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November 6, 2024 • 42 mins
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Not there, but welcome aboard. I just welcome Potomatic. Thank god,
this is a day to celebrate. President Trump is triumphant,
The MAGA movement is triumphant, and we have created a
moment in history that is unlike any in certainly my
lifetime in this country. President Trump, we should remember, was

(00:24):
not supposed to be there today, and this was not
supposed to happen. They tried to kill him, They tried
to bankrupt him, they tried to imprison him, they tried
to discredit him and his family. They tried to do

(00:49):
everything they could to throw every piece of mud they
could come up with, and yet he prevailed, and that
he was triumphant. And today he is the president in
an elect hallelujah.

Speaker 2 (01:08):
Now.

Speaker 1 (01:09):
I always thought that he would win. The only question
was whether or not they would let him win, and
I didn't think they would. And I do think they
tried to do everything they could to stop it, but
they didn't stop it. And Trump probably would have done
better had they not tried everything they could, I think,

(01:30):
to steal the election. But they were behind the times.
They didn't they didn't estimate what was going on. Now
President Trump and the Republican National Committee under the auspices
of Michael Wattley and Laura Trump, and they did a
wonderful job. They basically embraced the model that was established

(01:57):
by Glenn Youngkin of Virginia, who understood the lessons. Mike,
here you are. But let me give yeah, but let
me give you the number two call so you can

(02:17):
be right in the system here now, and I'm giving
the same number two others as well. Five oh eight
six three seven five five nine six that's what you
called and you ended up here. No, that's odd.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
Well what what what? What number did I reached?

Speaker 1 (02:40):
You? You reached my regular numbers. So what I'm gonna
do is maybe hang up and try it again. I'll
shut my phone off. That might do it, all right,
all right, all right, thank you? All right. Michael shar
is having a couple of power problems. So that's that's
why we're having some technical difficulties. Oh, I see the problem, Skype.

(03:06):
I need to put this on. It might help if
I actually did things right. Here the code and Charles
Moskowitz that would be five three five seven oh five
five three five seven five sign in here we are okay,

(03:39):
and yeah. Anyway, so the Basically, the situation is such
that Glen Youngin and the Republican National Committee learned the
lessons of twenty twenty and they realized that they could
not allow it to happen again, that being the level

(04:03):
of election fraud that took place. So what they did,
starting with Glenn Youngin in Virginia, is that he fielded
thousands of volunteers to man the voting booths, to man
the counting rooms where they get the absentee ballots, to
make sure that there was a Republican there. And he

(04:26):
basically put up a staff of lawyers who understood the
law and who were prepared to deal with any interruptions
in that election and to do so quickly. And the
result was that there were very few interruptions, and those
that did take place, they were in court within an
hour and they were dealt with like if they tried

(04:49):
to block access to any of the polling places, or
if they tried to inappropriately count ballots or discard ballots,
or if they were counting illegal ballots or fake ballots
or those or anything else that we could describe, who
knows what. People who saw this would drop a dime,

(05:11):
and they would they would basically, let me just see
if we could get this thing and they would deal
with it right there. Well, that's exactly what President Trump
did and that's why he won. I mean, he would
have won anyway, and he also got such a big vote,

(05:32):
but he was able to thwart efforts to steal the
election in Georgia, in Pennsylvania, in Michigan, and in Wisconsin.
There were instances of fraud. Everybody was watching. They tried
to and in Arizona they tried to keep illegal aliens

(05:55):
on the ballot, and they had hid this from the
public until it finally came out. They had lawyers there
making sure that those votes would be taken off the
ballot because they were not legal votes, They were not
connected to a's citizen, and in some cases they were
not even connected to any person. There were reports that

(06:18):
the Gateway punted also should be would be applauded for
doing a great job of reporting this. There was, you know,
tens of thousands, who knows how many thousands of ballots
that were mailed out to bogus addresses, and there were
a lot of reports of this. The Republican National Committee
caught it immediately. They were sharp as attack and they

(06:42):
were able to stop it in its tracks. And the
result is, look, Trump would have won anyway. And they're
still trying to show up apparently in Philadelphia or in
Detroit with boxes of ballots, so it's not like they're
not trying. But the Republican National Committee was fully engaged

(07:02):
and fully prepared to deal with the problem, so you
had you know, they couldn't pull it off, and as
a result, we genuinely had one of the most honest
elections in American history. Now, now the President Trump has won,

(07:24):
thank God, and Halla lujah. I just love saying that
you need he needs to. I hope that he doesn't
just drop the ball on this issue, and I hope
that he does pursue broader questions of election reform. I
understand that elections are state by state, but if there

(07:46):
is a remedy nationally and that's something that maybe Congress
and the new administration can look into to make these
necessary reforms, then let's hope and let's pray that they
do it. What is this. Let me see if I

(08:08):
can get Mike to to call in. Oah, Hello, hi Mike, Hawaii.

Speaker 2 (08:40):
Okay, So you get ahead, and we're saying work out.

Speaker 1 (08:43):
Well, I mean, for some reason, you're not coming in
on the computer. But that's okay, we'll just do it
this way. Oh all right, no problem at all. So Mike, uh,
we have a lot to celebrate in this country of
ours today. I think that the election of President Trump
is a miracle, and I also think it is an

(09:03):
act of conscious hard work on the part of the
Republican National Committee which should be applauded, and which prevented
the kind of voter fraud. They learned the lessons of
twenty twenty and the followed the example of Glen youngin
in Virginia, and I followed this on the Gateway punted.

(09:24):
They did another. They did a really good job of
reporting it that every time voter fraud came up, and
by our voter fraud, I should be more accurate election fraud,
ballot fraud. Voter fraud is rare, that's not what we're
talking about here. We're talking about hundreds of thousands of
unaccountable ballots that were on various roles in different states.

(09:48):
Whenever this came up, the Republican National Committee had thousands
of lawyers ready to go and to challenge it in court.
Right down to the hour and get to get these
ballots thrown out. And they did this in in Atlanta, Philadelphia, Detroit,
and Milwaukee, the key cities in the Key States, and

(10:14):
Americopa County. So this is why President Trump won. He
would have won anyway. I think that even with even
if they didn't do it, he got such an overwhelming
vote that he probably would have won anyway.

Speaker 3 (10:27):
What do you think, Well, here's a darker interpretation if
you will. Sure, yeah, I'll due credit to Larry Trump,
but this also snacks to.

Speaker 2 (10:39):
Me of Ronnie McDaniel working for the other side, because
it's just too traumatic.

Speaker 1 (10:48):
In a difference, Well, she might whether she actually was
or not, she might as well have been. I mean,
you know, and I don't think that they expected such
a disastrous result. I think that in spite of the stealing,
and in spite of the theft and the the the
VOA CoA votes from overseas and all these other things

(11:11):
that they try to pull off, it just wasn't enough
to overcome Trump's vote. It was fantastic, it wasn't enough.

Speaker 3 (11:18):
And I didn't literally, I'm just saying that by want
of Daniel being a rhino and doing business as usual
and being an electured fraud denier. No, in effect, she
was working for the other side.

Speaker 1 (11:37):
Yes, and as were all of the rhinos, you know,
Mitt Romney and Chris Christie and Paul Ryan, who was
one of the worst, who was basically stabbing Trump at
the back while he was to speak of the House,
all of these guys, Bill Crystal, you know, not to

(11:58):
mention the change.

Speaker 3 (12:00):
All these other factors don't seem to be even as
large anymore. I mean, Josh Shapiro could have helped to
win Pennsylvania, but that wouldn't have mattered anyway.

Speaker 1 (12:12):
No, And it's just the vote was so convincing. I mean,
there's still according to the Gateway puntit, there are still
trucks arriving in Philadelphia and in Detroit with boxes of ballots.
They're still doing it, and they're not going to get
away with it, the Republican Committee as they're meeting them

(12:33):
at the door.

Speaker 3 (12:36):
And that's what I was saying, you know in previous
shows that there's no talent on the other side. No,
you can't bring up the nineteen fifty three playbook and
keep using it. It doesn't work anymore.

Speaker 1 (12:49):
Yeah, you're absolutely right. I mean, the whole thing is
so hamhanded and so cheesy. I mean they're trying to
do the same frecking thing they did last time, and
they were depending on the media. The media didn't even
buy it. I watched. I'm sure you watch some of
the returns. I mean the liberal media even like people like, yeah,
you know what's his name over there, the pretty boy

(13:11):
on Channel five, I mean, the one that tried to
screw Trump during the debate. They weren't even buying it.
I mean they all look crestfallen. Rachel Meadow with a
smirk was just off her face. She was she looked
normal almost. You know, they the.

Speaker 3 (13:29):
Harness of the hardcore are still taking in position despite
the result is the popular vade the American public is wrong, you.

Speaker 1 (13:39):
Know, oh, I know, and they're gonna lose because of that,
because that's why they lost in the first place, one
of the reasons. And NIB doubling down. I was listening
to NPR here in Boston a little bit, which is
what made me run back home to do the show.
But you know what's his name? Jim Browdy and Marjorie Egan,

(14:01):
and they're doing the same crap and it's all because
they don't like a black woman, right, and they're all
in other words, we're all racists and sexists, and you know,
it's just such bull crap. I mean, then the fact
that they would be still I mean, this is I
mean one of the ugliest and darkest moments of this

(14:23):
whole rotten campaign on their part was that they stooped
to calling everybody hitler and Nazis. And you know, people
are like, no, we're not Nazis, we don't have anything
against a woman. This is garbage. We're tired of this.

Speaker 3 (14:39):
This is a great case of shin clouds the intellect.
And you've seen this already in the entertainment industry.

Speaker 2 (14:45):
That with failure after failure after failure, these movies they
attack the audience.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
And you know, I just wonder if it's just putting
aside the fact that it's really a form of mental
illness when you do something over and over again and
it doesn't work. You know, who is it that he
did a book years ago, you know, back in the seventies,
one of the pop books. It's got this book called
the Androgynist Zone or something like that. I mean, he

(15:13):
was John Dyer. He was a therapist who researched his
book by spending a good bit of time in prison
and in mental institutions studying what people's behaviors were. And
one of the things that he noticed about people who
were mentally ill in and institutionalized that made them with
who they were, is that they would keep doing the

(15:34):
same thing over and over and over again, even though
it didn't work and they couldn't kind of get out
of that. They became like fixated on this action, and
that is one of the signs of mental illness. And
that's exactly what they are about.

Speaker 3 (15:52):
Interesting because I think what's happening here is the liberal media.

Speaker 2 (15:58):
It seems to recomposed ifeople that I mean by shorthand
for this is the junior high school model un type.

Speaker 3 (16:06):
You know, if they have this particular picture of the
world and that's what it's supposed to be, and when
you're in junior high, when you're in the model U win,
that's great.

Speaker 2 (16:17):
But then they start getting into real life. And the
way they avoid.

Speaker 3 (16:21):
Countering this is they're only with like minded individuals. So
you might be in that echo chamber of being in
your media center, but the problem is you're selling your
product to the general public, and the general public.

Speaker 2 (16:38):
You need a sense might be wrong.

Speaker 3 (16:40):
I mean, if you get into specific issues, like was
Betamax better than VHS, Well, in some ways it was,
but the public didn't think so because VHS tapes for longer,
you record more. Okay, I'm using that as a trivial example,
but the point was that sometimes you're idealized.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
Of what's supposed to be happening.

Speaker 3 (17:02):
Is it really what's going to sell to the public,
and they just don't see it. And the reason that
they don't change is, Hey, they've been doing this for
fifty sixty years, whatever it is. It would be catastrophic
for them to admit, you know, I'm.

Speaker 1 (17:20):
Wrong, know that they probably they would melt away. That
it would be like if they it would be like
throwing a bucket of water in the face of the
wicked Witch of the West. Yeah, in the in the
Wizard of Ours. They'd be they'd melt all My beautiful
wickedness is going down the drain. How could you, you

(17:40):
little brat? You know, it's sort of you know, it's
it's kind of like except in their case, it's one
thing to keep repeating this thing that this worldview that's
not true, that doesn't reflect what reality really, but that
the particular worldview that they are pushing is so nasty

(18:02):
and so ugly, and so it's defamatory.

Speaker 3 (18:07):
It's more and more the more they cling to it.
Yes's And by the way, has Paris conceited yet? Officially?

Speaker 1 (18:15):
I think that she's maybe waking up from a drunken evening.
I don't know what the hell is going on, but
you know, talk about you know, class lest I mean,
she sends out this guy who basically makes a quick
statement and then you see if that's what that's At
that point, I knew it was over obviously, and then
everybody leaves, and at that point I went to bed. Yeah,

(18:36):
it was over.

Speaker 2 (18:37):
That was the That was the Hillary Clinton playbook. But
I ended up watching Charlie Kirk had a streaming thing
which was just great.

Speaker 1 (18:46):
Oh sure.

Speaker 3 (18:47):
I mean there were these four or five guys on
there that were consulting every possible website and Twitter feed
that you couldn't possibly do on your own, Yeah, and
getting these these updates and being very denservative in some
cases with which states they were they were going to call.
And then they started making fun of Arizona, which is

(19:11):
I think it was just total.

Speaker 2 (19:12):
Denial on the part of amer Copa. They couldn't bring themselves, no.

Speaker 1 (19:18):
They couldn't even the media, they couldn't. You know, they
were like choking to to actually declare the reality of it.
I think it was only just a few hours ago
that that corrupt, rotten secretary of State in Michigan, Jocelyn Benson,
who I've been talking about for years, she finally has

(19:41):
conceded Michigan. And you know, it's sort of just they
don't want to take that bit of pill.

Speaker 3 (19:49):
No, because you see, they were right and everybody owes.

Speaker 2 (19:52):
Wrong and it was going to work out like this, and.

Speaker 1 (19:57):
Oh it was hilarious to watch it. I mean, it
wasn't as funny as as twenty sixteen because because then,
you know, they really didn't expect anything like it, and
they weren't completely shell shocked.

Speaker 3 (20:13):
You're exactly right, because as much as I hate Hillary Clinton,
she did at least have some credibility.

Speaker 1 (20:19):
Yeah, and I think that was a shock to them.
It was a shock to a lot of people. We
all were shocked. But this time around, I mean, it
was it was kind of known and they just looked
so morose and so crestfallen. That was just amazing to see.

Speaker 3 (20:39):
It was it was fun to watch because there was
no doubt from the beginning.

Speaker 2 (20:44):
Which was piling up and piling up, and the mac
was getting redder and redder. Oh, they are all these
clips that are going out there, like I think there
was one on CNN.

Speaker 3 (21:00):
Is there any county and I don't know how many
thousand counties there are in the US. Is there any
county in the US that heuristed better than Biden? Oh?

Speaker 1 (21:10):
I saw that. That was with David That was it
with David Muir? Was was or is it?

Speaker 2 (21:16):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (21:16):
No, it was Jake Tapper and he's looking at it.
He's like, holy smokes, not a single county. And they
showed the map of the United States and it was
completely blank and there was just nothing.

Speaker 2 (21:31):
It was.

Speaker 1 (21:32):
I don't think that she. I think she She collapsed
in just about every demographic except maybe one, and that
would be suburban, well to do single highly educated white women.
Now you can you can attack me for saying that,
but that's the core.

Speaker 3 (21:52):
No, no, no, that's exactly what it was, because it's
the it's it's.

Speaker 4 (21:58):
The same men challenge and.

Speaker 2 (22:02):
So this is just tremendous. And I guess RFK Junior
has already come out and saying he's going to dismantle
the FDA I've been calling for for years.

Speaker 1 (22:14):
Yes, you know that. I can hardly wait.

Speaker 2 (22:18):
You can do everything the FDA does with a few
contractors interview. There'll be no politics. So it's you know,
it's just.

Speaker 1 (22:31):
It's a beautiful thing. It is. And you know, the
other thing I've noticed is squealing about is this is
an assault on bureaucracy. And not only are they saying this.
I saw a video of this on on YouTube. They
have them it's like a talking head thing. Bureaucracy, bureacracy, bureaucracy, bureacracy,

(22:53):
you know, with each one of them making the exact
same statement, like somebody sent this out to them and
they got the mess. And I say, hallelujah, good, throw
out the freaking bureaucracy.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
As if it were a thing.

Speaker 1 (23:09):
Exactly. They just that they're so out of it. They
just don't see this. I mean, this is what Elon
Musk did at Twitter. He cut about eighty percent of
it and it became better and stronger and more free
as a result probably more profitable too.

Speaker 2 (23:27):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (23:28):
Well, so it just became big and fat, and it
was very much typify as a tech company with too
much money.

Speaker 1 (23:36):
And they must be shaking in their boots because they
know that the people around Trump and Trump himself that
they understand this because these people are business people. Elon
Musk was in business. Even JD. Vans I think he
was in business, you know, I mean all of them.
I mean, they understand what bureaucracy is and they know

(23:56):
how they know how to kind of pare it down
and turn it into a more efficient machine. And all
these layabouts, all these hacks there, they know the days
a number. They better look for a job because they're
going to be out on their backside.

Speaker 3 (24:13):
Well, the the they're completely unrealistic by stuff, I mean
is as we had discussed and the previous shows.

Speaker 2 (24:23):
How can you have a job at the l times
and quit thinking that there's going to be another immediate
job waiting for.

Speaker 1 (24:31):
You, that's right, does a plumb jobs and then and
they're disappearing anyways.

Speaker 3 (24:36):
Yeah, so so what's what's the upside? Okay, And you're
so you're gonna you're.

Speaker 2 (24:43):
Gonna start to tat.

Speaker 3 (24:45):
On a subset column and you're gonna be all bitter
about how.

Speaker 2 (24:48):
You were forced out.

Speaker 3 (24:51):
You know, it's sort of like a rif Colin Cabrick, right,
he was offered a couple of deals and he didn't
take them. Everybody forgets that, you know, he he just
decided he was going to make more money being a
professional race baider. Yeah, good luck to these people that

(25:14):
left Washington Post, La Times.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
There's no upside, No, and if the industry.

Speaker 3 (25:22):
Is gone and wants going to have its NBC with
Julry Reid talking about it was all racist and cashist
and everybody in the country is wrong.

Speaker 1 (25:33):
Now they're going down the tubes. I mean this whole
you know, it's on the one hand, it surprises me
that there's still using that argument because it obviously failed them,
and it's insulting and it's denigrating to about, you know,
more than pretty much most of the country. And yet
they're but they're dublin down and they're gonna they're gonna

(25:54):
end up like that was.

Speaker 3 (25:56):
You know, I figured that would happen again based on
was with the with the movie industry. Well, and all
these these videos of Amanda Stenberg and Rachel Zeglar. You know,
it's all the fans, and the fans are negative and.

Speaker 2 (26:19):
We produce all this great stuff and they should love it,
and it's garbage.

Speaker 1 (26:24):
So well, they don't get it, and they're gonna the
Democratic Party is going to go the way of the
Dodo Bird if they keep that up, because they're losing
you know, traction. I mean, it's just it's so out
of touch and so elitist, and this old you know,
this old playbook which comes out of Sololensky's rules for radicals.

(26:45):
It just doesn't play anymore. Too many people have been
red pilled now and they're going to I mean, they'll
continue to rally their base, but that base is going
to start shrinking even more. You know, they lost this
election in a be a way than you can imagine,
and they're going to continue to lose if they keep
that up. If they don't reform the Democratic Party and

(27:08):
get rid of that kind of woke, hostile fascism, and
they don't get rid of law there, they don't get
rid of censorship, they don't get rid of goose stepping,
you know, attacks on their opposition, then they're going to
go They're going to be extinct. It's going to be
like the Wigs, you know, that could happen.

Speaker 3 (27:28):
There's almost a mirror when the Democrat, when the republic Party.

Speaker 2 (27:33):
Was all rights.

Speaker 3 (27:34):
Yeah, they have voices come up and say, you know,
we really should get more conservative because the idea of
driving off a cliff at fifty five miles an hour
versus eighty miles an hour is really not a good
selling coin. And it took all this time, and it
took a complete outsider.

Speaker 1 (27:55):
That's right.

Speaker 3 (27:55):
Remember Barry Goldwater was a senator and a big political
figure for a long time.

Speaker 2 (28:01):
Right, and he couldn't change it.

Speaker 1 (28:03):
So now but this is this is really almost revolutionary.
And already you can see an international alignment by like
minded nationalists in their countries, people like Milay from Argentina
and Aubon from from Hungary and Uh I think uh

(28:23):
Maloney in Italy and and and several others. They're all from,
not Musk and not Tusk, the other one who was basically,
you know, removed to a color revolution thanks to the EU.
They're all coming around to UH to congratulate Trump. And

(28:45):
it's it's really the beginning of a major movement toward
a kind of a nationalist, populist, sovereign development. And I
think that Trump is you know, he's going to do
some amazing things. You know, you've got Ukraine, which, by

(29:06):
the way, now there's video out that shows that Biden
basically gave Russia a green light to invade Ukraine mainly
because they wanted to have war so they could feed,
you know, trillions of dollars to the defense industry, and
it creates international order and all the other interests, which
is the policy that's been a place in this country

(29:28):
since Wilson. And you know, Trump is going to put
a stop to that. He's going to probably take Putin
and Zelensky and invite them maybe to Camp David, and
make them hammer out in an agreement. Because Ukraine now
is on the verge of collapse. They've got, you know,
they maybe another six months. And you know, the atrocity

(29:51):
of that and although losses of you know, lives, I mean,
it's it's really loathsome and evil, and I think that
it never would happened under Trump. And Trump is going
to stop it. He said that he could do it
even before he takes office, which I think is possible.
I mean, Eisenhower did it in Korea before he took office.

Speaker 2 (30:11):
Yeah. Yeah, well, they'd say that's right, that's a good analogy.

Speaker 1 (30:15):
And the way my understanding from history is the way
Eisenhoward did it is that he flew out to Korea
and to Panmunjahm where he met with both sides and
he said, look, I'm going to become president in three weeks,
and if you don't stop this war, I'm going to
drop a nuclear bomb on you. And they and they
believed him, and they stopped the war and it's been

(30:37):
peaceful ever since. I'm just saying Trump is he knows
how to do that, and I think that he could
do that. I think he could do it with the
Israeli Arab conflict too. I mean, I'm happy that he's
pro Israel, but he might force the Israelis to make
some painful concessions to get peace with the Palestinian Arabs,
and I hope he does.

Speaker 3 (30:58):
So.

Speaker 2 (30:59):
It was divine intervention. I'm not sure we deserved it,
but we were given another chance. And it is again
We've said this a couple of times.

Speaker 3 (31:10):
The funniest part of all this is they're just doubling
and tripling down with the same cramp.

Speaker 2 (31:15):
They just don't get it.

Speaker 1 (31:17):
They really don't. And they've now seen that this has
been the rug has been completely pulled out from under them.
This is a glorious day. You know, we are to
relish it. I know that it's going to be a
long slog. I'm not utopian about this. It's going to
be a war. But we can enjoy a moment of

(31:38):
basking in the sun, you know, for now, and relish
our victory and now get to work in terms of
how to define it for people, how to make people
understand what this is about, make people understand about you know,
Trump's arrangement. Why did they hate Trump? Were they manipulated? Yes,

(31:58):
they were manipulated by this deep apparatus, and they ought
to take another look. They ought to take another look
at this whole movement because it's incredible and you know,
it's time to get on the into the program. Now.
It's not going to be easy, but it can be done.

Speaker 4 (32:14):
There are going to be more convergence than you might expect.
Oh yeah, because you know the old hell half you know,
fury like a woman scorn. How about hell half, no
fury like like some.

Speaker 3 (32:29):
Wild eyed optimist who got taken over by this crap,
seeing how they were misled and just you know, just
sort of a reverse Harry Sisson, right, you know it
was yes, well yeah, his initial tweet was har would

(32:50):
the country be so wrong? And other people are saying that,
you know that the women didn't come through as m
whatever it was.

Speaker 1 (32:59):
Oh my god, it's just not it's not flying. I mean,
he's an I mean he's talking. First of all, he's
paid by the Bio ad Ad agency. I mean that's
something that's been public and in fact this now it's
not being said that the Harris campaign was literally paying
people to go to those events. But I mean, in

(33:20):
the case of system, he's doing this thing where he
shows up with these two other goofballs and they it's
so embarrassing. I mean they're these white, privileged, empty headed dimwits,
you know, standing there like in front of the camera
with goofy faces. They've never worked today in their life.
I mean, it's and they're like, oh, well, we support Harris,

(33:41):
and they make these ugly charges. They're probably all on
a payroll, and and they're dumb. You could tell that
they're just dumb. I mean, it's embarrassing. This is what
the this was that they say, well, we represent you know,
men for Harris or some crap like that. Really that's
what That's what it's come down to.

Speaker 2 (33:59):
I mean, you see this.

Speaker 1 (34:00):
Thing and you're like, that's a sad state of affairs
that they would represent men for Harris or men for anybody.
But then who knows.

Speaker 3 (34:09):
You may have a situation like in Germany after World
War Two when suddenly you couldn't find any Nazis.

Speaker 1 (34:16):
Well that's fine. Look at Germany after World War Two.
You know, under Adenauer in particular, it became a powerhouse
and they were all former Nazis. Who cares they all,
you know, I mean it was not a Nazi, but
he was certainly a man of the right, and he
was able to negotiate an end to conflict between the

(34:39):
unions and create a united economy that turned into a
powerhouse in Europe. An incredible story. So if they want
to join us and put aside, you know, their past, great,
come on down. You know, I believe in redemption of
course and way.

Speaker 2 (35:00):
And and I believe you're going to have a bunch.

Speaker 3 (35:02):
Of conjurts, because I think the only ones you're gonna
who are going to stay on the other side of
the ones who were paid to do it. But at
some point the MSNBC and CNN model cannot sustain. Yeah,
they're they're they're only around because of the old cable system,
but that that's falling apart.

Speaker 1 (35:25):
No, they've lost them momentum, and it'll be interesting to
watch what happens to them, because you know, they're not
going to be able to sustain that, not any longer.
I mean they barely were before, but now this is
a big blow to them, and we'll see, we'll see.

Speaker 3 (35:39):
I mean, remember the way that it worked was eighty
million cable subscribers were paying so that four hundred thousand
people can watch CNN.

Speaker 2 (35:50):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (35:52):
Well, I mean they got that. They and they got
up certain deals like they were piped into all the airports, yeah,
and stuff like that that much.

Speaker 2 (36:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (36:03):
Well good.

Speaker 2 (36:04):
I mean you seem to be in a much better mood.

Speaker 1 (36:06):
Oh, totally. I mean, who isn't This is a great day.
I mean, I'm exhausted. I was up late and I
you know, just stressed out, and I'm sitting there at
a stupor on my couch, you know, eating pistachio ice
cream and all of a sudden, something happened on the

(36:27):
TV and I said, wow, and I sat up. I
think that it was when when I don't know, one
of them said something and I think one of the
big states came in and I was then riveted and
you could just see the whole thing unfold. So I think,
like a lot of people, you know, there was like
a moment where you realize that you'd crossed the rubicon

(36:49):
and that they were not going to get away with it,
and that the election was going to happen fair and square.
And Trump, of course came out with his beautiful family,
and he gave an eloquent speech, and you know, I
think that he's I think you've said that Trump has
been somewhat humbled maybe after having been shot, and that

(37:12):
you know, he's becoming a great molded into a just
a great statesman. You know, it's just an incredible thing.

Speaker 4 (37:20):
Anyway, Well, good, it's going to be exciting at times.

Speaker 3 (37:26):
Now indeed, and not not not the least of riches
that you see to be in a positive.

Speaker 1 (37:32):
Mood, totally, totally, no, no, no, I mean I'm very optimistic.
I really feel very very just absorbing it and I'm
basking in it, and I hope that all everyone is,
including people who didn't like Trump, you know, we all
want to see things work out.

Speaker 2 (37:49):
Well.

Speaker 1 (37:50):
I think that everybody's relieved that it was not close,
even whether they admit it or not, because then we
would have had Mark Elias there with his team of lawyers,
and they would have been dragging on week after week,
and the Liberals were talking about doing that, and they
can't do it. It's too late. You know. He got
the popular vote, for God's sake, I mean not just

(38:11):
the electoral plus Congress.

Speaker 3 (38:15):
He won the popular vote, he said, by at least
five million. And then of course it's all falling apart.
Don't forget. People say, we'll wait him. How is it
possible that you.

Speaker 2 (38:27):
Got that Biden got eighty one million votes?

Speaker 1 (38:30):
Well that's right, all of a sudden, what happened? They
just evaporated, And yeah, it is falling apart. And also
the fact that Trump got such a large popular vote
shows that those votes came from the blue so called
blue states. They came from New York, they came from California,
from Massachusetts.

Speaker 2 (38:51):
Yeah, well, you know, I was waiting for Massachusetts to
go to go red.

Speaker 1 (38:55):
No, no, that's not happened. That's I don't know, there's
not much hope for that.

Speaker 3 (39:00):
But they didn't lose these cligh school blue states by
all that much.

Speaker 2 (39:05):
I think it was New Jersey by three.

Speaker 1 (39:07):
I mean they almost Trump. You know. They held on
to Minnesota by a thread in New Hampshire too, so
you know they didn't. I mean, they lost steam in
every single state maybe except Vermont, you know, and the
district of Columbia. Other than that, they every you know,

(39:28):
they barely held on. And that's why the popular votes there.
Both houses of Congress are going to be Republican, which
means that little Jamie Raskin is going to have to
put away his impeachment filings, right, I mean he does, yeah,
he said he was talking about this on with Bill
Maher impeachment. We're going to not certify the election. That's

(39:51):
all out the window. Ain't gonna happen, thank god. So
and I think that most Americans, including most liberals, are
relieve that was It's just so miserable. The law fair
agenda is dead, The censorship agenda is dying. It's not
completely dead, but we'll see, you know, all of it

(40:11):
is going it's disappearing. And if the Democrats don't learn
that they need to move into a new way of thinking,
they're going to be dead too. So anyway, Mike, all.

Speaker 2 (40:21):
Right, well it great. I mean it's like night and
day with your move here.

Speaker 1 (40:27):
All right, great talking to you. Yeah, get your power
back and we will talk to you soon. All right,
take care. Thanks. All right, So that was Michael d.
Shaw coming in by phone. He's having some kind of
a power outage. And I've said what I've had to say.

(40:48):
I mean, I've been taken off of TikTok for some reason.
I don't know what I said that offended them, but whatever,
I appreciate you all joining me today. I'll give out
the number one more time if you'd like to call
in five oh eight six three seven five five nine
six six three seven and well you can text me

(41:16):
or chat me as it were on Rumble, which is
the flagship station that's rumble dot com. Chiles Moskowitz. My
books are available at Amazon Books. Just put my name
in the server Chiles Moskowitz, and you'll see a bunch
of books come up. That's how I sponsored the show

(41:39):
with my books. So all I can say is God
bless America. Thank God, it's a new day. It's a
new day in this country, a day of sunlight and
hope and goodness. Anyway, thanks for joining me. Everyone, have
a great evening and God bless you all.
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