Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
Oh, turkey on the table.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Truth in there.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
This ye roo Mayer of good fields head, but we
still can't.
Speaker 1 (00:21):
Families games voice is class hopestas bright.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
Across this country. One message rings. It is time to
go right right right, right, right right right. Let's given
his different rings.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
When the nation feels strange, people like you in online
like freedom is a game.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
But the i beat of the country is the.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
People who fight, who pray over dinner and stand for
it is right here from we're all down the cities
where the lights tale lay.
Speaker 4 (00:57):
We are tired of the chaos.
Speaker 1 (00:59):
Most part they probably from division.
Speaker 3 (01:02):
While pretending to unite. We called the turkey and call
the truth.
Speaker 1 (01:05):
It is time to go right, bool night, build a
pressure rice brother, dune in the chest, fire in the out.
Speaker 4 (01:15):
All right.
Speaker 5 (01:16):
Put up people all right, full of light all right,
go the family's giving thanks to night all right, Moto
workers and the ones who fight poor right, go the druth.
Speaker 6 (01:27):
It is time to go right all right, Boa light.
Speaker 1 (01:31):
All right for the families giving thanks to night all right,
put the workers in the one who fight all right,
but the drouth. It is time to go right, Grandma said,
It's great. Kids laugh in the hall we remember what
matter when the world feels small, nothing, headlines, nothing now, nothing, endless,
(01:54):
online fire.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
Thanksgiving is free on Thanksgiving is strength. Thank Giving us
rise up and right.
Speaker 7 (02:08):
It is.
Speaker 4 (02:13):
It is.
Speaker 8 (02:16):
What remember. We fight for what's right, because it's time
to go right.
Speaker 6 (02:37):
I like giving, You like receiving when we get together,
so pleasing heaven Thanksgiving.
Speaker 9 (02:48):
I want to thank you all this book cook cooking
that you do.
Speaker 10 (02:52):
As we have arrived at Thanksgiving season, it's crucial to
reflect on the bedrock of our nation's valevalues and the
essence of our founding. Our country was built upon the
principles of unity, freedom, and gratitude. The story of Thanksgiving itself,
(03:13):
where two diverse groups, the Pilgrims and Native Americans, came
together in celebration and gratitude, embodies the very spirit of America.
This holiday serves as a reminder of the resilience and
unity that formed the backbone of our nation. It's a
(03:33):
testament to our shared values of thankfulness, community, and the
pursuit of a brighter future for generations to come. I
speak to you today as someone who deeply values the
principles upon which this great nation was built. I believe
that By upholding these values, we can continue to strengthen
(03:56):
our state and our country. I am committed it to
ensuring that our government works for the people, making it easier,
not harder, for every citizen to achieve their aspirations. It's
about ensuring that our children have access to quality education,
that our communities are safe and thriving, and that opportunities
(04:20):
are within reach for all. We must honor the legacy
of Thanksgiving by ensuring that our government remains transparent, accountable,
and dedicated.
Speaker 8 (04:32):
To the well being of its citizens.
Speaker 10 (04:35):
We owe it to the generations before us who laid
the foundation for our freedom, and to those who will
inherit the future we are shaping today. I pledge to
work tirelessly to uphold the principles of gratitude, unity, and progress.
I am dedicated to preserving our values and creating a
(04:56):
better tomorrow.
Speaker 8 (04:57):
For every North Carolinian.
Speaker 10 (05:00):
Let's come together and the spirit of Thanksgiving, cherishing our blessings,
celebrating our diversity, and working hand in hand to build
a brighter, more prosperous future. Thank you, and may we
all continue to give thanks for the blessings bestowed upon
us and this great nation.
Speaker 11 (05:23):
Thank you, Sarah Joseph, Thank you, President Abraham Lincoln. Because
of you, we share a national day of gratitude, a.
Speaker 12 (05:42):
Day gathering, a day cold Thanksgiving.
Speaker 13 (05:57):
Thanksgiving was not always a national holiday. Precedents as far
back as George Washington issued proclamations of Thanksgiving, but the
country did not share one unified day. That changed because
of one determined woman. Her name was Sarah Josefa Hale,
(06:23):
a widowed mother of five who supported her family through
writing poems, novels essays. She later became a respected magazine editor.
Many people know her for the poem Mary had a
Little Lamb, but her greatest legacy was something far larger.
(06:46):
Hale believed the United States needed a second national holiday
to stand beside Independence Day. She saw July fourth as
a celebration of civil freedom, but she believed Thanksgiving honored
something deeper, family gratitude, faith in God. She once wrote,
(07:13):
it is a festival which will never become obsolete, for
it cherishes the best affections of the heart, the social
and domestic ties. It calls together the dispersed members of
the family circle and brings plenty joy and gladness. In
(07:34):
eighteen sixty three, Haile wrote directly to President Abraham Lincoln.
History cannot say for certain if her letter was the cause,
but only days later Lincoln issued a national proclamation. He
declared the last Thursday of November as a day of
thanksgiving for the entire nation. He wrote, with one heart
(08:00):
and one voice, by the whole American people, I do
therefore invite my fellow citizens in every part of the
United States, and also those who are at sea and
those who are sojourning in foreign lands, to set apart
and observe the last Thursday of November as a day
(08:22):
of thanksgiving and praise to our beneficent Father who dwelleth
in the heavens.
Speaker 2 (08:34):
Thank you, Sarah Josephhill. Thank you President Tabraham Lincoln.
Speaker 9 (08:45):
Because of you, we share a national day of gratitude,
a day of gathering, a day called Thanksgiving.
Speaker 3 (09:09):
A word though we have you heard the news Thanksgiving Day?
Go right with Peter boy can let's.
Speaker 14 (09:24):
Pave the way, gather around the table, bring your plate.
Trump's making Thanksgiving truely great. Inflation's high, and times are tough,
but we've got the spirit. That's more than enough. Biden
(09:45):
forgot to butter the balls. Now butterballs turkeys cat hit
the stalls.
Speaker 15 (09:54):
Go right, get thanks, It's time to feast, turkey stuff
and the celebration. Beast, pass the gravy, take a stamp,
thanksgivings Better in Trump's.
Speaker 14 (10:10):
Great Land, Cranberry sauce and pumpkin pie America First, No
need to cry while Biden's economy gives us a scare.
We're grateful for freedom, love and care. Light the candles,
(10:33):
raise your glass. Thanksgivings here. Let's make it last.
Speaker 3 (10:40):
Let's give thanks for what we've got, even when Biden
makes it tough.
Speaker 15 (10:47):
On a lot.
Speaker 14 (10:49):
The flood of all turkeys try to recall, but Trump's
got a plan to fix it off from.
Speaker 6 (10:59):
The farm to the saying, oh He'll naked. Write, Let's
go ride, keep out the fight, go right, gift.
Speaker 7 (11:09):
Thanks, It's time the feast, turkey stuff in a celebration, beast,
past the gravy, take a stamps, thanksgivings, Fair and.
Speaker 3 (11:24):
Trump's Great Listen.
Speaker 7 (11:27):
So joined the podcasts Go Right with Peter boy King's
show brought to you by Go Write News, Yeah, Thanksgivings
about the thanks.
Speaker 3 (11:37):
Video to family, friends and this great nation.
Speaker 12 (11:43):
Go ride is the cellration.
Speaker 16 (11:55):
Fight Alright with Peter Boykin's shows brought to you by
Go Right News.
Speaker 14 (12:00):
Thanksgivings about the thanks we, the family, friends, and this
great nation go right in the soul.
Speaker 3 (12:33):
This turkey tastes half as good as it looks.
Speaker 17 (12:36):
I think we're all in for a very big treat.
Speaker 8 (12:40):
Save the next work, Clark.
Speaker 3 (12:43):
Okay, Eddie, there's no.
Speaker 4 (12:57):
Young man.
Speaker 10 (13:10):
Imagine a face so momentous that it has been etched
into the fabric of a nation's history. The first Thanksgiving
in sixteen twenty one was a celebration of survival, community,
and gratitude. The Pilgrims, with help from the Wumpog, the
Wampanog people, gathered to share the bounty of the land
(13:35):
they had worked tirelessly to tank. Fast forward over four
centuries in Thanksgiving remains a cherished tradition. Yet welcome to
hashtag go Right with Peter Boykin, where we shift through
the facts, confront the narratives, stuff the turkey, and uphold
the ideals of our constitutional republic.
Speaker 8 (13:55):
Let's dive in.
Speaker 13 (13:58):
We'll be right back.
Speaker 8 (14:00):
Remember we fight for what's right because it's time to
go right, to.
Speaker 4 (14:06):
Go right, to go right, time to go right.
Speaker 18 (14:27):
So you're heading home for Thanksgiving? But your family supports
Trump not good. You're probably wondering, how can I show
them I'm a good tolerant person and they're all terrible
intolerant people, and how can I find common ground with
these rednecks who are literally hitler. Well, you're in luck,
(14:52):
because I too am a good person who likes to
share my superiority with those around me. Today, we're gonna
show I owe you how to talk about Trump with
your racist uncle this Thanksgiving. First, try slowly and articulately
explaining to him how he is a racist, a bigot,
(15:13):
a Nazi, and just an overall garbage person. You can
even use simple visual aids if you want to. Next,
you can help educate your backward, bigoted family members by
handing out copies of Robin DiAngelo's White Fragility. This thoughtful
holiday gift will endear them to you and open up
the door for more conversation later. Now, sometimes your family
(15:38):
might disagree with you and attempt to use far right
tactics such as facts and logic. Counter this with a
powerful hakka dance. Fourth, you can easily get through to
these maga bigots or maggots for short, by re enacting
the entirety of Hamilton. Let it never be said that
(16:00):
you threw away your shot.
Speaker 4 (16:03):
Ah.
Speaker 18 (16:04):
Here's a good one. When your arguments just aren't getting
through to them, try screaming at the sky simple but
effective tip number six. When you're encountering opinions you disagree with,
just run away to a secure location. You might call
it a space that is safe. If someone follows you there,
(16:26):
then go somewhere else, and so on and so on,
and finally, and perhaps most effectively, just start a good
food fight.
Speaker 3 (16:41):
It works every time.
Speaker 18 (16:43):
Use these simple tips and you'll convert your maga family
in no time, because you're right and they're Nazis. Good
luck out there, fellow member of the Resistance, if you
have any other helpful tips and dealing with your maggot
family members. Even in the comments down below, poor shot
(17:03):
him at the sky works every time.
Speaker 10 (17:12):
Let's talk about Thanksgiving, a complex narrative beyond the myf
Thanksgiving as traditionally celebrated the United States as a time
for family gratitude and feasting. The mainstream narrative often betrays
a harmonious gathering in sixteen twenty one between Pilgrims and
Native Americans, a story that has become so deeply embedded
(17:36):
in American culture. However, this version of events largely oversimplifies
our races, the broader, painful history of colonization, resilience, and
survival experienced by engineing injo Indians basically indigenous people. Well,
(17:57):
I knew I was gonna get that word out eventually.
The true context of the First Thanksgiving, the sixteen twenty
one feasts between the Wampoungnong I'm gonna spell it out,
Wampa na g Wampanog and the Pilgrims is often romanticized,
(18:18):
but it was far from this ideoltic gathering.
Speaker 8 (18:21):
Many are taught.
Speaker 10 (18:22):
The Pilgrims, struggling after their first harsh winner, survived thanks
to the assistance of that tribe, led by Chief Massoit
m a Ssasoi t This aid included sharing food and
agricultural knowledge. However, the tribe's decision to help was a
(18:43):
calculated political move, made under immense pressure from rival tribes
and the devastating impact of European born diseases that had
decimated their population. Massoit's alliance with the Pilgrims was rooted
in pragmatism, not altruism. He sought to mitigate threats from
(19:05):
more powerful tribes and secure trade advantages. The sixteen twenty
one feast was less a mutual celebration and more a
complex moment of uneasy coexistence, with the Wumppog deriving uninvited,
but as a show of strength and control.
Speaker 8 (19:25):
So let's talk about the legacy of colonization.
Speaker 10 (19:28):
Over the next few decades, this fragile relationship deterrorized.
Speaker 8 (19:32):
The Pilgrim's arrival marked.
Speaker 10 (19:34):
The beginning of widespread colonization, bringing disease, displacement, and violence
to native populations. Land theft and broken treaties became the norm,
and by the sixteen seventies, conflicts like King Philip's War,
led by Massanoid's son Metacomet Medacommet, decimated the.
Speaker 8 (20:00):
Tribe and other tribes.
Speaker 10 (20:03):
These events resulted in mass deaths, enslavements, and the near
erasure erasure of the indigenous cultures in the region, and
so comes Thanksgivings evolution as a holiday. The Thanksgiving holiday
is celebrated today has little to do with the Pilgrims
or that particular tribe. President Abraham Lincoln formalized it in
(20:29):
eighteen sixty three as a national day of thanks aiming
to unify a nation fractured by the Civil War. By then,
the Pilgrim narrative had already been co opted as a
foundational myth to betray early European settlers as pioneers of
religious freedom and peaceful coexistence, ignoring the violent realities of colonization.
(20:56):
This sanctified version of Thanksgiving persisted, boystered by cultural symbols
like Plymouth Rock and media patroyals that frame the Pilgrims
as the genesis of the United States democratic ideals. And
so we talk about the indigenous perspectives on Thanksgiving. From
many Native Americans, Thanksgiving is a day of mourning, reflecting
(21:20):
on the loss of land, lives, and culture resulting from colonization,
and since nineteen seventy the National Day of Mourning has
been observed in Plymouth, Massachusetts, highlighting the resilience and struggles
of Indigenous people, and this often honors ancestors and raises
awareness of ongoing issues like land rights, sovereignty, and the
(21:43):
protection of sacred sites, and thus comes the proclaiming of
the holiday. Some Indigenous communities have chosen to reinterpret Thanksgiving
as a time for resilience and cultural survival Gatherings that
emphasize traditional foods, community, and gratitude for the land serve
(22:03):
as acts of resistance and celebrations for Indigenous identities, and
these practices also highlight the importance of food sovereignty and
environmental stewardship, and thus we have to move towards a
greater understanding. Revisiting Thanksgiving's history is essential to understanding its complexities.
(22:27):
Educating non natives about the true events surrounding the holiday,
foster's empathy and respect for Indigenous perspectives.
Speaker 8 (22:36):
Actions such as land acknowledgments.
Speaker 10 (22:39):
Supporting Native lead initiatives, and amplifieding Indigenous voices can help
shift the narrative. Thanksgiving can involve into a day not
only for personal gratitude, but also for reflection on shared
histories and collective responsibilities. By honoring the holiday's full context,
(23:00):
Americans can create a more inclusive and truthful collimoration of
this pivotal chapter.
Speaker 8 (23:07):
In our history.
Speaker 10 (23:09):
And I know some people would go, oh my god,
the right wing guy is talking about Indigenous people talking
about Thanksgiving, not embellishing the greatness of Thanksgiving.
Speaker 8 (23:23):
Yes, Thanksgiving is everything we have.
Speaker 10 (23:27):
Grown to know, that is the day of Thanks, thanks
for everything we have, Thanks for the land that we have,
Thanks for the agreements that was made, maybe under duress
way back then, that helped people survive. And you gotta
think the Indians were dying a disease and they were
(23:49):
probably looking for helping cures, and we were helping the
It was that mutual understanding. And I know some people
would go, well, isn't that let's going on and on
with all this immigration that's been going on. People are
taking over our country and such, and maybe we should
just let them do it, because that's what we did.
(24:09):
You know, Well, the thing about it is people move around,
things change. Well, we've learned from our past that it's
kind of dangerous when you know, new people come in
and try to settle. It causes problems. They bring disease,
they bring violence, they bring crimes. And don't we owe
(24:33):
it to the indigenous people who were from here already
to protect this land even more from other set of invaders.
Speaker 8 (24:44):
And somebody would say, well some of.
Speaker 10 (24:46):
Them actually were already there, Well they moved, they moved
somewhere else. This is America. We've built it up, we've
made it better, we've made it great. And yes, we
should learn to be thankful to work together with other
people to share our land as much as possible. But
(25:06):
when people don't respect and won't sit down at the
same table as us and don't bring us some mutual benefit,
and they gotta go. So what I'm thankful for this
Thanksgiving is that we're gonna have a president who's gonna
(25:27):
come in. She's gonna hopefully lower our prices, hopefully straighten
our country into a better America, to make America great again,
and someone that recognizes the hard shifts of what it
takes to be an American and that art of the deal, that.
Speaker 8 (25:53):
Understanding and that.
Speaker 10 (25:57):
Compromise that happened Thanksgiving a long time ago.
Speaker 8 (26:04):
And maybe if things should have went better.
Speaker 10 (26:07):
I'm not saying our history was the greatest, believe me, slavery, colonization,
running from Europe because of what they were doing that
was bad, basically turning America into New Europe, trying to
run from certain things to only turn around.
Speaker 8 (26:29):
And do it again.
Speaker 10 (26:32):
We ran from taxation without representation. We ran from a
state run ideological.
Speaker 8 (26:42):
Church in England. We ran for religious persecution. We ran
to be able to have the ability to have the.
Speaker 10 (26:54):
Freedom of religion and the freedom from religion. And there's
some people that would like to take us back. And
I know a lot of people get America confused and
making America great again confused with taking us back to
some bad age.
Speaker 8 (27:10):
No, it's not about that.
Speaker 10 (27:11):
It's about the greatness of America and how people perceive America.
And I, for one, do want to see America great again.
And That've always said make America great for everyone. So
I'm not preaching against Thanksgiving. I'm not saying don't enjoy Thanksgiving.
(27:33):
I'm saying understanding the past and how we got here
and the sacrifices made from everybody throughout the world, and
who is already here and who came here. We could
have been easily wiped off the plane of existence here
(27:54):
in the New World by these tribes, and instead, for
at least a little time there, we got along. But
there was a lot of wars, there's a lot of conflict,
and the only thing we can do is honor the
sacrifices made from all sides and continue our history, learning
(28:21):
from our history, not running from our history, and understanding
where we came from and where we are now and
where we're going into the future.
Speaker 8 (28:33):
We'll be right back school.
Speaker 3 (28:35):
Love to eat Turkey, Love to eat Fie. I love
the season under the autumn sky.
Speaker 19 (28:44):
Turkey on the table, mash could say, eat us too,
green bowl for.
Speaker 3 (28:50):
Family and my red water Loo.
Speaker 4 (28:54):
Turkey for the Turkey for you.
Speaker 3 (28:58):
Let's celebrate and others what we do past the stuff
it don't belay.
Speaker 8 (29:07):
It's Thanksgiving Day.
Speaker 3 (29:10):
Let's celebrate pumpkin spice and everything nice. Thanks for more freedom.
It's worth the price. America is strong.
Speaker 4 (29:19):
We're building it right.
Speaker 3 (29:20):
Trump in the spotlight, keep it bright. Turkey and gray
Cranberry song.
Speaker 14 (29:25):
That's on of the day with no laws from sea
you shine and see we seen Thanksgiving here.
Speaker 3 (29:31):
For everything, Turkey for me, Turkey for you on the
sider me get new.
Speaker 20 (29:42):
Gobble gobble goo and gobble gobble Wow.
Speaker 3 (29:46):
Let's get thanks for where we.
Speaker 16 (29:49):
Are now, Stuffing in the oven, rolls on the side,
a omen of joy and ash.
Speaker 14 (30:00):
An old pride, red hats, blue scott starts shining bright.
Speaker 3 (30:04):
Thanksgiving Love.
Speaker 4 (30:05):
It feels so right.
Speaker 7 (30:06):
So grab your fork, grab your plate together, We'll make
them gray Oh, I love turkey on Thanksgiving Day.
Speaker 3 (30:16):
Happy Thanksgiving, USA.
Speaker 21 (30:39):
It's pumpkin spicing everything nice, thankful for freedom.
Speaker 3 (30:43):
It's worth the price.
Speaker 8 (30:44):
America is strong.
Speaker 3 (30:45):
We're building it right Trump and the spot like keep
it bright, Turkey and gravy Clammery. Saul sits on to
day with no loss from sea to shining sea.
Speaker 20 (30:56):
We've seen the Thanksgiving cheer for him with thy mean
Turkey for you.
Speaker 4 (31:03):
Or Decider may new.
Speaker 16 (31:08):
They old goggle good and goggle goggle Wow.
Speaker 3 (31:13):
Let's get thanks for where we are.
Speaker 22 (31:16):
Not stuffy in the oven rolls on side a moment
of joy and as Shuttle Pride.
Speaker 14 (31:27):
Red has blue scott Stars, shining Bride, Thanksgiving Hove.
Speaker 3 (31:31):
It feels so right, So grab your ford, grab your plates.
Speaker 14 (31:35):
Toget the will make America gray out love Turkey on
Thanksgiving Day.
Speaker 10 (31:40):
Happy Thanksgiving, USA, Welcome back to our hashtag Go Write,
(32:01):
recap and remix. This has been a special Thanksgiving episode.
Thanksgiving reminds us as the importance of gratitude, reflection, and
the resilience to go right. For more stories that dive
into the heart of issues affecting our nation, visit go
rightnews dot com, tune into Go Write news on Rumble
(32:22):
dot com. Our search for hashtag Go Write with Peter
Boykin on platforms like Spreaker, Spotify, Apple, Amazon, YouTube, TikTok,
Facebook and x and Twitter. Support the movement at cash
app for Dollar show Peter Boykin number one with links
on Go Rightnews dot com Peterboykin dot com. So stay informed,
(32:43):
stay engaged, and always go right. God bless everybody, peace
and happy Thanksgiving.
Speaker 4 (32:56):
Dude, it's very nice.
Speaker 20 (33:03):
We're leading old you stand through the light, Peter boy
Can at the helm, we'd take it.
Speaker 4 (33:14):
A stand.
Speaker 3 (33:17):
Constitution list for America. We protect this land.
Speaker 21 (33:25):
Welcome to the place where opinions aligned with liberty's flame,
our voices combined, citizen journalism, honest and true.
Speaker 3 (33:35):
Let's go right. It's the podcast for you.
Speaker 20 (33:52):
Welcome to the place where opinions the line Cebruary Slave,
our voices combined, citizen elisabe, honestly true.
Speaker 4 (34:01):
Let's go right.
Speaker 23 (34:02):
It's the podcast for you. It's time to go right.
(34:26):
Let the truth night.
Speaker 3 (34:31):
Where are we to write news into the line? Peter
boy Can now, would again a stand institution list for America.
We protect this Land.
Speaker 20 (34:51):
Welcome to the place where opinions aligned with liberties flame,
our voices combined, citizens nalism, honest and true.
Speaker 4 (35:02):
Let's go right.
Speaker 3 (35:03):
It's the podcast for.
Speaker 20 (35:04):
You to the place where opinions alive with liberties flame,
(35:40):
our voices combined. It is in journalism, honest and true.
Speaker 3 (35:45):
Let's go right.
Speaker 21 (35:46):
It's the podcast for you. Welcome to the place where
(36:08):
opinions are line.
Speaker 20 (36:11):
With liberty's flame, our voices combined, citizen journalism, honest and true.
Speaker 3 (36:20):
Let's go right. It's the podcast for you. Welcome to
the place.
Speaker 24 (36:35):
The day we gather with friends and family to enjoy
turkey stuffing, mashed potatoes, and pumpkin pie.
Speaker 4 (36:40):
We throw up the game, catch up.
Speaker 3 (36:46):
Religion Americans. As the day and as Americans, we certainly valow.
But it's also important to.
Speaker 8 (36:58):
Holiday.
Speaker 3 (37:20):
Have you heard the news with its Thanksgiving Day?
Speaker 19 (37:25):
Go right with Peter boy can let's pay the way,
gather around the table, bring your plate.
Speaker 3 (37:33):
Trump's making Thanksgiving truly great.
Speaker 14 (37:39):
Inflation's high in times are tough, but we've got the
spirit that's more than enough.
Speaker 3 (37:49):
Bite in forgot took butt of the balls now, butter
boss turkeys can hit the stall.
Speaker 20 (37:57):
Go right, get thanks It's time under feast, turkey stuff
and a celebration.
Speaker 3 (38:05):
Beast, ask the gravy, tay a stand. Thanksgivings better and.
Speaker 19 (38:13):
Trumps great Land, Cranberry sauce and pumpkin pie.
Speaker 3 (38:21):
A Bearica first, no need to cry while Biden's a
coin of me gives us a scare.
Speaker 14 (38:30):
We're grateful for freedom, loving care, Light the candles, raise
your glass.
Speaker 3 (38:40):
Thanksgivings here. Let's make it last.
Speaker 20 (38:44):
Let's give thanks for what we've got, even when Biden
makes it to.
Speaker 4 (38:51):
Fall a lot.
Speaker 3 (38:54):
The butterball Turkey's tried to recoil what Trump's God plan
to fix it all from the farm to the table.
Speaker 4 (39:05):
He'll make it right.
Speaker 3 (39:08):
Let's go right and keep up the fighting. Go right,
give thanks.
Speaker 20 (39:14):
It's time to feast, Turkey stuff and a celebration.
Speaker 3 (39:20):
Beast past the gravy, take.
Speaker 7 (39:25):
Stand, Thanksgiving spair and Trump's great Land.
Speaker 3 (39:31):
Last showIn the podcast, Let's Go Right with Peter Boykin
shoe ride for you by Go Write News. Yeah, thanksgivings
about the thanks we hope. It's a family friends in
this great nation. Go Right is the cell celebration.
Speaker 19 (40:04):
So join the podcast. It's Go Right with Peter your
boy again show.
Speaker 3 (40:11):
Brought to you by Go Right News. Yeah, thanksgivings about
the things we own. It's a family, friends and this
green show go right is the sun operation?
Speaker 17 (40:46):
Did you hear the latest rumor about butter? Well, it
seems that dads everywhere are spreading at this Thanksgiving. I
guess they just can't resist a good butter rumor. After all,
it's the only time of year when they get to
whip up some gossip along with the mashed potatoes.
Speaker 25 (41:10):
Scar love, love to eat, Oh, I love the season
under the autumn sky. Turkey on the table, mashed potatoes,
too grateful for family.
Speaker 3 (41:29):
I'm a red, white and blue.
Speaker 8 (41:34):
Turkey for me, Turkey for you.
Speaker 3 (41:38):
Let's celebrate together.
Speaker 4 (41:41):
It's what we do.
Speaker 3 (41:44):
That's the stuffing.
Speaker 4 (41:46):
Don't be late.
Speaker 3 (41:48):
It's Thanksgiving Day less brave, pumpkin, spice and everything nice.
Thankful for freedom. It's worth the press. America strong. We're
building it right, Trump in the spotlight, keeping right. Turkey
and gravy, cranberry sauce. Let'spot of the day with no loss.
Speaker 26 (42:08):
From sea to shine and sea we sing, thanksgiving you
for everything.
Speaker 3 (42:13):
Turkey for me, Turkey for you, or the sight make
it new.
Speaker 15 (42:23):
Gobble gobble gool and gobble gobble.
Speaker 3 (42:27):
Wow, Let's give thanks for where we are now.
Speaker 24 (42:35):
Stuffing in the oven, rolls on the side home and
of joy and the national pride, red hats.
Speaker 3 (42:45):
Blue sky, stars, shine, right, Thanksgiving love.
Speaker 4 (42:52):
It feels so right.
Speaker 3 (42:54):
So grab your forck, grab your plates together.
Speaker 7 (42:57):
We'll make America great old love Turkey on Thanksgiving Day.
Speaker 3 (43:04):
Happy Thanksgiving USA.
Speaker 27 (43:28):
Turkey for me, Turkey for you, for the sign of
making news, gobble gobble and gobble gobble.
Speaker 4 (43:40):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (43:41):
Let's get a face where.
Speaker 4 (43:44):
We are not.
Speaker 3 (43:46):
Stuffing in the oven.
Speaker 26 (43:48):
Rolls on the side, a moment of joy and national pride,
red hat, spood, sky stars, shine and bright.
Speaker 3 (44:01):
Thanksgiving love. It feels so right. So grab your forky,
grab your plate together. We'll make Americal grat I love
Turkey on Thanksgiving Rappy Thanksgiving USC