Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
In the restaurant of life. We're putting freedom back on
the menu.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
It's the Missouri Liberty Report with John Williams, working with
grassroots organizations and legislatures to make Missouri the free estate
in the nation.
Speaker 1 (00:13):
Let freedom Marie.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
All right, folks, when we are back with another edition
of the Missouri Liberty Report. Thanks so much for joining
us again this evening.
Speaker 1 (00:24):
We got a lot of good stuff.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
Well, I don't know if good stuff is the right
terminology to use when we're talking about Harris and Trump
and everything else, but we got a lot of stuff
to talk about, that's for sure. And let's listen, guys.
You know, if I was a type of if I
could say, if I was good at citing a quick
(00:46):
prayer before we really get going, I would pray that
by the time you hear all these audio clips that
your IQ hasn't just went right down to toilet. Because
listening to Kamala, Harris and and some of these other
people's other people.
Speaker 1 (01:02):
Talk is uh is.
Speaker 3 (01:06):
And we may get into this David David says that
uh Israel's bombing Iran, which Uh Brandon and I were
just talking about that before the show, and we had
one other. Oh, Brandon, I know you can't see the
live chat, David Dwyer says, I'm about to drive over
to Brandon's house to give him a background.
Speaker 1 (01:25):
I live five minutes away.
Speaker 3 (01:28):
And Brandon and I discussed that, and I'll just leave
it as a surprise for next week.
Speaker 1 (01:32):
Things are good.
Speaker 3 (01:32):
Things are probably gonna look a little different there in
Brandon's part of the part of the show. All right, folks,
let's not I don't want to dilly dally around too
much here.
Speaker 1 (01:44):
I guess we'll start off with listen, folks.
Speaker 3 (01:49):
I know we've talked about this on other times in
the show while Brandon's been on with me. Before, Brandon's
been on with me the whole transgender movement. I want
to hit this article first. Brandon sent this our article
over to me the other day because I actually, somehow,
as I scrolled through X did not see the article. Now,
I believe that in Tom Wood's email list he sent
(02:12):
out an email that kind of talked about this article
a little bit, but I just never took the time
to go look at it. So I'll just pull it
up right now here. Well, Brandon, do you have you
have you read it all? So you can kind of
just if you want to roll through this and kind
of hit the high points on this.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
So it was a ten million dollar project. I can't
remember all the specific so I'll pull it up too,
but it was a it was a multimillion dollar project
research study that where they where they were trying to
see if transgender surgeries actually made kids happier after the surgery.
(02:53):
And the lady, the doctor who was in charge of
the study, uh, decided she wasn't gonna post the results
because she was afraid that it would be bad for
like the the use of the surgeries because they don't work,
(03:17):
because the surgeries don't actually help didn't help mental health,
and so she was trying to hide that. Yeah, there's
a ten million dollar study.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
Yeah, I believe the words.
Speaker 3 (03:28):
I believe the words she used were she didn't want
the findings weaponized. It's like, well, if you're not, you
know what, I don't know what better way to weaponize
any you know, either side of an argument. By just
failing to submit your findings because they don't fit your agenda,
(03:49):
you're going to weaponize anyway. When people see this, they're
gonna be like, hey, lady, you forgot to post some stuff.
What are you talking about, like, oh, the mental Now
down the article? I know it said that there was
a Let me see if I can find it. There
(04:09):
was a study done in somewhere in Europe, and they
made it sound like it did help the mental health
of the kids. But apparently it's not working over here.
Speaker 1 (04:25):
Let's see.
Speaker 3 (04:25):
Oh, it was a Dutch study in twenty eleven. Let's
see it says, which is the primary scientific research cited
by proponents of giving kids puberty blockers. That study of
seventy kids found that children treated with puberty blockers reported
better mental health and fewer behavior, behavioral and emotional problems.
(04:51):
I mean, honestly, folks, you get into the abortion issue,
trans issues, all these issues like this that really divide people,
you're gonna find studies on both sides of the A
one's gonna give your rosie outlook and say this works
perfectly good, and the other side's gonna be like, hey,
(05:13):
shouldn't mess with the kid's natural transition of of life,
where you're you hit a certain age, and you go
through puberty, and your body goes through changes and all
these things as you grow into adulthood. I don't know, Brandon,
I don't know about you. I don't understand how anyone
(05:34):
I mean, I understand.
Speaker 2 (05:35):
I don't.
Speaker 3 (05:36):
It drives me crazy that these scientists are so I'm
gonna use scientists and air quotes because I feel like
some of these people got their degree out of a
crackerjack box. But regardless, I don't see how these people
can look at anyone in a straight in the eye deadpan,
(05:56):
just like no emotion to go. It's perfectly acceptable to
block the natural transition that your body goes through and
you know nothing bad's really gonna happen. I don't understand
how you can expect me, or expect people with more
(06:17):
than two brain cells to rub together to believe you
when you say that you know what I'm saying, Brandon.
Speaker 2 (06:24):
I just don't understand the people who can will subject
their children to that.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
You know that will.
Speaker 2 (06:32):
That's the hard part I have wrapped my mind around
is is doing that to one of my own doing
that to a kid, you know what I mean. There's
a lot of things we don't let kids do in
this country, and I think making them wait until they're
at least eighteen to decide to if if you're an
adult and you want to do that. I think that's weird.
(06:53):
I think that's wrong. But you shouldn't. I'm not gonna
stop you from doing it, but you shouldn't let kids
do it. And you should be a parent letting a
kid do it.
Speaker 3 (07:03):
Yeah, you know, and you being a new father, a
relatively new father, first time father, I mean, you're you know,
you're It's.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
One of those things when.
Speaker 3 (07:14):
Here's something to add to what you said, Brandon, When
you're a parent and you're you know, your kids are
growing right in front of your eyes, and it seems
like you blink one day and they're graduating out of school,
or they're going to college, or they're getting a job.
It seems like you blink a few times and your
kids are grown. But it's it's cool to watch them
(07:35):
grow and learn and you try to guide them to
where they're not crappy horrible people and turning into serial
killers or something. You know, you're like, oh, I hope
my kids don't murder anybody. But and how you look
at a I mean I've seen people like literally wanting
(07:56):
to do this to.
Speaker 1 (07:56):
Eight year olds, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3 (07:58):
And how you look at your hid at ten or
eleven years old ago, I like a kid, but you know,
it would be really I would be happier if you
would change your gender for me, because I feel like
I had a boy. I always really wanted a girl.
So I remember when you were four, you told me
you like playing with dolls, so I think you might
(08:19):
be a girl. I feel as if I literally believe.
I believe that there are parents out there who do
these ridiculous things for other people to like come up
and pat him on the back and treat them like heroes,
which is absolutely just that, you know what crazy. If
(08:40):
I saw a parent, you know, if I knew a parent,
I was like, well, I'm gonna let my kid transition, like,
oh how old are they? Uh?
Speaker 1 (08:48):
Eleven?
Speaker 3 (08:50):
My reaction is not gonna be well, okay, I'm gonna
say this and say it as nice as possible, maybe not.
I want to give you a hat on the back,
but I want to give you a pad on the back,
really hard, near a flight of stairs. I wanna treat
you like a slinky, you know, fun.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
To push downstairs.
Speaker 3 (09:10):
That's the only pad on the back you're gonna get
for me. But then the more insane part is that
other people will treat those parents as as heroes. Jordan
Peterson I remember him talking, I think it was on
Joe Rogan's show, talking about how there was this woman
and she said both of her kids were trans and
(09:30):
he's like, do you know statistically the odds that you
would have two kids who had body dysmorphia and or
thought they were the other. No, that's not your kids,
that's you, you psychopath. And you know here's another thing, Brandon,
real quick, and then you just give me your opinion.
(09:50):
It is I don't have any faith in the state
taking kids away from parents and handing them off to
some body else unless it's just horrific, and then I
would hope that.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
A family member.
Speaker 3 (10:04):
But when people do this to their kids, it's I
understand why people are like, uh, they should they should
not have custody of their children anymore. I understand, like,
it doesn't matter how we get rid of you know,
get those kids away from them, just do that. I
understand the sentiment when you see parents behaving in that way,
why you would be hell bent on doing it, just
(10:26):
about anything you could to get those kids out of
that home, because you can just see it's it's just
overflowing with abuse.
Speaker 1 (10:36):
So I get the sentiment, I really do.
Speaker 2 (10:40):
Yeah, that's a difficult one because it's not like the
state's gonna, like you said, the state's not going to
do any better at raising your kids than even someone
down that I mean, you know what I'm saying. That's
a difficult one because you hear a lot of horror
stories from a child protective services and the you know
how you know, that's not usually a good path. So
(11:01):
it's that's tough to balance right there for sure. But uh,
you know what, what what I see a lot is
society playing on the vulnerability of like teenage emotions to
pit them against their parents. Oftentimes, like you'll see it,
like the societal influences will even if your parents aren't
(11:21):
the one making you do this, like it'll be you'll
you'll get this pressure at school because all a bunch
of your it's like trendy to be either by or
gay or you know, or trans and then they want you.
Like in California schools, you're not allowed to tell the
parent if the child is uh, just like if the
(11:45):
child declares that they're trans to a teacher, the teacher
is not allowed to tell the parent if I'm not
mistaken in California, and that's just mind boggling.
Speaker 1 (11:56):
Yeah, I.
Speaker 3 (11:59):
It, and you're you're you you hit right on the
head when you said, you know, even if it's not
the parents, the the social influences on these kids, the
I mean.
Speaker 1 (12:12):
The pressure that they the pressure that.
Speaker 3 (12:16):
They're under anyway because of how public education is, and
then the societal forces tugging at them, and then and
being in the public education system, being in these schools,
depending on what area you're in, you're gonna have activist
teachers or activists school boards pushing these ideals on these kids.
Speaker 1 (12:42):
So they've got they've got all people.
Speaker 3 (12:45):
In different uh you know, geographies, uh, people in different
from different uh generations just.
Speaker 1 (12:57):
Cram it it, just cramming it down their throat.
Speaker 3 (13:00):
And so the kids who don't know how to maybe
have an understanding of how to buck the system and go, listen,
you do whatever you want to, just leave me out
of it, because their parents don't educate them on how
to stand up against something that you feel is wrong.
And so and of course, when you you know, most
(13:22):
kids when they're in school, I was not one of
those kids, fortunately, but Most kids want to be cool, right.
They don't want to be seen as nerds or geeks
or whatever the phrase you want to throw. They want
to be cool. They want to be in the clicks.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
Right.
Speaker 3 (13:35):
So if you start heaping this crap on them and
then suddenly the cool kids are into it, they're gonna
draw a few kids. I'm not saying the majority, but
the ones who just can't handle not being cool and
not being the one of the cool kids, or afraid
(13:56):
they're gonna be bullied or made fun of, they're gonna
they're gonna jump on board. When my daughter was in school,
there was a rash of kids just cutting themselves. I
mean it was just there was a lot of girls
my daughter's age cutting themselves.
Speaker 1 (14:11):
And it's like, but.
Speaker 3 (14:13):
Some of them wouldn't have done it if they hadn't
seen other girls.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
Doing it or hearing about it.
Speaker 3 (14:20):
So the influence and it, you know, it's like, okay, well,
what gets into your head that you want to you know,
you want to cut? And I don't know, there's I
know there's mental health things that go along with this.
I'm not an expert. It's just that I think if
we're looking at this, things like the transing self harm.
(14:42):
You want another reason to keep your kids out of
public school and homeschool, there there's another, there's another good reason.
I mean the trans things always it's it's becoming.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
More and more.
Speaker 3 (14:55):
Uh, it's almost it's almost like it's being romantic size
by the media. A lot of people in public education.
It's being pushed to kids. It's it's becoming and they're
trying to normalize it. Something else I wanted to that
you hit on, Brandon, that I wanted to talk about too,
is you know, again, pitting the teenagers or the kids
(15:18):
in school against their parents. Because the one thing the
state cannot have is a strong nuclear family. You have
to tear them apart. You tear the kids away from
their parents, you can fill their head full of lies
and falsehoods and just total just dumpster fires of garbage information,
(15:43):
and then the kids not going to tell their parents
because they think their parents aren't cool, they're not hip,
they're old fashioned, they're racist, or they're this or they're that.
So yeah, pitting the teenagers or the kids against their
parents is a perfect way to indoctrinate them because those
kids aren't going to go home and tell their parents
everything they've learned, and you have activist teachers probably maybe
(16:07):
telling the kids that what you know they talk about
in class doesn't need to, you know, go home to
their parents. It's hard to say I'm not in public school,
thank god, because I would be into principal's office all
the time for being a horse's patuit, because I would
have to call out the bs every time the teacher
turned around. So it's probably a good thing that I'm
just working nine to five job now. But anyway, go ahead, Brandon.
Speaker 2 (16:31):
Oh no, I think you pretty much summed it up there.
I was going to touch on the mental health aspect
of it too, Like we were saying, it's not that
every kid on the planet is susceptible to this way
of thinking. They're preying on the ones that are having issues,
the ones that are already having difficulties with themselves, and
they're they're manipulating their thought process, and it's it's multifaceted,
(16:55):
which is why you know, it's a systemic thing, like
you see it in public school, and you see it
in the media like the new the new purse dog
for celebrities is a trans kid. So I mean you,
like you said, you see it everywhere, and so like
you said, I think there's like a it's a play
to you know, which which forces are driving it or
(17:17):
or just a collective forces agree that this is what's
best for their interests are in charge of it. But yeah,
you can definitely tell in society it's it's the same
thing with racism. You saw it after like around the
Michael Brown hands up, don't shoot fake narrative time that
it was the media just started picking up on these stories,
you know, in mass any every story had a race
(17:41):
tone to it. Every you know, and they'll hide certain
races if it doesn't fit the narrative, and they'll exploit
certain races if it does. And it's not an accident.
They use it in politics, they use in the media.
It's the same thing with the trans thing. It's all
you know, there's something at play here. There's a force
that's doing this.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (18:01):
I think you just had a great slogan right when
you started off on what you just said. It would
be it would be a really uh it would be
one of those shirts if you wore in public, would
probably get you the stink eye life. But the quote
you just said, the new pocket dogs.
Speaker 2 (18:17):
For oh, trans kids are the new person dogs person Doggie. Yeah, yes,
I heard I read that somewhere. I'm not gonna lie.
I didn't make it.
Speaker 3 (18:25):
It was still it would still make a great T shirt.
It was it would it would be it be a
very controversial T shirt. Oh, that would be a great
T shirt. Man, you want to talk about Hey, here's
the thing. People would probably buy that.
Speaker 1 (18:39):
Shirt just to infuriate the idiots who are like, oh,
you know like training kids. No, no, moron, I don't.
I think it's bad.
Speaker 3 (18:46):
I think it's awful, and I think your a douche
canoe for wanting to do that to children. Henceforth, I
bought this T shirt and I wear it probably wherever
I go, like like uh oh. Like Nate from Good
Morning Liberty, he's like, you want people to come up
and shake your hand.
Speaker 1 (19:02):
Which I don't listen.
Speaker 3 (19:04):
He you know, they are the guys that created the
God hates Feds, T shirts and hoodies and all that. Right,
So I have the hoodie. I love the hoodie, Nate
says if he wears it too. You know, these big
conventions and stuff he goes to, he got people coming
up shaking his hand. Oh, I love your shirt whatever.
When I wore my hoodie into work, I saw people's
(19:25):
eyes go down, read the words come up, and go
away from me. They wouldn't even look at me, like
I was about to be struck by lightning at any moment.
Speaker 1 (19:35):
It was a cursed being and they didn't want to
be close to me. It's like, it's a joke.
Speaker 3 (19:39):
It's a play on words from that idiot pastor from
I can't remember the name of the church, the one
who said God hates Yeah, yeah, the Westboro Baptist shirts.
Speaker 1 (19:49):
God hates.
Speaker 3 (19:52):
You know, a bad slander or a slang term for
a gay person starts with an F ends with an S.
I'll just say, I'll just leave it at that. But
it's just a play on that. And I think I
love the hoodie. I absolutely love it, And uh, if
I didn't get the reaction that I got, I may
not wear it as much. But any place I wear
it I want, they'll make eye contact, especially like I
(20:14):
went to the eye doctor when I got my eye
exam last year. I walked in it was a cool day,
had the hoodie on, walked up to check in, gout,
looked at me. I watched your eyes glance down. You
see a micro expression. Eyes come back up. They check
me in, I sit down, I go in the room.
The doctor comes in, she looks eye contact, eyes drift
(20:37):
down to the words back up micro expression. I'm like,
I am just hitting it out of the park today
with these people love it.
Speaker 1 (20:45):
But you were You are right. It's here's something else.
It's sad, Brandon.
Speaker 3 (20:52):
It's like if people have these kids, it's like it's
like they're carrying around a trophy. They they did something
like they won the like it's a gold medal and
just won the four hundred meter relay. It's like you
didn't do anything but just literally do physical and mental
(21:12):
harm to your kid. You abused your kid. There's no
trophies for that. I mean maybe in Hell, but on
Earth you shouldn't get a trophy for that. You should
get the crap eat out of you for that, or
at least thumping and naging a couple times, or as
Lewis Black said, just take him out for a day
of electroshock therapy, you know, just to get them back
(21:32):
on track.
Speaker 1 (21:33):
But awards and people lauding you for being oh my god,
what a brave parent. No, you're sick.
Speaker 2 (21:46):
Doesn't this you know. Another aspect of this story, though,
is how much more we can trust the science. Now
I feel like I can trust the science again. Yeah's
suppressing studies so we won't weapon them. That's that's what's
gonna rebuild trust in to science. Is suppressing studies.
Speaker 3 (22:07):
Yeah, that's a good way to build up my faith
and trust in anything is when you don't give me any.
Speaker 1 (22:13):
Well anything in this instance anything.
Speaker 2 (22:16):
Because a lot of these the surgeries are done, and
like not the surgeries necessarily, but also the puberty blockers,
which is what the study was. I misspoke earlier when
I said the study was about surgeries. It's actually about
puberty blockers for minors. But they're given by doctors and so.
(22:36):
And when you you saw a bunch of people around
the time where this movement really started taking off, as
you saw a bunch of medical associations and doctors associations
all praise this stuff. Like a lot of them were
coming out, Oh you have to know you actually you
have to do these puberty blockers because it's you know,
the mental health blah blah blah. And so it's the
(22:58):
same entities that gave the covid lies and the you know,
the response to covid lies more than anything, and uh
and so yeah, like I said, you just can't can't
trust the science at all, you know.
Speaker 3 (23:14):
And to me, uh, I know this sounds maybe it
sounds hyperbolic or whatever.
Speaker 1 (23:20):
I'm I'm glad. I'm glad. I hope this does.
Speaker 3 (23:22):
I hope this ruins people's faith and trust in medicine,
the direction that medicine has taken in the last.
Speaker 1 (23:32):
It's just the last decade alone. I hope this does.
Speaker 3 (23:36):
I hope this has more people questioning anything that these researchers, doctors,
big pharma, any of these people tell them. I hope
they they take a step back, dig deep, look at it,
and go, ah, this seems shady. Well, it probably is
shady anymore. Ninety percent of it is shady business. So
(23:56):
I hope it does. I hope that people's fit and
trust in those science doctor Fauci himself, I hope that.
I hope that faith and trust just continues to wither away.
Nothing would make me happier at this point than watching
people lose trust in the institutions that we've been propagandized
(24:20):
into thinking are just uh you know again, these benign
entities that only want to help us and heal us,
and and so solve what ails us, you know, cure
what ails us, solve our problems. I hope that continues
to erode away and people just go, I don't believe you anymore.
You have to do better than that than just getting
(24:42):
some body, you know, white coat on a screen telling
me this is good for me. You're gonna have to
do better than that.
Speaker 2 (24:49):
I hope you're right, but I you know, especially on
this particular issue, I don't really have that kind of faith.
I think they're the forces at play are too far
in t in this position where they can't turn around. Now.
They're just gonna have to do what they always do,
which is just deny the facts. They're gonna have to
They're gonna come out, they're gonna spin this, like she
(25:09):
tried to say, They're like, well, I just didn't release
the study because they'll weaponize it. And that's just what
they're the left wing media is gonna pair it on
this particular story. Especially, is that well it's just that
one study she you know, because the kids were too happy,
she couldn't you know, that didn't change levels, and how
their happiness levels with these puberty blockers. I mean, it's
(25:30):
just gonna go on like that. And I, like I said,
I hope you're right. I hope some people might actually
be waking up to Hey, I can make decisions for myself.
I don't need, you know, bureaucrats making decisions. I can
do my own research for my own studies and decide
what I like best. But I don't have faith in this,
like on the for the parents that are already pushing
their kids into this, like subconsciously, like giving favoritism to
(25:53):
the children that choose to transition and all that, I
don't see them making a turning point. Not until all
of society together collectively just goes, we can't do this,
like we we now know this is bad for kids.
It hurts their body, it you know, they regret it
long term, Like until all of society is pushing that,
I think. I think people hate admitting when they're wrong too,
(26:16):
So you're gonna see a lot of people hate to
admit that they're wrong about this.
Speaker 3 (26:19):
No, you're absolutely right. It's just one of my my
hopes you're right. I don't see anybody you know, saying, well,
I gotta you know, I don't see the majority of
people just giving up on the scientific medicine and scientific
communities and saying, hey, you guys can't get your act together.
Speaker 1 (26:41):
We're out. No, you're right, and it's so bad. Like so.
Speaker 3 (26:49):
We have Netflix, and we have like Amazon Prime here
at home, right, and we don't have cable, we don't
have any of that, So we just have streaming services.
And there's my wife will watch a show that's on
like Amazon Prime, and you get those I remember the
name of the streaming service that Amazon Prime kind of
uses to carry some of these shows.
Speaker 1 (27:10):
But they'll be ads throughout.
Speaker 2 (27:12):
The shows or like the Stars.
Speaker 1 (27:14):
I know, it's like Freebee or free.
Speaker 2 (27:17):
Oh yeah yeah yeah.
Speaker 3 (27:19):
So then you get I don't know how many times
she's been watching something, like she'll binge watch something and.
Speaker 1 (27:28):
There's just commercial after commercial.
Speaker 3 (27:31):
Now, now the new thing is you got to get
the kids real early and give them their RSV vaccine.
I keep seeing commercials for RSV vaccines like man, and
it's just it's it's nothing but fear propaganda trying to
scare the parents. You know, shows parents taking their kid
to the emergency room or they're getting put in the
hospital for RSV. Yeah, they're just pulling on the heartstrings
(27:53):
of these parents. And I'm like, I'm sitting here thinking,
I just look over my wife and go, I wonder
how many parents right now are doing this, just taking
her kid to the doctor and getting an RSB vaccine.
Speaker 2 (28:06):
Now, good God, I'll tell you what they They don't.
They're starting to give you less and less choice. Like
when I I I don't remember if I told you.
I'll just remind the audience and everybody. But when when
my baby got discharged from the hospital, they made before
they would release her into our custody, we had to
(28:29):
have an appointment set up with a physician. It was
like one of the rules for the hospital. And when
I was calling around to physicians, I was worried about
this because I I'm I have a little vaccine hesitancy,
and so I just wanted to make sure I could
read and have all of my options available to me
before I chose a pediatrician or not chose a pediatrician,
(28:50):
but before the vaccines actually went into my kid. Apparently
that's a no go with like so many pediatricians. We
called around to a bunch of them and they were
all like, no, all of them within a certain radius
of us, they were all like, no, you have no choice.
We're going off of what the American the Association, American
Association of Pediatrics, they're going off of that schedule. And
(29:12):
the multiple doctors that we called said we had no
flexibility on that, and so it's kind of sad. And
I think RSV might still be an optional one, but
I'm just saying, pretty soon they're gonna make it not optional.
They're gonna make COVID not optional. I'm shocked they haven't
made the flu vaccine for as long as it's been around.
I'm shocked that they still make that optional because they
all they push it on like the radio, as if
(29:33):
it's the next polio, And so, yeah, I think it's
I I would. I think it's crazy how people don't
have more choice in things like that.
Speaker 3 (29:45):
No, you're right, I mean, uh, people in the future
that have children, I mean, they're just screwed. And you know,
I've been willing to compromise a little bit on this
because when I was a kid, they weren't putting two
(30:06):
and three vaccines in the same syringe and jam, you know, and.
Speaker 1 (30:10):
It's like I do know.
Speaker 3 (30:11):
I've I've talked to one person that's had two kids
and her doctor's like, you know, you know, get the vaccinations.
And she looked at her doctrines said will you allow
me instead of giving them multiples at a time, stretching
them out one here, wait six months, a year, the
(30:35):
next one. And her doctor's like, yeah, that's fine, and
she said, I feel more comfortable doing at that. And
it I mean, there has been studies reported that the
more they mix these things and you know, you get
two or three or four in one sitting, seems to
be much more harmful than what they used to do,
(30:57):
which was give you one at a time, and what
is it the one it's like the MMR vaccine that's
three and one and then you're getting that in one
leg and they're sticking a needle in the other leg
with something else, and it's like, maybe that's the problem,
if you know, and it's the thing. Here's another thing, Brandon,
I think, if to me, if you want to prove
(31:20):
to me that the vaccines are safe and effective, then
let the parents draw them out over time instead of
and instead of making this the program that these doctors
seem to the majority of these doctors follow where it's like, oh,
they're this many weeks old to get five vaccinations. Bam
of saying, let's let's start something out where we stretch
(31:43):
this out and then look, let's look at the health
effects of staggering them or jamming five of the men
at a one time, and let's see what. Of course,
they're not going to do that, because if it proves
that you stretching them out over time seems to.
Speaker 1 (31:59):
Have are fewer.
Speaker 3 (32:02):
Health impacts on a number of kids, then they have
to admit they're wrong. But if I'm a parent that,
for whatever reason, things that I have to give all
my kids these vaccinations. Again, I'm not a doctor, folks.
I'm just saying I'm not giving you medical advice, but
I'm saying that's another option.
Speaker 1 (32:21):
If you feel like you have to vaccinate.
Speaker 3 (32:23):
Your kids, stretch them out, don't let them piggyback three
and four at one time, spread them months apart.
Speaker 1 (32:31):
The thing is, people, I understand it.
Speaker 2 (32:36):
Man.
Speaker 3 (32:36):
When you got a little kid, especially an infant, you
want that infant to be healthy. You want that child
to grow up to be a healthy adult, So that
fear is always working.
Speaker 1 (32:45):
In your mind.
Speaker 3 (32:47):
Oh my god, what if they're one of the few,
you know, they get sick and dies from some you know,
hepatitis or something like that, I mean, or the mumps.
What if they're the one that dies from ups and
I just could have got him a vaccine and you
know whatever else. I get it, And it plays with
your head a little bit, but you got to understand
the risk of dying for most of these things is
(33:09):
pretty pretty low, very very low in fact. So I
just and I know there's other people that said, hey,
with the vaccines. You know, the vaccines aren't the thing that.
Speaker 1 (33:24):
Created this error of less disease.
Speaker 3 (33:29):
It was actually better sanitary better waste sanitation is what
really made the decline of these diseases. So again, not
a doctor never went to medical school. I'm just saying,
you have options and and exercise those options, and don't
go into a doctor's office and have again full faith.
Speaker 1 (33:48):
And trust that if he just tells you that he.
Speaker 3 (33:52):
Knows the material, then it's perfectly okay, that it's perfectly
you know, just to take him at that.
Speaker 1 (34:00):
Do your research.
Speaker 3 (34:01):
I bet you probably go online and find some of
this material, these inserts out of these vaccines.
Speaker 1 (34:06):
If you looked hard enough. But just weigh your options.
Speaker 3 (34:09):
I mean, you're making the best decision you can for
your kid and yourself at that point if you literally
weigh your options. And that's just not medically, that's a
lot of other things in life.
Speaker 1 (34:21):
Weigh your options.
Speaker 3 (34:23):
We have the ability to make the choice, and then
use that ability to make it to make the right
choice for you, your yourself, your loved ones, whatever.
Speaker 1 (34:33):
Just do a little research.
Speaker 2 (34:36):
Wasn't it so I might be wrong about this, But
wasn't it Reagan who signed the bill that where vaccine
manufacturers couldn't be sued?
Speaker 3 (34:46):
I want to say that was during so I think
the first time that happened I think was the first
swine flu and I don't remember if that was during
Nixon's administration the first swine flu came out, I think
they were exempt.
Speaker 1 (35:02):
Now it might have been. Let me see if I
can find that.
Speaker 2 (35:07):
Because another aspect to the vaccines we have to talk
about it since we're talking about vaccines is the money.
It might not be Pfeizer or Maderna, whoever, but people
own these vaccines that go into every child in America.
It's a money making machine. I mean, somebody produces it.
A private entity produces it and sells it to the hospitals,
(35:29):
and the doctors who give it to your kid, who
build it to your insurance, and every kid going too
public schools forced to take them. So yeah, there's a
ton of money involved in it, and I'm sorry if
I want to weigh my options and read into things
and have conformed incent on informed consent on specific vaccines.
I don't feel like that's a tough thing to ask.
(35:50):
So yeah, like I've been shopping around, possibly using a
different pediatrician. It's just like I said, it's hard to
find one.
Speaker 3 (35:58):
So it looks like Congress ask that law in nineteen
eighty six that gives vaccine manufacturers immunity from product liability lawsuits.
Somebody wrote in the comments because vaccine manufacturers were going
to leave the marketplace if they didn't. I do know
(36:19):
that there's a vaccine let me see. That came up
in my search. There's also an injury Act, so all
the vaccine manufacturers have to put money into this fund.
But it's totally different if you could if you know
your child's been injured by vaccine, you go in front
(36:39):
of a magistrate and you have to prove to them
that your child was vaccine injured, and then you can
get compensated for that. But that is just money that
goes from the vaccine manufacturers into this pool, and then
people can pull from that tub of money.
Speaker 1 (36:55):
But you can't.
Speaker 3 (36:56):
You know, it doesn't matter what vaccine it is. If
they make a horror mistake and they say, oh, this
one's safe and effective, those.
Speaker 1 (37:04):
Words are constantly being thrown about.
Speaker 3 (37:07):
Now if it's not safe and effective and it harms
hundreds of thousands of people, millions of people, nothing, nothing
will be done because they've insulated themselves with billions of
dollars in lobbying, uh congress congressmen like mad so Well
good laws.
Speaker 2 (37:27):
Also the open door between the higher ups at these
pharmaceutical companies and then the people who sit on the
board of the FDA. That goes back and forth like
a swinging pendulum. Or if you're you know, depending on
who's funding the studies of what schools, you know, you
could like who knows who's funding like certain studies at
schools to determine, oh, well, actually we found out this
(37:49):
vaccine doesn't cause that. And they were being paid by
the people who made the vaccine.
Speaker 3 (37:55):
Yeah, so for those of you who have never read it,
and let me let me make sure I get the
act actual website.
Speaker 1 (38:04):
Correct.
Speaker 3 (38:06):
So if you go to archive dot org, archive dot org,
I believe you can find let's see, I'm gonna look
up the let's see if it'll pull it up.
Speaker 1 (38:23):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (38:24):
So there's a book called Murder by Injection by Eustace Mullins.
I don't remember what year this book was, uh put out.
I don't see it in the in the description, but
I did. I read it, and from its inception, uh,
(38:50):
the AMA was like, oh you if you want your
medication to be put in the nal or whatever, cough
up the dough. From its inception, the AMA has been corrupt.
And so he goes into detail on the Okay, I
(39:13):
gotta talk about the polio vaccine real quick, because there
was something in a book that was crazy about this.
It not crazy like this guy's completely retarded. It's just
so you know, there's a polio outbreak. And there was
one doctor that said, stop giving your kids sugar. Stop
(39:34):
giving them kids your kids sugar. So there were states
where a bunch of parents are like, okay, cool, and
they you know, the sugar intake into population dip down.
Well guess what else dipped down. Cases of polio went down.
But the people making the candy bars and stuff, we're
losing a bunch of money. So they in turn were
(39:56):
giving handing out free candy to the kids. And sooner
or later, you know, pretty soon the sugar intake went
back up, and polio rates seemed to just coincide, coincidedly
went right up with the sugar intake. So when the
sugar intake went down to the population, the polio cases
went down, sugar intake went back up, polio cases went
(40:19):
back up. So that's just one thing in the book
that he covers. Again, but again we're talking.
Speaker 1 (40:24):
The sixties when this went down, and.
Speaker 3 (40:27):
So from its inception, Oh you talk about you know,
when you read about the guy who had the iridium
minds and using you know, X rays and radiation, you know.
Speaker 1 (40:41):
The dude was giving.
Speaker 3 (40:42):
He was he not only himself, his kids, his wife
and the kids. He wiped his whole house out basically
because every time they get sick, he hit him with radiation.
He literally killed himself and his family, his household with
radiation because at that time they had no idea, just like,
well found it and I own it, so radiate, radiate,
(41:03):
radiate me every.
Speaker 1 (41:04):
Time we get sick.
Speaker 3 (41:05):
Yeah, he ended up just I mean, just killing everybody
in his house. So if people understood a little better
the history of the AMA and some of the and
the corruption from the beginning, maybe we get some more
people to understand, Hey, this is never it seemingly has
never been about healing. It's making a boatload of money
(41:30):
off band aids that never actually fixed the issue that
you have. I was just Tucker Carlson had this pair
of dot well one was a used to be a
head and neck surgeon, and her husband was a lobbyist
for big farm and stuff, and they were coming out
saying stuff like some of these or some of these
(41:52):
uh pharmaceutical companies also are in agriculture, So they sell
you crap poisoned food, and then on the other on
the other side, they're selling you the medication to help
mask the symptoms of the crap food that they produce,
(42:12):
so they're getting money on both ends. You're buying their
food and then you're buying the band aid that you
have to use because you're eating the crap poisoned food.
Speaker 1 (42:23):
That they make.
Speaker 3 (42:23):
So they're getting it on both sides. Uh, well, in
two different economies, the food economy and the medicine economy.
They're getting it on both ends billions of dollars. And
it was a it was a very interesting, uh interview
and talking about vaccines again, this YouTube is gonna bust
us on this one.
Speaker 1 (42:43):
I don't even care.
Speaker 3 (42:45):
But they were talking about the hepatitis vaccine. Now, this
gal again had an ex surgeon just said that hepatitis
vaccine for babies is pretty much useless, especially the type
of hepatitis vaccine that they're given. It's pointless to give
that to a baby. Now, she gave her reasons, and
I can't remember what they were, solid reasons, they were
(43:06):
logical reasons. But yeah, apparently the hepatitis vaccine is pointless
for infants, but they give it to every single one.
As soon as it comes out of the womb, Bam,
they get hit with the heppatitis vaccine. So you know,
it's it's nuts when you again, as you said earlier, Brandon,
people don't want to admit they're wrong.
Speaker 1 (43:28):
Man. You got to wise up sometime. Good God.
Speaker 2 (43:30):
The worst is the arrogance too, Like when you talk
to some of these nurses or some of these doctors,
like when they when they offered us the het B
vaccine or heba have B. I believe it was vaccine
in the hospital to our baby, and we had our
reservations about it, like we wouldn't sign that paper right away.
We definitely took a look at it and wanted to
(43:51):
know more about it. And they just gave us, like
everyone was giving us the dirtiest looks, and they were like, well,
we're vaccine responsible and hospital. I'm like, yeah, I'm like
you that you guys are out of your mind. I mean,
you're you're out of your mind for not even for
(44:11):
not allowing even the like they they didn't do the studies.
Like it'd be one thing if you were talking to
the doctor of the studies who's like, no, I did
the studies, and they were an honest person. They're like,
I did the studies and it's right, But you're just
talking to some nurse who heard from a person who
heard from a person who heard from a person that
that it's safe. And I heard from a person heard
from a person that it wasn't and so I want
(44:32):
to do my research and they treat you like you're
crazy for even considering doing your own research.
Speaker 3 (44:41):
Yeah, that's absolutely that's absolutely right. That's absolutely right.
Speaker 1 (44:45):
They and.
Speaker 3 (44:48):
You know, it's there was a time in this country
where people who thought for themselves that that was those
were the cream of the crop. They they still are
technically the cream of the crop, but they're not treated
to such anymore. It used to be those people were
treated in pretty high regard, and now you're treated as
(45:09):
some far right winger, conspiracy theorist, tenfoil hat wearing freakazoid
because god forbid, you have a little bit of cognitive
cognitive dissonance about something you heard and you want to
learn more before you form an opinion or make a decision.
Now you're the crazy one that you tell you everything
(45:31):
about government, about the medical system, the pharmaceutical system, heck,
the food industry. If you can't question what you put
into your body without some jackass treating you like you've
got the plague, like, oh, get me away from this guy.
He wants to think for himself that that's the problem.
(45:52):
And we've also now I'm gonna say this, and some
people don't like it when you phrase it the way
I'm going to but that's what it is. And I've
talked to policemen and other people about this, but we
have come to a point, especially after nine to eleven
and stuff like that and COVID, that we've come to
(46:13):
this hero worship of first responders and now it's nurses
and doctors. And when you do that and you put
them on a pedestal, the arrogance level goes up. And
so when you decide to be one of those people
who's gonna question everything, they're like, well, apparently you didn't
get the memo because during COVID, I was I was
(46:36):
the rock star.
Speaker 1 (46:36):
Here you were some.
Speaker 3 (46:38):
Lobi who didn't know any better, getting your horrible information
on the internet. Like, no, I just like to make
up my mind. I'd just like to make up my
own mind. Oh we don't do that here, we don't
make I'll make up your mind for you. You'll nod
your head and go along, and then you'll get the
heck out of my office. When you're done. It's like,
I don't know what kind of doctor's office this is,
(46:59):
but it sucks, but it But it's sad that to
be a critical thinker anymore is like you've committed some
kind of horrible, heinous crime.
Speaker 1 (47:11):
Like I went.
Speaker 3 (47:12):
I went up the block, found every puppy I could
and tried to be a and it was doing tryouts
for a place kicker for an NFL team. I was
just kicking the puppy as far as I could. And
I have a buddy standing ten yards away, holding his
arms up in the air like he's a goalpost and
just trying to drive the puppy right through the uprights
because I want to. I want to make my own
(47:33):
mind up. And oh and then Voodoy Queen says Nixon
started the mandatory vaccinations for schools.
Speaker 2 (47:40):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (47:41):
But Nixon was just really he was a great Republican Uh,
you know, great Republican prayer speaking of great presidents. Folks,
keep this in your keep this in your brain for
next year.
Speaker 1 (47:54):
Now.
Speaker 3 (47:54):
I am not one that's really good at uh organization.
I don't have great organizational skills. Any of you that's
known me for very long know this. I am seriously
considering putting together, even if it's a small type of thing,
the first time. I'm actually wanting to put together a
(48:15):
Coolidge Day event here somewhere around Owensville and just see
how many liberty lovers we can get to show up.
We can talk a little bit about Coolidge, but we
get to get some you know myself, Brandon, Tom Martz.
I can get Sam from Missouri Liberty Radio. We get
a lot of people just talking about actual liberty, actual freedom,
(48:38):
what's that mean, what that what that looks like?
Speaker 1 (48:41):
And then talk about.
Speaker 3 (48:42):
Coolidge a little bit and say, if you want to
if you really want to change things, then you have
to elect more Ron Paul's, Thomas Massey's and if you
want a good president, you have to find your Calvin coolidgees.
Speaker 1 (48:57):
You know it is it is.
Speaker 3 (49:00):
That's funny, Brandon, that the Republicans have their Reagan days
and their Lincoln days. And I got all kinds of
problem with Lincoln, and I've got a lot of problems
with Reagan, but I got more problems, i think, with
Lincoln than I do with Reagan. And the absolute worship
it kind of should almost tell you something about the party.
(49:20):
It's not that all the people that in the party,
or even reps or or candidates running in the Republican
Party all think that Lincoln was, you know, the bomb.
But when you have a party that has Lincoln Days,
And it's like, you mean the guy that's supended suspended
Habeas corpus and and started a war with the South
(49:42):
and all that.
Speaker 1 (49:42):
That's the guy you're worshiping.
Speaker 3 (49:43):
That's the guy you want to name a day after
when you're having your big campaign events. Is Lincoln Days?
Really that's the guy. So yeah, I would like to
do a Coolidge Day next year. Like I said, get
some speakers here, talk about freedom, talking about liberty, talk
about some of the things about Coolidge, because you know,
(50:05):
if you read a history book, Coolidge was horrible because
he did nothing. He didn't have the government doing anything.
But like uh, Woodrow Wilson and FDR. Those were great
presidents because you know they we won world wars and
stuff with those guys. Coolidge was he was just a
lame o because he didn't get to have the government
handing out money and creating new systems. What a what
(50:25):
a piece of crap he was. Well, that's the guy
I want to celebrate. That's the kind of political philosophy
that I dealize with. That I idealized with more. So Yeah,
as the as the months come along, if I can
find a decent spot to do it, even like again,
even if it's a small one the first time, and
we can maybe build on it or create a new
movement of Coolidge days, that that would be.
Speaker 1 (50:49):
That would be pretty awesome.
Speaker 3 (50:51):
But he had something to think about, uh as we
move forward Again, I'm not the best at organizing uh
any event at all, but I would like to I
would like to try to put that on just to
see what kind of response we would get, because most
people just don't talk about Calvin Coolidge.
Speaker 1 (51:10):
I mean they just don't.
Speaker 3 (51:11):
If you're looking, if people are looking at presidents that
they look up to or admire, Coolidge just seemingly amongst
most people is not on the list. Again, it's Lincoln, Reagan.
Some people think Trump or Obama or Clinton, George W. Bush,
George H. W. Bush, those are the names that come
(51:32):
to mind. Coolidge, Eh, what a loser. So anyway, that's
that is coming up in the days and months ahead.
Speaker 1 (51:44):
All right, I want to play this clip.
Speaker 3 (51:47):
I'm just gonna play it because I forgot what button,
I put what thing on because I'm dumb, But I
believe the first clip I'm gonna play you and I
had to.
Speaker 1 (51:59):
I was looking.
Speaker 3 (52:00):
I was scouring YouTube today trying to find his clip.
I couldn't find it, so I literally had to clip
it from Dave Smith's part of the problem because he
played it. I went to his YouTube channel, found it,
recorded it to the board. This is Kamala Harris because
the title of this episode is Harris the Horrible History Teacher.
So Harris is going to give us a little lecture
(52:21):
on isolationism and World War two. And again, I pray
that all of our brain cells stay intact and we
don't lose any IQ points after this goofball does her spiel?
Speaker 1 (52:35):
Let me make sure. I hope to God this is
the right button. The Cheney thing, Oh wrong one, that's next?
Here it is here you go.
Speaker 4 (52:44):
Bringing the allies together is because they are fully aware
of and remember to the congresswoman's point, World War to
remember this concept of isolation. We were once there as
a name, and then Pearl Harbor happened. Let's remember recent history.
(53:06):
Europe remembers it.
Speaker 2 (53:07):
Well.
Speaker 4 (53:10):
Then when we got attacked Pearl Harbor, we jumped in.
And it is because America jumped in that we were
ultimately able to win that war. And it should be
a constant reminder to us. We have to remember history.
That isolationism, which is exactly what Donald Trump is pushing.
(53:33):
Pull out a NATO, abandon our friends. Isolationism is not insulation.
It is not insulation. It will not insulate us from
harm in terms of our national security. So I say
that to emphasize a point that the congresswoman made. And
(53:53):
the other point I'd make is also check out where
he's been on how he thinks about America's military service members.
One of the great great American heroes, a prisoner of
where John McCain.
Speaker 3 (54:06):
Remember, Oh, okay, that's that's about all, like the stomach
of that one a And I'll let you just ramble
on a little bit here, Brandon. I just got one
one thing I want to say before you before you
you set off here?
Speaker 1 (54:19):
Is that woman not?
Speaker 3 (54:21):
Is it not like we're sitting in elementary school and
she's talking to us all like children. When she talks
like that, it's like she's talking down to everybody like
I'm a teacher and I'm gonna tell you how gings
wear and if you don't like it, And then she
has to take a break and go hit a bottle
of wine so she can get smashed and continue on
her conversation because he's drunk all the time. So she's
(54:41):
a drunk kindergarten teacher. But that voice, you know how,
it's like it's like nails on a chalkboard. That's like
the whole classroom of kids getting up and just raking
the nails down to board and you're just sitting in
the middle of just goosebumps, raising up and feeling, yeah,
feeling like you just want to dive out the window
just to get away from it.
Speaker 2 (55:03):
So this this is where she started, This is where
she wanted to go. This is how she got there.
That was insane. That was there are people on the
internet day from the live chat sent me over, I
gotta there are people who actually try to argue that
(55:26):
Kamala Harris is a good speaker, Like there are people
trying to I gotta find it. But there are there
are like the leftist on Twitter, the the ones you
see commonly blindly defending Biden in the Harris administration, the
Brooklyn Dad defiant and the guys like that.
Speaker 1 (55:48):
But what did she.
Speaker 2 (55:52):
Oh anyway, Oh, here it is. Her name is Ali Samarco.
And she said Republicans keep saying Kamala Harris speaks in
word salad because she speaks in an intelligent, nuanced manner.
They're so used to hearing first grade level vocabulary that
anything more educated than that is confusing for them. That's
(56:14):
how the left plays this on the internet. And we're
talking about the president who said Russia is.
Speaker 5 (56:21):
A big country, okay, and you Crane is a little country, okay.
And the big country invated the little country, okay, and
that's bad. That's the person we're talking about.
Speaker 2 (56:41):
I mean, I have my own I love I'm not
gonna lie. I love listening to Trump speak. I personally
find him hilarious. I think that, Like I think he's
a bad leader. I don't. I don't like a lot
of the things he did as president. But the dude's funny,
and I like that he's he he is really it's
like relatable the way he just like mocks things. It's
(57:03):
like the way you and your buddies mock things in public,
and it's like it's cool. It's not ultra intelligent, and
I understand that, but to act like Kamala Harris is
like the end all be all of intelligence, even compared
to Donald Trump, is just it's just bananas. If you
listen to things like that speech and then like I said,
(57:23):
her Russia invading Ukraine speech, So she is an idiot.
Speaker 1 (57:29):
Dude that I'm not gonna lie.
Speaker 3 (57:35):
That was a uh I that was a pretty solid
impersonation of Kamala Harris. You did a good Trump one
the other day and now you've got this Harris thing
nailed down, and uh yeah, that was a David Dwyer's
just losing his mind in the live chat. He's just
cut laughing emoji's plaster everywhere. But and that should speak
(57:59):
volumes about people who who've backed Kamala Harris if they
and of course they're lying to themselves, they have to be.
But if you honestly believe voodoo Queen's got that where
she saw her bus, she's like.
Speaker 1 (58:18):
The wheels on the bus go around there, around that
whole thing.
Speaker 3 (58:21):
That was hilarious too. But if you're going to go
with the the message that Kamala Harris just speaks to intelligently,
I don't know who you've been talking to. That means
your whole life has been talking to infants who are
(58:43):
trying to learn to form words. And so when you
hear Harris speak, that's intelligent to you because you're every
every other human being you interact with can't even put
like four words together to form somewhat of a sentence.
That you're either talking to those toddlers and infants or
(59:04):
you're talking to people with severe dementia that just ramble,
ramble incoherently because their brains degraded. But you clearly have
not been uh talking to people who have any brain
cells at all. You you can't, you can't do that
(59:24):
and go, eh, it's just really intelligent.
Speaker 1 (59:26):
Hold on, I've got a visitor come here anyway. So
I love how I love how these people say these things.
It's crazy. Yes, I know I'm on a show when
you're in my lap.
Speaker 3 (59:40):
But uh yeah, that's that's crazy to me that that's
where they that's the line that they're gonna put in
a sand.
Speaker 1 (59:48):
If you could do with Kabla Harris. You're just not
You're just not into this intelligent conversation, like you know.
Speaker 3 (59:56):
It makes me wonder. I know people, there's a funny
where there's a black guy sitting in his car freaking out.
He's like, white people, why do you make your edibles
so strong? I feel like that's what I mean, most
people just get baked and go off to another plan.
I feel like Kamala is getting the absolute best edibles,
but it's a really bad strain to weed where she
(01:00:19):
just starts repeating the same words over and over again.
But in her head, she's like, I'm knocking this out
of the park. People are clapping for me. She has
no idea what she's doing, she's no idea where she's at.
But she's having a really great time.
Speaker 2 (01:00:33):
And God, I think she's gonna arrest herself for taking
the edibles.
Speaker 3 (01:00:38):
I hope she does, and I hope she when it's
time for her to get out of jail, she's like, Nope,
you can't get out yet.
Speaker 1 (01:00:44):
You're a horrible person.
Speaker 3 (01:00:45):
And she just keeps prolonging her sentence and she just
can't seem to get out of jail because she she
just permanently baked her brain, like I'm a terrible person.
I shouldn't be out of jail yet, I'm dangerous to
be out on the streets.
Speaker 1 (01:00:57):
That would be. That'd be a wonderful way of doing things.
Speaker 2 (01:01:00):
If she wasn't getting absolutely annihilated in like every statistic
in this election so far, then yeah, she might be dangerous,
but she's not even dangerous out in the public anymore.
Like I'm not. You know, anything can happen in the
next you know, ten days. They can do whatever to
try to stop the steal. But from all what I've
been seeing, as far as like the mail in ballot
turn in and the uh the early voting, it's going
(01:01:23):
so far Republican that she's in the she's in the
in the in the dumps. And I we as much
as I hate on Trump and I really really don't
like him, I do think it's better for the country
for if Trump is president than Kamala Harris. So I
will say that it's marginal. It's so marginal. It's so marginal.
(01:01:43):
I don't think I'll pull the lever for either one
of them. But uh, you know, she she is so
much less threatening now than than I was. I was.
I was very afraid that the media was gonna trick
everybody into being like she's the most likable person ever.
And I'm glad to see that that momentum died.
Speaker 3 (01:02:03):
Yeah, you know, and that's I hate to say the
words too, but it would be just a touch better
if Trump was in office than Harris.
Speaker 1 (01:02:13):
Harris is.
Speaker 3 (01:02:15):
Because she'll just do She will literally do anything that
they want her to do, anything that it doesn't matter
if it's war, she'll do whatever. She just wants that position,
she wants that power. And Trump, Yes, he's bad and
he sucks too, but.
Speaker 1 (01:02:33):
She is just.
Speaker 3 (01:02:36):
I mean, you might as well just if you like,
you'd say, you held up a picture of the United
States and then you held up a cancer cell and
you just PLoP it right where DC is on the map,
and that cancer is just gonna grow. I mean, that's
just you're you're you're you're taking the the US for
(01:02:57):
all its faults, our government, with all its fault we
are still one of the most free countries in the world,
and you're just it's like, oh, this is somewhat healthy tissue.
I think we should put cancer right here and then
watch it metastasize and just spread like wildfire.
Speaker 1 (01:03:13):
Again.
Speaker 3 (01:03:14):
Yeah, I'm not a fan of Trump by any means,
But do I think that Trump would still be a
little bit better than Harris. I think you have to
be I think you have to be lying to yourself
to say that that's not the case. Again, I would
just assume neither one of them touched the White House.
But ye, at this point, I and the thing is,
Guy Brandon, I'm hearing libertarians saying, you know what I'm done,
(01:03:39):
and I'm gonna play the clip here in a minute
after you and I talk a little bit. But when
Dick Cheney's daughter started going around with Harris and trying
to convince Republicans that they need to vote for Harris,
Libertarians are like, that's it. They're they're literally going to
vote for Trump.
Speaker 2 (01:03:58):
Because can I jump in there for just a second,
because that's it's so frustrating to me, because why like,
if you weren't gonna vote for Trump, like if you
were gonna pull the lever for Trump, then at least
let it be about something Trump, did you know what
I'm saying? Like, why would you? The libertarian argument forever
the reason we can't ever win is because the people
will always pull for the lesser of two evils, and
(01:04:20):
then we continue to get more spending, we continue to
get in more wars, no matter which Republican or Democrat
makes it into office, and for you to not want
to vote for like for you to make your vote
go from libertarian to Republican because of something a Democrat
did is so like I don't know, just misguided in
my opinion, Like I thought libertarians, I thought more libertarians,
(01:04:43):
And I'm not trying to like bubble all libertarians together.
And if you vote for Trump, vote for Trump, like
voting for like whoever you vote for. It isn't gonna
make a ton of difference anyway. But I just think
I just think, uh, you know, if you're gonna vote
for for Donald Trump, let it be about something Donald
Trump is promising you, or that Donald Trump is gonna
(01:05:05):
do this or that. Don't make it about something that
a Democrat said or did. It's I find that just
a little bit like why is that the straw that
made you? I don't know, I see. I think it's
kind of it's either dishonest or or you or you
already planned on voting for Trump.
Speaker 3 (01:05:19):
Yeah, you know, I I know one guy said that
he was on the fence about it, and and now
it's just gotten to point now one of them wasn't
because Harris and Cheney were together and trying to, you know,
just say, oh, you know, you don't have to tell
anybody you can vote for Harris. That's what Liz Cheney said,
(01:05:40):
but it's others. It's it's the indictments, it's the it's
the two assassination attempts, it's all these things. And they
know that, you know, like someone like a Chase Oliver
or whoever's running the Constitution Party doesn't stand a chance.
So they're like, Okay, well I'm I'm voting for.
Speaker 1 (01:06:01):
It's some of them.
Speaker 3 (01:06:02):
It's almost like, and again, I don't necessarily agree with it.
I understand the I understand the sentiment, I understand the mentality.
I just don't agree with the outcome. They see everything
that's happening to him, and it's almost like they're like,
and Harris is so frightening and also too to that point,
(01:06:27):
the more they hear Harris talk and the thought of her,
just the idiotic things that she says, like the clip
that I just played, they're like, God, this woman absolutely
cannot get in, and so they're just going to cast
their vote for to get more votes to Trump to
make sure she doesn't get in, which is the exact
same thing on the opposite end of the spectrum that
(01:06:50):
happened in twenty twenty.
Speaker 1 (01:06:51):
Anybody but Trump.
Speaker 3 (01:06:53):
Now it's flipped to anybody but Harris, we're playing the
same game, but it's for the opposite cult. As Tom
Marteau affectionately calls him, he's not wrong, but we're just
playing the other side of the coin. Now, it's anybody
but hars Again.
Speaker 1 (01:07:09):
I get it. I get it.
Speaker 3 (01:07:11):
That woman scares but Jesus out of me, she's a psychopath.
She slept her way into powerful positions. She clearly doesn't
understand any of the topic material unless she practices it
for probably hours before she steps on a stage. And
even then she gets in an interview and it's like
the connection between her and whoever's talking in her ear
(01:07:32):
got lost and she has to wing it.
Speaker 1 (01:07:35):
So I get it.
Speaker 3 (01:07:37):
Yeah, the woman is scary, but we're just we're playing
the exact same game we did in twenty twenty.
Speaker 1 (01:07:44):
And my fear is.
Speaker 3 (01:07:47):
That this is what the elections are gonna look like
from here on out, that it's just gonna be it's
it's anybody but this person. So if the Republic, depending
on who the the Republican and Democrats run in twenty
twenty eight, one's gonna be well, they're both gonna be horrible.
But then the eyes of common people that the majority
(01:08:10):
of Americans, one's gonna be objectively worse than the other,
and so they're gonna be like, oh, anybody, but that
person the Republican or the Democrat. And that's just gonna
be the cycle unless people wise up. That's gonna be
the election cycle we're stuck in from here on out
until this country has collapsed because instead of people voting uh,
(01:08:35):
you know, their actual heart and with their brains, they're
just voting for again, the lesser of two evils.
Speaker 1 (01:08:43):
But the two.
Speaker 3 (01:08:43):
Evils seemingly are very similar. It's just the personalities and
the propaganda that drives the wedge and pushes them far apart.
And again it works great because the state, these states,
these central planners, the one thing they don't want people
to understand is how much they don't need government and
(01:09:05):
still be able to thrive better, to be more successful,
to be more free, to make their own choices. That's
the one thing they can't that's the one lesson they
can't have people learning is how little they need government.
Speaker 1 (01:09:18):
So we're gonna get.
Speaker 3 (01:09:19):
These wedge driving politicians and the people are gonna get
pushed far they're and farther apart as time goes on.
We've been seeing this for years and it's just gonna
be anybody but that person. I think that's just going
to continue on until people maybe we luck out and
people wise up and go we got to change dramatically
what we've been doing here.
Speaker 2 (01:09:40):
Well what I am A I just don't so Donald
Trump policy actually tends to dictate more of the Republican
policy then like actual then the then like what a
typical conservative value is, because Democrat and conservative values change
over time, like the the Democrat platform from the early
(01:10:02):
two thousands to what it is in twenty twenty four,
and same with the Republicans is vastly different. And so
it seems like like Republicans forever had a very pro
life stance forever, I mean it was unfeathered, unchanged. They
are staunchly you know, pro life. And now Donald Trump
is like, I'm a little more proach, so I'm a
(01:10:24):
little more flow. And then now you see Republicans slowly
tending that way and moving that way, and so you're
gonna see a lot of like like if Donald Trump
prints more money to save Social Security and save Medicare, right,
you're gonna have people praising him for saving those programs,
but he just printed money to do it. You know,
he didn't actually do anything policy good wise. But you're
(01:10:45):
gonna have people praising him. I just and I what
I don't want to see is the people who for
four years were like nitpicking his every move, now that
they're supporting him in this election over Harris, they better
stay true to their word that they're going to continue
to nitpick him when he's in office. And actually, like,
maybe maybe he'll force Israel to make a peace deal
(01:11:09):
or something, and maybe he will force Ukraine to make
a peace deal in Russia. But the people who are
and you can vote for him or whatever, but there
are a lot of people who who claimed to not
like Trump who are now cheerleading for him, and I
want to see those same people give him hell whenever
he decides to continue the status quo when he's in office.
Speaker 3 (01:11:32):
And I think you know, in regardless when we're talking,
because this is a point I've made on Twitter before
X or whatever you want to call it, that it
doesn't matter who you're voting for. If you're going to
vote for this person, then when they do something wrong,
please don't be a big baby. Don't be a woos
feel free to criticize when they make a bad move
(01:11:54):
because for the majority of what I see in most
Republicans and Democrats on social media, they absolutely refuse to
criticize the person that they voted for, that one that
elected position. They do unconstitutional things, they do immoral things,
and for not all of them, but the majority are silent.
(01:12:18):
And it's like, that's the that's the behavior I want
to see changed.
Speaker 1 (01:12:22):
I think, uh.
Speaker 3 (01:12:27):
I think if we want to change the behavior, and
I'm not saying fully, but we redirect the course a
little bit, is that the American people openly criticize someone
they voted for when.
Speaker 1 (01:12:41):
They behave badly.
Speaker 3 (01:12:43):
I think if you if you have a lot of
Americans speaking out against the person they voted for because
they were told one thing and they get in and
they act completely different, that the majority of those people
stand up and go, hey, this is and what you
said jerk, so fix it or will will will boot you.
(01:13:05):
I I think until that happens, when people are are
honest enough with themselves to criticize the person that they
voted for and helped get elected when they are acting
in an unconstitutional manner, I think that's the only way
we may change the direction a little bit. I'm not
saying we're going to get a full change, but it's
a it's it's a it's going in the right direction
(01:13:28):
at that point.
Speaker 1 (01:13:29):
But right now, the majority will not do that.
Speaker 3 (01:13:32):
They refuse to do that because that again, like you
said earlier, Brandon, they have to admit that they were wrong,
that they got fooled. But it's better to it's better
to admit that you were fooled then you then to
continue to be a fool and to be a uh
a tool of whatever regime you're backing.
Speaker 1 (01:13:54):
It's that simple.
Speaker 2 (01:13:56):
So here, I just don't trust that. It like if
Mike Palm comes back in let's say he's Secretary of State,
then you have Nicky Haley, Secretary of Defense, and then
you have Jared Kushner, senior advisor to Donald Trump. We
are gonna be in the Middle East for four more
years at least, like we're not like all of our
all of our military engagement problems are not going away
(01:14:19):
with a Nicky Haley secretary Defense, Mike Pompeo Secretary of State.
I mean, it's gonna be very clear early on where
Trump's presidency lands and especially you're gonna see if he
like all of the people that he's promised these things to,
like RFK, Tulci Gabbard, those types of people, they're either
(01:14:39):
gonna get official roles like they're either gonna have actual
roles that matter, or they're gonna be advisors, and then
he's they're just gonna be on the outside, little wing
while the establishment continues to run his little circle. It's
why I think places like like CNN, to their credit,
has been very dogged on on Kamal Harris lately. Like
(01:15:01):
obviously they still bend over backwards to propagandas for Democrats,
but they don't spend twenty four to seven going Trump Trump, Trump.
They'll show Harris making mistakes and they'll press her on things.
And I think that's because the establishment knows that when
Trump gets back in office, it's not going to be
that much different.
Speaker 3 (01:15:20):
No, And you know it's unfortunately for us, but good
for them. If Trump wins, they oh, man, they are
going to have network gold for four years because they've
got somebody to beat up on every day, every freaking
day they're going to beat up on and it just
gives them non stop stupid to talk about but that
(01:15:42):
helps their viewership. For all the people that hate Trump
are going to go to their channel and listen to
them talk trash the whole time. And so it's great
for them. But I mean, it's bad for them, but
it's I think business wise, it's better for them. Tom
made a funny comment here says Kamala talks more about
(01:16:04):
Trump than Trump talks about himself, and I thought I'd
never see the day that someone else talks about Trump
more than Trump.
Speaker 1 (01:16:10):
That is a good point.
Speaker 3 (01:16:11):
And after that clip I played last week with her
and Brett bhar Biden's not running Trump is so Trump
is Trump Trump Trump Trump Trump.
Speaker 1 (01:16:19):
She just and it's almost like it's almost like.
Speaker 3 (01:16:23):
If you say his name enough times, he disappears, like
opposite effect of beetlejuice. If you say beetlejuice three times,
beetlejuice appears. It's like if you say Trump's name enough,
then you know, Trump disappears. I want to talk about
something else real quick too, because one of President Trump's
former advisors or whatever is saying that he, you know,
(01:16:45):
he he wished he had generals like Hitler did, and
now Kama was saying, well, see how big of a
fascist he is, and they keep throwing the fascist word out,
and they keep tying him to Hitler, which I wholeheartedly
believe incites or incentivizes people to try to take him
out because they actually think he's Hitler or he's the
(01:17:08):
reincarnation of Hitler, that he's going to become a dictator,
and all these things. I'm like, if he's going to
become a dictator, he would have done it the first
time he was in office. So I don't know why
you think he's gonna do it now when he could
have done it before and he didn't. But I think
they're really It's like I think part of them wants
it to happen.
Speaker 1 (01:17:26):
I really do.
Speaker 3 (01:17:27):
I don't want to see I don't care if it's Harris.
I don't want to see a president get assassinated. I
don't like what it does to the country, because all
it's going to do is it's going they're going to
make more laws against us, They're going to.
Speaker 1 (01:17:41):
Take more of our freedom away.
Speaker 3 (01:17:43):
But it's like they're pushing people to that end, and
it's going to be the nutcases out there that look
at they see a picture of Trump, they think Hitler
and is like, oh, man, I remember what Hitler did.
I don't want that to happen in the US, so
I'm gonna take him out. I really feel like they're
(01:18:03):
at some time, at some point, they're literally trying to
entice people into going to that extreme.
Speaker 2 (01:18:12):
I wouldn't take it that far. I would just say
that they have poor choice of words again, calling him hitler.
People called politicians crazy names for forever. I mean, different
pundits in the media and different people have compared people
to all sorts of communist dictators and all this other
(01:18:33):
thing for a while. So I'm not gonna say that
calling Trump hitler is them pushing for his assassination, but
it is. It's just bitter irony because it's from the
same people who act like words are violence all the time.
You know, it's just super rich coming from the crowd
who like tried to make hate speech of not hate speech,
(01:18:54):
but like tried to make like you get what I'm
saying is that it's from the super soft lefty crowd.
Is the one calling for this and the one acting
like saying things like Trump is Hitler. And I'm like,
if we if anybody on the right calls anyone Hitler
says anything like that, they lose. They go crazy, like, oh,
how could you learn the rhetoric? The rhetoric, But then
they're the same party to call him hitler. So I
(01:19:16):
think the hypocrisy of it's great. I uh, I mean,
people plot to kill presidents all the time, and I
you know, on the KINGE pantrail, I'm not gonna like
when I go knocking on doors or when I go
to gun shows that I've been around some people who
threatened public officials just in casual conversation, and I'm like,
you're it's a little strange to just be saying to strangers.
(01:19:39):
But at the same time, you know, I'm not gonna
say that them calling him hitler is them trying to
drive someone to kill him. But it is a poor
choice of words when people are trying to kill him,
like in secession.
Speaker 3 (01:19:52):
I yeah, I think, I mean partly to what you
what you said. But here's my problem. So there's been
supposedly two tries on his life. I would think that
if you were worried concerned about his safety, you would
not continue to use those terms if you really you know,
(01:20:13):
because Harris and Biden's you go, they just condemned the
actions of the first guy.
Speaker 1 (01:20:18):
That's not we don't do that here in this country.
Yet they turn around a month.
Speaker 3 (01:20:23):
Later fascist fastest, fastiest fascist, fascist, Hitler, Hitler, Hitler, and
they can and he's a putin puppet, he's this, he's that,
And it's like, okay, if you're concerned about his well being,
then you should stop using those terms, you should stop
saying those words, and they don't. They continue to use them.
Speaker 1 (01:20:40):
I get it.
Speaker 3 (01:20:41):
It works on the mentality of the people in their cult,
and it gets some it gets some agitated, and it
gets some active. So they're more activists and they're out
there trying to get convinced people to vote for their
cult leader. But again, you're right, poor choice of words.
And I think at this time, when they're saying there's
been two tempts on his life, that maybe you shouldn't
(01:21:02):
use those words anymore. And if you continue to use
those words and somebody does, somebody else does try to
do something stupid. Don't sit there and act like you're
just you're so surprised somebody else would do this again
when you're the one pushing that rhetoric.
Speaker 1 (01:21:18):
And again it's all for rich of those people.
Speaker 3 (01:21:21):
You don't ever hear them saying anything bad about Stalin,
and Stalin killed more people than Hitler. But you won't
hear these people talk smack about Stalin at all. They'll
bring Hitler up all day long. And again, Hitler was
a terrible guy. Yes I'm not saying he's less bad
than Stalin, but you know, they don't go, we don't
(01:21:41):
want him to be a dictator like Stalin. It's like, yeah, don't.
I definitely don't want that either. He killed what ten
twelve million people, So yeah, I definitely don't want a
Stalin or a maw But it's always Hitler. It's like,
why don't we bring up the other evil idiots that
murdered millions of people.
Speaker 1 (01:21:59):
It's just always Hitler.
Speaker 2 (01:22:01):
Well, I'm used here you'll hear Trump say that, like
if Kamala gets elected, we won't have a country anymore.
The Democrats are out to destroy the country. They're gonna
ruin everything. And so I just, you know, I don't
take the politician's rhetoric. I guess that seriously. Maybe maybe
I should be more concerned about the people who do
but I'm just like, again, it's just rhetoric unless you
(01:22:24):
actually say, like like the the one guy who tried
to assassinate Trump and then he posted that letter that
was like I'll give money to whoever actually does it
or whatever, like that is wrong. The media posting that
is not. That's what's That's the wrong thing is that
they're actually in like, hey, there's an incentive. Someone said
there's an incentive to kill Trump. That's the crazy part.
(01:22:45):
But just saying Trump is hitler, it's it's dumb. But
I don't I don't know. I don't think it's ultra dangerous.
Speaker 3 (01:22:52):
But anyway, I'm just it's one of those things where
it's like, again, you.
Speaker 2 (01:23:05):
Just given the circumstances, yet.
Speaker 3 (01:23:08):
It's really it's really in poor taste, you know. It's like,
it's really dumb for you to say those things. I
just got a notification somebody left a or may put
a comment in the in the video here on Rumble,
But I don't, come on, what are you doing? I
don't see anything, So I'm trying to see what the
(01:23:30):
actual comment is. But uh, let's see No, but I
don't see anything, and then if.
Speaker 2 (01:23:37):
You have it, can we play that the the the
compilation of her from the town Hall Kamala Harris.
Speaker 1 (01:23:45):
Oh yes, yes, the all the stupid and the seven
the seven stupid things.
Speaker 2 (01:23:50):
Yeah, so shout out to Colin Rugg. It's Colin Rugg
with two g's on on X. He he breaks a
lot of news, so it's definitely worth a follow on there.
But he also does like these little compilations where like
he'll take an event like the Al Smith dinner. He's
where I got the Al Smith dinner video from last episode,
so where he did the top five jokes that Trump did.
(01:24:13):
So these are the This is the top seven just
blunders of Kamala Harrison. This is all from one town
hall with Anderson Cooper. This is not like a string.
This is not like, oh, she's having a bad month,
and these are all this is one night at a
town hall with Anderson Cooper, like a few couple days ago.
Speaker 1 (01:24:33):
Yeah, let me let me pull this up.
Speaker 3 (01:24:37):
I make sure it's not gonna blast bluring a loud
but yeah, this is seven worst moments of the night.
So it's about three almost four minutes long. And again
I pray that everyone keeps their brain cells.
Speaker 4 (01:24:51):
I'm constantly saying, let's kick the tire on that. Let's
kick the tires on it.
Speaker 6 (01:24:55):
Is there something you can point to in your life,
political life, or in your life in the last four
years that you think is a mistake that you have
learned from.
Speaker 4 (01:25:05):
I mean, I've made many mistakes, and they range from
you know, if you've ever parented a child, you know
you make lots of mistakes too. In my role as
vice president, I mean, I've probably worked very hard at
making sure that I am well versed on issues, and
(01:25:31):
I think that is very important. It's a mistake not
to be well versed on an issue and feel compelled
to answer a question.
Speaker 7 (01:25:36):
You've been in the White House for four years.
Speaker 6 (01:25:38):
You were vice president, not the president, But why wasn't
any of that done the last four years?
Speaker 4 (01:25:44):
Well, there was a lot that was done, but there's
more to do, Anderson, and I'm pointing out things that
need to be done that haven't been done but need
to be done. Thank you, Eric, And you're absolutely right.
Speaker 3 (01:25:54):
You know what.
Speaker 4 (01:25:54):
I know what I think most Americans know it price
of grocery is still too high. Well, I may not
be quick to have the answer as soon as you
ask it about a specific policy issue sometimes because I'm
gonna want to research it. I'm gonna want to study it.
I'm kind of a nerd sometimes, I confess.
Speaker 6 (01:26:13):
Twenty twenty two to twenty twenty three, there were record
border crossings. Your administration took a number hundreds of executive actions.
It didn't stem the flow. Numbers kept going up. Finally,
in twenty twenty four, just in June, three weeks before
the last the first presidential debate with Joe Biden, you
institute executive actions that had a dramatic impact, really shut
(01:26:36):
down people crossing over Why didn't your administration do that
in twenty twenty two, twenty twenty three.
Speaker 4 (01:26:42):
First of all, you're exactly right, Anderson, And as of today,
we have cut the flow of immigration by over half.
In fact, the numbers I saw most recently illegal immigration.
Speaker 7 (01:26:53):
With that executive action? Why not due in twenty twenty
two to twenty twenty.
Speaker 4 (01:26:55):
Three, because we were working with Congress and hoping that
actually we could have a long term fixed to the
problem instead of a short term thing.
Speaker 7 (01:27:01):
You couldn't have done one in the both at the
same time. Well, here's the thing.
Speaker 4 (01:27:05):
We have to understand that ultimately this problem is going
to be fixed through congressional action.
Speaker 7 (01:27:11):
Is a border wall stupid?
Speaker 4 (01:27:13):
Well, let's talk about Donald Trump and that border wall.
So remember Donald Trump said Mexico would pay for it.
Come on, they didn't.
Speaker 6 (01:27:23):
But you were agreed to a bill that would ear
morek six hundred and fifty million dollars to continue building
that Okay.
Speaker 7 (01:27:28):
I pledged that.
Speaker 4 (01:27:30):
I'm going to bring forward that bipartisan bill. Let's just
fix the problem.
Speaker 6 (01:27:35):
To fix the problem, you're doing this compromise bill. It
does call for six hundred and fifty million dollars that
was earmarked under Trump to actually still go to.
Speaker 7 (01:27:43):
Bill the world.
Speaker 1 (01:27:43):
I'm not afraid of good ideas where they occurred.
Speaker 7 (01:27:45):
Say, you don't think it's stupid anymore.
Speaker 4 (01:27:48):
I think what he did and how he did it
was did not make much sense because he actually didn't
do much of anything.
Speaker 1 (01:27:55):
I just talked about that wall.
Speaker 7 (01:27:56):
Right, we just talked about it.
Speaker 4 (01:27:57):
He didn't actually do much of anything.
Speaker 7 (01:28:00):
But you do want to build some wall.
Speaker 1 (01:28:02):
I want to strengthen our border. Okay, So.
Speaker 3 (01:28:08):
First question, Brandon, be honest. Does she does she not
sound drunk? She sounds drunk to me.
Speaker 1 (01:28:16):
She slurs, she stutters, she stammers, and then she's got
the hyena laugh.
Speaker 3 (01:28:23):
She sounds drunk. I honestly believe that she is three
sheets to the wind when she's talking.
Speaker 2 (01:28:30):
Sometimes, well, picture this, you wake up every morning for
three and a half years and your boss is Joe Biden.
I'd be getting tanked at work too. Oh heck, yeah,
I'd be boozing up like crazy. I'd be worse than her.
I'd listen, we got problem, we got haul of Actually,
(01:28:51):
I'd probably be about the same as her. But either way,
my point being is that, I mean, yeah, she's an idiot,
But if I would be drunk too, if my boss
was Joe Biden.
Speaker 1 (01:29:06):
It's it's just, uh, I don't know, dude. I I struggle.
Speaker 3 (01:29:12):
I struggle with the fact, literally every time she talks.
I struggle with the fact that people are like, yep,
that's who I'm voting for. Seems seems like a solid choice.
Seems like she really understands the issues, understands government's.
Speaker 1 (01:29:31):
Role in our life.
Speaker 3 (01:29:33):
Uh, you know, would definitely wouldn't tiptoe us towards World
War three or anything like that. She seems like the
most intelligent candidate running for office right now. I struggle.
Speaker 1 (01:29:45):
To see.
Speaker 3 (01:29:47):
I sometimes I think it'd be cool to see what's
going on in other people's heads, but at this point
in time, I don't want to unless you can put
filters on it to get all the weirdness out, Just
to try to understand what part of your brain is
identifying with a Kamala Harris, and to identify her as
someone who's intelligent with it and cool and hip and
(01:30:10):
brings joy and change and all these other words that
they throw around. Your brain must look like a Barnum
and Bailey circus tent on fire. The animals are rampaging,
people are scurrying for cover, getting trampled by the elephants, and.
Speaker 1 (01:30:28):
You're just like, this looks perfect. This is what I
dreamed of, Like, no, no, no, it's not supposed to
be this way.
Speaker 2 (01:30:36):
So one thing I think is interesting with the media
right now is that no one is calling Donald Trump
racist on the border anymore. No one go it's silence.
Like they'll call him racist on other things. And this
is the say he hates the troops for fake reasons
and this and that, But you haven't heard a word
about even the leftiest of leftists calling him a racist
(01:30:58):
about the border. And I find that super interesting because
normally even the crazy leftists, they'll hold on to their
crazy leftist position and like defend the defund the police.
Like I'm sure if you if you win online, you
could find the defund the police people still defending their ground.
(01:31:18):
But you can't find anybody calling Donald Trump. Like on
the left. No one calls Donald Trump a racist for
his border policies anymore. And that's so like, it's so
interesting to me because you would think that they would
be that that that that part of the left wouldn't
have gone away, or that they wouldn't stop on their movement,
because normally they won't. They don't care if it hurts
the Democrats. They're gonna keep like with their like they
(01:31:42):
have agenda, they have an agenda, and they keep pushing
it and they'll eventually vote for someone like Harris and
they'll be because we can't let Trump win. But they
won't ignore like things they consider problems. And so I
think it's strange how a lot of the left has
completely given up that the Trump is racist because of
the border thing. It's gone gone completely, and.
Speaker 3 (01:32:02):
That to me that speaks on the media is not
saying it anymore either. They're going a different direction. Now
they've they've changed direction, and now he's he's unhinged, he's irresponsible,
he's too dangerous. So once the media stops parroting the
(01:32:24):
racism thing, because whatever whatever, candidates no longer parroting racism.
So if the candidate's not saying anything anything about him
being racist, the media stops saying anything about him being racist,
and then the people who are in the blue colt
stop saying anything about him being racist. So it it
(01:32:44):
stems from if the candidate says it, the media says it,
then the people say it, and it's just one big
you know, I talk about Harrison word salad that it's
it's frightening to think about. But can you imagine going
into a restaurant and they're like, oh, we have the
Harris salad bar over there, and you're like, no, thank you,
(01:33:09):
there's there's e coli all over that salad.
Speaker 1 (01:33:12):
I'll pass.
Speaker 3 (01:33:14):
Can you give me a prepackaged salad from Walmart. I'd
feel much safer eating that. Then the Harris words salad
that you've got over in the bar and you go
over there and there's just lettuce and cheese and the
eggs are all rotten, and they're just spread out all
over and there hasn't been any ice pass Yeah, there's
no ice all over the floor.
Speaker 2 (01:33:33):
It's on the ceiling. Everything within a ten foot radius
of that bar is just covered because there is no
control that woman. If if her words were putting together
a salad, it would be all over the place.
Speaker 3 (01:33:46):
It looked like the Sweetest Chef from the old the
Old Muppet Show where he's just throwing the ingredients and
you're going airborne. It'd be like the Sweetest Chef Harris
salad bar. And yeah, you'd go over there to get
salad and you're like, the hell happened over here? Like well,
you know, it's it's about as put together.
Speaker 7 (01:34:05):
As she is.
Speaker 3 (01:34:05):
And you're like, oh, okay, I see what you're doing now.
You know, that would be hilarious if you had a
restaurant and you just sectioned off like a little area
like and made a second salad bar as a joke
and went, oh, yeah, that's the Harris salad bar over there,
and you go over there and it's just empty and
they're like there's nothing here, and it's like, yeah, we know,
(01:34:27):
it's empty, like her head and so were we apologize.
That would be freaking hilarious. You're gonna tick off some
of your customers, but it'd be fun in the process.
I'm not gonna lie.
Speaker 1 (01:34:39):
I'm gonna play this other clip because again Harris is bragging.
Speaker 3 (01:34:47):
I don't know why you'd brag about having the supportive
of war criminals, basically, And so Tim Wallas was on
with John Stewart.
Speaker 1 (01:34:57):
John Stewart was giving a little bit of flack, and
I love how.
Speaker 3 (01:35:01):
Walls you'll you'll hear this, uh this, uh just momentarily,
but I love how Walls try to tries to like
just wallpaper over it and just bring in these other
two names and just try to like paste over and like, oh,
nothing to see here, it's just Cheney. But listen to
his reasoning and then use all your brain power to go, well,
(01:35:22):
that doesn't make any sense. If I know what a
libertarian or a constitutionalist is, this doesn't make any sense.
This guy's full of crap. Here's the clip here, you go,
bring me hit the wrong spending thing.
Speaker 7 (01:35:36):
Do we really have to do that? Look? I it
goes broad in that.
Speaker 8 (01:35:42):
Look Bernie Sanders, Dick Cheney, Taylor Swift, No, no, no, no, no, no, no,
having the Cheney's on board.
Speaker 1 (01:35:49):
Nah, you can't, Dick Cheney or Taylor Swift.
Speaker 3 (01:35:52):
No, Dick, we're a big twint, big country to Taylor
Swift to get us too in vain.
Speaker 1 (01:35:59):
No, No, don't.
Speaker 7 (01:36:01):
Don't you think though that and I do this. I
believe this.
Speaker 8 (01:36:04):
Yeah, there is still a core group of folks out there,
you know, your point being and not joke that. Don't
tread on me the Reagan piece of this, the libertarian piece,
but the constitutional piece.
Speaker 7 (01:36:14):
There are a lot of people out there. I think.
Speaker 8 (01:36:16):
I think Liz Cheney and Dick Cheney give permission to
those folks who want to find a reason to do
the right thing. It doesn't mean they agree with this.
We're not going to take their foreign policy decisions and discussions,
you know, and implement those.
Speaker 7 (01:36:26):
We're gonna take their their's honest.
Speaker 1 (01:36:28):
Yes, yeah, I don't. I don't believe that. And at all.
Speaker 3 (01:36:34):
They're gonna do whatever they can to stay in power,
make and make powerful friends to sit there and pretend
like they're not going to take their foreign policy into
account bs.
Speaker 2 (01:36:44):
Is Dick Cheney known for? Am I missing something? Or
is Dick Cheney not only known for the Iraq war. Like.
I thought that's what everyone knew him from. They made
a whole movie about how he, like after nine to eleven,
basically ranish shadow government with the Department of Defense and
did whatever he wanted in power and like made everyone
(01:37:07):
at haliburt and a bunch of money. I thought that's
what he was famous for. I don't know how you
could even attempt to proudly boast his endorsement and then
also to rope in the constitutionalists and libertarians. It's I mean,
it's the most out of touch a political party could
(01:37:27):
possibly be with the American people. I mean, it's that's
one thing I I don't like. Obviously, you know, don't
care for Trump, but he's his approach to this election
was in touch with the American people. And clearly clearly
Kamala Harris's was not.
Speaker 1 (01:37:47):
Well.
Speaker 3 (01:37:47):
And the thing is, too, this is the same guy,
Dick Cheney was the same guy who was the bane
of everyone on the left during George Bush's presidency and
the following years. You said, Dick Cheney at around somebody
who's progressive or liberal and watch their head explode. And
(01:38:09):
now they're like, oh, Dick Cheney's a Okay, Well, I
guess maybe he's had a change your heart and his
families all all for uh Kamala Harris. Okay, I guess, uh,
I guess maybe they've had to change your heart about
murdering every brown person they can find.
Speaker 1 (01:38:26):
No, No, they haven't.
Speaker 3 (01:38:28):
They're looking again. I'm not saying that Trump is some
strong guy, but they're clearly they're clearly looking for the
people they can manipulate the most and will make them
the most money off of war. And that seemingly looks
like Kamala Harris. Now, I want to say one thing,
you know, when unfortunate, Let's say Trump gets in and
(01:38:51):
he's like, hey, we're gonna pull troops out of a
bunch of countries and we're gonna bring him home and
we're gonna put them at the border or whatever the
thing is. When he was president last time, the generals
refused his orders to pull troops out of places.
Speaker 1 (01:39:05):
They're like, no, we're not doing it. So it's like, okay,
I hope that.
Speaker 8 (01:39:12):
What is it?
Speaker 3 (01:39:13):
Colonel Douglas McGregor, If Trump was to choose anybody to
head up the Department of Defense, I would hope it
would be McGregor, because McGregor has brains and he looks
at things on a level other than oh, how much
money can we make off this? He understands geopolitically how
(01:39:36):
things evolve and what's the right course of action, what's
the wrong course of action, what's a losing proposition, what's
a winning proposition. So unless he gets a McGregor type, yeah,
there's not gonna be anti war. They may not have
as much war as they want. It's gonna be fewer wars.
I'd say that maybe is a safe bet.
Speaker 1 (01:39:57):
Israel Palestine. Oh, he'll fund that all day, every day.
Speaker 3 (01:40:01):
He may again, as you said towards the beginning of
the show, he may say, look at Ukraine and Russian
and go, hey, you guys got to work something out.
Speaker 1 (01:40:10):
Get this.
Speaker 3 (01:40:10):
I'm not gonna fund this anymore. Figure it out, let's
come to a deal. Let's let's let's do the peaceful
thing here. Israel, He'll give them all the money in
the world. He may continue to fund Saudi Arabia to
blow up Yemen.
Speaker 1 (01:40:24):
Things like that.
Speaker 3 (01:40:25):
What we may have a few less incursions in the
areas where we shouldn't, and that terrorizes people like the
Cheneyese of the world because they don't have somebody in
there who will blow up anything they tell him to,
because well, again, they stand to make a lot of
profit off dead bodies. And that's to me, that's the
(01:40:47):
only difference between the two between Harris and Trump.
Speaker 2 (01:40:50):
Yeah, I don't well, I don't think Trump's gonna be
any better on China. Trump seems to be a very
hard China hawk, So I think he's gonna continue to
float a bunch of stuff in the South China Sea,
spend a bunch of money there, please the military industrial
complex there. Just like since I know we're running a
(01:41:11):
little we're getting close to the end here, but I
know that Israel is striking back in Iran. Who struck
back at Israel, who struck at Iran, who struck back
blah blah blah. I just want everyone to remember during
these we have to pick Isai. You're either with Israel
or you're a terrorist. Moment is that those are two
(01:41:34):
countries halfway around the world that are nowhere near us.
We shouldn't be funding either side. Yeah, not to mention,
not to mention that Iran is friendly, like is a
part of is They're not they're an alliance partner. They
have a partnership with the Bricks who just had a
big meeting in Russia where China the leader of h
(01:41:56):
where Jijinping was there, the Indian president was there, and
obviously Putin was there in Russia. But the I mean,
it's news stories like that that don't get shown in
the media that the American people really need to hear about.
Is that like all of the people were fighting or
that are advertary against us are all uniting like economically,
(01:42:24):
you know, strategically and with their resources, they're all uniting
against us. Like we should not be provoking these conflicts.
We should If you want the world to change, what
you need is someone at the Department of Defense who
or the Secretary of State who is like a true
(01:42:44):
business leader who has no ties to the military industrial
complex but understands like the business movings of each region
and how they could work together and benefit each other,
instead of someone who was literally paid by a weapons
manufacturer six months ago.
Speaker 1 (01:43:01):
Yeah, I I don't know, dude.
Speaker 3 (01:43:05):
It's I think the Iranian president was there too, and
he was talking about the whole thing with Israel and
uh and then you know, I've seen different reports that
North Korea has sent several thousand troops to Russia to
help fight Ukrainians. I mean, we just keep creeping ever
so closer to a really big war that could could
(01:43:30):
be catastrophic on so many levels, and yet the media
is really not talking about it. They're not they're not
talking about how bad this could be.
Speaker 1 (01:43:41):
Neither are either one of really the none of that.
Speaker 3 (01:43:43):
I have not heard any clips of either candidates saying
anything like anything in depth on this. They give these
general answers, but they're not going in depth to say
how dangerous this really is. If if they talk about
the dangerous, it's Iran is dangerous, China is dangerous, Russia
is dangerous. But nothing about our foreign policy and how
(01:44:09):
we have caused a lot of these problems to begin with,
and and say how much how much of it is
our as as this government's fault.
Speaker 1 (01:44:20):
They don't want to talk about that.
Speaker 3 (01:44:22):
And it's that's the most frightening thing to me, is
we're getting stirred up about it rightfully, so we should
be stirred up about the two choices that we have,
especially Harris. It's frightening, but we're not hearing enough about
our foreign policy right now, and seemingly that somebody else
is running the White House because Biden's clearly not. We're
(01:44:46):
entangled in all these in the in these different countries,
and the Meatia is just silent. It's like, hey, guys,
don't you want to know what's going on? Or you're
so worried about making sure that Trump doesn't get reelected
that and that you might put somebody, help put somebody
in office who will march us right into World War
(01:45:06):
III without without batting an eye, and you guys just
don't seem concerned about that.
Speaker 1 (01:45:11):
Huh okay, that's.
Speaker 3 (01:45:12):
That's kind of strange for from a group of people
who are supposed to be all about the truth and democracy.
But you don't want to discuss how dangerously close we're
edging to a major battle with a nuclear superpower, maybe
multiple nuclear superpowers. If you don't watch your step, don't
(01:45:33):
want to talk about that. That's that's interesting.
Speaker 2 (01:45:37):
Israel has destroyed more hospitals then Iran has killed Israeli
civilians this year, more hospitals than Iran has killed of
Israeli civilians. It's just there's no I mean, there's there
I hate. I don't even like to play this game
(01:45:58):
as much like the why you know who's the better
person in this fight? Because we shouldn't be funding either side,
but we're funding the side blowing up the hospitals. And
they tried to claim the IDF tried to claim that
the hospital that they blew up in Beyrout was being
used by Hesbela, and there's no proof of that. There
have been several journalists. In fact, they blew up a
(01:46:20):
hospital in Gaza, and one hundred American nurses and doctors
who'd been over to that region signed a letter saying
they'd never seen a single Hamas militant member doing any
military activity in the hospital. And the ninety nine American
doctors had spent over fifty three fifty three hundred hours
in that hospital and not a single one of them
(01:46:42):
said they'd ever seen any sign of any Hamas activity
in the hospital. And Israel all they have to do
is like these blind fake claims, and every American news
media just runs with it as if it's the truth.
Like they act like IDF is like the direct factual source,
and that they could never be wrong, that everything released
from every other news source couldn't possibly be true, and
(01:47:04):
it's just so. But I mean, it's we're so on
the wrong side of history, like the American politicians are
that it's just crazy. It's it's not even that they
have to be isolationists or like I would love for
us to just be isolationists, but we're on the side
of the bombers, of the hospital bombers. And it's it's
my tax dollars are going to it.
Speaker 3 (01:47:27):
Yeah, it's again. I've heard this argument so many times
and I still hear it. You know, there are a
lot of people who are Christians that think that, you know,
they have to the Bible tells them they have to
support Israel. It's like, is it you Are you supposed
(01:47:48):
to support the government of Israel no matter what they do?
Or are you supposed to pray for the well being
of the Israeli people of the Jewish people. I think
you're getting confused here. It doesn't The Bible does not
say support the Israeli government. It doesn't say anything about
a Yahoo type figure and you're supposed to support that
(01:48:09):
person no matter how many evil acts he perpetrates and
how how much funding he's given to Amas to destabilize
a region. No, no, it says nothing about that, and
people are getting and again we got I remember, I
don't know how many times I've said this. I remember
during George W. Bush's the Second Iraq War, administered by
(01:48:34):
the name of John Hagy, standing up in front of
his audience on the Bible Network and saying that Iraq
was the new Babylon and we have to destroy it,
and everybody in the room standing up in applauding, and
it's like, what.
Speaker 1 (01:48:49):
Are we doing? What are you doing? You're leading people.
Speaker 3 (01:48:53):
Christianity is supposed to be the religion to peace, and
you're propagandizing people Christian people in to supporting an unconstitutional, unnecessary,
in moral war. You're displacing tens of thousands of people
into other countries, You're causing problems throughout that whole region.
Speaker 1 (01:49:14):
And well, gee, I mean, come on, people, you gotta
smarten up.
Speaker 2 (01:49:19):
Well, just since you happened to bring it up Net
and Yahoo was on the floor of the United States
Congress addressing a joint session when in two thousand and
two pushing the Iraq has weapons of mass destruction line.
That was twenty two years ago that he was propagandizing
(01:49:39):
Americans into going to war in the Middle East, and
twenty two years later, we're still falling for it from
the same guy.
Speaker 3 (01:49:48):
Yeah, I've heard Scott Horton mentioned this several times about
you know that net and Yah Israel really wanted us
to go to war with the Rock. They really really
wanted us to go to war in Iraq, and it worked,
It worked out perfectly. And now the push and seemingly
a lot of people seem to be on board. The
(01:50:09):
next new evil that Israel would like us to go
in and blow the crap out of and again terrorize
the region and not really fix anything is Iran. Now
they want us to go in and invade Iran, and
if we're not careful about who's in the White House,
seemingly both of them would probably be on board with it.
One of them just be a little more gung ho
(01:50:31):
than the other. We're they're gonna be pushing for Iran.
Whoever's the next president, that's gonna be the push we
need to invade Iran. And there have been multiple people
in the military that said that you think Iraq and
Afghanistan was tough, Iran is an impossible country to invade
(01:50:52):
and defeat. Simply because of the topography of the land.
We cannot win in Iran. It is literally the only
thing you could do is nuke it out of existence.
But you are not gonna put troops in there and win.
You're not gonna run an air campaign and win. You cannot.
But Israel does that affect them at all? Does that
phase them? And they're thinking no, They're gonna keep giving
(01:51:15):
a bunch of money to a bunch of Congress critters
and trying to entice them into saying, well, we don't
care what the UN says. We're not gonna declare war
with Iran constitutionally, We're just gonna, you know, author or
what is it, the Use of Military Force or whatever
Authorization of Military Force Act, and we'll just send troops
(01:51:37):
into o Ran and we'll help the idea fight what
is it hesboala in in Iran And it's it's like,
come on, guys, what are we doing here?
Speaker 2 (01:51:47):
I can't I mentioned this on the last episode, but
Iran sells a lot of it's oil to China. So
if we start a conflict with Iran in China can't
buy its oil, whose side do you think they're gonna
be on not the side invading Iran, because Iran has signaled,
like obviously publicly they haven't done so as much, but
(01:52:09):
if you really pay attention and you know the way
that like these geopolitical movements work, Iran has signaled they
don't want this fight. And so that's the craziest part
to me, is that so they blew They took out
senior IRGC leaders in Syria, and that's what prompted the
first strike, and then they struck back, and so then
(01:52:30):
they struck. So then Iran struck again and hit They
hit Iran's military bases, but they still didn't kill anybody.
They blew up some runways the first time, and the
second time, they sent a bunch of drones over Jordan,
and ninety nine percent of them were blown up by
the Iron Dome or by American forces in Jordan before
they ever got to Israel. And so you can clearly
(01:52:50):
see there's a pattern that Iran does not They're not
intending to strike deep inside of Israel right now. They
don't want that fight. It is the West bringing that
fight to them, and it's it's a repeat of history
for the un millioned team time of something we do
in the Middle East for Israel, which is bad for America.
Speaker 3 (01:53:08):
It seems, and it seems like they're doing this playbook
where you know, Israel strikes them and as a show
of force of we're not gonna take this, they will
send a measured strike in response. Now they do it
very measured. Again, they don't they don't target the Israeli population.
They're targeting military outposts or whatever.
Speaker 1 (01:53:29):
And that's basically what this is.
Speaker 3 (01:53:32):
Israel hits them and they're like, all right, well, we're
gonna fire a volley in return. Again, a targeted response.
They do not want insight war. This new president and
some of the other people in the top uh you know,
establishment of Iran does not want war with the United States.
They've they've said so, and they're acting in that manner.
(01:53:53):
But because we have a foreign nation who is spreading
millions of dollars in in a in a building in Washington,
d C. To get to sway opinion, and of course
they're gonna work very hard on the President and Department
of Defense and everybody else.
Speaker 1 (01:54:14):
They're gonna push really hard for this.
Speaker 3 (01:54:16):
I wish I had enough time, uh Vi vague Ramaswami,
and I think Charlie Kirk or somebody was at a
thing together and so some kid stands up and talk
starts talking about a pack, you know, like you know,
and Charlie Kirk's like, well, they're American citizens in a
(01:54:41):
pack who because you know, our Congress critters couldn't take
money from a foreign company or foreign country, So these
are American citizens who are lobbying, you know. Basically try
to turn around like you know what do you uh,
you know what, do you just anti Semite because you
don't you don't support this And that's not guy what
the guy was getting at.
Speaker 1 (01:55:01):
It's like, this is a heavy lobbying.
Speaker 3 (01:55:06):
Yes, they may be American citizens, but it is a
benefit of a foreign nation. That is a problem. That
is a major problem. When you have someone giving millions
and millions of dollars to everyone in almost everyone in Congress,
influencing foreign policy, possibly influencing the start of an invasion
(01:55:27):
of a country, that is a problem.
Speaker 1 (01:55:30):
It's not anti submitted to say that.
Speaker 2 (01:55:32):
And it also doesn't have to be illegal or like
it like, it doesn't have to be against the law
for it to be blatant corruption, Like you're taking money
and it influences your decision. Whether you legally obtained that
money to influence your decision is moot. You took the
money and it influenced your decision. That's corruption. That's like
(01:55:55):
the simplest, most basic definition of corruption. You let undo
money out affect your influence, your decision, influence your voting
on going to war and things like. It's it is corruption.
You can you can try to say that it's legal
if you want, but it's it's still wrong. It's still
wrong to sell out your your vote and your values.
Speaker 1 (01:56:18):
Yeah, it's I hate that.
Speaker 3 (01:56:22):
I really hate to see that people that I think
are genuinely pretty intelligent people still fall to their knees
for an over for a foreign nation, and in such
almost almost a religious fanaticism. And anytime anybody speaks ill
(01:56:43):
of even Apex, they immediately go to, what do you do?
Speaker 1 (01:56:47):
You anti Israel? You anti Semitic? What what's your problem?
Speaker 3 (01:56:50):
It's like, no, dude, I'm just tired of foreign nations,
you know, influencing our government. And also I'm tired of
having politicians in office who are so willingly taking money.
Speaker 1 (01:57:09):
From that that's foreign influence. I'm sick of both. I'm
sick of the apax of the world. I'm sicking.
Speaker 3 (01:57:16):
I'm sick of I'm sick of having so called representatives
in a big building in a city on the East coast,
easily influenced and and and making decisions that could possibly
start a world war that easily without much thought.
Speaker 2 (01:57:33):
I would love to know how many of those APAC
handlers that are American citizens have dual citizenship in Israel.
I'd love to know, because I bet, I mean, I
don't know for sure, but I bet it'd be a
high rate of people who have dual citizenship or at
least family ties, super strong ties to the country of Israel.
It's not like a bunch of just regular concerned citizens
(01:57:54):
for the nation of Israel.
Speaker 1 (01:57:55):
There is definitely ties to Israel. There's no, there's not that.
Speaker 3 (01:58:01):
That's not just a bunch of do gooders trying to
that really want to help out Israel. All right, folks,
So that's gonna do it for this week's show. Another
barn burner, another lot of good stuff to talk about tonight,
and stuff to get you all fired up and keeps
you awake for two hours after you worked a long week.
So that's that's a that's a bonus. But anyway, again,
that's gonna do it for this week's show. We appreciate
(01:58:23):
everybody in podcast land on YouTube, rumble, oh yes, and
make sure I got to put the I'll put the
link in the description again to check out our Printify
store and some of our T shirts. Brandon has sent
me three new designs, the CIA which Criminals in Action
(01:58:45):
fbe the Federal Bureau of Entrapment, and then another shirt
that says less nineteen eighty four and more nineteen eleven.
It's got a nice, nice picture, a nice silhouette of
a nineteen eleven forty five ACP right below it. So
I'll put the link to the our store in the description.
(01:59:06):
Will get those shirts added whenever I can. But thanks
for their minder, Brandon, because I just about skirted right
past that. But anyway, folks, that's gonna do it for
this week's edition of the Missouri Liberty Report. Again on
those to those of you on Rumble, Youtubemolibertyradio dot us
or in podcast land, we greatly thank each and every
(01:59:28):
one of you for your continued listenership and support, and
we'll see y'all next week right here on the Missouri
Liberty Report,