,
and they are on target are on time and on budget.
It's much more complicated than this. However, politicians today do
not serve the Kaffel's best interest. They serve big tech
and big banks and others. This is not all about China.
(26:24):
This is just one example of how our federal government
has been used and abused to enrich special interest while
destroying American jobs, American families, American schools, American morale, and
now the American election process.
Speaker 3 (26:38):
You've been you and.
Speaker 1 (26:39):
Your generation has been lied to and gaslighted, gas lit
into thinking. Donald Trump and Maga are Nazis. Our federal
government now spends one hundred and twenty five percent of
what it brings in revenue. For example, if you made
one hundred thousand dollars, that means you're spending one hundred
and twenty.
Speaker 3 (26:57):
Five thousand dollars. This was not the case when you
were kids.
Speaker 1 (27:00):
It is impossible for America to not to implode and
go bankrupt unless we get leaders in DC who will
say the truth out loud and back it up. Donald
Trump understands this game. He's not afraid to piss off
big business and big government to get us back on track.
Speaker 3 (27:15):
Kamin is here.
Speaker 1 (27:16):
Right, now because of big business and big government, she
can only recite what she's memorized after being told what
to say. So now Donald Trump is turning a little
bit into a folk hero, but speaking on behalf of
the last generation to actually know the greatest generation that
(27:37):
crush fascism and communism. We need your generation's attention, deference
to our wisdom and vote. One response from one child was, Dad,
how much was that was chat ept? And then of
course my son said, I'll debate you on this stuff.
Speaker 2 (28:02):
At a time. I took another approach with my children
once they hit the sixth or seventh grade and I
felt they were old enough, I read them the book
Animal Farm by George Orwell, Oh my god. They loved it,
and I can remember Lucas, my oldest son, going, oh,
I hate those pigs, which were the representations of the
(28:24):
Communist Party apparatics.
Speaker 1 (28:27):
I think, for really, really, if you want to get
a breath of fresh air, if you're sick and tired
of the political venom in the airwaves, and you do
like politics, and you do like history, do yourself a
favor gone podcasts and find Ronald Reagan's greatest speeches, and
(28:48):
you're going to find forty plus great.
Speaker 2 (28:50):
Speeches by or Milton Friedman, the great.
Speaker 1 (28:53):
Communicator, and he's just a breadth of fresh air and
reinvigorates my soul. After the break, General Doctor Donald Trump wins.
I'm giving my friend Bernie Marino my thoughts on what
the United States Senate.
Speaker 3 (29:10):
And government should do.
Speaker 1 (29:12):
If we're gonna do it, let's do it big, all right.
I have no doubt that Donald Trump.
Speaker 3 (29:21):
Is going to win. I think he's going to win big.
The numbers are just going to be too big to steal.
Speaker 1 (29:25):
The real battle is going to be between five November
and twenty January. That's when you're Jamie Raskins and other rascals.
They have plans, your Mark elliases, they have plans. They
are going to make J six look like Carnival Day.
We'll see what they do. It may be more.
Speaker 3 (29:47):
It's going to be organized unlike J six.
Speaker 1 (29:50):
It's going to be facilitated at a federal level by
some federal insiders, unlike J six, unless you think that
Democrats had a hand in that.
Speaker 2 (30:00):
Strangely be palettes of bricks, But the Democrats said J
six was was not.
Speaker 1 (30:09):
But what they said it was is what they have
in mind between five November and twenty.
Speaker 2 (30:14):
January admission through projection.
Speaker 1 (30:16):
I'm giving my friend US Senate Canonate and the next
Senator for United States Center for the Great State of
Ohio my list of my wish list of what I
would love to see our federal government do and think
big and think upside the box. And Bernie's Cardio just
(30:37):
like our was Cardiolo, just like our favorite.
Speaker 2 (30:41):
Our sponsor, our Chess Rown Automotive of in Delaware. I mean,
these people who are involved in the automotive industry and
getting cars to people. You know, you take it for
granted that you just go up there, it's a nice place,
you talk to somebody, you get a car. You know,
That's not the way it was back in the Soviet Union,
back in the nineteen thirties. And this is what Kamala
(31:03):
Harris is going to take us back to. There was
a story about how a line worker went and put
in a requisition for a car, an automobile Soviet yeah,
back in nineteen thirty five, and he was looking for
a car, and this bureaucrat had this amused look on
his face and said, Okay, well, I'll take this guy's
name and so he takes the guy's name and he says, well,
(31:26):
the car will be delivered to you on November twenty
eighth of nineteen seventy four. And the auto workers looked
at him stunned for a second and said will that
be in the morning or the evening. And the bureaucrat
got a little snotty and said, well, what difference does
(31:47):
it make, comrade. He says, well, comrade, the plumbers coming
in the morning, that was an old Reagan story. But
the difference is you go to a place like chess
Row and they have it for you that after.
Speaker 3 (31:57):
N Yeah, yeah, you know. So November fifth is just
the beginning. Once.
Speaker 1 (32:04):
Once Maggie gets in there and all this battle, people
going to prison, prosecuted, a couple assassination attempts, being desensored, deplatformed,
being on the receiving end of weaponized DJ don't get
in there and just do the same thing. Here's my
wish list. Number one, seal the border and deploy the
(32:24):
army to the border until the wall is complete. I
do have an amnesty plan for the illegals that are
currently here that I won't go into, but I do
think we need to offer an amnesty plan for the
people that are here. Okay, I see it on your head,
and okay, all right, we got to get.
Speaker 3 (32:40):
We can raise taxes or we can increase our tax base.
Speaker 1 (32:43):
Ronald Reagan was all about increasing the tax base, more
people paying taxes. Get these millions and millions of illegals
to step forward. You have one hundred days to register,
get amnesty in exchange for three year moratorium on deportation.
Speaker 3 (32:57):
If after three years you can show.
Speaker 1 (32:58):
Gainful, taxable expual employment and a law abiding life, then
you can qualify for an additional five years. But while
you're here, no voting because you're not a US citizen.
If you fail to step forward into our temporary amnesty
program when we catch you, it is a mandatory prison term,
then deportation.
Speaker 3 (33:15):
How does that sound.
Speaker 2 (33:16):
I would just go straight towards deportation their tax space.
Speaker 1 (33:19):
And look, there is a genuine issue as it relates
to labor. Number two, reverse the Biden energy policy. Do
we need to say anything else on that?
Speaker 3 (33:30):
No?
Speaker 1 (33:30):
Number three? Reinvigorate the Tenth Amendment. For those of us
who don't remember, the amendment reads that the powers not
delegated to the federal government are.
Speaker 3 (33:41):
Reserved to the states or the people.
Speaker 1 (33:44):
And there are many, many, many things our federal government
does that's simply unconstitutional.
Speaker 3 (33:51):
We need to get some.
Speaker 1 (33:51):
Super smart conservative constitutional professors and fine tooth calm all
the federal age and season every department inside each agency.
Speaker 3 (34:03):
Now, with the reversal of the.
Speaker 1 (34:05):
Chevron ruling, we can disentangle this administrative state with the
Chevron the anti Chevron case.
Speaker 3 (34:14):
This sounds daunting.
Speaker 1 (34:15):
I'm talking about eliminating a large chunk of.
Speaker 3 (34:18):
The federal bureaucracy.
Speaker 1 (34:20):
This sounds daunting, but not as daunting as it was
to translating the Bible into English and pushing back against
the overbearing Catholic Church. And just like the first men
to translate English, the Bible into English and challenge the
Catholic churches interpretation led them to being executed.
Speaker 3 (34:39):
It's a big deal, but we can. We can. We
have to.
Speaker 1 (34:44):
We have to revamp, not just drain the swamp. We
have to blow it up and start over. And it
can be done. I would guesstimate that at least one
out of three federal agencies simply redistribute working class earnings,
our earnings taking through income tax and other confiscatory regulations.
Speaker 3 (35:04):
That's all they do.
Speaker 1 (35:05):
I would say, one of the three federal agencies just
take the revenue they collect from the taxpayers working class
and redistribute it through aids and grants and other programs.
Speaker 2 (35:15):
And to themselves.
Speaker 1 (35:16):
All right, So and then also, how many generations of
able bodied Americans have been raised to suckle at the
government teet. That cycle needs to be broken. I said,
able bodied. You know what I say. Take Washington DC
and make it Washington DMZ.
Speaker 3 (35:32):
We need to demilitarize that place.
Speaker 1 (35:35):
The ideologically weaponized Department of Education, Department Justice needs to
be investigated from top down, every single one of them,
every single one of them. Take separation of powers and
finish the separation of powers. Move the White House to Missouri,
move Congress to South Dakota. And you know, we can
(35:57):
keep the Supreme Court where it is, but we have
to if we're.
Speaker 3 (36:01):
Going to separate the powers.
Speaker 1 (36:02):
Put Congress while the lobbying happens. Put it in North
Dakota or South Dakota where it's cold and and un
and there's there's conservatives and good strong American conservatives up
there that'll keep an eye on things for the rest
of us. We got to get it out of that
(36:22):
eight square that sixty four square mile eight by eight.
Speaker 3 (36:27):
The Leviathan got to get it out of there, but
just relocate two of the three.
Speaker 1 (36:32):
Next, cut off the food supply to the federal leviathan
by abolishing the tax code. Yes, abolish it, start from scratch.
Speaker 3 (36:41):
There is a reason the seven richest counties.
Speaker 1 (36:43):
In America, folks, and there are three and forty three
counties in America, the seven riches are suburbs of Washington, DC.
We need to when we read, when we come up
with our new tax code the tax base again, start
taxing NGOs, nonprofits, these foundations where all the wealthy pour
(37:07):
their money into these foundations. They have their boards, and
the foundations basically pay for their lifestyles and their ideologies.
Speaker 3 (37:14):
They need taxed.
Speaker 1 (37:17):
In the proxy war in Ukraine, if we are for
self determination, then let the Russian separatists work it out
between Russia and Ukraine.
Speaker 3 (37:28):
By the way, general, you do realize that the.
Speaker 1 (37:33):
Establishment refers to the folks and the don baths that
kickstarted all this as separatists.
Speaker 3 (37:39):
They want to separate from well.
Speaker 2 (37:41):
They want to separate from Ukraine, right because they're ethnic Russians.
Speaker 3 (37:45):
Right, all right, they simply want independence.
Speaker 2 (37:51):
In Russia wants a buffer zone.
Speaker 1 (37:52):
And why wouldn't the United States that is supposed to
be the standard bearer of independence and freedom. Why are
we calling these people separatists. We should be calling them
revolutionaries or founding fathers. Our founding fathers were separatists. Our
(38:13):
founding fathers were separatists. Now, pump some air into the
tires of Article one, Section.
Speaker 3 (38:20):
Four Clause one. I know you don't know this.
Speaker 1 (38:23):
It's the elections clause. We need to pump some air
into the tires of this thing. We must figure out
a way to guarantee federal election integrity.
Speaker 3 (38:33):
It ain't hard.
Speaker 1 (38:35):
Number one proof of citizenship. Number two, a valid government
issued real ID. Number three paper ballots.
Speaker 3 (38:49):
All right.
Speaker 1 (38:49):
My last thought, guys, take those really smart constitutional law
professors that we had working on other projects and have
them take a look at how to get dark money,
black money, poison money out of our federal elections. We
need to really study citizens United again and figure out
(39:13):
a way.
Speaker 3 (39:14):
I heard a statistic.
Speaker 1 (39:15):
I don't know if it's true, but almost half a
billion dollars is being poured into Ohio for the US
Senate race that is ridiculous, all right, General, if we
lose five November, I'm going underground referrals and cash only,
liquidating one hundred percent of my asset, selling the house,
(39:37):
buying a cabin on a northern Michigan lake, maybe get
a Harley, and I'm putting all my money into bourbon
and gold.
Speaker 2 (39:43):
Boy on, what are you doing? I don't have any money.
Speaker 3 (39:47):
You're gonna be with me? Thanks for listening. Go read