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August 11, 2025 116 mins
8-11-25  Conservative Commandos: TOPIC:  Trump deploys National Guard to D.C., federal government to take over city police department
President Trump announced Monday that he would deploy about 800 National Guard troops to the District of Columbia and placed the city’s police department under emergency federal control in an unprecedented move to combat crime in the nation’s capital and remove homeless encampments.  The president said he might send federal authorities to other cities, including New York and Chicago, if local Democratic officials don’t crack down on what he called “out of control” crime in liberal jurisdictions.
Citing lenient prosecution of teens who commit crimes in the District, Mr. Trump said carjackings, assaults, armed robberies and other offenses have become commonplace in the nation’s capital. He said the District has become an unsafe city for American tourists and foreign dignitaries alike.  “Our capital city has been overtaken by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals, roving mobs of wild youth, drugged-out maniacs and homeless people, and we’re not going to let it happen anymore. We’re not going to take it,” Mr. Trump said during a White House press conference.  The president said his administration also will be “getting rid of the slums.”
Flanked by several Cabinet members, including Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Attorney General Pam Bondi and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, Mr. Trump painted a hellish portrait of a city overrun by violence, homelessness, graffiti and vandalism. He said his actions were necessary to “rescue” a city that has become “out of control.”  Mr. Trump said he is prepared to send the military into the District “if needed.” Mr. Hegseth did not indicate which branches of the military could be deployed in the city but said “specialized units” could be mobilized.  “They will be strong. They will be tough and they will stand with our law enforcement partners,” Mr. Hegseth said.
Ms. Bondi said Monday morning that the federal takeover of the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department began immediately.  The president’s depiction of rampant crime in the District contradicts statistics from the police department showing that overall crime is down 7% from last year and violent crime is down 26%. However, the numbers are down from recent 20-year highs, such as 274 homicides in 2023 and a surge in carjackings two years ago that reached more than 100 per month.  “It’s not getting better, it’s getting worse,” said Mr. Trump, adding that he believes the District is fudging its latest crime statistics.
 
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
Welcome everybody, and welcome fellow patriots, Welcome, Fello de Plorabulls,
Welcome all of you Drakes's Society at Rock dwellers, you
sick of fence and stinkos. Welcome to the Conservative Commandos
radio show. And I'm Rick Trador coming to you from
the my Pillar Studios and my Sture Studios of the
TV network and joining me today as my co host

(00:28):
is the President and CEO of Frontiers of Freedom, and
that is George Landrath. George, welcome back, Welcome back to
Conservative Commandos.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
I am so glad to be here. After all, this
is the place to be.

Speaker 1 (00:41):
Indeed it is, Indeed it is, And George, it's great
to see again. So George, what's on your radar screen
this day?

Speaker 2 (00:48):
Well, I think I've been kind of curious about some
of the craziness I've seen from the news, because, for example,
Democratic strategist James Carvell, who recently got in the news
and headlines because he was at indicating that if the
Democrats were able to ever control the White House, the
House and Senate again for example after twenty twenty eight,
that they should grant statehood to Puerto Rico and DC,

(01:12):
and that they should pack the court and then you
have people like idiots named on Texas. It's run from it. Yeah,
Beto Urk, that's the guy that he was saying. Also
that they should make all of the illegals full citizens
and all that, and then they claim they're doing all
this to protect democracy.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
That's by myself.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
These people don't even know what that means. And they've
certainly not just been protecting a democratic republic or our
constitutional republic. They just seem to want to change the
definition of democracy. For example, you could say I support
democracy because I want people in China to be able
to vote in our presidential election and be like, really,

(01:55):
you think that's democracy. Okay, tell me you're stupid. Without
telling me you're stupid, that guy wins, right, all right,
So Jim Carvell wins the Stupid Award. Beato O'Rourke wins
the stupid Award.

Speaker 1 (02:08):
Well, George Shaw, I'll be honest with you. I think
that the Republicans should be proactive. And what I mean
by that is I think they should give Puerto Rico
it's independence so forever you're taking that off the table.
I think that you should make Washington DC a part
of the state of Maryland, which is already a heavily
blue state. So let them let the state of Maryland

(02:30):
take DC with it. Maryland would pick up a couple
of Congressional seats probably, but at the same time you're
getting rid of that problem. And as far as the
packing of the Court, I think the Republicans should do
it right now. I think the Republicans should jump ahead
of the Democrats and make nineteen members on the Supreme Court,

(02:51):
and before Donald Trump leaves office, maybe twenty seven members
to the Supreme Court. And maybe if jd gets in office,
maybe they should make it thirty seven members to the
Supreme Court. And every and then what you do is
you pass law so you get a constitutional amendment finally
settling the number of judges on the Supreme Court while

(03:14):
Republicans are in charge. But see, Republicans are always always
ten years too late on things. Ten years. We've known
for a long time what the Democrats wanted to do.
We've known for a long time. They want to make
DC estate, they want to make Puerto Rico estate. They're
going to want to make Wamas state. They're going to

(03:35):
want to make a state of anywhere and they think
they can where will give them a congressional advantage, an
advantage in the Senate, an advantage in the House, and
also an electoral college.

Speaker 3 (03:49):
So I believe that Republicans need to take these.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
Warnings seriously, George, and they need to be proactive.

Speaker 3 (03:57):
Don't we another thing I think they should do.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
I think they should take northern California and make it
the state of Jefferson, maybe includes in some territory of
the southern part of Oregon. I think that place is
maybe like South Jersey. They should make South Jersey a state.
Get where I'm going, George. The Republicans are always too late,

(04:24):
too short, and they need to be proactive because they've
been worn. Now they've been worn what the Democrats want
to do, and the Democrats will do it, George. Look
at all the actions they're taking now in order to
quote unquote save democracy. And before I go any further,
let me say this. The word democracy is not used

(04:46):
one single time in the Declaration of Independence or in
our Constitution. This is a republic, it's not a democracy.
And there's a total difference in forms of.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
That's true. Yeah, and I think people don't understand in
a democracy you vote on everything, meaning that it would
be legitimate to vote on whether or not in a democracy,
not saying it's legitimate, but in democracy it would be to,
for example, vote on whether or not you could round
up a particular religious group and put them in gas chambers,
and if fifty percent of the population says, yeah, that's okay,

(05:22):
then it's okay. In our country, that's not okay because
we have the First Amendment and we have a principle,
which is we're not voting on people's inaliable rights. The
right to life, the right to liberty, the right to
pursue happiness, the right to free speech, the right to
freedom of religion. Those are things we will not vote on.
We don't care if eighty nine percent of the populace
agrees it does not matter. That's not a legitimate vote.

(05:46):
And that's a much better society than saying, yeah, you
just need fifty percent plus one and then you can
do whatever you want. And so it's very interesting. So
the powermongers want the democracy because then they can, for example,
cheat as they have already done by letting in twenty
one million illegal aliens and then trying to get them

(06:06):
to vote. For example, in California, Almost five hundred thousand
people in the voting roles have been called in to
serve on over the last couple of years on jury duty,
and they have declined to do so because they weren't citizens.
But they're on the voter rolls.

Speaker 1 (06:25):
Well, George, if they were on the voter rolls, if
they were on the voter rolls and they voted, that
is a felony in and of itself. They should be arrested.
They should be tried, they should be convicted. But let's
not house them here, George. Let's send them back to
where the hell they come from and say to them,

(06:47):
if you ever come back again, you're going to a
federal prison for twenty five years.

Speaker 2 (06:54):
Yeah, that makes sense. I do find it very well.

Speaker 1 (06:57):
If it makes sense, George, from where are the Republicans?
Why aren't the Republicans getting on this. Why aren't the
Republicans saying, who are these five hundred thousand people who
registered to vote and probably voted, who went called for
jury duty are not citizens? Why don't the Republicans do something?

Speaker 4 (07:16):
George?

Speaker 1 (07:16):
George, George, I'm a little frustrated today. Computers are driving
me crazy, So I'm a little bit frustrated this, But
when you talk about what James Carvel said about making
DC and Puerto Rico estate, about packing this Supreme Court,
about allowing these illegals to become permanent residents, this all

(07:40):
angers me. And as I said, what really angers me
they Republicans are stuck on stupid. They're doing nothing about it.
They're not being proactive.

Speaker 2 (07:51):
Yeah. Well, and the other thing they ought to be
doing is right away is pointing out how essentially totalitarian
these approaches are. An example would be look at the
debate we're having right now about redoing districting and so forth,
after they've literally did a fraudulent census in twenty twenty
and so forth. So then in Texas and places like that,

(08:12):
when they say they're going to redo the districts for
you know, redistricting and so forth, the left goes crazy
and acts like how dare they? And yet Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maine,
New Hampshire, New Mexico, Rhode Island, Vermont. It just kind
of goes on and on and on, Hawaii, Delaware. These
are places that all have zero Republican seats, and yet

(08:35):
some of them actually have almost half the population is
Republican and then the low ones are down in about
about a third. But the bottom line is we're talking
about it between a third and a half. And yet
there's no seat that elects a Republican. And yet they're
outraged that in Texas they might have a redistricting that could,

(08:55):
you know, cost the Democrats a seat or two or
something like that. And it's just kind of amazing. And
there's a lot of other states. Those are the ones
that are most obvious. But you know, California, for example,
almost forty percent of the vote is Republican, and yet
they only have twenty percent of the congressional seats. And
in Illinois close to half are republican, and only seventeen

(09:17):
percent of the seats are republican. And so you go
on and on this way, and in New Jersey has
the same problem. Forty six percent of New Jersey's republican,
twenty five percent of the seats are republican. And you
go to Oregon forty one percent of republican, but only
one congressional seat and they're sixteen percent. And yet the

(09:38):
Democrats don't have any problem with that. They're okay, they
did all of this, and they've been doing all of
this for decades. But now when the Republicans say, well, okay,
we're going to make sure that we in the states
that we have the control, that we do something somewhat similar,
maybe not quite as outrageous as the ones that we
were just discussed, and they go crazy, how dare you?

(10:01):
That's unconstitutional? And it's kind of like, well, it's not
unconstitutional because the Constitution doesn't specify exactly how you have
to draw up the districts, but it is there is
something kind of weird about it in the sense that
the districts probably ought not be decided on political grounds.
The point of it was to make the people were represented.

(10:22):
And what they're doing is they're making sure that in
places like Massachusetts and Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, New Mexico,
Rhode Island, Vermont, Hawaiian Delaware that somewhere between a third
and half the population gets no representation. And yet they
claim and pretend that they support democracy, and the answer

(10:46):
is they don't. And as you're right, first of all,
we have a democratic republic, meaning we have a constitutional republic.
We're not just a democracy and not.

Speaker 1 (10:56):
A democracy at all. Georgies, they said that word democracy
it's not used and not one single time in the
declaration were the constitution. We are a republic. Yeah, that's it,
a republic, a constitutional republic. Forget the word democracy, democratic,

(11:17):
or anything. It does not exist in our laws, right
doesn't exist.

Speaker 2 (11:22):
Well, the reason why they use this word and some
Americans get fooled by it is because we have elections
and that sounds like, oh, well, that's democracy, and the
answer is no, that's not actually democracy. What it is
is our constitutional system that provides and says that the
people are sovereign and therefore the people get to vote

(11:42):
on who's in Congress. Originally, the states would vote on
who's in the Senate, but we've changed that, you know,
with the seventeenth Amendment, so now they're directly elected by
the people. And then of course the president was elected
by the people through an electoral college, but they're still
you know, the people's votes mattered and impacted that, and

(12:04):
so that's I think why they get away with pretending
that we're a democracy. And I wish that people were
a little smarter because it would be kind of like
saying a Hamburger steak because it's made out of meat
from a cow, you know what I mean, And it's like, well, yeah,
it's there's you know, but that's not the same thing.

(12:24):
And yet somehow these people seem to think that that's
the case. And it's like, wow, you guys couldn't even
pass a high school Civics class. And that's unfortunate because
I think part of being an American citizen as you
have to understand our system, how it works, and why
it works.

Speaker 1 (12:40):
Well, George, I'll disagree with you in one little way.
You say wish you said you wish they were a
little bit smarter. I wish they were a whole lot
smarter actually. But let's go to break George, and you
are listening to and watching The Conservative Commandos with George
Lander as Thumbrick Drader. We'd got a couple of great
guests joining our show today and on you have the

(13:01):
society of this break. George is gonna tell tell you
who they are in the topics for our conversation.

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Speaker 1 (16:03):
And welcome back. Welcome back to the Conservative Commandos with
George Landris and Imric Trader, coming to you from the
Mikela Studios and my Stewart Studios of the a u
n TV Network. George, after this segment, we're going to
be playing a couple of the best of interviews that
we've done here on the Conservative Commandos. When he got

(16:24):
lined up, Buddy Well, I thought.

Speaker 2 (16:26):
We might go back to roughly late January so we
could look at the inauguration right afterwards. So let's we
would start off with Rick Manning, who is the president
at that time, was the President of Americans for a
Limited Government. He's also a member of the Conservative Commando's family,
and he's an au n TV alumnus. As well, and

(16:47):
he served on President Trump's transition team, and now he's
serving in the administration and sonyhow he I think he'll
be a great It'll be very interesting to listen to
what he was saying several months ago, because I think
what we'll see is that when things stand up after
six seven months in time, it demonstrates that they're saying

(17:08):
things that matter. The same thing with Worris Cooper. He's
a senior Fellow with the National Center for Public Policy Research.
He's coach chairman of Project twenty one, their national advisory board,
and you probably guys see him regularly on TV on
major networks, and he's taught constitutional law, and he served

(17:29):
as the senior counsel to US House Majority Leader Dick Army.
So he's you know, has a lot of experience and
is a smart guy and is a very strong proponent
of the our constitution. He's, for example, written two books,
one of them recently is How Trump Is Making Black
America Great Again. And then he also wrote a book

(17:53):
on mister Biden entitled put You All Back in Chains,
How Joe Biden's policies Black Americans. And his point there
is just to kind of make it clear. These guys
claim they care about minorities, but the evidence is they
don't actually care about minorities. They just care about power
and they use minorities as their way to get power. Yeah,

(18:14):
so this is very interesting to me to see the
world we live in and how people are just kind
of crazy, don't make sense, and you know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (18:24):
Absolutely so definitely a couple of great guests here on
the Conservative Commandos with your Trader and Jewish Land because guests,
we did so, George, what else is lighting up your
radar screen?

Speaker 2 (18:38):
Well, we were talking about some of the things that
you know, the crazy left, and maybe one example that
would be crime is getting out of control in all
of America's major leftist cities, and it's getting out of control,
for example, in DC, and yet they act like, oh, well,
crime went down a little bit because we had high

(19:00):
during the pandemic and it's gone a little down from there,
so everything's great. It's kind of like, Okay, that's crazy.
You know, it's not actually doing it, maybe doing statistically
better than it was, but it's still awful the crime.
An example would be a neighbor of mine has a
daughter who lives in DC and works in DC. She

(19:22):
was on the phone with her mother and while she
was walking home from work, she was jumped. It's kind
of like that, you can't live in a city where
you can't walk around and be safe, and yet that's
what the left is allowed to happen. And so while
crime could be down from the recent spike, because many
places maybe had a super high spike right during or
right after the pandemic because everyone was masked. You know,

(19:45):
it used to be if you walked into a bank
with a mask on, people kind of knew to pull
the alarm and assumed that you were going to be
robbing the bank. And of course this made it easier.
So all of a sudden, now you have problems. But
bottom line is, let's be honest. In DC, in New York, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Chicago, La,
San Francisco, Oakland and beyond, families still don't feel safe,

(20:08):
or individuals don't still feel safe walking to the grocery
store or writing on the metro. And this is not
a statistical problem. This is a public safety problem. And
this didn't happen by accident. Policy choices matter, and all
these different cities we've seen the soft on crime approach,
and so there's no prosecution lists for whole categories of offenses,

(20:32):
there's automatic downgrading of felonies, there's low or no bail
often for repeat offenders. So we let people out of jail,
repeat offenders, and prosecutors and so forth, and many of
these prosecutors, of course, are George Soros backed prosecutors, and
they act as if accountability is a bad idea, and

(20:53):
so the results predictable. Chronic offenders cycle in and out,
cases are pled down, police morale drops and ordinary people
pay the price. And in some cases the police pay
the price, meaning you know, they become also victims of
violent criminals. And so the bottom line is we've seen
these stories and you know, someone released on a serious

(21:16):
charge re offends just days later. That happened, for example
here in Virginia just a week or so ago, where
a guy that has a long laundry list on his
crimes that he's committed, the George Soros prosecutor in northern
Virginia released him. And what did he do? Within two
or three days he was caught trying to kidnap a
toddler at mallow. And so it's the Left likes to

(21:38):
act like, well, we're just trying to be compassionate. That's
not compassionate. When people are getting killed, when people are
getting raped, when people are being robbed, when people are
being burned alive, those kinds of things. Tell me how
that's compassionate, Because I would argue public safety is an
important civil right. So one of the reasons why you

(21:58):
have government. Our founders did not want to have no government,
that didn't want to have big government, but they understood
that you needed government to make sure that our streets
were safe and that we had essentially a civic order
that allowed people to live in freedom without fear of problems.
So the bottom line is, we owe the victims of crime.

(22:19):
We owe neighborhoods, small businesses, families, individuals. We owe them
something a lot better than stupid slogans about compassion. We
need to fix this, and it's not that complicated. We're
actually pretty simple. Enforce the laws that are on the books,
prioritize pre trialed attention for violent and repeat offenders, prosecute

(22:39):
gun crimes and carjacking. Instead, what do they want to do.
They don't prosecute gun crimes. They just want to take
guns away from law abiding citizens. Kind of stupid there,
but that's what they want because why they're stupid, and
they're also clearly not interested in fixing anything. They just
want power. And also, we have to back our police
because they're doing a job to protect us. And of

(23:00):
course if a policeman is acting outside the law, then
we don't have to back that particular police officer. But
the reality is the police in our nation are a
very important part of our civic society and a civil
society and safe streets or a foundation of opportunity. If
you want thriving schools, vibrant downtowns, transit that people will

(23:23):
actually use, then we have to restore the consequences for
violent crime, and we have to hold prosecutors accountable in
the communities where they seem to act like now I'm
on the criminal side, it's like okay, fine, then we're
going to get rid of you. We're going to disbar you,
and if you're not following the law and so, we're
going to punish you. And this sort of so called

(23:46):
compassion without consequences actually is chaos and very damaging. So
it's time for us to start choosing public safety.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
Well, Georgia, I saw a sign. It was rather interesting
on a steward. Remember the old sign no shirt, no shoes,
no service. Well this sign said no shoes, no no shirt,
no shoes, no mask, no heuity, no entry. All right,
And you know what I find very interesting, George, and

(24:19):
I live outside of Philadelphia, so I see, I see
the news, and the crime in Philadelphia is probably as
bad as it is in Washington, d C. New York, Chicago, Atlanta,
Los Angeles. But now they've got to the point where
they don't even give a description of the perpetrator. What

(24:40):
they'll do is they'll say, well, this individual who was
wearing a black hoodie and black shoes, they failed to
mention that was a black man. Or this woman was
wearing this and this. They don't mention that this was
a Spanish looking woman. They don't do that anymore, which

(25:02):
I find is very interesting.

Speaker 2 (25:04):
And what they're playing politics.

Speaker 3 (25:05):
They're playing politics. They're playing politics.

Speaker 2 (25:08):
Yeah, because the truth is, if you tell me that
what the criminal is a white man, that doesn't mean
I think all white men.

Speaker 1 (25:14):
Well, don't you remember the shooter in last week in
New York City? Say you believe he's a white man
and he wasn't.

Speaker 3 (25:22):
If you look at the picture, you could tell he wasn't.

Speaker 1 (25:24):
A white man. But what the what they don't want
us to do, George, They don't want us to notice
race anymore. But in not wanting us to notice race,
they are the ones that are noticing race. Well, they
are the ones that are being undescriptive because of the

(25:45):
the individual is of a certain skin color or certain
apparent ethnic background. Now if it's white, it's a different story.
You're going to get this guy has.

Speaker 3 (25:57):
Blond hair, blue eyes, and white in white complexion or
a bill complexion.

Speaker 2 (26:02):
But the thing is, because the reality is skin color
ought not matter, but it can help you identify who
did what actually looking for the criminal. My point is,
if they've already captured the criminal, then they don't necessarily
to give us lots of details about how tally was
or how much you weighed, or any of that kind
of stuff.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
I would love to know that, George, because if I
saw that guy on the street, I would not want
to be around them, right, I'm serious about that.

Speaker 2 (26:28):
Capture. If they've captured him and he's in jail and
you don't have a no bail law and stuff like that,
then there's less critical nature that they need to do that.
But the fact is, half the time they're lying to
us when they don't even they have the guy on
video and they're still looking for him. And it would
be helpful if the public could know what they're looking for.

Speaker 10 (26:47):
You know.

Speaker 2 (26:48):
Example would be if I were to rob a bank,
then you'd kind of expect them to say, Okay, the
guy's six y three, he weighs about two hundred and
ten pounds, he's got white skin, dark hair, and I
wouldn't say, Oh, how racist for them to say that.
It's like, no, they're describing the person who committed the crime,
and yet somehow they act as if that's based in race,

(27:09):
and it's kind of like, no, it's just an attempt
to help the public know. Keep their eyes out and
if they see me walking down the street with a
bag full of money, they go, oh, that must be him.
We'll call the police and let them know. And that's
actually a good thing to have happened, and it's not racist.

Speaker 1 (27:27):
George. Another thing you're gonna before we go to a
break and get our guests on. You know who pays
for this, George, Every single one of this pay for
this because every time somebody commits a crime shop list
steals whatever, the store passes that charge onto the rest
of us. The insurance for that store goes up, and

(27:49):
that charge is passed on to the rest of this
You know, you go into a Stuart today if the
store is still open. But if you go into a
Sturet today, most of the merchandise is behind lock and key.
If you went and makeup, if you want paint, if
you want a tool, you've got to get somebody to
come over to open the cabinet for you. Do you

(28:10):
know why, George, Because of theft, Because of theft, because
the stores know that if they stop somebody for shoplifting shoplifting,
chances are that person's going to be back out on
the streets and back in that store within a couple hours.
So it's easier just to pass the cost on to
the rest of us. So many people are so concerned

(28:34):
about paying more because of the terriffs. They should be
concerned about theft and how much they have to pay
extra because of theft. Hey, George, let's get a couple
of let's get a break, and we do have a
couple of great guests returning to the Conservative Commandos. Our
friends are A Scooper and Rick Manning will be joining us.

(28:57):
Don't go away, we are the Conservative command We'll be
back with their guests right after this break.

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Speaker 1 (32:00):
And welcome back, Welcome back to the Conservative Command Its
Radio show with George landerth and you're truly Rick Trader
coming to you from the My Pillars studios of my
Stewart Studios of the aun TV network. Hey, George, longtime
friend of the show, is visiting us, and please make
that introduction.

Speaker 2 (32:18):
Absolutely. I love introducing our guests because we have the
very best guest on TV and radio, and our guests
are every single time. They are people who are not
just friends of Americans, they're friends of freedom, they're friends
of our constitution. And Rick Manning is that in spades.
He is the president of Americans for Limited Government. That's
an idea that was born out of our constitution. He

(32:39):
was also, as you mentioned, a member of the Conservative
Commando's family and the au n TV alumnus, and he
has served as a member of President Trump's transition team.
And he is also the author of a book that
I think is very much worth your attention. He and
Star Parker wrote it, and it's entitled Necessary Noise. How
Donald Trump inflamed the culture War and why this is

(33:02):
good for America. And ultimately, I guess I think the
answer might be because he speaks truth and oftentimes this
culture war is about lies the press likes to tell us,
and he exposes those lies. But Rick, thank you for
joining us because today's I know, a busy day, but
it's an important day in history.

Speaker 13 (33:19):
It is an important day in history.

Speaker 14 (33:21):
It's a I think it's also a day many of
us have looked forward to, worked very hard to achieve,
and so it's a day.

Speaker 13 (33:30):
It's a celebratory day.

Speaker 14 (33:32):
But I think a lot of the stuff that are
being talked about, a lot of the executive orders that
are happening and like are all going to be have
historic importance.

Speaker 13 (33:42):
So there's a.

Speaker 14 (33:43):
Lot to discuss, and you know, we're going to have
four years to unpack the Trump administration. But the truth
of the matter is, to you know, twelve oh one
today was a lot of things went into effect that
are that are erasing the Biden mystaic and the balls
have been launched to try to erase the legislative mistakes
under Biden.

Speaker 2 (34:04):
Yeah, so I want to ask you, how does it
feel to be unburdened by what has been for the
past four years. Yeah, that's great.

Speaker 13 (34:12):
I have to tell you I feel I don't feel unburdened.

Speaker 14 (34:16):
I feel because what has been over the last four
years has there's a lot of work ahead and trying
to make and so we recover from what has been
done to us the last four years. But I am
unburdened by the sense that it's going to continue on
for another four years. So I'm so that's where I'm at.

Speaker 13 (34:32):
Listen today.

Speaker 14 (34:34):
This may just be because I work in trying to create
limited government and create environments for limited government. But you know, everybody,
a lot of people are celebrating, and rightfully, so I
look at it and I say, today's the first day
of getting the job done, and we don't need it.
We can't afford to lose even a minute and doing
it because, as we saw on the first term, four

(34:56):
years is a very very short time and we have
to take advantage of every stink in minute.

Speaker 2 (35:02):
You make a very good point. I'll make a quick
analogy here. Let's assume that you have a home in
Pacific Palisades that's burned to the ground in the wildfires there,
and the wildfires are fondly put out eventually. I'm not
saying they have him, just saying this analogy and the
analogy the fires are put out, but that doesn't mean
that everything's back to normal in your life just yet.
So you could argue that maybe this is like the

(35:23):
day that the fires put out, but now there's a
lot of work to be done to rebuild the areas
that were destroyed by fire. And I would say that's
that fire, and this analogy is the Biden administration. So
I'm not saying that Donald Trump's election is important, but
I do think we have to be realistic and understanding
that the mere fact that he took the oath of

(35:44):
office today doesn't fix everything in America. We need him
to serve four years and hopefully someone after him who
will continue that agenda for another eight years to really
get America back on track, because there's a lot of
work to be done. Am I hearing you correct? And
you think my analogy of comparing it to the fires
in California are okay?

Speaker 13 (36:06):
Yeah, I think it is.

Speaker 14 (36:07):
I would say that there's still a lot of brush
fires going around because the bidenministration has been busy flighting
brush fires, particularly the last month and a half, but
over the course of time, you know, trying to get
out all the DEI employees, although all the employees have
been put in place to push a far left agenda,
the objectors, resistors that are put in place to try

(36:29):
to stop the Trump agenda. Those are all things that
have to be done if you're going to be able
to win this battle. And some of those Donald trump'spent
four years in his first administration trying to do that,
and quite honestly, he didn't get a lot of those
fires ever put out. They're like tire fires in a landsa.
It seems like they never they never stopped burning. But

(36:50):
having said that, what he did today with his inaugural speech,
which was an unusual inaugural speech, it was a it
was a straight policy speech. It was a speech about
here's what we're doing, Here's what we're going to do.
Some commentators called it more like a State of the
Union speech than a than an inaugural speech. But what

(37:10):
he set forward is we're going to be serious from
day one. And you know, everybody out there needs needs
to understand. This is more than getting a text message
from a five digit number. This starts with eight asking
to give five dollars to help Donald Trump. This is
about knuckling down, rolling up our sleeves, and letting our
members of Congress know that they have to be on

(37:34):
board from day one. They have to give him his
They have to give him his cabinet that he wants.
They have to give him the people who below the
cabinet level, sub cabinet level appointees that he wants.

Speaker 13 (37:45):
To make this point clearly for everybody.

Speaker 14 (37:48):
In At the Department of Labor and I was on
the Labor transition team in twenty sixteen twenty seventeen at
the Department of Labor, they picked they picked one guy
who was supposed to be the cabinet secretory. He ended
up getting lown up and didn't make it. They picked
somebody else that had to be vetted and approved, and
then it took him another year to put Pat Pizzella
in as a deputy secretary, who was the guy who

(38:09):
actually knew how to run the place. And so the
number two personally the Department Labor wasn't in place until
about fifteen months of the Trump term was gone, and
which meant he got to it. You know, he got
less than three years of having the top two the
top two way labor.

Speaker 13 (38:26):
And the Senate has to deliver not just.

Speaker 14 (38:28):
The cabinet but the subcabinets people immediately so they can
actually hit the ground running because this president doesn't get
another term. He's got four years and practically speaking from
a legislative stand or from a congressional standpoint, he's got
about fourteen months max to actually be able to pass
the legislation to undo some of the legislative damage done

(38:50):
by the Biden ad ministry.

Speaker 2 (38:53):
Yeah, that's a very good point. He's got a lot
of work to be done, but like he's got to
get a fast start.

Speaker 14 (39:01):
Donald Trump will never be more powerful than he was
at twelve oh one pm today.

Speaker 13 (39:05):
That's just true.

Speaker 14 (39:07):
We've got a three vote majority of the House, they've
got three House and well practically it's got a one
vote majority. Now there's three congressional seats that are up
for election just in April that the Republicans have to
win all three. Now they aren't Republican seats, but they
have to win all three. There's a lot of stuff
that has to happen, and they can't afford to be

(39:28):
engaged in a bunch of internal fighting.

Speaker 13 (39:30):
They have to be solidly focused.

Speaker 14 (39:33):
The members of the Congress have to be solidly focused
on getting the most done possible in the first three months.
And they're going to have a debt ceiling, they're going
to have, you know, they're going to have to fund
the government sometime in March, and they're going to have
a Vegian conciliation bill that they're going to be doing

(39:54):
in the next three months, the next first one hundred days,
and they have to take advantage of each of those
opportunities to press the Trump agenda forward to because they
cannot lose any chance to get real legislative change.

Speaker 13 (40:09):
Because George, as you said.

Speaker 14 (40:10):
Executive orders are interesting, but just like Obama's pen and
phone is really a pencil and with an a rate
bail eraser on it, and the next president has that
eraser and can erase whatever he wants now, can't raise
the damage done, can't erase other effects that the current
markets react. But the fact is the actual initial impetus

(40:32):
with the executive order can be erased. And it's and
that's what Donald Trump's doing much of today is erasing
Joe Biden's executive order legacy.

Speaker 2 (40:42):
Yeah, that was a disastrous legacy. Basically, he just kind
of said anything Trump had done, I'm against. So I'll
just overturn everything I can. So he opens the border,
he stops oil production and pipelines and things like that, Like, oh,
that's real helpful, you know, It's like any In his speech,
he said that for Americans, January twentieth was going to

(41:05):
be a liberation day. And I think that's true. So
I wanted to ask you what you thought of that.

Speaker 14 (41:11):
Yes, it is, and I will go that's on the
economic side of things and more towards the freedom side
of things here, because liberation is a freedom word, and
we've been suffering under a tyranny, that First Amendment tyranny
that has been killing speech, killing debate, and primarily killing

(41:35):
the ability for supporters of Donald Trump to be able
to be heard using coursing community companies through the FBI
and homes and Donald Trump through executive order is saying
you're not that's not going to happen anymore. But this
is an example where we need to have Congress to act.
We have the FISA Act, which has got to be reformed,

(41:56):
and it was kicked into the second next year of
aggress to deal with. We have something called System, which
is a which allows specifically directs the Homeland Security Department
to communicate with social media companies to deal with misinformation,
mail information, and disinformation. Well, guess what, that's censorship. And
Congress put it into law. Now Donald Trump can say

(42:19):
we're not going to have those interactions anymore under his administration,
but if he wants to actually do something, we have
to get Congress to say, no, we're wiping out that directive,
that power that was directly given by Congress. And because
quite it's unconstitutional. But rather than waiting seven years for
the Supreme Court to deal with it, we have to

(42:41):
deal We need to deal with it through the legislative
branch and wipe it off the books. As an empowering
of our hooland security agency to play quarterback on destroying
speech and making certain only approved narratives are allowed to
be get given through social media companies.

Speaker 1 (43:00):
Bent from minute, gentlemen, you know Rick talking about that
there were certain roles that during his administration, Barack Obama
just refused to enforce, for instance, the Defensive Marriage Act.
Couldn't Donald Trump do the same thing.

Speaker 14 (43:15):
Yeah, that's what he's announced, respectively, assuming that the that
the EEO Executive Order is goes to that depth that
I have not read it. I just saw what he
said on speech. But yeah, you could say we're not
going to enforce it, and that's and that's fine, But
that means, you know, if Gravin Newsom becomes governor or
president in twenty twenty nine, it's the sort of damnically

(43:37):
he's a handing hang ruth.

Speaker 13 (43:39):
That could be, you know, opposite kind of illusion. He's
looking for truth.

Speaker 1 (43:43):
But well, in the meantime, in the meantime, didn't didn't
the Democrats reverse the Defensive Marriage Act? I mean, so
you know, he failed to, he failed to, he failed
to enforce it, and then they got rid of it.
Isn't that what Donald Trump needs to do?

Speaker 4 (43:59):
This refuse to refuse to enforce it?

Speaker 1 (44:02):
And then have Congress get rid of it.

Speaker 13 (44:05):
Yep.

Speaker 14 (44:05):
The challenge with all this rick is that there are
things that are happening that every single day Congress is
enticed by the idea we need to do something about speech,
and it's always for a good reason. At the end
of the twenty twenty the last session of Congress, Republicans
in control of the House and Democrats and control of
the Senate, there's massive momentum for something called Kids Online

(44:27):
Safety Act and the Kids Online Safety Act, all good intentions.
You know, we don't want kids data being taken, we
don't want predators trying to take advantage of children and
the like. But it made the Federal Trade Commission the
king of language on the web if its children might
see it. Hence gave the FTC absolute power in terms

(44:50):
of speech on the web that might be seen by
people under the age of eighteen. It also gave every
state attorney general power to go and also dictate, based
upon their state interests, what speech would be allowed to
be heard by people in their state. So and since
most of the social media platforms are based in Silicon Valley,

(45:10):
they would be particularly give power to the state of
California the Attorney General of California who doesn't particularly like
biblical teachings as a result as it relate to let's
say lgptq xyz plus four seventeen kind of thinking, and say,
doesn't agree with that, doesn't believe that speech is it
believes that speech is.

Speaker 13 (45:31):
Harmful to children.

Speaker 14 (45:32):
Actual biblical truth is harmful to children because it counters
their narrative. After all, why would they How could you
ever vote against something called the Kids Online Safety Act?
We want to kid Everybody wants to keep kids safe,
don't they. It's like, dude, read the bill.

Speaker 2 (45:50):
Yeah, that's a good point. The name of the bill
is often fraudulent, and that's a good example.

Speaker 13 (45:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (45:55):
Well yeah.

Speaker 14 (45:56):
Inflationial Reduction Act, which was really the Green New Deal
to inflation reduction, had everything to do with Green New
Deal and everybody voting and people.

Speaker 13 (46:03):
Vote for it and say, oh, vote for inflation reduction.

Speaker 14 (46:05):
When they effectively empowered and funded and changed the Wall
Street Wall Street funding opportunities to promote the exact policies
that Donald Trump's now going to try to get reverse
through his fossil fuels first policies.

Speaker 2 (46:18):
Yeah, of course, then you have the affordable Care Act,
which was neither affordable in norder to promote good care.
And that's a good place for it to take a
quick break. So folks don't go away, because the Conservative
command is a Rick Trader and George Landreth and our
good friend and a special guest, Rick Manning, the President
of Americans for Limited Government, will be right back.

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Speaker 1 (50:08):
And welcome back. Welcome back to the Conservative Commander's Radio
Show with georgechlanderth and you're truly Rick Trader, coming to
you from the Mike Pillars studios and my store studios.

Speaker 4 (50:18):
Of the AU and TV network.

Speaker 1 (50:20):
I want to thank our guests for sticking through the break,
and that's Rick Manning. He is the president of Americans
for Limited Government also part time replacement host here on
The Conservative Commanders where always appreciate Rick joining us. Hey, Rick,
thank you for holding through that break. We really do
appreciate your time. Hey, Rick, looking at an article here

(50:41):
now on Fox News Jason Alden and I love how
these entertainers get involved in politics. But Jason Alden declares
Donald Trump's presidency will be quote a new era for America.
And I wanted to talk with you about voter expectations.
You know, the American people elected Donald Trump because they

(51:04):
didn't like what was going on. They didn't like what
was going on on our southern on our borders, especially
our southern border. They didn't like what was going on
with their economy. They didn't like what was going along
with inflation. And I just George and I were talking
about this earlier and I mentioned to George, you know,
the price of a dozen eggs is eight dollars. Mary

(51:27):
went out the other day to buy a dozen eggs.
Eight dollars for a dozen eggs. Gas is still three dollars.
People are going to expect prices to come down. Now,
alects might come down, gas might come down, But by
and large, I think that the best Donald Trump could
really do is put a hold on inflation. Lower inflation.

(51:48):
But there's not going to be a deflation. There's not
going to be deflation overall. And I wonder about voter
expectations and if in a year or two, or especially
come the mid term, if things aren't drastically improved, they're
going to say, well, we tried that Republican thing and
it didn't work.

Speaker 4 (52:07):
We were lied to your thoughts.

Speaker 14 (52:10):
First of all, if markets are actually determining prices as
related to you know, two fews of goods and dollars,
chasing too many goods kind of thing, you're driving a price.
You can drive a price through basic markets now that
is a and that's not something the government really should
be trying to control. Okay, that's how you get you know,

(52:31):
if you want more chickens laying eggs, price of eggs
goes up to eight bucks and suddenly some of those
eggs become new chickens as of eggs, and you then
have more eggs to buy, which point the price goes down.
That's how the supply and demand marketplace works as it
relates to price.

Speaker 1 (52:47):
Does the public understand that though Rick.

Speaker 13 (52:50):
Well, no, no, they don't.

Speaker 14 (52:51):
They understand I'm paying eight bucks a dozen for eggs
and that's outrageous and it is outrageous.

Speaker 13 (52:57):
The point on it is that overall the policy.

Speaker 14 (53:00):
Is that Donald Trump is going to be pushing it
is now pushing. Are going to be profit ones to
increase markets, increase the ability for labor cost of labor,
which is inflationary by the way, but increasing the cost
of labor by market basis means it means you're that
money is going into the workers pocket. And the thing

(53:21):
that really matters the difference between what what Biden did,
I was called him, oh Biden. I don't know why,
but the things that Biden did and Donald Trump is
Biden didn't understand that it's real wages that't matter. If
I'm making more money in real terms, and I may
then I'm better off. And if eggs are eight bucks

(53:43):
an hour, but I'm now making as opposed to eight
bucks a hour, I'm not making eight bucks of carton,
but I'm now making twelve dollars an hours supposed to
eight dollars an hour, I'm now I'm doing better off
overall my overall I'm making more money. And so it's
really quality of life and the real way is the issue.
And Biden never got his arms around that, that basic

(54:04):
problem and never understood it. They could say, oh, inflation's
going down, but the fact is people in the four
years of Biden ended up being no better off than
they were before he got there, and people and people's
mentality was that he'd ripped that they were much worse off.

Speaker 13 (54:22):
So get down to it.

Speaker 14 (54:24):
If we start refining more diesel fuel and the cost
of diesel goes down, and trucks were able to actually
deliver stuff, if we make it to the state of California,
can't block certain trucks from being able to run run
from the ports and lower the cost of driving from
the port of Ports in California to deliver goods from

(54:45):
the Far East all over all of America. If that
is less expensive to do that, then the cost of
those goods go down. If the you know, if the
for instance, if corporate taxes go down, then you have
a you have a natural offset to the tariffs which
are going to go up. And so at that point

(55:05):
that becomes a wash and you effectively then you're getting
more money coming in from the fore from China in
terms of tariffs, and you're not ending up having the
higher prices based on the corporation is having to raise prices. Lastly,
smart tariffs when we kind of if you're not gonna
talk you have to talk terrifts when you're talking to inflation.
Smart tariffs recognize a simple thing. Recognize that any good

(55:32):
that comes from China is subsidized by the Chinese.

Speaker 13 (55:36):
The Chinese have to have the.

Speaker 14 (55:37):
Lowest price in the market in order to continue to
dominate the market. That's how their whole business model operates.
So consequently, if you put a tariff on Chinese goods,
what the Chinese government does is they subsidize those goods
even more effectively, a tariff on Chinese goods is a
tariff on China and never gets past consumer because the

(55:58):
last thing to Chinese can afford to have. Even though
this is what we need to have happened, is for
the steel Chinese steel industry to find itself in trouble
because suddenly American steel is We're now building the highest
tensile steel. We're now building, We're creating those kinds of factories,
those kind of that kind of undergrooding of an entire economy.

(56:20):
And because the price for Chinese steel went up constantly,
the profits to make steel here became large enough that
you could afford to invest in it. That's the Chinese
cannot allow that to happen, so they will subsidize, subsidized, subsidize.

Speaker 13 (56:32):
And those moneies are going to go directly into our treasury.

Speaker 14 (56:36):
As a result, we still have to figure out how
to build a steel industry again in this country. We
have to make sure a car industry is strong in
this country because a car industry is a tank industry, understand,
and steel industry is the ability to build steel and
aluminum industry's ability to build those tanks and build those
airplanes and do the things we need to be able
to do so we have a military that's not dependent

(56:56):
upon Chinese raw materials to be able to build it.
Donald Trump is looking at Greenland. Why is he looking
at doing something? Rare earth metals are huge in Greenland,
and China's right now dominating the mining of them. We
have to get China out of Greenland. For military purposes
and for rare metals purposes, we have to get them

(57:17):
out of Greenland. And we have to truly protect the
North Atlantic seaways from China. But we also want those
metals to come to America to defend Western interest and
not Chinese interests. So there's a lot of things that
are a lot of moving parts here. Bottom line is
Donald Trump's determination is We're going to make it so
American workers make more, take home more, and hence are

(57:40):
able to afford to live in America, to get a
house in America, to buy a home in America, to
have children in America, and to thrive in America. And
that's what his whole agenda is, and that's what his
economic policy is built around.

Speaker 13 (57:53):
And it's holistic, it's not just one thing.

Speaker 1 (57:58):
Rick and wanted to talk with you about the Trump Effect.
What I mean about the Trump Effect? Okay, today's January twentieth,
New Day in America. The Trump Administrator, the inauguration of
Donald Trump. But I really do believe and I think
this may be imprecedented. I wanted to get your feelings
about this, the Trump Effect. Look what has happened. There's

(58:21):
an online publication out.

Speaker 4 (58:23):
There called the Daily Torch.

Speaker 1 (58:25):
Maybe you've heard of it, Rick Manning the Daly Torch,
and there was an article in the Daily Torch.

Speaker 4 (58:31):
Trump's taror threat on.

Speaker 1 (58:32):
China results in dialogue, just like it did for Canada, Mexico.

Speaker 4 (58:38):
Rick olad Panama, all lad Greenland on it.

Speaker 1 (58:41):
I'll lad Canada on it. It seems like when Donald
Trump talks, the world resounds. You know, we have this resignation,
resonation throughout different levels. And I was wondering, Rick, have
you ever seen anything like this before?

Speaker 3 (59:00):
The effect and administration that's.

Speaker 1 (59:03):
Not even in office yet can have on a world situation,
same thing. And guys it Donald Trump said if those
hostages aren't going to be released, there's going to be
hell to pay. And what's your thoughts on this? Rick?
Even before he was inaugurated, before he was sworn in
what an effect he's had on really truly big world situations.

Speaker 14 (59:28):
Strong leadership begets reactions in turn from a country like America,
which is still the strongest country in the world, creates
reactions of how do we survive this and how do
we how do we work with them, how do we
make how do we get out from under being top
of mind for Donald Trump? And so you get you
get responses that are are typically positive and in terms

(59:50):
of trying to get things done. The terriffory basically, I
don't think it's a surprise many people that Justin Trudeau
end up resigning about five days after Donald Trump jokingly
said he was going to make Canada fifty first state.
There's a you know, he when he talks, he's like
the old YF. Hutton commercial. When he talks, people listen,

(01:00:10):
you no. But the Biden administration had the same effect,
but it was it was the opposite effect in terms
of America. Suddenly, when Joe Biden's in, nobody cared what
we said we were. It was, oh, now the front
the Europeans are going to go do stupid things they
want to do.

Speaker 13 (01:00:25):
You know.

Speaker 14 (01:00:25):
So it was a so we didn't have the dominant
voice at the table, and we were we essentially we
were laughed at, we were put in a put in
a box, and things like the bricks which which is
stands for Brazil, Russia, India, and China, which then expanded
by I think about fifteen countries who said we don't

(01:00:45):
want the dollar to be the US world reserve currency anymore,
attempting to us essentially undermine America's primary economic advantage in
the world. So there's a So those things happened because
there was a president who didn't respond, who couldn't respond strongly,
in fact, wasn't willing to defend his own country's interests.

Speaker 13 (01:01:05):
So it works in both directions. It's just more noticeable
when you.

Speaker 14 (01:01:10):
Have a strong voice replacing a weak voice, because suddenly
all the mice have been playing, say oh, take a
look at each other and say oh, oh, there's no plane anymore,
and they scramble to see who can get who can
get out of the way of the bulldozer that's coming,
or the bit let's put it this way to keep
the metaphor right, the big cat who's coming.

Speaker 1 (01:01:30):
Rick Man, Americans for limited government. Rick, we always appreciate you.
Please tell our audience how they could follow you follow
the work of Americans for Limited Government.

Speaker 14 (01:01:42):
Ye, go to Dailytorch dot com, that publication that Rick
was telling better earlier Daily Toorch.

Speaker 13 (01:01:47):
Dot com and.

Speaker 14 (01:01:49):
Just get the same thing we send to George into
Rick and others and say, we'll go about hundred thousand subscribers.
Just put your email address in and you'll get exactly
what they get.

Speaker 13 (01:01:58):
And this year we're going.

Speaker 19 (01:01:59):
To be beefing up some of the focus on some
focal points in terms of draining the swamp, because we
get that, forget that this.

Speaker 14 (01:02:12):
If we don't fix the personnel problem in DC, everything
else falls apart the minute Donald Trump be leaves sixteen hundred.
So we have this opportunity to fix that problem, and
that's going to be a primary focus of Americans for
Prelimited Government in the next year.

Speaker 1 (01:02:28):
Well, I hope that was the lesson Donald Trump learned
from his last administration.

Speaker 3 (01:02:33):
How the how the the swamps sucked.

Speaker 1 (01:02:36):
Him in and buried him under. Hey, Rick Manning, again,
thank you so much for joining us. Take care and
God bless.

Speaker 14 (01:02:42):
I'd bless you guys, and just we got lots to do,
but let's not forget to enjoy where we are.

Speaker 1 (01:02:47):
And amen, bright sunny day, bright sunny day out there today.
And this is the conservative command to this radio show
with George landreth Our Merick Trader.

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Speaker 2 (01:05:53):
Welcome back to the Conservative Commandos. I'm glad you stuck
around because we always have the best guests. And guess
what we have with us proof of that proposition? We
have Horace Cooper. He is a Senior Fellow with the
National Center for Public Policy Research. He's co chairman of
Project twenty one National Advisory Board and he's a regular

(01:06:14):
television commentator on major networks. Now, Horace is also a
longtime dear friend of mine. But the truth is he's
a friend of freedom and opportunity and of our constitution.
He taught constitutional law George Mason University in Here in Virginia,
and he served as the senior counsel to US House
Majority Leader Dick Army. So he's going to be a

(01:06:37):
great guest because he's going to have some great insights.
But also he's got some great books out there. One
of them is How Trump Is Making Black America Great Again,
The untold story of Black achievement in the era of Trump.
And then he has another book, and that one is
even more recent, and it's put you all back in chains,
How Joe Biden's policies hurt Black amer Americans. So those

(01:07:01):
are two books that really go well with this concept
of freedman opportunity. And so with that, Horace, welcome back
to the Conservative Commanders. We're glad to have you.

Speaker 20 (01:07:11):
It's always a pleasure to come on the program.

Speaker 2 (01:07:13):
We're now basically one week into Donald Trump's presidency. The
inauguration was last Monday, and so we're hitting the one
week Mark and so forth. So I thought maybe perhaps
we could discuss what this first week of this new
era looks like and what it may mean for the future.
So perhaps I can start off by asking you, how
does it feel horace to be unburdened by what has

(01:07:36):
been for the past four years.

Speaker 20 (01:07:39):
Well, the stark contrast is what is so obvious. It
is very clear that President Donald J. Trump is directing
the policy changes that we Americans are witnessing. What was
unclear for four years was who was directing the Paula

(01:08:00):
See changes that we suffered under when Joe Biden was president.
It is a telling narrative when you see so many
of the instances with things as simple as he can't
climb stairs, but he can't remember names. He speaks to

(01:08:22):
dead congressmen when they're not available because they're dead. At
various public events, Speaker Mike Johnson actually said that he
asked him about a executive order involving LNG and how
dangerous it was for our economy and how detrimentally it

(01:08:45):
would affect us internationally in terms of our reliance more
on international energy as opposed to locally produced and Speaker
Johnson said that President Biden told him, I have no
idea what you're talking about. I never did that. We
don't have that problem. Now we have the amazing benefit

(01:09:08):
of a president who is taking charge. When he says,
DEEI has to come to an end, he issues the
executive order. He then tells us why he's issuing the
executive order. In many instances he does it on camera.
It's not a stranger that has done this, it's the

(01:09:30):
president that's done this. So I would say the biggest
contrast it's the difference between the president himself taking charge
and setting priorities and the past president where we heard
about policies. We've read about policies, but many of them
may or may not have even been viewed by the

(01:09:54):
former president before they were put into effect. President Biden
was not driving policies. Crazy lefties were. But today a
conservative president is driving American policy.

Speaker 2 (01:10:07):
Yeah, and these are the things he campaigned on. So
that's one of the things that I think is interesting.
We'll get into some of the executive orders and maybe
just a moment, but I thought before we get there,
I could ask you this question, which is, let's just
start with his inauguration and the speech that he gave
and maybe the priorities that he outlined in that speech
and what impressed you about it, and then we'll jump
to the executive orders and presidential directives.

Speaker 20 (01:10:30):
The President Trump's first inaugurill address, many people were taken aback.
It encapsulated the ideas that he had talked about while
he was running for office. However, it did not result
from a collaboration with speech writers and some of the

(01:10:54):
professionals who were really good at pros and so as
a result, some people thought that it wasn't an appropriate response.
There was nothing that he said, however, that was inconsistent
with anything that he campaigned on this time around. You
can see that there had been some preparation, there had

(01:11:17):
been a little practice, and perhaps he had allowed some
professionals who are really really skilled at pros in influencing
its layout. However, what stayed the same These were the
views and the policies that he had campaigned upon. This

(01:11:39):
president is committed to the idea that if you're born
in America, it should not be American policy that life
is more difficult for you because of what the government
is doing. Instead, government should stop doing the kinds of
things that harm you when when Raven spoke and he

(01:12:01):
said that government was not the solution, that government was
the problem. Our president today has taken that concept to heart.
Whether it's regulatory policy that restricts our energy access, it
hurts Americans, the inflation problem hurts Americans. The idea that

(01:12:23):
we've got a government that prefers that we have this
almost unlimited number of genders rather than recognizing the truth
God made man and God made woman. Science tells us
there's an XX chromosome and an x y chromosome. There
are only two sexes. And he captured that concept, and

(01:12:49):
his policies are going to perpetuate that concept.

Speaker 2 (01:12:54):
Yeah, that's a very very good point. I thought it
of the Reagan speech, I agree with you, and also
liked the fact that it wasn't shocking. And what I
mean by that was it was very consistent with the
principles that he governed on and that he campaigned on.
And so there's this there's a you know, a straight line,
as it were, that you can connect the dots with.
And I think that's unusual in politics because oftentimes, you know,

(01:13:17):
it was Joe Biden who told us that he was
going to govern from the center. Of course he didn't.
He also promised he wasn't going to pardon members of
his family and his son, and he did, et cetera,
et cetera, et cetera. So anyhow, it's nice to have
a president who actually does the things and he governs
the way he said he would, and I think that's
going to be a very refreshing change for Americans.

Speaker 20 (01:13:38):
I'm just gonna say, it's absolutely critical that we make
sure we emphasize prouting the interest of the American people first.

Speaker 2 (01:13:48):
Yeah, that's a very good point. That's the whole point
of his campaign. So there's been a number, obviously a
lot of executive orders. We probably couldn't talk about all
of them at length because that we probably need couple
hours to do that, but I thought maybe we could
talk at least on some of the big ones, like
there was one, of course, established the Department of Government Efficiency,
which isn't technically a full day government department, meaning they

(01:14:10):
won't have an office building somewhere and ten thousand employees,
but it's going to be a part of government that
will be working for the president to help him figure
out how to streamline federal operations, reduce waste. There's also
the protecting American people from invasions, and there wolds making
sure our border was secure. He also declared a National
Energy Emergency, and he unleashed American energy. Those are certainly

(01:14:34):
four of the maybe the top line ones, but there
was a bunch of others. But I thought I'd start
off with that one and ask you what you thought
of any of those.

Speaker 20 (01:14:42):
So we have seen in America our energy access dramatically reduced,
not because of scarcity of these resources, but because of
government policy. If you are a person who a six
figure income, or even a seven figure income, you might

(01:15:06):
find the price of gasoline when you stop annoying when
you see how it continues to go up. But when
you start looking at people who are closer to fifteen
thousand than they are to one hundred thousand in their
household incomes, they don't find it merely annoying. They find

(01:15:27):
it a Sophie's choice, where you literally make a choice
between the needed pharmaceuticals for your household, the needed baby
formula for your household, other food products, electricity bills, or
filling up the tank. These kinds of choices on the

(01:15:51):
part of the Biden administration created what what analysts called
energy poverty. Lower income people are overwhelmingly impacted, disproportionately impacted
by these kinds of policies, and his preference, President Trump,
is to revitalize energy exploitation and development right here in

(01:16:16):
the United States, with the ultimate goal of getting prices
dramatically down. Earlier this week, he suggested that we could
get the price of a barrel of oil under fifty
dollars a barrel. Now, he said that would have significant
benefits to the American people, but it would also have

(01:16:38):
international benefits because it would diminish the ability of Russia
to continue carrying out its predation against Ukraine. Good energy
policy isn't just good for Americans, although that's its primary purpose.
It also is great because America won't have to expend

(01:17:00):
hundreds of millions, if not billions of dollars in defense
expenditures to offset the consequences of these elevated energy prices.
This idea that we're going to create the Department of
Government Efficiency. I've talked to you about this, George, and

(01:17:21):
I know many households understand. You have to look at
your incoming revenue stream and you make that the ceiling
of what you can expend. With households sitting at the
kitchen table, husbands and wives look at what their budget is.

(01:17:42):
They understand some things have to be cut. You know what,
Netflix is great to have, but if you can't afford
it right now, you've cut that. Having more than one
vehicle in the household, maybe even more than two vehicles
in mysol, is a great benefit when it can allow

(01:18:03):
you the ability to carry working goods and products for
the garden, are for carpentry, etc. But if the plaget
doesn't support it, American households reduce. Sometimes, even when they
are only down to one car, they sell that one

(01:18:24):
car so that they can buy a lower priced car.
That's how American households deal with the economic pressures that
their households face. Our government just spends. Our government just borrows,
and they're planning to make your grandchildren, our grandchildren, our

(01:18:45):
great grandchildren pick up the tab for all of this.
What the President said with the adoption of the Department
of Government Efficiency is this cannot continue. We absolutely must
allow lemonade unnecessary, inefficient, wasteful government spending.

Speaker 2 (01:19:06):
It's essential, Absolutely, it is essential, and I'm glad he's
working on it. But that's a great place for us
for stick a quick break, take care of a little business.
But folks, don't go away, because the conservative commandos will
be right back, and of course we'll be very fortunate
to have our special guest, Horace Cooper back as well,
So stick around. I can promise you you won't want

(01:19:27):
to miss it.

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Speaker 2 (01:22:25):
Welcome back to the Conservative Commandos. I am glad you
stuck around, and I know you will be too, because
we've got a great guest in Horace Cooper, and we've
been having a great conversation about the inauguration and about
some of those executive orders, and so perhaps we can
pick up on those executive orders. A couple I thought
were interesting was the President withdrew us from the World

(01:22:45):
Health Organization, which makes a lot of sense to me.
He of course pardoned the January sixth, defendants, and that
fits I think within the what i'd call the traditional
way a pardon was supposed to work, and it's fixing
an ingen justice and things that were wrong. But then
of course he designated the Huthis and Yemen as a
terrorist organization, and the cartels and other organizations that have

(01:23:11):
been international drug cartels and so forth, they've also been
designated as terrorists. And then I thought I was also
he got rid of the idea of well, he restored
merit based opportunity and got rid of the diversity inclusion
or diversity equity inclusion DEI sorts of programs some people

(01:23:31):
lack like that's bad news, and we can get that
a little more later. But I just thought i'd ask
you to give us your thoughts on any of those
that struck you as interesting or important.

Speaker 20 (01:23:40):
So in my most recent book, I refer to it
as die diversity, inclusion and equity because it kills a society.
I have been very impressed with so many of the
executive orders, but ending this policy and announcing that we
Americans would return to the notion of being a meritocracy,

(01:24:03):
I think is the most consequential executive orders we absolutely
need to step away from this idea that the race
or sex of a person tells us more about who
they are than their accomplishments, their talents, and their skills.
Now I can say as a black person that I

(01:24:27):
am glad that our country has come together and we
recognize the importance of equality before the laws making sure
that all Americans, as our founders intended, have that protection.
But the Biden administration and the Progressives took it further
than that, and in fact tilted to scale the other directions.

(01:24:50):
So if you think that in the nineteen twenties and
nineteen thirties, or even in the nineteen fifties, there were
places in America where to be black put you at
the back of the bus politically or otherwise, well it's
not better to say that we're gonna take you if
you're white and put you at the back of the

(01:25:13):
bus political or otherwise. When someone like Daniel Penny, who
happened to be white but more importantly was a marine,
had trained and understood the importance of standing up for
Americans his fellow citizens were sitting on a subway train
and intervened and saved lives, we should not have allowed

(01:25:37):
this culture. Anything a white male does his suspect and
he was prosecuted. Thankfully, he ultimately was acquitted. But all
across America, whether it's at the workforce or the campus,
we should not, we absolutely should not have policies that

(01:25:58):
favor or dis favor people on the basis of their appearance,
on the basis of their sex. So that to me
was just really really remarkable. Now shameful on the part
of President Biden. Were these partons. He said in twenty
twenty that when President Trump was leaving office that President

(01:26:22):
Trump was going to issue pardons to his family and
might even issue what are called preemptive pardons, pardons that
didn't have a definite design or identify a specific misbehavior
or crime that it purportedly would cover. But Donald Trump,

(01:26:45):
when he left office, issued no such pardons. He did
no such thing. It turns out it was Joe Biden
that did such a thing. It was shameful that what
many of us called the Biden crime family to be true.
He pardoned his family for the crimes that they committed

(01:27:08):
that we as Americans watched and were appalled by. But
he also pardoned Anthony Fauci. He didn't tell us what
it was that Anthony Fauci had done. But as I
have said before, he did us a favor. Like our
contestine services when they're out in the field and they

(01:27:32):
have to use an electronic marker to identify the target
that either is going to be grabbed, is either going
to be where the rocket's going to go, or whatever
we need for the purpose of identifying. His pardons are
their political equivalent. They have let us know who it
is that we ought to target, and we should and

(01:27:56):
I believe our speaker, mister Johnson, is going to follow
through on this. They have enhanced resources so our committees
can investigate. Mister Fauci is going to have to go
before the House of Representatives and before the Senate. But
now that he has been pardoned, he can't exercise the

(01:28:20):
Fifth Amendment right of self incrimination not to self incriminate,
and he thus will be forced to speak. When committees
interviewed him in the past, he danced, and he did
double speak, and then occasionally he had his lawyer speak

(01:28:40):
and announce that he was invoking a Fifth Amendment right.
All of those conversations have been recorded and have been
put in writing so that when he's brought again, all
you gotta do is go right to the questions where
the invocation occurred, and he's not allowed out to do

(01:29:00):
anything but tell the truth. If he doesn't tell the truth,
he can be prosecuted both for perjury and for obstruction
of justice. And guess what that fancy parton does. It's retrospective.
It does nothing for the future.

Speaker 2 (01:29:17):
Yeah, So if he committed perjury, say two years ago
when he was testifying for Congress, that he's been pardoned of.
But he's not going to be pardoned as you've described,
for a future hearing where he's called testify and he
won't have the option of invoking the fifth So you
make a very good point that that's one way to
work around this pardon and make sure he there's accountability,

(01:29:37):
which I think matters. One of the things I think
you made a really good point, which is this, you know,
the idea of DEI and all that and getting away
from merit based stuff. And I have to be honest,
I think it's very racist to pretend to argue to
act as if without affirmative action, minorities can't possibly succeed.
It's like, that's outrageous obviously that's not true. And an

(01:29:59):
example would there was a time I can remember when
Doug Williams, the Redskins quarterback in nineteen eighty eight, he
became the first black quarterback to win a Super Bowl,
and that was he was also the MVP, and that
was you know, made news because that was new. Guess
what this year's Super Bowl, there's going to be three
out of the four possible qbs right block, meaning you know,

(01:30:22):
because in the NFCC.

Speaker 20 (01:30:22):
And it's not because the standards were lowered, but because
talent was recognized.

Speaker 7 (01:30:29):
And you're right, not one of them was picked.

Speaker 2 (01:30:31):
You're exactly right. Not one of them was picked because
someone said, oh we need to have more black quarterbacks.
They were picked because they were great quarterbacks.

Speaker 20 (01:30:38):
You're exactly right that these progressives who say if you
don't have lower standards, then you won't have X, well,
I don't know that to be true. I don't know
that if you have high standards, there won't be any
black mathematicians. If you know that to be true, do
you need to join in putcher claim cap on and

(01:31:01):
start going to the KKK meetings. There's no truth to this.

Speaker 2 (01:31:05):
Yeah, exactly right, that's why I say it's racist to
act like you need affirmative action. It's like, wait a minute,
you're saying that these people can't succeed if we have
high standards, and I figure that that is insulting.

Speaker 20 (01:31:19):
And yet that's what progressives do. And it's I am
so thankful that our president recognized this. We absolutely need
to get inflation under control. We absolutely need to get
spending under control. We need to reduce the size and
scope of government. We need a dramatic reduction. This past week,

(01:31:42):
the Wall Street General reported that nearly two trillion dollars
in regulatory burdens were added by the Biden administration in
four years. In four years of the Trump administration, only
eight billion net regulations were impacting our economy, a world

(01:32:06):
of difference in a multi trillion dollar economy. For eight
billion versus one, that is twenty or thirty percent of
that economy. Donald Trump in twenty seventeen said that we
would have to reduce a regulation for every regulation that
was added. That's the attitude that is absolutely needed. Americans, black, white,

(01:32:31):
or brown. You know you had a arch not an arch.
A bishop claim that the biggest problem that she saw
was that transgender Americans, children of who were transgender, we're
going to live in fear. I'm going to tell you
this carefully. If you've got a three year old and

(01:32:55):
you think that your three year old boy is really
a three year old girl, we need to call child
protective services to stop you from operating, or pay excuse me,
are paying to have someone operate on that child. Whatever

(01:33:18):
a twenty one year old wants to do. George, you
and I might want to sit down and counsel them
about their gender identity issue, but absolutely we should not
tolerate this kind of action being done to a child.

(01:33:39):
A ten year old child can't legally drink, can't legally
smoke a cigarette. How on earth would we allow an
or sexual organ to be removed. So for this bishop
to say that the problem is these children are living
in fear, them in fear that we have parents that

(01:34:03):
would unbelievably destroy and tarnish the lives of the innocent
at such an early age, that's what I am afraid of,
and that would be more in keeping with where America
is than what we saw at the National Prayer Service.

Speaker 2 (01:34:21):
Yeah, that's a very very good point, and I think
that's perhaps a good place for us to take a break.
But I do want to ask you, Orris, if you
can tell folks how they can follow your work, get
your books, things like that, because, to be honest in
my experience, what I can just tell folks this, because
you and I are good friends. When I sit down and

(01:34:41):
talk with you, at the end of that conversation, I
feel like I'm smarter than I was when the conversation began,
and when I read your books, the same thing is true.
So I want to just make sure that they know
that if they want to bump up their IQ, they
ought to focus in on Horace Cooper a bit.

Speaker 20 (01:34:57):
Well. My books are available at Amazon. It's a real
easy way, or you can go to Walmart type my name,
type books and you'll see both of those books are
available there and other retailers that sell books. Follow me
on Twitter at the real Horace Cooper and you can
also check out the activities and my appearances on www

(01:35:20):
Dot Nationalcenter dot org.

Speaker 2 (01:35:22):
Very good and I recommend it, folks. You'll be smarter
if you do it. So we're going to take a
quick break here, but the conservative commandos will be right back,
so don't.

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Speaker 1 (01:39:04):
And welcome back. Welcome back to your Conservative Commandos with
George Landreth and your shre Lee rich Trader, coming to
you from the Mypillar Studios and My Store Studios of
the au n TV network program. Note here we want
you to go to our website au n dashtv dot
com a u N dashtv dot com. Just below the banner,

(01:39:25):
we'll see a couple of things. Number one is a
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(01:39:47):
Click on that make a donation to us. You know
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Speaker 3 (01:40:05):
And you can help us by making.

Speaker 1 (01:40:07):
Your detonation to aun TV and click on a link
help aun TV, and I'll take you right to the
donate page. Georgia ten minute thing any time? What do
you got for us?

Speaker 2 (01:40:20):
Well, I was just going to say, I think that
we were talking about crime and things like that, and
I think what we're going to see is that Trump's
going to clamp down on crime and the streets will
become safer as a result of that. But I also
think it's interesting that everyone was telling us that, oh,
my goodness, Donald Trump's tariff's going to cause prices to skyrocket,
It's going to wreck our economy, send us into an impression.
Guess what it hasn't done that prices have not gone up.

(01:40:43):
Prices have actually dropped. And what's interesting is, for example,
just recently, Apple Computer Company has pledged six hundred billion
dollars of investment in the United States to essentially avoid
tariffs and to move their manufacturing and the things that
they need inside the United States, and other tech companies

(01:41:06):
is the same thing, things like merk and IBM and
Navidia and bunches of others. And then of course there's
other countries, foreign countries that wanted a good trade deal,
and so they've made major investments in the US, meaning
that they you know, that they're willing to build things
in the US and promote things that will create American jobs,

(01:41:26):
American wealth, et cetera, as opposed to you know, otherwise.
So I just think it's very interesting because Apple is
the is the third most valuable company in the world,
and yet they have bowed to the pressure to make
America first and to focus on America, and I think,
to myself, that's good news. And so as a result

(01:41:49):
of that, I think we're going to see a lot
of very good things. So we're going to see crime
go down, We're going to see American jobs increase, We're
going to see wages go up. We're going to see
prices in the United States, first of all, level off,
because not everything will get cheaper. What I mean by
that is historically, when you have inflation, in order to
get prices to go back to where they were before

(01:42:10):
inflation hit, you usually have to have a depression. And
we're not going to have a depression. What we will
see those there'll be no more inflation. The inflation will
disappear and go away, and some prices will drop gradually
in a little bit here and there. But I'm not
suspecting that that we'll have radical drops, you know, to
go back to say, what the prices were in twenty seventeen.

(01:42:32):
But at the same time, I do think we're going
to see a lot less inflation obviously, and a lot
more economic growth. And we're going to see, for example,
Donald Trump's presidency the first time around did a lot
to deal with the issue of income inequality. And it's
not because he was focused on trying to help this
person or that person. It's just that opportunity helps people

(01:42:54):
the most who are suffering. If you're a billionaire, you
don't need a lot of opportunity. Life's good for you
no matter what. So when you focus on lowering taxes
and creating more opportunity, who are the biggest beneficiaries of that?
The people who are suffering and don't have a lot
and how are having a hard time getting by. And
so when they're doing much better, what does that do?

(01:43:15):
That lowers income inequality? And when the left talks about
income inequality, what do they do? They make it worse?

Speaker 1 (01:43:22):
They lie, George, they lie.

Speaker 2 (01:43:24):
Yeah, it's just a tool to get power.

Speaker 1 (01:43:28):
To you know, George, you talk about you talk about inflation.
Let's put it this way.

Speaker 4 (01:43:35):
If the if the.

Speaker 1 (01:43:36):
Trump tax cuts were not extended, we were in for
it the largest tax increase in American history. I am
sick in time of the lying Democrats talking about all
the Trump tax cuts do is help billionaires? All right?
Not to say I don't say millionaires anymore because everybody

(01:43:57):
like Bernie Sanders in Nancy Ploye. He is a millionaire.
So they those say millionaires, billionaires, it's billionaires. Well, George,
I don't know of a single billionaire that depends on
tips or over time to make money. I don't know
a single millionaire. Well, I don't know a single millionaire
that depends upon their so security check. Not a single

(01:44:21):
one of them. Also, look at the market, George, the
market is hitting and again we heard this, We heard
this a couple of months ago, and you're right, the
gloom and doom about the market was going to drop
and it was going to sink like a rock and
we were heading for another recession or depression. George, the

(01:44:41):
market is sick, is hitting highs almost every week, it's
hitting another all time high. And why is that? It's
because of Donald Trump. Hey, George, we had a couple
of great guests today. Would you thank them for us? Please?

Speaker 2 (01:44:56):
Oh? Absolutely, Well, we always have great guests. There's no
real news there. This is a lot of fun to
kind of review a strong conversation we had just a
little while back, and you'll go back to the inauguration
time period. It's just I think very interesting that we
were able to talk with. Obviously, our good friend Rick Manning,

(01:45:17):
a great conversation with him, and then of course we
had a great conversation with Horace Cooper. Both of them
are committed conservatives, committed to our constitution, committed to freedom
and opportunity for all. And one of the things that
I think makes Horace Cooper such a powerful proponent of
those things is because he is black. He can sit

(01:45:39):
there and tell you how awful things like DEI are.
In his book, for example, he doesn't call it DEI.
He calls it dee die because he says it RECs society.
And you know, if you or I say that, they'll say, oh,
you're just a racist. But I'm trying to figure out,
you know, he can at least say it, and I
guess they'll just say he's the black face of white

(01:46:00):
supremacy or something stupid like that. But the reality is
what he is is he's a constitutionalist. What he is
is a man who believes in freedom and opportunity, and
he's not at all interested in promoting racially based policies.
Because we're all humans. How about we just deal with
people based on the fact they're a human. In other words,
all men are created equal and endowed by the able rights.

(01:46:22):
And it doesn't matter what color their skin is. It
doesn't matter where they go to church, it doesn't matter
where their parents came from. What matters is if you're
an American citizen, you can be you know, red, brown, black, whatever, yellow.
I don't know what of the different you know things,
but bottom line is, none of that matters. And yet

(01:46:42):
too many people on the left act as a skin
color actually matters, and it's just like, well, so, it's
very powerful. I think when someone who is a minority
group stands up and explains to you why dei is
so bad and why it's so harmful. And I really
appreciate the fact that Horace does that because he does
a very good job of it.

Speaker 1 (01:47:02):
Georgie reminded me of something. Dei Dei, the first woman umpire,
made her to be her debut yesterday in in the
in a Major League Baseball game, a woman umpire. Now, George,
I think it's been shown recently with things like uh

(01:47:24):
Play Review, Instant Replay with the with the box that
shows what the strike zone is, how bad umpiring really.

Speaker 3 (01:47:34):
Is in every game, In every game.

Speaker 1 (01:47:38):
You have umpires being reversed. All right, definitely. Major League
Baseball is having a problem with its umpires. So what
they do over this weekend? They brought a woman in umpire. Now,
I don't know this woman. I know nothing about this woman,

(01:47:59):
but I really do doubt that she was the best
umpire they could have hired.

Speaker 3 (01:48:06):
No, I don't care, George.

Speaker 21 (01:48:07):
If an umpire is black, white male feeding female, Hispanic Caucasian,
I don't care. But I want them to be the best,
most accurate, most honest umpire. For some reason, I don't
believe this woman was the best they could have picked.

Speaker 2 (01:48:27):
Yeah, major League Baseball.

Speaker 1 (01:48:30):
Major League Baseball is having problems with umpires. Probably in
another two years is going to be another major strike.
He may go a whole year without baseball. Right, major
League Baseball needs to get it right. For the integrity
of the game and for the fans. They need the

(01:48:52):
best players. They also need the best umpires. And I
don't think umpiring there is any room for DEI in umpiring.
But that's just me, George.

Speaker 2 (01:49:06):
No, I'm with you on that, and that's you know,
if you think about it, You go to an NFL team,
and there was a time when there weren't many black quarterbacks.
And this last year, because Horas and I were talking
about this in the interview that we did earlier, Well,
you know, three of the four when you get to
the AFC and NFC championships, three of the four quarterbacks
for those teams were black. Now, nobody hired them because

(01:49:30):
they were black, and the white guy that got hired
wasn't hired because he was white. They were hired because
they were really good quarterbacks. And that's how you do things.
And I think, and that's what I think, that's how
we got to view the world. Just do it based
on quality, ability, and the you know those kinds of things.
Let's stop paying attention to skin color. Example would be

(01:49:51):
if I needed to have surgery, I'd be very happy
to have Ben Carson do it because I don't care
what color the doctor's skin is. I care how good
the doctor is exactly, and I have an interest in
having the doctor be among the very best doctors available.
And the same thing. That's what a an NFL team has.
And so we got to get back to because if

(01:50:12):
we focus on quality, then you will end up with fairness.
And what I mean by that is you will have
exactly three or four quarterbacks leading in the Super Bowl.
We're black, and that's proof that the you know, the
people aren't racist, they're just looking for a good quarterback.
And I would argue the same thing. You know, if

(01:50:32):
you got a leak in your house and you need
a good plumber, do you care what color their skin is?
Or do you just want a good plumber that doesn't.

Speaker 1 (01:50:38):
Know you want the best plumber. Jurors, you really want
the best plumber, and you want the best. Now you're
just to show you how ridiculous it is to hire
woman as an umpire in the NFL. You were talking
about the NFL, eighty five percent of the players are black.
Where is the call for more white players? Hello, I

(01:51:01):
haven't heard of George. You know why, because the black
players seem to be the best players. And if there's
a white player that's better than the black players, the
white player will play. If the black players are better,
the black players will play. But I heard no, no,
no outrage that we need more white players in the

(01:51:21):
NFL or NBA.

Speaker 3 (01:51:24):
No, we want the best players.

Speaker 2 (01:51:26):
I think they go.

Speaker 1 (01:51:28):
To a game, we want to see the best players perform.
We don't want to say a player perform because he's
white or he's.

Speaker 2 (01:51:35):
Black, yeah, or a young or old for that matter. Imagine,
for example, saying in the NFL there are no guys
over sixty playing football. How because of that, they say
that you and I get to start in the NFL.

Speaker 1 (01:51:48):
Now, I guarantee, George, in the next ten years there
will be a woman on an NFL team, probably a kicker,
all right, But and the show only be there not
because she's the best, most accurate kicker, but because she's
a woman. If she is the most accurate kicker, more

(01:52:09):
power to where chances are. Chances are most of the kickers,
but any college team can out kick even the best
female kicker. Hey, George, I want to thank you for
sitting in as my co host. But before you go,
tell us about your book, tell us a little bit
about Frontiers of Freedom.

Speaker 2 (01:52:31):
Sure, well, Frontiers of Freedom was what it not was
is a public policy think tank that was founded by
US Senator Malcolm Wallap, who was a friend of Ronald Reagan's,
a political ally of Ronald Reagan's. And we give out
a Ronald Reagan Award, And I know you've attended that before,
and I would demonstrate where we come on the political spectrum.

(01:52:52):
We think of him as a great president and a
great leader. And my book, of course, before I get
to my book, you can go to our website dot org.
You consider my shoulder FF dot org. And then my
book is entitled Let Freedom Ring Again. And the subtitle
is can self evident truth save America from further decline?

(01:53:12):
And the answer to that is yes. The Constitution is
very important, and the self evident truths of our declaration
things like that helped create a society that went from
being thirteen insignificant colonies to being the world's most economic, military,
and otherwise superpower in the world. And we can thank

(01:53:33):
our founding fathers for providing the foundation for that. And
so I discuss these kinds of principles and things like
that in the book, and you can get it at Amazon.
You can also go to FF dot org. I think
the very top entry there is has a picture of
the book and gives you a click on that and
you'll give you all the details to where you can
get it, all the various places beyond Amazon, Larnes and Noble,

(01:53:55):
et cetera, et cetera.

Speaker 1 (01:53:57):
All right, but for right now we are out of
which means that we get to run. We gotta go
take care of godless, and we're gonna see it tomorrow
and that'll be on TV, at on radio.

Speaker 12 (01:54:27):
You're still looking good.

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Speaker 8 (01:54:30):
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Speaker 9 (01:54:35):
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(01:54:59):
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on all my Pillow products and when you spend one

(01:55:20):
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Speaker 10 (01:55:25):
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eight nine three and please use the promotion code a
U n TV. To order, please call eight hundred seven
nine seven seven eight nine three and please use the
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(01:55:47):
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