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August 1, 2024 • 22 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, everybody, Welcome to Everything's Political. I'm your host, Tayas Shoemak.
You can also find us online at Everything's Political dot
substack dot com. Shout out to Magicman, Joe Strecker, the
Marshall Will Kane of podcast producers. A Terroristricken Town left

(00:20):
him to face four killes single handed at high noon,
of course, played by the legendary actor Gary Cooper, in
a movie that was released on this day in nineteen
fifty two. And how appropriate. We've said for some time
that it is no longer morning in America. I'd say

(00:43):
it is high noon. Save as all right, I know

(01:09):
what you're thinking, Joe. How do I know the movie?
How knew? So? It's black and white nineteen fifty two.
Let me explain. So when I was growing up, of course,
we left the house early on the weekends. Weren't back
till the street lights came on, right gen X. We
raised ourselves. It was so bad our parents. They had
a commercial for our parents. It's nine o'clock at night.

(01:31):
Do you know where your children are now? The only
exception to that in my experience was if I had
to go back to the house for anything, because if
my dad had finished his lawnwork and was taking a
break and plopped in his favorite chair with a long
bottleneck of pepsi and found what he considered to be

(01:53):
a classic on TV and heard us come in the door.
It was over. We weren't leaving the house. He'd be like,
sit down and watch us as his classic, And there
were many. There was Moby Dick, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers,
Tora Torah Torah, Bridge over River, KWHI, I mean I

(02:13):
knew about those events before they were timeline points in
my history class. Oh yeah, I know all about that
at age nine or whatever it was. And High Noon
was one of those movies. And I did like Heinen
because I loved the character. He was similar to the

(02:34):
characters in Magnificent Seven. Not I mean, it's not a
perfect analogy, but the theme of moral courage is what
was pervasive in both of those And I remember having
the conversation about what made the Magnificent seven magnificent? Was
it their skill set? Was it their ability to teach

(02:57):
the skill set to the townspeople so they could defend
themselves else But I would say both of those things,
and the fact that they came back after they were
spurned by the very people they helped. Similar theme ran
through high noon. Gary Cooper cleaned up the town. The

(03:17):
people got fat, happy and lazy, and when trouble came
back to the town, no one stood with him to defend.
It really sounds kind of familiar if you consider the
last four years. So who is willing to stand who
has the moral courage to do what's right even if
they stand alone? Very very rare quality. But I'll tell

(03:42):
you we need some more affirmations of that in our homes,
in our schools, in our culture. Because it is high
noon in America, all right, Lots going on the debate,
the bullseye comment, someone that took Biden up on the
bulls eye, com resignations, vice presidential picks on top of

(04:04):
all that. However, in case you haven't heard, and this
was a couple of weeks ago, a few weeks ago,
Congressman Thomas Massey's wife, Ronda unexpectedly passed away. And so
if you would please just say a prayer for him
and his family or keep them in your prayers as
you're so led. Okay, the debate, and I know that

(04:27):
I'm backed up here, that's okay, And we're doing this
from the Southern Command. Hopefully the signal works. The debate
was so bad that we could sum it up with
one clip. Joe, can we play that clip? We get
the total band on, the total initiative relative to what
we're going to do with more border patrol and more

(04:50):
asylum officers. President Trump, I really don't know what he
said at the end of this sentence. I don't think
he knows what he said either. Okay, I would say
that not only sums up the debate, but also sums
up Joe's entire presidency. I would take it back to
his vice presidency. That's how bad it was. And I

(05:11):
know ingsak the uniparty. The overlords want us to reject
the evidence of our eyes and ears. But everybody saw it,
and everybody heard it, and it was that bad. And
so plan A, if I'm speculating, and I'm usually pretty
good at this in politics, was to get Joe to

(05:33):
get the foxtrot out of the race. And initially that
just wasn't happening. So what did they do then? Plan
b Well, Biden says, forget about the debate. It's time
to put Trump in the bull's eye. Now, Whether you
think it was a loaner, I don't, or whether you
think it was an agency I do. They took him

(05:54):
up on that, Oh okay, we're ready to go with
Plan B. Plan B is to kill Trump. Except they
missed and that didn't work. Now I want to say
something quickly here about the comment putting him in the
bull's eye. That wasn't a one off. That kind of

(06:14):
talk has been going on since twenty sixteen. And when
you speak that way about someone or a group of people,
I mean, just take a even a cursory review of
history will let you know that speaking that way about
a person or a group of people for so long

(06:37):
will get them killed. Not a shocker that someone or
some agency took him up on that. Maybe it was
their code. Who knows. So we have an assassination attempt
of a former president, and I know a lot of
people like to say, don't write off to conspiracy or cleverness.

(07:00):
What can be explained by incompetency. I would say that
even if those people have good intentions, they still have
too much trust in government, because in this situation, I
don't think it's an either or. I don't think it's
in competency or a deliberate attempt. I think it's a both.

(07:21):
And because whether you're incompetent or ignorant or complicit, the
former enable the latter. That's what DEI is all about.
We're going to get the dumbest people in here so
that we can take control, so that we can show
the incompetency. And we just need bigger government. We need

(07:41):
more government or whatever the situation may be, more government subsidies,
perhaps in some cases more public private partnerships, if you will,
which is just code for fascism. So Kimberly Cheedle gets
called into a dog and pony show, and that's that's
what it was. There was no accountability and there won't

(08:02):
be any accountability. Goes to pattern, she'll write a book,
she'll make the talk show circuit. Nothing's going to happen
to her. She's either cognizant that she was a pond
or she was a willing participant in the game. And
you know my proclivity of not giving any judgment of

(08:22):
charity to anyone in government, I would go for the latter.
That's at least how she acted in the Dog and
Pony Show. I mean, unless she was a diversity higher,
which that's on the table too. Everything's on the table
after the last four years. The answers to the questions

(08:43):
were good, lord, unacceptable. Let's just take the roof, the
roof that should have been covered by someone. Did you
not go in with an advanced team? And I'm coming
up to a genuine either or situation here. So we've
got an advanced team. I've worked with advanced teams. They

(09:05):
come in before, during after events. They are comprehensive, and
they typically know what the fox trot they're doing. You're
telling me that your advanced team for a former president,
a very controversial former president, didn't cover a roof that

(09:27):
had him in the line of sight. Come on, and
then she threw local law enforcement under the bus? Was
their job and they turned through her under the bus? No,
it wasn't our job. The answer is it was the
Secret Services territory. You've got to ensure the safety of
the protectee, and if someone's not on that roof, you

(09:48):
freaking cover it. So then we get from her. Well,
it was awful steep. The slope of that roof was
pretty dangerous. Holy are you kidding me? What are you
their mother? Now? Poor widow guy might fall down go boom. Really,

(10:08):
so here's the either or you've either hired a team
of warriors who can come in and comprehensively take care
of an event before, during, and after ensuring the safety
of the protectee, or you've made a bunch of diversity

(10:30):
hires who don't know their ass from a hole in
the ground. No ine between there. Either they know what
they're doing or they don't. And while we're on the topic,
because the visual is seared into my brain and I
just got to get it out. The Secret Service Director

(10:53):
Kimberly Cheetoh had said at the beginning of her tenure
that she wanted to have thirty percent women on the
force in the Secret Service by the end of her tenure, which,
praise God, is over. Okay, now, I'm sure most of
you saw the footage. I don't even know how to

(11:19):
begin here because it's not about toughness, right. Women can
be pretty tough. If I'm in need of protection, and
I hire Ronda Rousey, that makes a lot of sense
because she's tough and she's a foot taller than me,
so that works. Okay. Now there's a little girl jumped

(11:40):
right up on that stage to get in the huddle.
I give her all the credit in the world for that.
I'd like to think I would jump in the huddle,
and I probably would. But at the same time, I'm thinking,
I'm going to put everyone in danger because one of
these things is not like the other. She was a
foot shorter than everyone on the stage. And I'm not

(12:05):
saying she's not good with her gun. I'm not saying
although the other girl could not find her holster to
save her life, that's another discussion. But the girl that
jumped up on stage, I'm not saying anything other than
in this situation, size matters. And she left Trump's head, neck,

(12:25):
and upper torso completely exposed. Had there been another shooter
at the opposite angle, he would have been dead meat.
And the guy next to her knew it. He kept
trying to move his arm to get in the way
of that possibility, which guess what put him in a

(12:46):
compromising position because he couldn't fully do his job because
he's doing Both men and women are different, and in
this instance, size matters. It's not saying I'm not saying
women aren't tough or this or that and the other thing.
But you know, sorry, you cannot replace the Y chromosome.

(13:09):
You can't do it, not with a double X, not
in this situation. You know, most women don't train to
be tough or you know, think that they are going
to beat the crap out of a six foot five
male assailant, because guess what, folks, that's not going to happen.

(13:32):
No matter what you see in the movies with Diane
Lane playing secret Service chick at sixteen hundred Pennsylvania Avenue,
no matter what you see with the darling little blonde
chick fighting the Rock and one of the what was
it one of the Fast and Furious movies? Okay, and
there's in that hob I think it was Hobbs and
Shaw and he basically just holds her above his head

(13:56):
until she, you know, quiets down a little bit. And
I'm like that everything leading up to that was bull
crap because in the real world, the Rock wins that fight.
But women don't train and get strong and try to
be fast and cardiovascularly healthy because we think we're going

(14:17):
to beat Jocko Willink. We train, we get strong, we
try to be healthy to get away, and if you're smart,
you'll realize that we need to be able to hurt
an assailant to the degree that we can get away
if we don't have our sightem and that's the whole point.

(14:42):
So in this situation, it was so frustrating this guy
next to her trying to cover her space. There was
no way she was going to pick up you know,
they say the rich need to pay their fair share. Okay,
pick up your our share. It's impossible because size matters.

(15:06):
Modo Nami. So frustrating. Then the other little girl couldn't
find her holster to save her life. I just kept
watching her trigger finger. They were only worried about putting
their sunglasses on, looking like men in black. Who knows.
But even with all that, don't let that distract you

(15:27):
that this was very likely an inside job. The incompetent
enable the complicit every time, especially when it comes to government. Okay,
Plan C plane get Biden out after the debate. That
doesn't work. Plan B killed Trump, that doesn't work. Now
we got we not only need a plan to know

(15:51):
what to do, we've got to get Trump out of
the news cycle because he's charging ahead. Plan C. As
you find a way to threaten Biden or to dupe
him or whatever they did, they released it on Twitter
for Pete's sakes, on X not the news outlets, so

(16:14):
we know it didn't go through the usual channels, no
pun intended. And now there's this whole big thing about
he's supposed to be, you know, George Washington, and Kamala
is going to take his place and choose the greatest
thing since sliced bread. And I want to make a
point here before I get to jd Vance's the vice

(16:38):
presidential pick. I try. I'm not always successful, but I
try not to be guilty of the very thing I
criticize in others. On this point, I think I'm pretty consistent.
But isn't it hysterical that whomever they put on their
ticket is the second coming? Right? We do the same thing,

(17:05):
and it bugs the crap out of me, because once
you're bitten by the UNI Party, once you're bitten by
the party that was ostensibly on your side, and you
realize that they're in a club you're not in it,
but they still want your votes, money and sweat equity.
Once you realize that, you'll never look at another ticket.

(17:27):
And I don't care if it's township trustee, county commissioner,
state legislator, it doesn't matter, but we do the same thing.
Biden all of a sudden is George Washington, which, good
Lord in Heaven you kidding me, Camela is now that
you know, end all be out? No, And this is

(17:48):
why I try to be fair and balanced about our candidates,
and I point out things like two things can be
true at the same time. What they've done to Trump,
the law fair, the assassination, all of it. Since the
get go is criminal, that doesn't mean he's Thomas Jefferson.

(18:14):
That doesn't mean he's even read the Constitution. And the
reason I bring stuff like this up is because the
key to all of this is to manage realistic expectations,
because I've been doing that for nearly thirty years. So

(18:36):
Biden resigns, of course, you know, Kimberly, Cheetah resign. Kamala
is the girl now running against uh which is a joke.
We'll do a whole thing on that Trump. We don't
know who her veep is yet, but Trump picked his
vice president who is jad Vance. You all know I

(18:56):
am not a huge fan of jd Vance. I never was.
I appreciate his story, but I don't believe a word
that comes out of his mouth, because his trajectory since
meeting Peter Teal is completely inconsistent with his story and

(19:19):
who he claims to be. In less than two years,
he went from You're all a bunch of lazy drug
addict deplorables to Ohio senator thanks to Don Junior in
Peter Teal's money, and Viveke helped California elitist Ohio senator

(19:42):
to Vice president nominee in less than two years. And
I will say this, I could level the same criticism
at Viveke, and in a nutshell it would be where
the fox trot have you been? Oh, you've been with
big pharma making money. Okay, well, good on you, But
don't act like you've been fighting the good fight, because

(20:05):
for the last thirty years, I don't recall you even
donating to the grassroots efforts toward the end of liberty
or any issue we hold dear. I don't recall you
at a rally. I don't recall any donation. I don't
recall you speaking in front of a legislative committee and
you just step in Ohio to step past Ohio. I

(20:29):
got two words for you, and they're not happy birthday.
We've got everyone and their brother now telling Ohio wins.
Oh got to pick the vague. Hey, buddy, just chillax.
Let Ohio choose if they want to choose the populist,
if they want to choose someone that's never actually fought
the deep state, well then I'm right in leaving it.

(20:52):
At least Trump has fought the deep state. He's won
sum and he has lost some, and whether we like
it or not, at any given time, that's necessary to
understand your enemy to know how to fight him. And
I just pray a that he has better people around him,
and b that he actually has learned how to better

(21:16):
fight the deep state once he gets in there, because
you know, it was all sunshine and rainbows until they
played him like a stratavarius over COVID and he handed
the keys to the kingdom to Fauci with a twenty
three trillion dollar economy and undid absolutely everything he did. Good,
that's fair, that's true. Let's just call it what it is.

(21:39):
We've got to have realistic expectations, and so we have
to be honest about who's running. So you know, JD is,
we'll see, Hey, he can. I hope I'm wrong if
I had a dime, Joe, for every time I said
that in politics, i'd be giving this podcast from my
yacht in the Caymans. I'll say it again none the less.

(22:00):
I hope that I'm totally wrong about jd Vance, but
I won't hold my breath. He can spend the rest
of his career proving me wrong. And make no mistake,
they've got something going on him, Peter Teo, Don Junior
and Vavak and I wouldn't mind it so much had
they not just shown up with all their money thinking
they're all that. They've never invested one iota in Ohio,

(22:26):
let alone its people. But whatever, Okay, I think I'm
going to stop there and pick up next time. I
want to thank you all for listening. Please remember to
keep Congressman Thomas Massey and his family in your prayers.
Thank you as always to magic Man Joe Strecker. Remember
it is high noon in America. Until next time, who

(22:50):
will stand at either hand and keep the bridge with me?
Have a great day.
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