Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're tuned to tap into the truth with Tim tap.
Stay tuned right here, Tim tapping into the truth right here,
right now.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Command code verified. He would say, it's in a crucial stage.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
It's not because the pony walls where you wait. It's
going to have us blue and.
Speaker 4 (00:32):
Bread, she said, boss to lunch.
Speaker 3 (00:37):
Governments can tell me where the Constitution went.
Speaker 2 (00:42):
Bill a Rights is just headed by bread. So many
people trying to cross the border, politicians able to.
Speaker 3 (00:52):
Do up, too many boys up the extention love, I've.
Speaker 5 (00:59):
Gotta be the way God made that.
Speaker 6 (01:07):
Rule by the damn.
Speaker 2 (01:12):
Take your right to self defense.
Speaker 3 (01:15):
Sing your signal that they don't make sense.
Speaker 7 (01:18):
Ms will not get the guns.
Speaker 8 (01:24):
All as aspectable, all eyes made out throwing shorts.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
Day would be real health.
Speaker 9 (01:32):
Pay the.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
Way God made that.
Speaker 3 (01:43):
Rule by the damn in a way godmu when Hello
(02:40):
and welcome to today's broadcast of Tapping to the Truth.
Hope you're having a fantastic day wherever you are and
whatever you may be doing. With all the usual caveats,
of course, but he as always, I'm your ever so
humble and mostly peaceful host, Tim Tapp, coming to you
live from a Stork, Rome County, Tennessee and so very
glad to have you along for the riot on this
(03:03):
Friday night live edition. We are, of course broadcasting worldwide
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(03:25):
South Carolina, you're likely to tune in WCT on your
FM dial and you can listen to us live there
as well. In the meanwhile, if you're not listening live,
then that means you're listening to the podcast. And if
you're listening to the podcast, well, then thank you for
cutting out some very specific time prem your schedule to
(03:45):
listen in. We should have a fantastic show tonight because
we have some really really good guests. Right off the bat,
we're bringing on journalist, author, radio host, television hosts. I'm
not sure there's anything he hasn't done in the realm
(04:08):
of political commentating and messaging. Most importantly, though, he is
a literal wow. Of course, not literally, but he is
a staunch bulldog when it comes to digging out the
truth and never letting it go until he can reveal it.
(04:28):
Of course, talking about the author of Preserving Liberty, mister
Josh Bernstein returns. Glad to have him coming back on.
You may or may not have known with everything else
going on in the world, but the Fed finally got
around to lowering the interest rate a bit. So we're
going to have a conversation with a less than traditional
(04:52):
economic expert, Mark J. Kwan. He's going to be coming on.
It'll be a repeat visit him as well. He's actually
from my neck of the woods. In fact, I think
he's making his home just up the road in Knoxville
these days, So we should have an interesting conversation there.
And we will close out tonight's show with a full
hour discussion with our friend from Red State journalist, Miss
(05:18):
Becky Noble. So as we look forward to getting the
conversation started, and of course we're going to be talking
about the tragedy with Charlie Kirk and then the even
more ridiculous leftist reactions to it with Josh. We'll get
started with that here just momentarily. But before we do that,
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all that being said, it is time to get back
(07:07):
to the show. Enough trying to sell your stuff. Time
to start talking. Ladies and gentlemen, Welcome back to the show.
A man that you know I've been listening to, I've
been watching for a very very long time. It's so
very proud to be able to say that he, on
a fairly consistent basis, has joined us. We had kind
(07:29):
of a long gap in betweens, but we're making it
a more regular thing again. His book, Preserving Liberty is
a phenomenal book. If you haven't already picked up a copy,
you certainly need to. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to
the show once again, mister Josh Burnstain. Josh, thank you
so much for coming on tonight. How are you today.
Speaker 10 (07:47):
I'm doing fantastic. It's great to be back on the
program with you, and you're right for the audience that
doesn't know. In some respects, we go back more than
a decade actually, back to the Facebook days where you
were one of the biggest supporters of me in the
infancy stages of my career, and you were posting for
(08:08):
me and things like that, and I guess in some respects.
You know, I hope that I gave you the courage
and the motivation to kind of start your own path
out there in conservative world and circles. So God bless
you for continuing to the fight, and also to now
have me back on all these years later to talk
(08:29):
about all these different topics going on.
Speaker 3 (08:31):
Yeah, you know, it's interesting, I think, and I do
believe it's good that you look around and you can
start finding those things to connect conservative voices. We just
lost Charlie Kirk, of course, and you have an interesting
connection there, and we'll talk about that here in a
(08:52):
little bit. But Charlie had that unique position where he
kind of he was able to draw together and he
was a go between, and he helped a lot of
conservative voices, especially at those higher tiers that get all
the glory and fame, who ordinarily work against one another
(09:14):
because they're constantly competing for time slots in space on
one network or the other. But he managed to pull
people together in a way because he reminded them of
things that you and I have known for a very
long time, and that is we're not actually competitors. We're
trying to reach a larger audience, and we should be
working together to do that. And now that that light
(09:37):
has been diminished just a little bit, those of us
who've been in that pray for a while, we have
a little more work to do to try to help
keep the torch burning as bright as it was. We
just need a lot of help doing it. It's just
a terrible loss for the nation as a whole in
ways that I think a lot of people don't even
realize yet.
Speaker 10 (09:57):
You're absolutely correct. And look, you know, Charlie, really there's
no one like him. He was what he was doing,
no one else was doing. I mean, are there other
people on college campuses and doing tours and talking, Yeah,
sure there were, you know, of course, Ben Shapiro, Glenn Back,
many others, Matt Walsh, many others have been doing that,
(10:17):
but no one was doing it like Charlie was doing it.
Because what Charlie was doing is he obviously wanted to
get the youth to vote Republican. He obviously wanted to
grow you know, the gen Z voter base, you know,
for President Trump and for Republicans. But that was a
side note. That wasn't necessarily his main focus. His main
focus was to put Jesus Christ and faith into this
(10:41):
generation because Charlie was so wise beyond his years that
he knew that if he was able to reach them
through the teachings of Jesus Christ and God and faith
in the Bible, they'd automatically become Republicans, because why wouldn't
you become a conservative or Republican. So Charlie's approach was very,
(11:02):
very different. Obviously, he wore his you know, his faith
on his sleeve. He never shied or apologized for it.
And a lot of his arguments, if you look at
some of the old videos of him sitting there in
the tents talking to these people, a lot of the
arguments were solved with biblical principles and faith, and he
(11:25):
opened up a lot of hearts and minds that way.
When I was coming up and starting, I've always been
more rough and tough and bombastic and in your face
and that kind of thing. And so I actually suffered
from being censored a lot sooner. Charlie was never really
censored because if you think about it, Charlie was not
(11:45):
necessarily a far right conservative, I mean, especially even years ago.
You know, he was even skeptical of President Trump before
eventually realizing that President Trump was as amazing as he
truly is. But I remember, you know, even years ago,
where he was more mainstream, and he was obviously religious,
(12:06):
and so I kind of call him a more conservative
version of the former Senator Rick Santorum. You may remember
Rick Santorum. He ran for president in twenty twelve. I
believe it was he's the one that wore the sweater vest.
He was another one that was very religious. He was
a social conservative, but he was a little bit more
(12:27):
moderate on some of the other issues. Charlie was more
conservative than him. But in some respects they were similar
because what they did was try to, you know, give
you know, the Gospel if you will, and conservatism all
together in one. And of course they went after Santorum
when he ran for president, and of course we saw
(12:50):
what they did to someone who was literally being the
embodiment of what a good Christian would be, which is
to go out there, love your enemy, love your neighbor,
and educate them and bring them in by using the
teaching at the Gospel. So I thought he was just
a remarkable human being. I will be going to his
(13:10):
funeral on Sunday to pay my respects, and you know,
I do have a story with him more from my
nephew's standpoint, But my nephew actually went to a rival
high school that was five minutes away. He went to
Buffalo Grove and Charlie went to Wheeling High School and
(13:33):
they were rivals. And at the time, Charlie was very
heavily involved in the Mark Kirk campaign. No relation to Charlie,
and he was helping him run for office. And Mark
Kirk eventually did well and he was elected. And my
nephew actually saw that and watched that. And my nephew
(13:53):
was working on the Bob Dole campaign believe it or not,
all the way back then, and he reached out to Charlie,
said hey, I'd like to talk to you, and why
don't we have lunch. So they sat down at a
Red Robin and they were discussing the campaign. He told
them how you know, he thought he did a great
job with the Mark Kirk campaign. And my nephew's goal
(14:17):
at that meeting was to try to convince Charlie to
come over and work on the Bob Dole campaign as
a staffer. And the funny thing is, and my nephew
told me This story is that while he was doing
that and was trying to bring him over to the
Bob Dole campaign, Charlie kept telling him about this idea
(14:39):
that he had. Now it wasn't called Turning Point at
that point, but he was talking to him about, Hey,
I've got this idea. You know, the younger generation are
going away from God, they are becoming more atheistic or agnostic,
and we need to bring them back into the fold.
I've got this great idea to go around to college
(14:59):
campuses talk to the kids. So as my nephew is
trying to bring Charlie on to the Bob Dole campaign,
Charlie Kirk is trying to basically recruit my nephew to
working with Turning Point. So it was a very interesting
story that he told me. And then eventually Charlie Kirk
worked on the Bob Dole campaign with my nephew and
(15:21):
when that was over, that's when he went in twenty
twelve to the RNC convention and he met, you know,
some big donors and got a chance to start Turning Point.
And then he reached back out to my nephew and said, hey,
would you like to be part of this new endeavor
that I'm doing Turning Point, and my nephew said, oh,
that would be really nice, but I'm actually going to
(15:44):
go to college and I'm going to study you know,
a different path. But thank you. Anyway, So my nephew
ended up going his separate way and Charlie started Turning Point.
I met Charlie many times just seeing him in the
hallways of Turning Point events in Arizona, but I actually
(16:05):
met him at the headquarters once at an event. And
the funny thing is, and it ties into my nephew
as well. There was a whole line of people waiting
to talk to Charlie, like literally one hundred, one hundred
and fifty deep, and his security guards were near him
and around him, and basically had these young teeny boppers,
you know, these young girls and they're you know, eighteen
nineteen years old with pictures. I want to get my
(16:27):
picture with Charlie and sign this and sign that. So
there's like three of them in front of me. I'm
right behind him. So I go, hey, Charlie, and he
looks over and I go Buffalo Grove and he goes,
who said that? And I said I did, and he goes, oh, hey, Josh,
what's up, because he knew who I was. And so
then I told him my nephew's name, which again, you know,
(16:49):
he's an officer, and you know, I don't want to
give his information. And he said, oh, really, is he
still badass? And I said yeah, he is actually a
police officer and in law enforcement now. And so he's like, oh,
that's great. He's like, yeah, I haven't heard that name
in a long time. And I said, yeah, I'd love
to talk to you about joining Turning Point. And he's like, oh, okay, well, yeah,
(17:12):
you know, just reach out to you know, such and such.
And before I could get the information, as security guards
going all right, come on, move it, move it along,
move it along, move it along. And so I never
really got an opportunity to kind of talk to him
and talk to the people to see if that I
could have become another person that maybe was going out
and speaking on these college campuses to these kids. I
(17:33):
never got a chance to do that, and obviously, with
me and my mouth and my outspokenness, I became extremely
extremely censored. So in some respects, maybe God was protecting
me from myself, because who knows if I was more
mainstream and I kind of just you know, was controlled
(17:53):
opposition and kind of just you know, took the paychecks
and said what I needed to say and stayed in line.
Maybe that could have been me instead of Charlie, And
so I thought about that a lot lately. My book
Preserving Liberty never would have come to fruition if I
didn't meet the right people at a Turning Point event.
And the sad reality is that I really wanted to
(18:17):
thank Charlie in person because I met the right people
at his event, and sadly I can't.
Speaker 3 (18:24):
I mean, it's I keep every time we get onto
the topic, I have a hard time finding the right words,
which of course is terrible. If you're supposed to be
a talk show host, you need the words. But I
don't think anybody realizes how many different people that he
(18:46):
really had interactions with, that he improved their lives, that
he made all these changes. And I think maybe the
most tragic part is that they're just now starting to
launch this secondary extension of Strictly Faced based off of
(19:07):
Turning Point. We've got this expansion. A lot of good
things are coming, but it's at such a high price,
you know, it's it's not just heartbreaking. It's it's mind
numbing to a point. But then that takes me to
(19:28):
this other side, and it's clear we've known for some
time how ridiculously dark and evil a lot of the
folks are on the left. But to see some of
the reactions, to hear some of the hate being spewed,
(19:49):
even from pulpits and churches across the country, somewhere defined
between hatred and jealousy and the combination of the both.
Mostly because Charlie was so effective at reaching people that
they were working so hard at indoctrinating. And one other
(20:10):
thing that's obvious is there are three major talking points.
They all got the talking points. This is how they're
sparing them bald face lies. What in your mind has
been the most outrageous of the of the smears and
of the leftist reactions trying to push back against Charlie, Well.
Speaker 10 (20:30):
I think it's a combination of a lot of these people,
the shocking revelations that some of these people are not
only educating children across the country, some of them are
even operating on or you know, providing medical you know,
advice and things like that for a lot of people.
I mean, you've got doctors and nurses and anesthesiologists. I mean,
(20:53):
imagine you've got to go into the hospital and they
find out, you know, that you're a conservative and they're
an anesthesiologist. I don't want to I don't want to
visit with that doctor, you know. And what about these teachers.
I mean, my goodness, these teachers are saying these horrific things.
But you know what it did is it opened up
and it bewokened so many people that maybe didn't even
(21:14):
know him and maybe didn't follow him, and maybe he
didn't really pay much attention to him. Now all of
a sudden, they're going to church. Now, all of a sudden,
they get to see firsthand the evil that the left
is capable of, which clearly they are. And let's not
forget that even though this person did this, he didn't
(21:34):
act alone. There's an entire online network of these sick,
twisted trans terrorists all over and they're not just in Utah,
which is shocking to begin with because it's a pretty
red state, but again, they're all over and all these
people on social media saying we knew about it. Just
(21:55):
watch what's going to happen, you know. I hope he
comes to our college. I hope he gets, you know,
eviscerated literally Donald Trump December fourteenth. Look out, watch the
news in the next few days. I mean, look this
whole thing. They knew about it, They did nothing about it.
That is accessory to murder. And I do hope that
(22:17):
the Department of Justice and the FBI and Cash Hotel
and Pam Bondi and Bongino and all the people that
are working diligently on bringing justice to this. I hope
they're looking at this entire underground network of these sick, sadistic, evil, twisted,
demonic people that are pretending to be the opposite sex,
(22:39):
and they are murderous and that's what they are capable of.
You know, I'm the only one in the media that
when it happened, brought up the movie Dog Day Afternoon.
Now maybe I'm dating myself at fifty years old, but
Dog Day Afternoon came out, I believe in nineteen seventy
five and it started al Pacino and al Pacino plays
(23:00):
a bank robber and he robs a bank and the
reason he robs the bank is to get money to
pay for a sex change operation for his lover. Now
you want to talk about being you know, risk gay
in the times. I mean nineteen seventy five or so.
That's the year I was born to know that there
was a movie out there that was even talking about that.
(23:22):
But anyway, so I see a lot of similarities because
even though this you know, this furry whatever you want
to call him, lamps, twigs or whatever, the lover is
saying that, oh, I didn't know about this, and I'm
innocent in this, and that I think that that person
radicalized this kid Tyler, because this kid, Tyler, for the
(23:42):
most part, came from a nice conservative Mormon family. He
was pretty normal his whole life, and just the last
couple of years is when he became radicalized. Well how
did that happen. It happened online, It happened through social media,
and it probably happened from this weirdo that he was
with their dating. And I have a good feeling that
(24:04):
that person drove him in some respects to do this.
Almost like in the movie Dog Day Afternoon, which by
the way, is based off of a true story. You
can look it up and read it yourself, that person
may have radicalized the character of al Pacino to rob
the bank. And so if you notice in the text messages,
in the exchange and the back and forth, he says,
(24:24):
my love, I did this for you, my love, right,
So there is that kind of you know, correlation if
you will. Now, maybe the Pacino character robbed the bank,
but what this Robinson character did is he robbed us
of Charlie and that is way worse. And he's irreplaceable
in my opinion. I don't know who would be able
(24:48):
to fill those shoes. I know Erica is taking over
as CEO, and that's wonderful, but is she going to
be the one that's going to do what he does?
Does she have the skill set to do that? Is
there going to be a power struggle where people are
at the top are going to be like, well, this
is how it should be done. Well, now I'm in charge,
it should be done like this. What I'm hoping that
(25:09):
doesn't happen. And I really hope that there's someone that
has the ability the chops, if you will, to be
able to talk to the youth, not just in political ways,
because anyone can do that, right, I can do that,
Shapiro can do that, Tucker could do that, They could
all do that, But who can do it? With a
(25:31):
conviction of faith like Charlie was able to do that. Indeed,
is the question?
Speaker 3 (25:38):
Yeah, Yeah. The one thing that was always obvious when
it came to Charlie Kirk when he was having these conversations,
and I kind of get missed when people even refer
to them as debates, because while they may have started
off adversarial, he was never really debating. He was responding,
he was answering, and then he was asking questions and
(26:00):
asking her legitimate to answer back. And that's part of
what set him apart. He would quiteten the crowds if
they started laughing a bit too much or was trying
to shout down the perier to say no, they had
the courage to step up to come speak, let them talk,
this is what they believe, and gives them a chance
(26:21):
to hear We'll hear them out. Then they'll have to
hear us out. And that tack is so very successful.
That was part of what was unique because he was
also extremely sincere in it. You never once came away
hearing him say these things and think it was just
for show, because most of the time it was pretty
obvious it wasn't. We're already almost out of time, Josh,
(26:44):
and I hate it because it still feels like we're
barely even getting started with this conversation. But I want
to give you a chance again real quick, to let
everybody know where they can find your work. Please, please
feel free to share websites, let them know where they
can still find the book and any other things you'd
like throughout there, real quick.
Speaker 10 (27:03):
Well, you can get the book in digital form or
hard copy form on Amazon, and you can just go
and put in Josh Bernstein Preserving Liberty and you'll see
my bald, ugly mug staring Atchia, pointin atcha. So that's
how you know the book again. The book has been
endorsed by multiple people, two New York Times bestselling authors
(27:26):
Roger Stone as well as Alan Dershowitz, and the forward
to the book was written by Congressman Paul Gossar from
the Freedom Caucus. So it is a blueprint. It's an
easy book to read, only one hundred and fifty pages
or so, but it is a jaw dropping type of book.
It's not self published, that's very important to point out.
(27:46):
This was done through Skywors's Publishing, distributed by Simon and Schuster.
This went through a legal review. But there is jaw
dropping information in the book. A lot of what Trump
is doing now not only did I predict, but I
showed exactly how he should do it with some of
it he is doing. But there's a lot more in
that book that actually shows more. If you also want to,
(28:08):
you can go to substack and you can go to
Jbushow dot substack dot com. Jbushow dot substack dot com
sign up, become a subscriber for only five dollars a
month and you'll get a free digital copy of the
book if you sign up there as well, And you
can also find me at at Real jbu Show on X.
Speaker 3 (28:34):
All right, Josh, as always, it's been a pleasure and
an honor. Thank you so much again for coming on.
Speaker 10 (28:39):
And you got to be blessed anytime any topic.
Speaker 3 (28:43):
All right, We will definitely take you up on that.
In the meanwhile, keep up the great work, ladies and gentlemen.
That was mister Josh Bernstein. If all goes as planned,
it won't be the last time you hear from him here,
and I highly recommend you go check out this work.
Like I said, I've been listening to him for a
very long time in fact, back when he was part
(29:06):
of a duo, Grits and Grace. That's a blast from
the past right there. All right, we're about to hit
our mid hour break, but before I do that, I
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Wow Wow out you're listening to Tap into the tree.
Speaker 3 (36:36):
All alrighty ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to the show.
Thank you so much for staying with us for that
very brief break. It is now time for us to
bring on our next guest. He spent thirteen years as
an investment advisor, despite having a very unique path to
becoming an investment advisor. There's a good reason and why
(37:00):
he's kind of just thrown out conventional wisdom, especially since
most that conventional wisdom generally is designed to keep the
pecking order as is, or at least that's certainly the
way it appears. Of course, we're talking about Mark Kwan.
He has written multiple books. Its most recent one, however,
(37:20):
is still Be Smart, pay zero taxes, use the by
borrow die strategy to get rich and stay rich. Certainly
a must have if you are someone who wants to
have a better fundamental understanding of how the system really works.
Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome back to the show for
(37:41):
just a second time, Mark J. Kwan. Mark, thank you
so much for coming on board with us again tonight.
Before we get started, how are you today?
Speaker 18 (37:51):
I'm great.
Speaker 11 (37:52):
I'm sitting in the in Knoxville, Tennessee, just ramping down.
We have an incredible week my company, and I'm just
about to go to a nice dinner with my wife.
So having a great, great evening so far. But glad
to be on the show.
Speaker 3 (38:05):
Well, glad to have you here. Certainly nice weather for
a good evening here in East Tennessee, no doubts about that.
I wanted to talk to you a little bit first
of all, about the impact of the Federal Reserve finally
deciding that they were going to lower the interest rates. Now,
(38:28):
there's so many different facets involved here, and let's be honest,
like so many other things financial, a lot of people
just don't understand how everything's interconnected. So I guess the
first thing we want to take a look at is
how important is this interest rate change? And in your opinion,
(38:51):
is this the right move at this time?
Speaker 11 (38:55):
I think it is the right move. I think it's
a little over They should have done it a little
sooner in my opinion. You know, but the Fed has
a long track history of being wrong or late on everything.
I mean, they said inflation was transitory, that.
Speaker 16 (39:10):
Was that was nuts.
Speaker 11 (39:12):
I was like, are you kidding me? When no inflation
was high growing? I mean, you can't print trillions and
trillions of dollars versus COVID and not cause massive nonstufflation.
So the FED was wrong on that one, as they
usually are. But you know what the fact is that,
you know, they're wealthy people. They love it when interest
(39:33):
rates go down because they're borrowing money to invest, right,
So it's very bad for savers when rates drop. You know,
it's great for investors because we like to borrow money
to invest. So you know, it's it's it's it's a
very bad situation for you know, people who are sitting
sitting money in savings accounts because you know, the actual
(39:54):
the actual inflation rate is really around six percent traditionally.
You know, the government doesn't tell you the truth on
that because they don't want to adjust social security and
pensions to the real inflation rate. So they've been they've
been manipulating inflations in the nineteen eighties and inflation went
out of control at that time. So you know, Americans
really need to keep make about six percent rate of
(40:15):
return on their investments every single year just to stay
flat with inflation. And if you minus taxes, that's a
bad deal. So, you know, FED rates are welcome for investors.
Real estate should go up up in value. You know,
the mortgage rates aren't directly tied to the FED rate,
but does follow it. You know, pretty it's pretty correlated.
He has moved in that direction. So I'm ramping up
(40:37):
to buy more real estate in Nuxville, Tennessee, because I
want to buy it when rates are high, and as
rates go down, real estate values get pushed up, and
then you can often see refinance those those that real
estate down to lower rates and get rid of payments.
So great opportunity for investors right now. We're very, very
excited as investors, but you know, savers not going to
(40:59):
do so well.
Speaker 3 (41:01):
Yeah, Unfortunately, that's usually the way this works anyway, when
we have these movements one way or the other. Uh,
there's one group of folks that are at the better
end of the equation, and then as things shift, it's
the other folks. But there does seem to be still
(41:23):
a lot of volatility here. But it really is kind
of odd that this particular go round there seemed to
be almost a denial when it comes to the stock market.
There was very little caution. There was very little slow
down even in the latter days of the Biden administration
(41:43):
transitioning into the Trump administration. Because there's a lot of uncertainty, right,
But a lot of people just didn't believe that it
was going to cause the kind of negative effects that
you ordinarily would see. Just the terraf war alone in
under previous administrations would have been enough to make most
investors take a lot of their money off of the
(42:05):
board and just kind of wait to see where the
better place to put that money would be. But I
guess my real question at this point, after your great
answer to the first one, is was this rate cut
enough And if it wasn't, at what point is it
(42:25):
too much? Because obviously you don't want the rates to
drop too low, because that too can help to fuel
inflation and start moving in the wrong direction.
Speaker 11 (42:35):
Right, yeah, I can. I mean, you know, there's a
lot of things that are going on in the world
that never happened before, right, So they're trying to stimulate
the job market, but the amount of job is being
taken by artificial intelligence every six months is kind of
mind boggling. I don't think I don't think people quite
(42:55):
know what's happening in the world. Right is they realized
that the job market is going to disappear for a
lot of Americans over the next ten years, So people
need to build passive income stream. Honest, say it doesn't
rates go up, rates go down. Yeah, we're going to
get too, probably another half point rate cut. But most
(43:17):
Americans are still going to go to their megabanks. Just
pick your megabank name. They're going to go to a
company ask for help. When that company only makes money.
They have an absolute goals fiduciary responsibility to their shareholders.
So they go to a financial advisor who works for
a publicly traded bank and they get advice. And the
(43:37):
only advice they're getting is to maximize profitability for the shareholders.
Speaker 4 (43:42):
Of that bank.
Speaker 11 (43:43):
So they want to pay you nothing. They want to
get you into a high interest rate. They want to
put you into poor, poorly managed investments that I would
never put a dollar into. And that's how they make
their money. And they love retirement accounts because retirement accounts
are the biggest scam ever put on the American public.
You're deferring taxes to the highest tax rates when you retire.
(44:07):
It triggers taxes on your Social Security so that's double taxation.
And it was a tax in the first place. It's
triple taxation. These tax deferred retirement accounts They were built
by Wall Street and big government, not to benefit the
American consumer. They were built to trap you to work
till you're sixty five or seventy, and then they tax
(44:29):
you to the grave, and then it triggers the taxation
on your Social Security, and when you die, you pass
all the tax to your children and all the bad
advice that the banks have been giving you for generations.
So that's my summary of you know, people really need
to wake up right now and realize that Social Security
(44:50):
is in trouble in twenty and thirty three. Okay, that's
a bad deal because most Americans will fall into major
poverty if they don't have their Social Security four oh
one K will never you retire. You it's mathematically impossible
for middle America to retire with dignity with a retirement account.
(45:11):
So that's why I spent the last four years building
a financial education company, and I wrote be Smart, Pay
zero taxes. It's dedicated to ordinary Americans. It's dedicated to
bricklayers like my dad, and plumbers because I've done that too,
and factory workers because I've done that too. And it's
dedicated to high school and dropouts like me who are
(45:33):
now wealthy, but I grew up poor, you know. I mean,
so like I just would rather than just talk about
the issues, I just really want to wake people up.
You're in a lot of trouble unless you start raising
your financial iq and learning the strategies the rich people use.
They're using buy boro die. They buy assets, they never
sell them, they never pay taxes, They take loans. So
(45:54):
we love borrowing when the rates drop because we get
lower interest loans. And then when they die, you can
I with up to thirty million dollars totally tax free.
You can transferrupt to thirty million dollars with zero taxes
to your family. So anyways, totally different topic there, but
I just want to issue a little bit of a
wake up call to all Americans that are listening today.
Speaker 3 (46:17):
Well, I mean it's utterly appropriate. More people need to
hear that message. I think a lot of people kind
of get caught up and say, oh, this guy's trying
to sell his book at he's trying to sell the system.
Oh it's probably just another financial scam, blah blah, Because
there are people out there that do exactly that, which
is why it's important for people to understand that's not
(46:38):
what you're about. You've got the background where you have
pulled yourself up and you are legitimately trying to help
people to not just understand how to go about doing this,
but also to actually be able to do it. And
you're absolutely right. There's a lot of folks out there,
especially on the lower end of the incomes spectrum, that
(47:01):
are counting on that so called lock box that has
never been locked, that has never not been spent the
world's worst Ponzi scheme, social Security. Unless some changes are
made soon, that's going to bankrupt the entire nation in
an effort to try and keep it going, And nobody
(47:22):
right now seems to have the political will to even
address the scenario. It's never been a great idea, but
they managed to funnel more money away from the American
taxpayer without even calling it attacks under the guise who
are giving it back to you later? And like you said,
the government and the people that are setting these policies,
(47:44):
they have a very different agenda than making sure that
you the individual is okay.
Speaker 11 (47:51):
Yeah, I mean, I love what you said. Social securities
upon the Team. I wrote my first book. I started
it in two thousand and nine and I finished it
in four It took me five years to write that book. Right,
But yeah, I called Social Security of Pons because by definition,
by the definition, it is a Ponzi scheme. Right, it
was built that way. But it was promised to be
(48:12):
tax free Americans. And then in nineteen eighty three the
government said, hey, we're just going to tax it if
you're rich. But they said, oh, it's just the rich.
In nineteen ninety three they said, oh, we're going to
tax it, but they brought the income levels down, right,
so they would tax more people, right, nineteen ninety three,
and it's just ridiculous. They're double taxing you. And then
they created the four A one K to quote to
save you money on taxes, right, But it's not in
(48:34):
tax savings your tax deferral. It's regular income tax rates.
And on top of that, it's it's so it's the
payments from your four oh one K that can trigger
the taxes on your Social Security payments. It's just it's
it's the system's rigged. I gotta say it is. And
I worked in it for fifteen years. I was a
financial advisor, investment advisor, a fiduciary financial advisor, and unfortunate.
(48:55):
I was working for a publicly traded company and I
sat in some meetings at the executs a level, and
I almost wanted to throw up right, and I resigned,
and I gave up a very large income stream. In
twenty eighteen, I've written four books. Trust me, I don't
need your book sales. I don't need you to join
a course. If you do a course. By the way,
if anyone decided to look it up and you do
(49:16):
a course and don't like it, I'll refund your money.
I don't care. I really don't need your money. Trust me.
I'm good so but no. I came from Middle America.
I got poverty on three generations of my family. It
was actually Newsmax that reached out to me early last
year and asked me if I could write a book
to prove that ordinary Americans can use the Bible or
(49:36):
Eye strategy. It's the same strategy at the billionaires even
since the Great Depression. It's very simple to understand, and
in fact, we've proven you can start using it with
starting with one hundred dollars in a brokerage account. I said,
one hundred dollars in a brokerage account, just to make
sure that stunt is clear.
Speaker 3 (49:55):
Yeah, when you put it like that, it seems like
almost anyone can do it. Imagine that. I tell you what,
it's such a wealth of information. It almost seems criminal
for folks not to pick up a copy of the
book and to get a good feel for what's going on, Mark,
(50:16):
because they have a professional class of criminal that just
protect themselves by calling themselves something else, whether it's a
banker or investment specialist or politician, that professional class of
criminal that's in double, triple, quadruple dipping in your back
(50:36):
pocket and they don't care how much you have left
over when it's done. If you're going to survive and
you're going to enjoy any level of financial independence, you
need to really understand how the systems work and what's
set up to work the best. That's why I completely
(50:57):
respect what you're doing here. Or because not a lot
of folks want to let other people in on the
big secret for some reason. It's like a magician revealing
the tricks or something. It's almost taboo. So other than
news macs reaching out to you, and of course having
that generational poverty that you grew up around. Uh, I
(51:21):
still get the impression that there is maybe still something
else that's driving you to try to help people in
this way. Is it really just those things or is
there a little bit more to it, because with the
level of passion you have, once you start talking about it,
it just feels like there's something even more personal to you.
Speaker 6 (51:43):
You know what.
Speaker 11 (51:43):
It's just when you grew up really poor and then
you see your dad work, it's off to the bone,
it's I mean, so it's just, yeah, it's pretty personal
for me, it really is. I mean, uh yeah, yeah,
it just is. I mean wrote I wrote the first
book because I didn't like the banking industry, and then
(52:05):
just working in the financial industry for fifteen years and
just seeing how it's just literally rigged. I'll give you example.
Where does the word retirement come from Wall Street? It
convince you that you're supposed to work for a corporation
until sixty five to seventy. Where does the word retirement plan?
Where does retirement account come from? It comes from big
(52:28):
government and Wall Street to convince you that you need
to put your money into a retirement account. Isn't that
interesting that it builds massive income streams for the government
when you retire and it turns your family into a
multi generational income stream for Wall Street. Right, where's the term,
where's the term financial advisor come from big government in
(52:49):
Wall Street? Where's the term fiduciary financial advisor come from
big government in Wall Street?
Speaker 4 (52:55):
Right?
Speaker 11 (52:56):
But all those companies have a fiducial responsibility to the shareholders.
You know, I've always, honestly, I've always gone against the grain.
I wouldn't go to school in high school. I just
told my mom I'm not going to school, and I
stopped going to school. After grade nine, I tried to
go to school in Los Angeles. I was in a
pretty gang infested neighborhood. I kept getting robbed, I got
(53:18):
beat up, my teeth got knocked out one day at school,
and I'm like, God, I want to going to school.
So I went laid bricks with my dad for a while.
I went to college in Canada. Back in Canada, because
I'm Canadian. I spent you know, I spent two and
a half years in business school. Finances notised this college
thing as a scam. All they're doing is me to
go work for a megabank. And then I left for California.
(53:40):
I spent twenty three years in California, became a financial advisor,
did all that stuff, wrote four books, and then be
smart Pezero Taxes. That's the one book to kind of
correct the thing. Biboro dye should be used by every
single American. I teach it to eighteen year olds. They
set up for their kids. I've got people from every
age level, from our youngest students eighteen or line. Our
(54:03):
oldest student is ninety five right now. So I do
want to correct the system a little bit. I mean,
I'm tired of seeing middle Americans getting screwed over by
big government in Wall Street. Your bank is evil. I
could actually show you documents you can you can search
is my bank?
Speaker 4 (54:18):
Is my bank?
Speaker 11 (54:19):
Put your bank name? Are they laundering money for drug cartels?
They probably are. I mean it's that it's that bad.
You can look up the history of the sec burying Street,
burying crimes for Wall Street. You can look up how
your megabank, one of the megabanks had the bank account
for Bernie Madeoff's Ponzi scheme, so that the whole Bernie
(54:40):
Madeoff Ponzi scheme with took the bankrupt. They pension plans
and everything. One of your megabanks which I don't want
to say their name on here, had the bank account
for them. So middle Americans, I'm just tired of seeing
them getting screwed over by these megabanks and big governments.
So hey, learn biborode, cut your tax, cut your taxes,
grow your wealth, pass it generationally without taxes. It's a
(55:04):
simple strategy.
Speaker 16 (55:06):
I can see.
Speaker 11 (55:07):
I've taught it to everybody. So again, I don't need
your money. I don't need you to join a course,
get a book, learn it, start learning it. You know,
I've taught it up. I've taught about five hundred people
over the last four years. Pretty soon we'll be at
probably ten thousand by an end the next year, a
couple hundred thousand a year after that, and a lot
of people are doing. Everybody's doing very well. So again,
(55:29):
it's a not a i'm this is not a job
for me. This is uh, this is passion. I love
what I do, so that's what.
Speaker 2 (55:36):
I do it.
Speaker 3 (55:37):
That's part all right. Two quick points I want to
make number one as the topic of the difference between
personal integrity and what is considered to be professional integrity,
too very say, two very different things, and two of
(55:58):
the worst industries when you look at whether personal morality
and professional morality matchup. Obviously, the legal system and then
the banking system. In the meanwhile, I appreciate again everything
that you're doing. Thank you so much for coming on.
And I certainly want people to take advantage of it,
(56:20):
because there is more than enough wealth in America for
everyone to do much better than they are. And the meanwhile, God.
Speaker 11 (56:28):
Speak to you, yeah, and reach out to my reach
out to me. I'll send you a book, man, I'll
ship you a book, or you want an ebook or
it kin to I'll just shoot you a book and
you can read it yourself and decide if this is
something that may help other Americans.
Speaker 3 (56:42):
All right, well, I want to give you an opportunity
real quick to again let everybody know where they can
find the book, where they can find you, and if
you invite people to follow you on social media, feel
free to share handles and platforms.
Speaker 11 (56:56):
Yeah no, it's just our website, the Perfect Portfolio dot com,
The Perfect Portfolio dot Com. And the book is Be Smart,
pay zero taxes. You can pick it up on Amazon.
Speaker 3 (57:07):
All right, thank you so very much for being here again,
and God speak to you and we will talk again.
At least I hope we get that chance. Thank you, sir.
Looking forward to it, all right, ladies and gentlemen. Mark J.
Kuwan Fellow Tennessee. And in fact, he's just up the
road a little bit at Knoxville. I'm digging it. He
(57:27):
may be from Canada, but he's at Tennessee. And now
how do I know that, Because he's trying to help
folks and I meanwhile, we're going to reset the hour,
so you guys don't go anywhere. We'll be right back
with my favorite journalist from Red State, Miss Becky Noble.
Speaker 9 (57:41):
This man who just down at the entrance of his building,
there was an elderly lady selling pretzels, and every day
he'd go by and he'd put a quarter down and
never take a pretzel go on in.
Speaker 4 (57:52):
He was being very charitable.
Speaker 9 (57:54):
And this went on for some time and came along
one day, put down his quarter started, and she took
him by the arm and he looked at her and
he said, well, you probably want to know why for
this full year I've been leading twenty five cents on
a plate, not taking a pretzel. And she said, no,
I just wanted to tell you the pretzels are thirty
five cents.
Speaker 16 (58:13):
Now this is almost Watson, I Tap into the Truth,
will be right back.
Speaker 3 (58:43):
This is Tim Tap, host of Tapping to the Truth
that you can hear every Friday night from seven to
nine pm Eastern on the k Star Talk Radio Network,
Liberty Talk FM, and the VERA Network.
Speaker 4 (59:45):
Is this is Tim Tap, host of Tapping to the Truth.
But I guess that does he got it.
Speaker 3 (01:00:06):
All right, Ladies and gentlemen, thank you so very much
for being with us as we now dive headlong into
our number two of the live Friday night broadcast of
Tap into the Truth. I appreciate you being here. We've
had a couple of good conversations already. One we were
having a remembrance of Charlie Girka in a unique way
(01:00:30):
from the perspective of mister Josh Bernstein. And then we're
talking a little bit about the FED rate change and
plans for you to take better financial control of how
things are going learning the insider secrets. Now we're going
to change things up because once again we were joined
(01:00:53):
one of the great journalists over at Red State. I
keep making the joke that she's my favorite journalist from
Red State because she's the one who comes to the show.
But ultimately I would love Becky even if she didn't
work at Red State. She does a fantastic blog as well.
You've got to go check out Gumshoo Politics and of
(01:01:14):
course listen to her blog there as well, the in
Your Face Podcast. Did I say that right? I feel
like I said blog anyway, It is a great I
call it a mini podcast, which is not a negative
thing at all. It takes a special skill to say
(01:01:34):
everything you want to say is such a short amount
of time. Of course, I am talking about miss Becky
Noble regular ordinarily, she's here on these third Fridays of
the month fairly consistently, and I love her for that too.
That takes a lot of commitment, and I'm glad Randy
is willing to share her with us for these hours.
(01:01:56):
Ladies and gentlemen, let me welcome back to the show,
Miss Becky Noble. Becky, thank you so much for being here.
I appreciate it more than I can express, but I'm
gonna try anyway.
Speaker 6 (01:02:07):
Well, thank you, Tim, thanks so much for having.
Speaker 4 (01:02:09):
Me all right.
Speaker 3 (01:02:12):
Uh, it's been it's been a wild ride since last
time we spoke and there's certainly been no shortage of news.
And in fact, I just pulled back up your author page.
I usually do write about time for the show, and
I was on here earlier, and it looks like you
(01:02:32):
just got another piece up. That's unfair trying to sneak
one in right after I But no shortage of things
to write about. And I think we would be remiss
if we didn't start by talking about the political assassination
of Charlie Kirk, and of course the reactions we've seen
(01:02:56):
to it since, both the outpouring of emotions from you know,
those of us who are still decent human beings, and
then of course some of the reactions from the left
who not saying that everyone that votes Democrat isn't a
decent human being. Because I've seen a lot of folks
that ordinarily we would be disagreeing about everything that have
(01:03:19):
also had very humane, very kind reactions. But there's been
the usual suspects that just I think they're just devoid
of humanity at this point.
Speaker 6 (01:03:31):
Yeah, Yeah, it's you know, I think it's going to
be one of those things where we kind of remember
where we were, you know, and when it happened, and
I had you know, I had just finished up for
that afternoon with you know, doing some Red State work
and and I was, you know, grabbing a little bit
of lunch. It was late, you know during the day.
Sometimes I don't get to lunch till till around two
(01:03:53):
o'clock or so my time. But yeah, I mean I
had just come in the kitchen and I was, you know, grabbed,
getting ready to grab some lunch. And then I was gonna,
you know, go back to work and do some other stuff.
And and all of a sudden, I happened to have
Clay and Buck on Clay Travis and Buck Sexton, and
they were talking. Talking at first, first Buck announced that
(01:04:15):
that Charlie had been shot, and at that point, you know,
nobody really knew what was going on yet. So you know,
long story short, you know, Randy and I were just,
I mean, we were glued to the TV from the
time the news broke. I mean, you know, practically all
the rest of the night is I'm sure a lot
of other people a lot of other people were and
(01:04:37):
you know, when when they announced officially that he had passed,
I got the same feeling that I did when Andrew
Andrew Breitbart died. When Rush died, it was like a
punch in the gut. It was a feeling of a
punch in the gut and a feeling of hopelessness.
Speaker 11 (01:04:54):
You know.
Speaker 6 (01:04:55):
And yeah, I mean in the week and a half
since since he was assassinated, and that's there's there's no
other way to describe it. It was a political assassination,
you know. I and I think that I was talking
to uh, Susie Moore, one of my editors this afternoon,
and I said, you know, it just it seems like
(01:05:16):
everybody's felt so weird, you know, since it happened, and
it's it's not really something that you can put your
finger on. It's kind of a kind of a mixture
of sadness and anger and still shock and just just
kind of a weird mixture.
Speaker 12 (01:05:31):
You know.
Speaker 6 (01:05:31):
But that, yeah, I mean, that was the only way
way I could think of to describe it, was that
I think everybody just feels so weird and just like
like you're not right, you know. And you know, so
they're gonna have the big memorial service in Arizona there
on Sunday, and I'm sure that that's gonna be that's
gonna be a tear jerker.
Speaker 16 (01:05:51):
I don't.
Speaker 6 (01:05:51):
I think I'm gonna like clean my house or something.
I don't know if I don't want to watch that.
But yeah, it's the less left, people on the left,
the majority of people on the left, And you're right,
yeah it's not everyone, but the majority of people on
the left have shown themselves to be who they really are.
(01:06:12):
And you know, I've heard, I've heard a lot of
talk about people wanting unity and wanting to bring the
country together and to get along. And I think that's
a great concept, and I think it's a great idea,
but I don't think you can get along with these people,
you know. I just I've said Tourandy, and I've said
(01:06:34):
to several other people, we have to treat these people
the way we would radical Islamic terrorists. You know, you cannot.
We know from all of the attacks on Israel. If
you talk to anyone in the Jewish community, they will
tell you that you cannot reason and you cannot negotiate
with people who make it very clear that they want
(01:06:55):
to kill you. And I think that that's the position
that conservatives are in right now. I mean it might
sound you know like I'm I'm uh you know, overreacting
and being melodramatic. But but I really and truly think
that that's what it is. You cannot reason with people
who've made it clear they want to kill you, and
they want to kill you for nothing more than your
(01:07:16):
thoughts and the words that you say. And that's I mean,
And it that that seems just just phenomenal in twenty
twenty five, but I think, I think that's where we're at.
And yeah, I mean some of the stuff that that
you know, I mean, I've seen just as much disgusting
stuff as you or anyone else has seen online and
(01:07:36):
just just when you think you've seen it all, you haven't,
you know. And in fact, I wrote a piece at
red State earlier this week about some of the people
in the healthcare field and which which I was an
employee of for thirty years of my life prior to
my Red State life, you know, And it just it
(01:07:58):
boggles the mind that PEO, people who are charged with
caring for other people and charged with saving people's lives,
would make the statements.
Speaker 10 (01:08:09):
That they did.
Speaker 6 (01:08:11):
I can't wrap my head around it. And I've I've
been telling people for quite a while now that if
you think that you think journalism's full of liberals. Healthcare
has got nothing on them. And it hasn't always been
that way. It's within the last ten or fifteen years
or so, I think maybe it's really gotten bad. But yeah,
(01:08:32):
it's been a hell of a week to week and
a half, I guess, to say the least.
Speaker 3 (01:08:38):
Yeah, I think that whenever we're talking about any professional
field that requires higher educational degrees, the liberal left and
the extreme left side of that particular grouping, they have
such capture of the education facilities that it is impossible
(01:09:03):
now for you to get through and become a doctor,
a lawyer, a professional of any other kind that requires
anything higher than a master's degree without eventually bending the
knee and having your mind warped in that direction, you're
putting into the darkness. And I wanted to circle back
(01:09:23):
to something you said earlier in regards to how there
is a percentage. Unfortunately, while it's still not a particularly
large percentage overall, it is a growing percentage, and that's
what makes it more dangerous. But they want to kill us, Becky,
not necessarily even because of things we've said, but because
(01:09:46):
of things they believe we've said, because of things they've
misinterpreted because of things they've taken out of context. Every
single one of these worst of the worst videos that
have went out at trying to trash and tarnish Charlie
have all taken stuff and it's always been the exact
(01:10:06):
same stuff. So you know, they've all got the talking
points right, but they've they've taken Charlie out of context
on so many occasions. And this notion somehow that he
was a racist, that he was a white supremacist. He was, uh,
he hated black people. He thinks black women are stupid. No,
(01:10:27):
but he did have a list that included some black
women that actually kind of are I'm looking at you
or we needed Kaitanji Brown Jacksonville Supreme Court justice, but
don't know what a woman is.
Speaker 9 (01:10:40):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:10:41):
But you said you were sounding kind of over the
top or overly dramatic. No, you're just starting to sound
like a podcaster, like you were finally one of us,
one of us. Yeah, it's just it hurts though, And
(01:11:03):
you're right, there is this strange feeling. First, like you said,
there's I've been fighting the same thing. I was fortunate
enough to meet Charlie Kirk on two separate occasions, very brief,
just a shake of the hand, glad to meet you
kind of thing, and moved on. And I seriously doubt
(01:11:25):
and I've tried to make this point. I'm not claiming
to have been his friend pal, deeply, nothing like that,
just to quick meet and greet. And I doubt he
could have picked me out of a lineup. I've said
that several times. I don't want to make that point,
but even in those brief encounters, I was better for it.
That's something that he had just this magical quality to
(01:11:47):
be able to do.
Speaker 1 (01:11:49):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:11:49):
When you look at some of the people he has
connected it and it seems like I keep pointing this
out to me just about every guess when we talk
about the subject. You know, he pulled people together from
parts of the conservative side that ordinarily could have never
gotten along without him being that intermediary. When you look
(01:12:11):
at some of the folks that became friends because they
were friends with Charlie first, some of these folks that
ordinarily are competing with each other over time slots and
you know the headlines and please sign up for our service,
and to people that are so competitive and they've lost
(01:12:34):
track of the fact that we're all on the same side,
we should be kind of helping each other and Charlie.
Speaker 10 (01:12:41):
You would.
Speaker 6 (01:12:43):
Don't get me started on that, but Charlie.
Speaker 3 (01:12:46):
Fit right into that in between sessions, and he was
able to bring some of the biggest egos out there
in the biz to heal because he came forth with
that clear cut Charlie charm. That was just a gift
(01:13:07):
from God. There is no other time, as Rush would say,
talent on loan from God. It's shined through. That's part
of why I think it was so very appropriate earlier
this week that Glenn beck actually presented the empty Charlie
Kirk chair with Rushlimball's golden microphone. That was I mean,
(01:13:33):
I have spent a lot of times quietly don't tell anybody, Becky,
I know nobody else is going to know. I'm just
going to share this between you and me. I spent
a lot of time quietly sobbing myself, especially seeing and
hearing a lot of what is transpired with this story
as it's progressed, and seeing the people who've known him
(01:13:53):
best having such a hard time keeping their selves together.
It's hard to see that pouring of emotion and not
feel something even if you're not directly connected. But you know,
that was one of those moments that somehow it just
felt right. It's like, yeah, Charlie was destined for that
(01:14:15):
microphone anyway, I don't doubt it. I just I wished
I wish he could have been here to receive it
instead of how things played out. I have no doubt
that turning point is going to continue on. They're going
to be Yeah, absolutely, they're going to be fine. The
conservative movement is going to move forward and become better
(01:14:37):
and stronger. The nation is going to become better and stronger.
But I sure as hell would still rather have Charlie here.
It's almost too high a price to pay.
Speaker 6 (01:14:47):
Yeah, yeah, you're right. And you know, I never met
him either, But I remember being at Seapac I'm going
to say twenty eighteen maybe, and I saw him in
the hallway that where the Seapack's always held at the
place in Washington, d C. There's a big, wide hallway
(01:15:08):
and they would you know, where all the TV stations
and podcasters and and things like that, would you know
where they would all set up. And I was standing
in the hallway there. It was kind of late in
the day, kind of all this stuff had had, you know,
half everything was kind of done for the day. But
I saw him walking down the hallway there, and there
(01:15:29):
was this trail of kids, high school and college kids,
this trail of kids just behind him, like like following
along like baby ducks, you know. And and I remember
telling Randy about that when I got home that year that,
you know, I said, you know, those kids, he's like
a rock star with those kids. They they they follow
him around everywhere. And so yeah, it's I think his
(01:15:54):
his impact on college age kids and even high school kids.
I don't don't think we're gonna see the entire impact
for a while, but it's gonna be it's gonna be
pretty pretty immense and pretty major.
Speaker 16 (01:16:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:16:09):
Yeah, I still I still was just so much rather
have him here because he was so good at it. Yeah,
I mean, uh, I what on the night had happened?
I ended up being a guest on a couple of
different shows, but I spent the longest amount of time
over on Firefox News Online. I joined George Censer and
(01:16:34):
we got to a point in the conversation where I
was talking about how I don't think it's a coincidence
that Charlie Kirk first came onto the scene and became
a well introduced himself to the scene. We didn't know
quite yet what the known quantity was gonna be, but
we first recognized him the same year that we lost
(01:16:55):
Andrew Breitbart. And that's why I thought it was kind
of ironic that you mentioned I hadn't thought of that.
Speaker 6 (01:17:00):
You're right, yeah, yeah, but yeah, so there may be
someone who maybe we don't know quite yet who it is,
but there's going to be a standout of someone who
picks up where Charlie left off, just like he did
with Andrew breitbarton Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:17:19):
I certainly hope so. But as far as an impact
on the conservative movement, he goes beyond what Andrew did.
He did element to Rush Limbaugh's status, but he did
it with possibly even a more important demographic because he
was bringing young people back. I mean, Rush was really
(01:17:42):
good at telling the stories and being Rush. There's just
no other way to describe it. But at the same time,
there were so many parallels about the career between Russia
and where Charlie was when this happened.
Speaker 9 (01:18:00):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:18:00):
The yeah, Uh, the one difference is that Brush kicked
around a while trying to figure out exactly what he's
going to do.
Speaker 6 (01:18:08):
Charlie Newton right off, he knew.
Speaker 3 (01:18:10):
Yeah, I mean he showed up.
Speaker 6 (01:18:12):
As I've known a few people like that in my
life who knew from the time they were you know,
high school age kids, knew exactly what they wanted to do,
and then they went and did it. And I was
always I was always envious of those people that, you know,
that knew from from early on what they wanted to do.
Speaker 3 (01:18:29):
Yeah, and so then we turned back around and we
start looking at some of these crazy things. Uh. Josh
Bernstein was on with me earlier. He was the first
guest tonight, and he kind of mentioned some of this
healthcare stuff. It almost makes you scared to go to
the doctor if they could possibly find out that you
(01:18:51):
were a conservative.
Speaker 6 (01:18:53):
Yeah, that's that's exactly what what Brandy said. I think
one day this week, and you know, I said, I've
said to several people that I'm just I'm almost ashamed
at this point to say that I was part of
that profession. That it's just, you know, are people going
to think that I'm as whacked out as these people
are that are online, you know, celebrating Charlie's death. I mean,
(01:19:16):
it's just good. I can't wrap my head around it.
The very people who are charged with saving lives are
celebrating the end of one just because they didn't agree
with them, and it's just it's unbelievable.
Speaker 3 (01:19:28):
Yeah, I'm still trying to get my head around some
of the statements from people like Jasmine Crockett, for example, Oh,
I want to pretend like there's not ten years of
video and writings, we know what he said, all this
revisionist history that these conservatives putting out here. It's like, well,
(01:19:49):
you're right, there is ten plus years of video and writing,
and if you'll take the time to read past or
watch past the part she've been told, you'll magically discover
that he was actually making a very different point.
Speaker 6 (01:20:07):
But they don't want to. They don't want to do
that because then that blows what blows their narrative, blows
what they already think. And you know, I described her
in something I wrote this week as as someone who
know who no one would expect to connect any series
of dots.
Speaker 3 (01:20:21):
So yeah, that's a very good point. Actually, I wish
I had said something like that when I was trying
to I was bogging on the Rumble channel last night
about how it is that she's the only one that
I've heard so far that she was the first one
(01:20:41):
at that point in time, that of course has changed
following her lead, I guess. But she's the only person
I can think of that could find a way to
turn this guy who was romantically defending his lover from
other horrific white guy. You know, how dare he be
(01:21:04):
Christian and stuff? How dare he talk to you like
you're a human being and want to have a conversation
because you know one of the two of you is
wrong and you might accidentally find out it's not him.
Oh that's terrible, horrible, And yet somehow that's all racist
activity against black folks. Ras And I still no wonder.
(01:21:29):
You just explained why I've been trying to figure out
how she got there, other than just falling back on
bad habits. But you're right, if I'm expecting to connect dots,
I don't need to be looking at Jasmine Crockett and
her lodging.
Speaker 6 (01:21:42):
No, And you know, she actually grew up here in
Saint Louis. She went to a very hoity toity private
school and her parents were very well to do. So
I feel like on behalf on behalf of the rest
of the nation. I feel like I have to apologize
for her beings that she's from here. So I'll just
give a big collective I'm sorry to the entire that
(01:22:04):
we've inflicted her on the entire nation. But yeah, she
is not uh you know, she's not Jazzy in the hood.
Speaker 18 (01:22:13):
She she was.
Speaker 6 (01:22:15):
She was very privileged. Dare I say use the word privilege.
She was very privileged and very kind of came from
a quite a well to do family. So she is
a total phony. She's not not who she claims to be.
Speaker 3 (01:22:29):
Yes, if I was to follow Sarah Gonzalez's example, I
would refer to her as a phony hood rat. Yes, yes,
but I guess I should leave that to Sarah. I
probably would get in more trouble than she does. But yeah,
(01:22:50):
I played some audio of her the other day and
I got a video clips too over in the Rumble
Channel a few episodes back where I actually showed her
when she first was running for her seat. Oh yeah,
where she is? I mean, clear cut, extremely articulate, someone
(01:23:10):
that you would take seriously, someone that you know is
gonna be capable of holding down that office. And then,
of course that was the same weekend where she was
at that private event where she went on about white
people drama thing, and she was sounding like she was
somewhere between the Houston, the South side of Houston, and
(01:23:34):
somewhere in Jamaica, to the point you could even make
out some of what she was saying. It's like, all right, now,
which one of these is the real Jasmine Crockett.
Speaker 6 (01:23:43):
I think, well, you know, it is kind of a
Democrat thing. They do like to change their their way
of speaking depending on who they're speaking to, depending on
their crowd. So I guess he's guess she's just trying
to fit in.
Speaker 3 (01:23:59):
Well, isn't Isn't that insulting to the people?
Speaker 11 (01:24:03):
It is?
Speaker 6 (01:24:05):
And you know, to me, I mean, what do I know?
But but it seems like to me that she thinks
that she's under the impression. Sure surely she can't actually
believe this, but like she's under the impression that that's
how all black people speak, you know, and it's to me,
it's insulting, So I can I can't imagine how it
must be to someone else, you know, But yeah, I
(01:24:28):
think that's what it is. I think she just has
this in her mind that that that if she that
if she talks and acts this way, that it's gonna
get her votes. And I guess it's worked for her
so far. But I don't know. They just they did
a whole lot of redrawing there in Texas not too
long ago, so she could have to, uh, she could
have to learn how to code, as Joe Biden said,
(01:24:50):
So I don't know. We'll have to find out.
Speaker 3 (01:24:54):
I would definitely be down for that, but I'm afraid
she'll probably find a way to wiggle around. She is
the voice of the Democratic Party. Now poor Aoc and
ilhan Omar have fallen out. They don't get to be
the fresh faces anymore. They're desperate for attention. We'll talk
about that a little bit on the other side of
the break that we're about to take. So Becky, if
(01:25:17):
you will stay right where you are, and of course
all you great listeners out there, stay where you're at,
and right after I remind you that at the moment,
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Speaker 1 (01:27:15):
Hi.
Speaker 10 (01:27:15):
I'm Docky Noble.
Speaker 6 (01:27:16):
You can find me at Gumshoe Politics dot substaff dot
com and at RedState dot com. You're listening to Tim tapp.
Speaker 10 (01:27:23):
And Tap in the Truth.
Speaker 4 (01:27:59):
The Murderer.
Speaker 12 (01:28:00):
Turnal Point founder Charlie Kirk is irrefutable proof that we
are either witnessing or directly involved in both a spiritual
and physical civil war.
Speaker 4 (01:28:09):
Hello, I'm Ron Edwards.
Speaker 12 (01:28:12):
On today's pace from yours notebook, brought to you by
Root Brand's premium products. For years, I have understood that
no less than thirty five percent of Americans literally agree
with everything evil and are hoping and working for our destruction.
Charlie Kirk also understood the reality of the war of
evil being waged against our republic. Charlie Kirk knew that
if America had any chance of being rescued, from the
(01:28:34):
clutches of demonic leftist doom. It would be through reaching
the young with truth that would liberate them from the
grip of ignorance, leftist bigotry, leftist ideology, and saved them
from being foot soldiers of doom and gloom. Charlie Cook
never wavered in his zealous effort to witness to young
Americans about our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, which resulted
(01:28:55):
in hundreds of thousands of students giving their hearts and
lives to Christ.
Speaker 4 (01:29:00):
The leftists shall soon learn the murder of.
Speaker 12 (01:29:02):
Charlie Kirk they now celebrate will inspire perhaps the greatest
youth movement against their satanic efforts, and America will be
one nation under God.
Speaker 4 (01:29:13):
I'm runs go to b run Edwards dot com.
Speaker 6 (01:29:22):
Ron Edwards the new voice of America.
Speaker 18 (01:29:26):
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Speaker 4 (01:31:01):
Hey Jared, what's up?
Speaker 10 (01:31:02):
Well?
Speaker 20 (01:31:03):
My company gave me this pride tea shirt. They said
I got to wear it to celebrate the LGBTQ. That's
not really my thing, and well, I sure as hell
don't want.
Speaker 4 (01:31:12):
To promote it.
Speaker 16 (01:31:13):
Yeah, I can understand that.
Speaker 4 (01:31:15):
What are you going to do? I don't know.
Speaker 20 (01:31:17):
I'm just tired of all this woke bullshit. I mean,
I've worked twenty years for this company. Well, they've been
great until they started all this crap. I just want
a job where I'm not forced to support all this nonsense.
Speaker 4 (01:31:30):
Yep, I hear you.
Speaker 5 (01:31:31):
I'm Andrew crabshots, CEO of Red Balloon dot Work, America's
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The way God.
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And I will be ruled by the Dan you.
Speaker 17 (01:32:28):
When you're listening to Tap into the Troy, this is
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Speaker 3 (01:32:40):
This is easy sharmon good.
Speaker 2 (01:32:43):
Night, sha the night to gather.
Speaker 3 (01:32:56):
All right, ladies and gentlemen, thank you so much for
sharing part of your Friday with us. I appreciate it
more than words can say, but I only have words
to offer at the moment, so trust me, I really
appreciate it. And I meanwhile, I do want to remind
you that if you want to know the secret to
(01:33:16):
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(01:36:27):
to get back to the conversation with journalist. She works
at Red State. She's got a fantastic substack called Gumshoot Politics,
where not only does she right there, but also does
a podcast called in Your Faith Man. Becky's just doing
all kinds of great stuff. In fact, she released a
(01:36:49):
really great one earlier today, and like I said, she
also dropped another piece in over at red State that
just got published just literally before we went on air.
So I'm digging that, ladies and gentlemen, please welcome back
miss Becky Noble. Becky, please so that I don't get
(01:37:12):
rested at the end and forget to give you the opportunity.
Please let everybody know where they can find your work
and if they wanted to follow you on social media,
what handles they should look for on what platforms.
Speaker 6 (01:37:25):
Well, you can find me at Facebook at Becky Noble,
and on X at Becky Noble sixty five, and of
course at RedState dot com. And I always want to
give a shout out to my amazing Red State coworkers.
They're all so gifted and so talented that they make
me want to be better every day. So that's the
(01:37:46):
sign that you have great coworkers. You can also find me,
of course at Gumshoe Politics dot substack dot com and
my what did you like to call it? My micro
podcast in your Face is also so on my subject
page as well.
Speaker 3 (01:38:03):
All right, well, you do have a lot of great
coworkers over there. I love reading Red State. I've been
reading the website for some time now. A lot of
great voices, uh and uh. As much as I enjoy it,
I'm sorry there until they start coming on the show too.
They're they're never going to have a chance to be
(01:38:24):
my favorite. They have to start coming on to at
least have a chance. And I don't think they're going
to catch up with you, Becky, but I just you
can let them know though if they if they're that much.
Speaker 6 (01:38:37):
Into the complication, I'm sure they'd be happy to.
Speaker 3 (01:38:41):
All Right, Well, I actually we probably need to make
that happen then, but any rate, sure, I do want
to talk to you specifically about the drama around ilhan
Omar and also whether or not we're heading for a
government to SmackDown. But before we do that, I do
want to talk about this surprising reveal, and it really
(01:39:05):
is kind of surprising to me and feels very much
like a lie. But in the lead up to Kamala's
new book, evidently she admitted that her first choice for
VP wasn't Tampon Tim, it was Pete Buddha Jete. So
instead of a closeted apparent homosexual, she really wanted the
(01:39:25):
out of the closet, wide open homosexual.
Speaker 6 (01:39:31):
It would appear so.
Speaker 3 (01:39:33):
And evidently Pete had kind of a reaction that you
found a little surprising.
Speaker 6 (01:39:41):
I did, I did. Yeah, it's her book is she's
kind of throwing everybody under the bus. She's throwing Joe
and Jill and and then Pete and everybody under the bus.
But yeah, so she one of my coworkers, Niko Rama
(01:40:01):
wrote wrote this about this earlier this week that she
had revealed in the book that that her first choice
was not Tampon Tim, but it was Pete Boudha Judge,
and she I'm gonna paraphrase this probably poorly, but but
she said something to the defect of that, how she
wanted to pick Pete Boota judge, but she said, uh,
(01:40:25):
we we were we were asking enough of America to
elect a woman and and a black woman, and a
black woman who's married to a Jewish man, whatever the
heck that has to do with anything. And so, uh,
just just having put put it, putting a gay man
on the ticket just felt like it was just too
(01:40:45):
much to ask. And so I thought, so you picked
a guy that that acts as though he's gay, but
but maybe it's not really gay, or like you said,
maybe he's still in the closet. And instead you picked
that guy over Pete. You know, Uh, Pete's not the
most competent kind of guy there is but uh, you know,
I don't know. I'm I I don't I don't know
(01:41:08):
enough about either one of them, thankfully to know who
who actually might be more competent than the other. It's
it's probably probably hard to say which I don't know.
I don't know if that's that's even a contest. But
so yeah, so so she basically said that she didn't
pick Pete Boudha Judge because he's gay. Sounds sounds a
(01:41:30):
little homophobic. So apparently, uh, Pete was in back home
in Indiana, uh, yesterday, I believe he was helping the
Democrats do something there in Indiana and and got wind
of what she said, and and he said, uh, something
to the effect of, well, you know, I give I
give the American people a little more credit than that.
(01:41:52):
I think that when when you, uh, when you're running
for something, basically that you should tell people, uh, you
know what with what what you're going to do for
them or what that what what you think that you
you would like to do from the for them to
make their lives better, and that they that's the things
that they really care about, and and they don't they
(01:42:12):
care about about those things more than than than uh
people in categories, and I thought, really, I thought the
Democrats were all about which which box you check, whether
you're a man or a woman, you're black or white,
you're gay, you're straight with you know, pick a box,
and the more boxes that you can check, that's the
resume enhancement, right. So yeah, I was really surprised that
(01:42:38):
he kind of you know, slapped her back a little bit.
But then and I thought, you know, maybe maybe he
really is sincere about about what he thinks about voters
and that they really don't care, you know, that he's
had this epiphany and that he's realized that that people
don't care about those things. They care about what politicians
say they're going to do and then actually that they
(01:42:59):
actually do it. And so I kind of gave him
credit for being half right. I said, no, it's not
what they think you're going to do, it's what you're
actually say you're going to do and then you actually
do it. But uh, I thought, you know, both of
their names have been out there as possible twenty twenty
eight presidential candidates, so this could may have been just
just no more than a than an early swipe at her.
(01:43:22):
But yeah, I was I was very surprised by his reaction.
You know that I thought democrats Democrats thought that that
checking boxes uh was everything. But maybe maybe they're Dare
we say that maybe Pete is one of the very
few people who are possibly beginning to see the light
(01:43:45):
about about the fact that the American people want nothing
to do with DEI. So, yeah, it was a surprising,
surprising response from from Mayor Pete.
Speaker 3 (01:43:56):
Oh dear, dear, sweet sweet Becky, Oh sweep so desperately
wanting to see the best in the Mayor Pete.
Speaker 6 (01:44:10):
Not Democrats after the last week and a half, No,
not really.
Speaker 3 (01:44:15):
As with all Democrats, they they want to check the
boxes until it works against them, and then that's when
there is that that's that's when they give more credit
to the Hurrican people. Well, like I said, dear sweet Becky,
you know again, it is interesting now to your point
(01:44:38):
as far as who's more effective, tampon him or Pete.
Speaker 6 (01:44:43):
After you know, Tamala loves her ven diagrams, but I
can't even ven diagram that it's Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:44:52):
Well, at the moment, I'm going to go out on
a limb and say that Mayor Pete probably is for
one reason and one reason alone, tampon. Tim has elevated
himself to a governorship and as you know, in the
Democratic Party, you fail upwards, so the actual component that
(01:45:13):
you are the less likely you are to rise to
the ranks. Now, if Pete manages to get the denomination upcoming,
then that might change. But for the moment, I would
put money on Pete being more competent, uh, not based
(01:45:33):
on anything I actually see him do. Let's let's ask the.
Speaker 6 (01:45:35):
Most throwing darts blindfolded. I guess.
Speaker 3 (01:45:43):
Ultimately, I don't think it makes a difference if Pete
runs or if I am Spartacus with his crazy mister
p runs, and the end result is going to be
the same. They don't know how to not be destructive.
And that brings me back to to il hann Omar.
Nancy Mace obviously had brought forth a motion to to
(01:46:08):
censor ill Hand and to have her removed from committees,
and this was based on ill Han's remarks and also
a TikTok video that she shared on her own social
media that was so horrifically bad, bad mouthing Charlie Kirk
(01:46:31):
and then bad mouthing us fellow conservatives who have been
saying a lot of positive things about Charlie and what
a loss he is, and you know, we're here talking
the truth. But it was horrific. And I think it
is unbecoming a setting congress person to have anything even
(01:46:53):
remotely similar to that on any of their social media channels.
So I think Nancy Mace was right by I knew
it wasn't going to happen, though, because if you're not
going to remove il hann Omar or Rashida talib on
the blatantly anti Semitic things they've said and done over
the years, at this point, this is just a small blip.
(01:47:15):
What irritates me most about the scenario, Becky, and this
is where I would kind of like to talk about,
is two aspects. Number One, she survived the effort at
censor and removal from committees by one vote, and it
took four Republicans crossing the line for her to get
that one vote. That irritates me. But then it also
(01:47:37):
irritates me even more that right after surviving that vote,
il han Omar goes out at another public appearance it
looks like a freaking church as far as I can
tell from the video, and triples down on the very
negative things that she was saying before, basically calling maga's
supporters and anybody that's saying positive things about churl Charlie
(01:48:00):
Cook being full of crap, only she wasn't nice enough
to say crap, right, you know?
Speaker 6 (01:48:09):
Yeah, yeah, these there's so there's there's these four squish
Republicans that that couldn't muster enough of a spine between
them to actually vote for this. And and like you said,
it goes back to the fact that no one has
had the spine to at least, at the very least
(01:48:30):
censure her for all of the anti Semitic, ridiculous myths
that that her and Talib have both engaged in over
the years. So yeah, why why would it Why would
it surprise us that these four squish Republicans would not
would not vote with the rest of the Republican Party
to censure her for her disgusting remarks. And I saw
(01:48:53):
something today. I don't know, well, I could be could
be peddling untruths here, so I don't know, but uh,
Corey Mills from Florida was one of the ones that
one of the ones that that voted against this, and
that somehow there was a deal made. Uh for something
that that Democrats wanted to reveal about him. So he
(01:49:17):
uh in turn said Okay, I'm going to vote no.
Uh so whatever this was doesn't come out again. I
don't know how true this is, and I don't mean
to be peddling on truths, but it could be a
possible explanation for at least one of those votes. But
you know, I mean, I don't I don't know what
it's going to take.
Speaker 9 (01:49:37):
You know what.
Speaker 6 (01:49:37):
I I get that that both of these two are
in office because the people who live in their district
voted them in. I get that Michigan is very blue
in the case of Rashida Talib. I get that Minnesota
is very blue in the case of Ilhan Omar. But
I mean, what what, I don't know what the rule is,
(01:50:00):
the rules are? Maybe I do need to know what
do you possibly have to do for it to be
enough for your fellow congressman to say enough? You know yet, yes,
the people who live in your district voted you in.
But this is a bridge too far. This is this
whatever you did or whatever you said, that's enough and
you've got to go, so, you know, and I think
(01:50:23):
it's just it's gonna give her. It's gonna empower, it's
gonna embolden her to say, well, they didn't do it.
In this time, I can up the ante a little bit,
and I can I can do or say something even
more outrageous, and they're still not gonna do anything. So
that would be my question to them, what does she
have to do, either of them or any of them
at this point, What do they have to do that
(01:50:45):
that's bad enough for you to say, Okay, we're done.
I just I don't know. I couldn't believe it either
when I saw that that those four, those four Republicans
could couldn't muster between the four of them a spine.
But you know that's there is a history there of that.
Speaker 3 (01:51:04):
When you look at the foreign question, all four of
them are folks with a voting record where they have
well we'll just stay seem to be friendlier to the
other side of the aisle than any Republican ought to be,
especially given how Democrats unwieldingly rule power if they even
(01:51:25):
just have a one vote authority. But the thing that
kills me, though, is that does What's the first thing
she runs out and does, is she goes out and
triples down on her negative statements. She goes out and
like you said, she was emboldened and it is going
to take that next level. And when we see images
(01:51:48):
like the mayor of Dearborn, Michigan, who's trying to name
a street after a pro Hesba La guy, and then
one of the citizens comes up and says, I don't
think this is a good idea, and the mayor goes
on a rant talking about how he's not welcome in
the city and that he's going to throw a parade
when he finally moves out. That's the mindset and the
(01:52:09):
mentality that we're dealing with that also keeps people like
ill Hand and Rashida in their current positions. Personally, I
think that ill Hand in particular, more show than Rashida should,
having come here as a freaking asylum seeker, a legitimate
(01:52:30):
asylum seeker from a country that's still falling apart, would
be grateful for the opportunity not to have to be there.
But instead she's openly said that she's working for their interests,
not America's interest and her voting record reflects that, so
it's obviously true. So at some time, honestly, I think
(01:52:52):
she's already violated the oath of the office so many
times that she deserves to be booted out completely, not
just removed from committees. But anyway, I would agree on
that we're quickly running out of time, Becky and I
want to at least get a quick thought process on
whether or not the Democrats are going to go ahead
and dive headlong over the cliff. Are we headed for
(01:53:15):
a government shutdown this time with the Democrats having nobody
to blame but themselves.
Speaker 6 (01:53:22):
Well, you know, I haven't been following it very closely.
I guess like everyone else, we've all been kind of preoccupied.
You know, I just wish that we could. You know,
I just got done talking about how there there really
isn't going to be any unity with these people. So,
(01:53:42):
you know, I think, I don't know.
Speaker 11 (01:53:44):
I I.
Speaker 6 (01:53:46):
Tend to think that they're so they're so out of
their minds at this point that that they're they're gonna do,
They're gonna do the most ridiculous, outrageous thing, thinking that
it's going to get them votes next year.
Speaker 10 (01:53:59):
So yeah, I mean, I think it's.
Speaker 6 (01:54:00):
Entirely possible that they will, uh you know, that that
they'll go over the cliff and and yeah, and and
cause the government shut down. Well because it's it's like
every other time, they think that if they do it,
that they can blame Republicans for it, and and the
general public will just go oh okay. And and yeah,
maybe there's there's a portion of those people that will
(01:54:21):
but I, you know, I like to think and again,
maybe I U naive, as they say in the in
the South, bless my art, you know that maybe that
that group of people is getting smaller. But uh, I
don't know. We'll see, we'll see what they uh, but
what they're willing to do. Like I said, I think
they're just they're they're so out of their minds right
now anyway that that they think that the most outrageous
(01:54:45):
thing to do.
Speaker 11 (01:54:46):
Is the right thing to do.
Speaker 3 (01:54:47):
So, you know, it certainly seems like the dinosaurs of
the party who still held positions of leadership really aren't
pulling the levers anymore.
Speaker 9 (01:54:58):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:54:59):
Oh no, it looks like he's scared to death right now.
I'm afraid he's going to be uh primaried. We are
out of time, though, Becky, which means one or two things.
Either we have to wait till next month to revisit
the conversation, or maybe I can tempt you over to
the Rumble Channel at some point between now and then,
(01:55:19):
which you know, I'm just people try so. In the meanwhile,
thank you so much for coming on again tonight. I'd
always love talking to you. Please send my best to
Randy as well, and let him know that whenever he's
ready to come back on, I'll open up.
Speaker 9 (01:55:36):
Goad.
Speaker 3 (01:55:36):
He needs to let me know it's been a little
too long since he's been on. I think we can
make that happen. I'm scheduled about two weeks out, but
we can work him in. Meanwhile, God speed to you, Becky,
and keep up the great work. I'm loving every bit
of it.
Speaker 6 (01:55:51):
Thank you so much, Tim, Thank you all.
Speaker 3 (01:55:54):
Right, ladies and gentlemen. That was miss Becky Noble, and
that concludes tonight's broadcast of Tapping Too the Truth. Thank
you so much for being here. If you made it
to the end, you have earned yourself a gold star.
I can't actually give it to you, though, maybe Doug can.
I don't know. He seems to have some thumbs up
stickers or something. In the meanwhile, though, don't take my
(01:56:15):
word for anything. You've heard me say tonight, but be
prepared to check it out for yourself. Be prepared to
do your own homework, do your own research, and most importantly,
use your brain if you really want to tap into
the truth. Have a great weekend, everybody with the V.
Speaker 7 (01:56:35):
That's all, folks, Your being gone was a world of
(01:57:03):
fun when you were just a little squirt.
Speaker 2 (01:57:07):
You learn the rules of defensive tool so that no
one would get hurt.
Speaker 7 (01:57:17):
You learn to breathe, and you learn to squeeze till
your animal is always true.
Speaker 2 (01:57:23):
You may the rite of passage man with your first
wheel twenty two.
Speaker 4 (01:57:32):
Now the new world order?
Speaker 2 (01:57:34):
True, well, there may you learn the mass. They don't
feel safe if you are wrong you say, country show
he's using both hands.
Speaker 20 (01:57:51):
Father's knew the second amend that was the final one.
Speaker 8 (01:57:55):
To keep the shots a hold on other right, sim
Tax will never because she.
Speaker 6 (01:58:06):
She's starling hit hernology in pol Pot told us.
Speaker 2 (01:58:10):
Things that you never forgot. Teach a lesson to your
goddess saus to fear the government, the fears of guns.
Speaker 11 (01:58:22):
Now in your.
Speaker 10 (01:58:23):
World, daughter, True, well, they're maybe there demands.
Speaker 7 (01:58:28):
And don't feel safe, and you are wrong to say
gun control is using both.
Speaker 12 (01:58:34):
Hands like a third.
Speaker 2 (01:58:42):
The Freedom Wake to the time. It's yours free. Give
me more than a thousand nuts to take.
Speaker 3 (01:58:50):
My battle name.
Speaker 10 (01:59:09):
Now.
Speaker 9 (01:59:09):
The New World are not through well, they're making lands.
Speaker 3 (01:59:15):
They can pass one hundred bolls, but we still won't
give it down.
Speaker 2 (01:59:22):
Area of these things over deal if.
Speaker 12 (01:59:24):
They try to take this lad.
Speaker 2 (01:59:28):
They have the kids Red Sam Don't control is using
both hans