The Michael Knowles Show - May 20, 2020


Ep. 549 - Too Few Problems


Episode Stats

Length

51 minutes

Words per Minute

176.31458

Word Count

9,041

Sentence Count

737

Misogynist Sentences

14

Hate Speech Sentences

24


Summary

The mainstream media is hard at work inventing fake problems to frighten us. First, the high school science experiment that locked down the world. Then, Joe Biden's new nickname for President Trump. And an explosive new allegation that Norma McCorvey faked her pro-abortion conversion.


Transcript

00:00:00.520 Hospitals are empty, homeless shelters are empty, coronavirus cases aren't spiking.
00:00:05.860 Great news, right?
00:00:07.440 Not according to the mainstream media, which is hard at work inventing fake problems to frighten us.
00:00:13.780 Then, the high school science experiment that locked down the world,
00:00:17.680 Joe Biden's new nickname for President Trump, spoiler alert, it's super lame,
00:00:22.640 and an explosive new allegation that Norma McCorvey,
00:00:26.100 the pro-abortion plaintiff in Roe v. Wade, faked her pro-life Christian conversion.
00:00:32.840 All that and more. I'm Michael Knowles, and this is The Michael Knowles Show.
00:00:43.340 Joe Biden, he just can't take his foot out of his mouth. He never seems able to do that.
00:00:49.940 We'll get to all of that in a moment, because we haven't spent nearly enough time on the 2020 race,
00:00:53.820 which most people forgot is even happening. But, I have to tell you, before we get to Joe,
00:00:59.520 about my favorite fake problem. Because you know there are a lot of real problems, obviously.
00:01:06.780 There's this epidemic that's going around the world, there's this huge lockdown, economic devastation,
00:01:12.340 30-40 million people thrown out of work. So, all these real problems caused by hysteria and alarmism.
00:01:19.680 But, the left keeps moving the goalposts. So, initially, the problem was there's not,
00:01:27.600 we don't know anything about the virus. Now, we do know things about the virus.
00:01:30.580 Then, the problem was we're not locking down fast enough. Well, we locked down the entire country.
00:01:34.740 Then, it was we, and people are buying masks, which was bad. Then, it was people are not buying masks,
00:01:40.100 which is bad. Then, it was we don't have enough testing. Now, we've got an even bigger problem.
00:01:46.640 No one wants to take the test. We didn't have enough testing. The lack of testing was going
00:01:52.540 to kill us. That's all we heard. The drumbeat from the mainstream media, from the left. Even
00:01:56.880 some people on the right told us this for weeks and weeks and weeks. Now, look, we got a ton of
00:02:01.420 tests. We have, we have so many tests that, according to the Washington Post, we have too
00:02:05.440 many tests. That's our new problem. Headline, as coronavirus testing expands, a new problem
00:02:11.260 arises, not enough people to test. It took, it took three reporters, by the way, to write this
00:02:16.540 piece. Four months into the U.S. coronavirus outbreak, tests for the virus finally are becoming
00:02:22.120 widely available. Finally, Trump. Jeez, like what, you couldn't get those tests out sooner? Gosh,
00:02:28.580 we needed those tests, which the Washington Post describes as a crucial step toward lifting stay-at-home
00:02:34.900 orders and safely returning to normal life. But while many states no longer report crippling
00:02:40.820 supply shortages, a new problem has emerged. Too few people lining up to get tested.
00:02:49.620 So the, the last sentence of the article, or the last sentence of the paragraph, rather,
00:02:55.480 contradicts the first sentences of the paragraph and the whole premise. The whole, the point,
00:03:00.500 the whole point is we need wide testing in order to lift the lockdowns, which by the way,
00:03:03.940 we don't, we can just lift the lockdowns. You can just do it. Doesn't matter. You don't need to
00:03:07.300 get permission from Dr. Fauci. You are a free people. You are an elected representative. You
00:03:12.500 can lift the lockdown that you imposed. But they tell us we need the tests. This is so important.
00:03:18.500 People are clamoring, waiting to get tested. And because we don't have the tests, we can't treat
00:03:22.800 the virus. Oh, wait a minute. Nope. Got that one wrong too. Because people aren't waiting to get
00:03:29.000 tested. There, there is an imaginary onrush of people who need these tests, but not,
00:03:38.020 not a lot of imaginary people are able to actually take the real test. A Washington Post survey of
00:03:43.460 governor's offices and state health departments found at least a dozen states where testing capacity
00:03:48.400 outstrips the supply of patients. Oh my gosh. What, what magnificently crafted fake news that is.
00:03:56.500 Look, Washington Post survey. So it's a survey from the paper that's reporting on this
00:04:00.260 of governor's offices and state health departments, right? Forget the federal government here because
00:04:06.460 they hate Trump so much. So anything, anything good, like having more tests that can only be on
00:04:11.900 the states. You can only give the state governors and, and health departments credit for that.
00:04:16.560 At least a dozen states where testing capacity outstrips the supply of patients. Look at those
00:04:25.440 words, outstrips and supply. Outstrips is the kind of word that you hear when it's a bad thing.
00:04:32.220 Like it, there's a, there's just too much and not enough for that thing we're demanding.
00:04:37.400 But the thing that we're demanding is the supply of patients. You don't want a lot of patients.
00:04:42.480 When you're in an epidemic, you want a low number of patients, not a high, but they're Washington
00:04:47.900 Post is making it seem like you, you, oh, if only we had more patients, if only we had more cases.
00:04:53.020 And something tells me that is how they really think. One, because it would have justified their
00:04:58.240 absurd, hysterical order of magnitude. And then some too high prediction models for the early
00:05:06.520 doomsday prophecies of coronavirus. And two, because it would prevent Donald Trump and others
00:05:13.040 from reopening the country and getting the economy going again and keeping poor old Joe out of the
00:05:17.720 white house. The numbers while rising are well short of capacity and far short of targets set by
00:05:25.860 independent experts. Those independent experts in the lab coats, they want more coronavirus patients
00:05:31.580 and they're not getting them, damn it. And they're really upset. This is the definition of a fake
00:05:39.360 problem. In LA, by the way, we're seeing the results of a policy made to address a fake problem,
00:05:46.680 specifically on how the epidemic is affecting the homeless. We'll get to that in one second. First,
00:05:51.600 I've got to thank our friends over at Rock Auto. You know, I love Rock Auto. The auto parts store,
00:05:58.360 the old brick and mortar. You ever notice that it never actually has what your car needs? And so you
00:06:04.260 go there, you say, I need the, I don't know, who's he, who's he, what's this? The doohickey doodad.
00:06:10.760 I don't know. I don't know what car parts are called. And then they say, oh no, we don't have
00:06:13.660 that for your model. So then they go online, probably to rockauto.com. Then they order it and
00:06:17.420 then they charge you double. Rockauto.com, skip that step. It's a family business serving auto parts
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00:06:32.660 tail lamps, motor oil, and even new carpet. And the website is so easy to navigate. Even I can do
00:06:38.980 it, which is very impressive stuff. Right now, cut out that middleman, cut out the hassle, especially
00:06:45.040 in a time like this where online makes it a whole lot easier. Go to the guys that I trust, rockauto.com.
00:06:49.860 Go there right now, see all the parts available for your car or truck, and then write Knowles,
00:06:54.560 K-N-O-W-L-E-S, in their how did you hear about us box, so that they will know that we sent you.
00:07:03.220 Over in LA, they have clamored to address a fake problem. Or at the very least, we could say they've
00:07:12.400 created a very inefficient solution to a real problem that they haven't dealt with for decades.
00:07:17.060 And that is the problem of homelessness. There are homeless people all over Los Angeles. When
00:07:23.520 the mayor of Los Angeles, Eric Orsetti, got elected, he said he's going to deal with the
00:07:29.060 homeless problem. He passes, I think it was a $1.8 billion bond or something like that. Don't
00:07:33.800 quote me exactly, but a lot of money to try to deal with the homeless problem. And the problem got
00:07:40.580 worse, not just a little bit worse. In that guy's first year in office, homelessness increased 16%.
00:07:45.600 16%. 16% in one year. It's all over the place. I mean, if you, if you go to downtown LA,
00:07:53.120 like the areas around Skid Row, the areas where like Hunter Biden hangs around, it looks like you're
00:07:58.160 in a third world country. Or, or even worse. I mean, it's even more grotesque in a third world country
00:08:04.300 because you know that you're in this land of prosperity and yet they're tolerating this whole,
00:08:10.180 this actual tent city in downtown LA. You see that kind of thing in Hollywood as well. You see
00:08:16.200 that kind of thing in Brentwood and, and Beverly Hills. Well, not as much Beverly Hills, but you
00:08:21.300 see it in really nice neighborhoods. I mean, huge tent cities, uh, you know, certain places in LA
00:08:27.720 where they have really a lot of local control like Beverly Hills, they have dealt with it. So it shows
00:08:33.300 you the problem can be dealt with, but not in LA proper. So you got all these homeless people
00:08:39.420 and then you've got an epidemic. Yikes. That doesn't sound good. Especially if it's highly
00:08:43.760 contagious, especially if it's as deadly as all the experts told us it was in the beginning,
00:08:48.160 which now appears not to be true. What were they going to do with the homeless people? LA came up
00:08:53.260 with a plan. The plan was to secure hotel rooms for the homeless people. Of course. So you get them,
00:09:03.160 this is at a time when people can't really afford to get their own hotel rooms. But instead, if you
00:09:07.800 don't work and you hang out on the street and you do drugs and you do whatever, then the city
00:09:13.940 government is going to get you a hotel room. So they, they didn't just get a few dozen hotel rooms,
00:09:19.360 few hundred hotel rooms. They got 15,619 hotel rooms across the state. That's as of Monday,
00:09:28.060 it's the project room key initiative from the governor's office. So not just, not just Los
00:09:34.360 Angeles, but also the state government. Of those rooms, do you know how many are empty?
00:09:40.720 Take a wild guess. About 50%. Of the 15,619 hotel rooms, 7,700 remain empty. Government's paying for
00:09:54.520 those. Well, the government's not paying for anything. You're paying for those hotel rooms
00:09:57.880 if you live in Los Angeles or through the state initiative, California at all. But it remains
00:10:04.620 totally empty because the doomsday prediction models didn't come true. Homeless people willing
00:10:09.020 to live on the street. Heaven forfend that the authorities go and say, Hey, go to a treatment
00:10:14.740 center. Hey, go to an asylum. Hey, go to prison. If you're committing crimes, they would never do that.
00:10:21.160 They are willing to put them up at the Ritz and, uh, you know, or maybe, maybe not quite as nice as
00:10:25.780 the Ritz, but you get the idea. And the homeless people don't want to go an ineffective solution to a
00:10:32.480 problem that was way over predicted. And then when they're trying to make up for it, when they're trying
00:10:37.880 to explain themselves and say, well, yeah, okay. 2.2 million Americans didn't die. Like the Imperial
00:10:44.640 College study said, like the prediction models on which we based our entire policy that threw 30,
00:10:52.900 40 million people out of work. Yeah, sure. It didn't, it didn't happen. And yeah, the lockdowns
00:10:57.220 didn't really do much at all. And yeah, things are going fine as people reopen. They can't admit that.
00:11:03.200 Even though the facts make it pretty clear, they can't admit that. So look at, this is like
00:11:08.940 fake news par excellence from the Hill, right? The Hill website, here's the headline, Texas,
00:11:16.380 North Carolina, Arizona, rising cases as they reopen. Now we know that some states are reopening
00:11:23.920 like Texas, North Carolina, Georgia. It's kind of funny that they don't mention Georgia in here.
00:11:27.740 We know that they do have rising cases as they reopen. So you got one, two, three, four,
00:11:35.860 five paragraphs insinuating that there are all these rising cases and it's because we're reopening and
00:11:41.980 really we should probably lock down. They're talking about the New York times. Only when you
00:11:45.640 get down to the sixth paragraph, do you get the real news story? So here, here we go. Sixth paragraph.
00:11:51.200 One reason for the increasing number of cases in all three states is that they are all seeing a
00:11:56.140 significant rise in testing, which means more people carrying COVID-19 are being identified.
00:12:02.940 That seems like an important detail. He's saying so. The reason that we're, we're not actually seeing
00:12:08.420 more cases, we're seeing more positive results because there's more testing. Don't you think you
00:12:15.680 should control for that? Like this, this headline is actually not true. We have no evidence that there
00:12:20.460 are, or that the cases are rising. We just know that the diagnoses are rising because the testing
00:12:27.160 is rising. Don't you think all those lab code experts might be able to control for that sort
00:12:30.820 of thing? I don't know. Next paragraph. With more testing, we expect to see more cases. North Carolina
00:12:36.580 Health and Human Services Secretary Mandy Cohen said Monday at a news conference. Oh, you expected to
00:12:41.060 see that because the mainstream news media didn't expect to see that apparently, or maybe they did and
00:12:46.400 they just wanted to fool us. Not all states that are reopening are seeing increased numbers of
00:12:51.760 coronavirus cases. And there are significant variations across the country as states move
00:12:56.620 forward with various phases of reopening. Now you and I knew that. You and I knew that not all the
00:13:02.180 states that are reopening are seeing a spike in cases. Do you know why? Because the first state that
00:13:07.000 they tried to make a big deal of this in was Georgia. Do you remember Georgia was the first bold state
00:13:11.880 they're going to reopen. We were told there was going to be death and carnage in the street.
00:13:16.400 It was going to be mayhem. Those idiots, those rubes. Oh, just you wait until, and then it never
00:13:23.040 happened. Then it never happened. And then it passed out of the news. I didn't even have to check
00:13:30.780 in to see how the death toll and everything was going in Georgia. I didn't have to Google it. Do you
00:13:37.020 know why? Because I knew that if things were spiking over there in Georgia, then that would be the only
00:13:43.780 news story anyone's talking about. That would be 24 seven CNN. That would be all over the Washington
00:13:47.920 Post and the New York times. The, this is so sad that you can now predict the media in this way.
00:13:53.640 The fact that that story was not in the newspaper, was not on TV, told me everything I need. It told me
00:14:01.100 more truth than had the reporters actually been reporting on it. Then we finally got, they finally
00:14:08.100 admitted here on the Hill, Georgia, one of the earliest states to start reopening has not seen a spike in
00:14:12.760 cases. And in fact, had a slight decrease. Florida similarly has been mostly flat. Florida, a state
00:14:22.180 that did reopen, barely shut down and is full of old people. It's the state that old people go to.
00:14:29.480 Yeah, no spike, mostly flat. So that head, about that headline, all three states, all three states that
00:14:38.140 they're even talking about, are also not seeing problems with hospital capacity, a key metric.
00:14:45.780 You know, the reporting here is actually pretty good. You got to hand it to the Hill for reporting.
00:14:50.900 But those editors who write those headlines seem to be contradicting the reporting. That happens
00:14:56.240 throughout the media. And it's because the reality has contradicted their insane prophecies.
00:15:01.580 LA now, as a response to this, is saying that they're going to reopen. LA has, I mentioned,
00:15:08.280 keep mentioning LA because they've been the worst city on this issue. They've actually,
00:15:12.220 in the entire country, they have been the worst city on managing this, getting the numbers wrong
00:15:16.920 and getting the response wrong. So they said they were going to keep us locked down as everyone else
00:15:20.720 is reopening. They're going to keep us locked down until July. Now they're saying, well, maybe it'll be
00:15:24.900 early July. They're starting to reopen a little bit sooner. I have a message for Los Angeles and
00:15:31.960 for all of you. We'll get to that in a second. We'll get to the bunk, bunk science before, behind
00:15:36.240 the lockdowns rather. And then we'll get to Joe Biden, who says that we need a president who believes
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00:17:11.200 So LA announces they're going to open a little bit sooner. Supervisor Catherine Barger for LA
00:17:19.220 County says, today the Economic Resiliency Task Force met for the second meeting and I set a goal
00:17:25.000 to reopen LA County by July 4th. July 4th. July 4th. Read more about our collaboration with sector
00:17:32.240 leaders to revitalize businesses and get employees back to work. Blah, blah, blah. I don't care. I don't
00:17:37.320 care what these people say. I don't care what Catherine Barger says. I don't care what Eric
00:17:40.780 Garcetti says. I don't care what Gavin Newsom says. They're wrong. They've been wrong the whole time.
00:17:45.580 They're, they continue to be wrong today. I'm not going to remain locked down until July or whatever.
00:17:51.900 I don't care. You know, we've been saying this for a while now and I think this is the point.
00:17:57.440 These people can only lead us where we want to go. They, they are not dictators unless we allow them
00:18:04.360 to be dictators. They're not autocrats unless we allow them to be autocrats. I look around Los
00:18:10.440 Angeles, the cars are moving. There's more traffic on the road. Businesses are reopening, whether the
00:18:16.320 city tells them they're allowed to or not. As a response to what people are doing themselves,
00:18:22.940 the politicians now are backing down because they know they got nothing. They got absolutely nothing.
00:18:28.740 They got no science on their side for one. And we'll get to that question in a second. But two,
00:18:35.940 you know, they got to be reelected and they know that they're pretty unpopular right now.
00:18:39.720 So I say we keep pushing that on. I'm not going to wear a mask when I walk, when I go on a hike,
00:18:46.420 when I'm out in the sunshine in the, in the open air, I'm not going to stop working. Just not going
00:18:52.800 to do it. I'm, I'm going to ignore them. I'm going to ignore Catherine Barger. I'm going to ignore
00:18:57.860 Eric Garcetti. Obviously some of these regulations you can't get over, you know,
00:19:03.240 you can't force a restaurant to reopen, but I strongly encourage restaurants just reopen,
00:19:08.220 flout these stupid orders based on nothing that have now transparently become arbitrary power grabs
00:19:16.460 by feckless politicians who are simply trying to maintain the illusion that they've got power over
00:19:22.340 you. Just ignore it. It's if they had credibility, we would listen to them. They don't. So
00:19:27.000 that's my, that's my opinion on this issue. How could I be clearer about it? I'm not sure.
00:19:32.580 It's already effectively over. That's the thing. At least here. I don't know. I guess it varies
00:19:39.140 city by city, state by state. According to Apple mobility trends, we are quickly approaching
00:19:45.940 pre COVID levels in terms of driving and walking. So I'm not saying like, I know it sounds like I'm
00:19:53.420 rallying the troops and I'm saying, we have to go out there and fight the powers. And I'm not even
00:19:58.560 saying that. I'm simply saying the politicians don't have credibility. And so people are ignoring
00:20:04.860 them and they ought to continue to ignore them. You can see it from the mobility trends. When you
00:20:09.900 look at, you know, the trends that Apple is measuring on people's cell phones for where they're
00:20:14.300 walking, how much they're moving around, that number plummeted at the beginning of the lockdown.
00:20:18.660 Now it's just creeping back up again. Same with driving. Uh, that's, that's not even
00:20:23.640 prescriptive. That's descriptive. And that's a good thing. Effectively, we are getting out of this.
00:20:30.820 How did we lock down in the first place? This, this is amazing. And no one is talking about it
00:20:36.480 because it's so embarrassing. The American Institute for Economic Research, I just published this piece.
00:20:44.300 Which genius scientist with a big gray beard and a lab coat who has degrees from Harvard and MIT and
00:20:55.600 which one do you think gave us the idea for a lockdown? Oh, uh, it wasn't any of them. It was
00:21:01.860 a 14 year old high school girl. Yes. The, the idea for the lockdown as a response to the epidemic
00:21:10.260 came to us, not from the exalted Dr. Fauci, not from the, our amazing soothsayer scientific priestly
00:21:19.740 class, not even from the elected politicians. It's a 14 year old high school girl, 14 year old high
00:21:27.440 school girl who was the daughter of a scientist at Sandia National Laboratories. Uh, she devised a
00:21:35.700 computer simulation that showed how people, family members, coworkers, students, and schools,
00:21:41.280 people in social situations interact. So she builds the computer model. She discovered
00:21:45.840 that school kids come in contact with about 140 people a day, which is more than any other group.
00:21:51.980 Based on that finding, her program showed that in a hypothetical town of 10,000 people,
00:21:56.760 5,000 would become infected during a pandemic if no measures were taken, but only 500 would be
00:22:01.420 infected if the schools were closed. According to this high school girls computer model, the girl's
00:22:07.420 name, which I won't say, cause it's not her fault that we created an international policy based on a
00:22:12.280 14 year old girls science model. So I'm not, I'm not going to say her name, but her name does appear
00:22:18.140 on the foundational paper, arguing for lockdowns and forced human separation. That paper is the targeted
00:22:25.060 social distancing designs for pandemic influenza from 2006. You know what this story reminds me of?
00:22:31.820 This reminds me exactly of how we got the bans on plastic straws. That's another hysteria that has
00:22:40.600 caught on around the country, if not around the world. You remember back in the olden days of like
00:22:45.240 six months ago, we used to have plastic straws that we could use when we would drink out of cups.
00:22:49.420 And then one day they banned the straws for some reason. We had to use those stupid paper straws that
00:22:55.420 just turn into pulp and you have to eat them. How did that happen? Was it because some scientist in a
00:23:00.300 big lab coat with a big gray beard, who's really super smart and educated told us that we had to
00:23:05.840 do it? No. Was it from some elected politician's imagination? No. It was a nine-year-old boy,
00:23:14.140 nine-year-old boy, fourth grade boy who did a school project, tried to estimate how many plastic
00:23:22.480 straws people use every day, called a few companies, tried to extrapolate from there,
00:23:26.460 and then started a nonprofit activist movement to try to get people to not use straws. And then when
00:23:35.800 that didn't work, to try to get the straws banned. Not based on science, you know, science of the
00:23:40.880 capital S and a trademark over the E. Not based on the guys in the lab coats, not even based on the
00:23:47.580 ethical and political discussions among our elected representatives and among ourselves. No.
00:23:52.620 Fourth grade boy. That's the kind of science that we see all around here. And that's the kind of
00:23:57.580 science that the left believes in, including Joe Biden, who says we need a president who believes
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00:25:26.000 A lot of science that doesn't seem particularly scientific, and that's the science that the left
00:25:35.220 wants us to believe in. Joe Biden tweets out, we need a president who believes in science.
00:25:43.140 Now, you know, we actually have a clause in our constitution that prevents there being a religious
00:25:50.440 test for people to hold office. And the way that Joe Biden is talking about science, the way that the
00:25:57.760 left is implementing science is religious. It's fundamentally religious. It's not based even on
00:26:03.900 the premises of this very narrow understanding of natural science of the last few hundred years.
00:26:09.640 It isn't based on that. The way that they talk about it, the way that the LA County supervisor and
00:26:13.900 everybody else, they say, we're going to reopen. Oh, magic. Oh, magic crystal ball. We're going to
00:26:19.760 reopen on July 4th. So long as science and data tell us that it is okay. Yes, the almighty science
00:26:27.800 and data are letting me know that exactly on July 4th, we are allowed to leave our homes again and
00:26:35.220 have an economy and have a politics where we debate issues. Thank you. Praise be to you. Peace upon you.
00:26:41.600 Science and data. The science and data that bases international policy on a fourth grade boy's
00:26:46.620 science project. A few phone calls that he made. Sort of science and data that begins with a 14-year-old
00:26:53.440 girls experiment. 14-year-old girls model. And the models turn out not to be so great. That's the
00:27:01.760 science that we're talking about. I think we need to, we need to ban the word science.
00:27:08.940 We can't use that word science anymore because it doesn't mean, it's not a useful word because the
00:27:14.760 way the left uses it is in a religious sense. The way the right uses it is in a modern scientific
00:27:20.780 sense, you know, in that very narrow way of empirical inquiry and that sort of thing. But even that doesn't
00:27:27.080 get to it. The word science refers to the word for knowledge. The way that science is used throughout
00:27:32.680 history is, it includes philosophy. It includes natural investigations. It includes all knowledge.
00:27:38.880 When one group tries to argue and say, we have the knowledge and no one else has the knowledge,
00:27:44.880 that, that is not very helpful in our politics. Okay. Presumably we can look at knowledge and we
00:27:50.700 can have debates. And the way that the left uses science is to shut down the debate, debate, and to
00:27:56.220 say that the expert in the lab code is going to make all of our decisions for us. And he just happens
00:28:01.420 to agree with us. And so that's going to be our science to say nothing of the obvious problems
00:28:08.000 with a group claiming to believe in science and then denying the humanity of little babies and
00:28:13.760 pretending that boys are really girls and girls are really boys. And there are 56 other genders as
00:28:17.960 well. It's just not a useful term and we should all stop using it. Speaking of unuseful terms, stupid
00:28:25.100 terms coming out of Joe Biden, Joe Biden has a new nickname for president Trump. It's pretty,
00:28:31.420 pretty lame. We'll get to that in a second. We will also get to the way that Trump is responding
00:28:37.140 both to Joe Biden and to Nancy Pelosi. Then a shocking deathbed confession from Norman McCorvey,
00:28:44.280 the woman who is Jane Roe in Roe versus Wade. Or is it shocking? I don't know. We'll get to that
00:28:48.540 just a moment. But first I've got to thank you and remind you, by the way, that we're going to be
00:28:53.420 doing a backstage. Remember those? Wednesday, May 27th, 7 p.m. Eastern, 4 p.m. Pacific. And it's time
00:29:00.940 to share even better news, even better. The double Tumblr is back. Remember a few weeks ago when you
00:29:07.780 signed up, you got two Tumblrs, not just one, but two? It's double as good. Then it went away,
00:29:12.800 but now it's available, except it's only available for our most exclusive membership tier, all access.
00:29:17.940 Yes. You get everything. You get two more hours of Ben Shapiro show, exclusive Q and A's,
00:29:22.900 new all access live shows, you know, which is not really even a show. It's more of a hangout.
00:29:27.340 You get double the Tumblrs. That's very important. Do I have my second? I do have my second Tumblr
00:29:30.540 here. Good. I'm going to need it when we get to the Joe Biden bit. Head on over to dailywire.com
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00:29:47.940 Joe Biden has a nickname for Donald Trump. You thought Trump had good nicknames? Wait till you
00:30:04.080 hear Joe's nickname for the president. They failed to get this money out to the folks who
00:30:09.500 desperately need it to stay afloat. Is it incompetence? Corruption? Trump was out there
00:30:16.420 tweeting again this morning. I called him president tweeting. Reopen the country. End of quote.
00:30:22.880 How are we supposed to do that if you're sitting on the money small businesses need in order to stay
00:30:28.960 alive? Stop tweeting about it. Get the money out to Main Street now. It's there. It's been passed.
00:30:38.600 This pandemic is hitting everyone hard. We need serious, competent leadership now more than ever.
00:30:43.960 President Tweedy. I call him President Tweedy. Yeah. It took me two or three years to think of that
00:30:51.180 one, but I think it's pretty good. I think it's, I'm going to send it into Bob Hope, see if he uses
00:30:55.620 the joke. President Tweedy. That's very lame. That's not a good nickname. You know, Donald Trump came up
00:31:03.320 with some of the best nicknames in recent political memory, right? You had low energy Jeb, little Marco.
00:31:10.020 You had the crook. Crooked Hillary was a stroke of genius. Crooked Hillary totally nailed her. Sleepy Joe,
00:31:16.480 another stroke of genius. At the time, a lot of people said, Mr. President, why aren't you going to call him
00:31:21.620 Creepy Joe? Because they were all talking about how Joe would smell people's hair and stuff. No, that wasn't as good.
00:31:26.400 The attack on Joe Biden is not that Joe Biden is some secret villainous mastermind pedophile. No,
00:31:34.380 that's not it. It's that he is a senile and doddering man who even in his prime wasn't
00:31:41.200 particularly smart, wasn't particularly with it. That's the attack. It's a much more effective attack.
00:31:46.480 You can see the Trump campaign leaning into this even more in really creative ways. Trump campaign
00:31:51.420 just released an ad. It's sort of an ad, I guess. It's produced by the Trump campaign and it's a sort of
00:31:56.240 mock, you know, true crime show that's just making fun of all those sad, senile aspects of Joe.
00:32:05.640 My name's Joe Biden. I'm a Democratic candidate for the United States Senate.
00:32:09.960 Corpott was a bad dude.
00:32:11.580 I'm not going nuts.
00:32:14.480 He'd be the oldest president in American history.
00:32:16.780 Are you willing to...
00:32:17.420 All right, Chuck. Thank you very much.
00:32:23.080 It's Chris, but anyway...
00:32:24.240 It would put 720 million back in the workforce.
00:32:30.960 We choose truth over facts.
00:32:36.640 Hello and welcome to the first episode of what we call...
00:32:40.900 Truth over facts.
00:32:42.680 Today we're examining the curious case of Sleepy Joe and, you know, the thing.
00:32:48.900 Our investigation begins at a recent campaign stop in Texas.
00:32:52.340 Join us next time when we will work with a renowned sketch artist who will reveal who
00:32:58.920 or what is a lying dog-faced pony soldier.
00:33:03.800 Oh man, what a great, what a great series. I hope there really are more of these. It plays,
00:33:10.800 it plays to so many important points. One, Trump and the Trump campaign certainly gets the country.
00:33:19.380 Okay, do you remember a few weeks ago there was the Lincoln Project as a group of disgruntled former
00:33:25.840 Republicans who hate Donald Trump and conservatism, apparently, and conservative policies,
00:33:31.440 and so they ran this big ad campaign called Mourning in America, but it was M-O-U-R-N-I-N-G.
00:33:38.480 Donald Trump is really bad. It's Mourning in America. He's really bad. Don't vote for Trump.
00:33:47.580 Trump. You know, it just, it seemed like an ad from 90s TV, not like an ad from 2020 digital
00:33:55.460 culture. Well, this is the opposite of that, right? What the Trump campaign realizes is that
00:34:01.180 stuff's so dated. It's so played out. People want to be entertained a little bit. They don't want this
00:34:06.640 to be a scary ad. They don't want it to club them over the head. They want it to entertain them a
00:34:10.980 little bit. Ronald Reagan was very good at entertaining people. Donald Trump, very good
00:34:14.160 at entertaining people. And true crime, just as a genre of entertainment, is, is almost certainly
00:34:19.240 the most popular one in the whole country. When you look at podcasts, true crime shoots to the top
00:34:24.900 of the charts. People love those true crime shows. And so it's a mock true crime show making fun of
00:34:30.520 Joe Biden. Look, no one's afraid of Joe Biden. Certainly none of our foes around the world,
00:34:35.660 but no one in the United States, no one's afraid of Joe Biden. Okay. They can say, oh yeah, he's
00:34:39.340 creepy with women and okay, whatever. No, nobody, we've known Joe for a long time. It's fine. He's,
00:34:44.480 and now he's a sort of frail, older gentleman. So really no one's afraid. The real attack is he's a
00:34:51.400 joke. Make him into a joke and laugh at him. It's going to have a much, much more damaging effect on him
00:34:58.160 in 2020. So that's how he goes after Biden. He goes after, in a similar way, Nancy Pelosi,
00:35:03.980 even off the cuffs. You remember the other day, Nancy Pelosi referred to Donald Trump as morbidly
00:35:08.420 obese in this gratuitous comment on a television show. So Trump was asked about that and he,
00:35:14.720 he just swatted her away. Last night, Nancy, the speaker of the house,
00:35:18.300 Nancy Pelosi called you morbidly obese. I just wanted to know what you had to say in response.
00:35:22.300 Oh, I don't, I don't respond to her. I think she's a waste of time.
00:35:24.700 These people are sick. Pelosi is a sick woman. She's got a lot of problems, a lot of mental
00:35:29.700 problems. We're dealing with people that have to get their act together for the good of the country.
00:35:35.660 Okay. Thank you very much. I like this. I like this kind of response. I mean,
00:35:41.720 I wish we lived in a time. It would be much better if we lived in a time where people had
00:35:46.040 civility and grace and just sort of really witty repartee. We don't. Okay. We don't. That's not the
00:35:52.220 time that we live in. We're not going to have sort of Churchillian zingers going back and forth
00:35:57.140 necessarily, or, or some kind of really elevated speech. This is the kind of world we're living in.
00:36:03.200 And if we're living in this world, I want Donald Trump to be on my side. Uh, Nancy Pelosi called
00:36:08.060 you fat. Oh yeah. I think she's crazy. Now it seems like a tit for tap, but it's not really because
00:36:13.280 what Pelosi did was go for this kind of physical issue that Trump has that a lot of people have,
00:36:21.960 namely being a little overweight. Who do you know that isn't a little overweight? I mean,
00:36:26.320 this is America for goodness sake. Everybody's a little bit overweight. So that doesn't play as well.
00:36:32.120 You go for a physical thing that describes virtually everybody. What Trump does is then go for a
00:36:40.120 mental thing. The men, which doesn't describe everybody. No, very few people in this country
00:36:45.000 are as crazy as Nancy Pelosi, but he goes for that mental thing because that is psychological.
00:36:50.640 That is what is, that is using your faculties of reason. That is what we're really doing when we
00:36:56.140 engage in politics, right? We're dealing with issues. The leaders of this country are using their
00:37:00.300 minds and their brains, hopefully to guide ourselves. Doesn't matter what they look like necessarily.
00:37:05.500 Winston Churchill was a big fat guy too. So no one, I don't think, uh, that, that was like a
00:37:10.000 real knock against him. And so I think Trump is focusing on the more important thing here.
00:37:15.880 Now, what that means into 2020, who knows? I think that the left knows that they're,
00:37:20.520 they're really not looking good. Pelosi's not playing well. Joe Biden's certainly not playing
00:37:23.820 well. So you're going to hear a lot more shenanigans about mail-in voting. They're going
00:37:27.520 to probably try to minimize the conventions and, uh, Republicans would be crazy to let them do it.
00:37:33.100 We should have a big showing for these conventions. We should make sure people show up to vote
00:37:37.820 because I think when people are engaging with the reality of this campaign and the reality of,
00:37:43.240 uh, voting, you know, real, real life in person, uh, I don't think it's going to go very well for
00:37:47.800 the left. Big story, maybe a big story. They say it's a big story. I don't know that it's a big
00:37:53.140 story. Norma McCorvey, who is Jane Roe in Roe versus Wade. Norma McCorvey was this woman who was
00:38:01.800 kind of used by the pro-abortion industry. And then in the mid 1990s, she became pro-life. She became a
00:38:06.860 pro-life advocate. She was born again, you know, described herself as an evangelical Christian.
00:38:13.220 There's now, they're now saying that she had a deathbed confession, that it was all a lie.
00:38:19.220 She didn't really become pro-life. She, I guess she didn't really become Christian. It's unclear
00:38:23.880 from the trailer of the movie. And she really just got, she just did it for the money. You know,
00:38:28.480 she got a lot of gifts from the pro-life movement. And so she just did it for the money. They bought her
00:38:33.660 off. They paid her to do it. That's the claim in the mainstream media. We don't know. The movie's
00:38:39.900 not out yet. I watched the trailers. You know, there's nothing in the trailers that suggests
00:38:44.460 that she really does recant her pro-life or Christian views. So I'm skeptical in the first
00:38:50.200 place. Then I look at the people that the film is talking to. The film considers an ex-pro-life,
00:38:55.780 now pro-abortion, anti-Christian pastor named Rob Schenk to be an expert on this issue. So already I'm
00:39:02.780 looking at that. I say, okay, this movie does not have a lot of credibility. Seems like
00:39:07.960 this is mostly hype to promote the movie. If I were a film producer, I know a lot of film
00:39:14.240 producers. I've been in Hollywood a little while. This is the sort of thing you do to garner
00:39:19.120 attention, get some headlines, try to get people to pay for your movie. And they don't, they don't
00:39:23.820 quite really give you anything in the trailer. So it's just like every other movie, you know,
00:39:28.580 the best stuff they got is in the trailer. And then you see the movie and it's kind of
00:39:32.180 disappointing. I suspect that's the same thing going on here. The articles that are coming out
00:39:39.160 about this don't really explain certain things. If it was all an act, if it was all an act,
00:39:45.000 why did Norma McCorvey, who had a lesbian girlfriend, why did she break up with her
00:39:50.340 lesbian girlfriend upon her conversion? You know, and this girlfriend gave, you know, pretty raw
00:39:56.900 interviews of being really in anguish about this whole situation. So why did she do that? That,
00:40:03.100 that doesn't really make a lot of sense. Why, why did she do it for the money? Presumably she could
00:40:08.180 have gotten more money from the pro-abortion groups, right? The pro-abortion groups are,
00:40:11.140 are way better funded in this country than the pro-life groups are. So why, why didn't she just
00:40:16.300 stick with her original team? And what does that even mean to be paid off? Did they, you know,
00:40:20.560 fly her around the country and, you know, bring her to speak at places? Okay. Is that really a payoff?
00:40:26.900 I don't know. I just, it doesn't really seem that compelling to me, that convincing to me. And we
00:40:32.020 also have, we have video, you know, we got it on tape of Jane Roe, at least a number of years ago,
00:40:38.060 describing why she became pro-life. Most of you won't recognize me or my real name. It's Norma
00:40:45.000 McCorvey. I'm also known as Jane Roe, the plaintiff in the Supreme Court case, Roe versus Wade,
00:40:51.400 which legalized abortion in America and changed our nation in an unprecedented way.
00:40:56.900 Back in 1973, I was a very confused 21-year-old with one child and facing an unplanned pregnancy.
00:41:04.060 At the time, I fought to obtain a legal abortion. But the truth be told, I have three daughters and
00:41:09.720 have never had an abortion. However, upon knowing God, I realized that my case, which legalized
00:41:15.880 abortion on demand, was the biggest mistake of my life. You see, abortion has eliminated 50 million
00:41:21.780 innocent babies in the U.S. alone since 1973. Abortion scars an untold number of post-abortive
00:41:28.160 mothers, fathers, and families too. You read about me in history books, but now I'm dedicated to
00:41:33.760 spreading the truth about preserving the dignity of all human life, from natural conception to natural
00:41:39.840 death. So, pretty convincing. I guess she could have been putting on an act there for, you know,
00:41:45.460 I don't think there's a ton of money in it, but maybe she could have. I don't know. My takeaway
00:41:48.780 from this is, who cares? The left is presenting this as though, here we go. Now the pro-life movement
00:41:56.320 is on the ropes. The pro-life movement is dead. It's all a sham. What are you talking about? I don't
00:42:00.580 think this hurts the pro-life movement at all, in any way. If it's, if it's not true, if this is all
00:42:07.280 just hype to sell this movie and they're misrepresenting what she really said, then, you know,
00:42:11.080 it's typical lies from the pro-abortion movement. If it is true, if she really did have a deathbed
00:42:16.340 confession that says her whole pro-life advocacy was a big sham, then Norma McCorvey's a liar and
00:42:23.020 who cares anyway? Who cares what she says? If she was lying then, she might be lying now, or she's
00:42:28.920 lying now, she might've been lying then. If she repented, great. If not, then, you know, we're no
00:42:33.980 worse off than where we started. If she lied and, and if now she's giving this confession that it was
00:42:41.420 all a big sham, I'm still glad that pro-lifers gave her the benefit of the doubt. I'm still glad. And if
00:42:48.100 the, and if she got some honorariums or she got, you know, flown around the country or something,
00:42:52.600 I'm glad she did. She's obviously a damaged woman who was used by the pro-abortion movement.
00:42:56.800 But abortion itself uses, destroys people. So if she said she had any inclination that she was going
00:43:05.100 to switch over, I'm glad we gave her the benefit of the doubt, even if she lied to everybody.
00:43:09.480 Because there are still many, many other very prominent abortion supporters who became pro-life,
00:43:17.260 even if Norma McCorvey didn't, or if she did, but then she went back, or even if it was complicated.
00:43:22.180 Okay. There's still so many others who were so clear about this. I think of
00:43:26.080 Dr. Bernard Nathanson, founder of NARAL, you know, the biggest abortion rights
00:43:30.020 organization in the country. Bernard Nathanson was a doctor, abortionist, who became vehemently
00:43:37.900 pro-life because he saw the reality of it. And he, he admitted that the pro-abortion movement lied a
00:43:43.480 lot. Abby Johnson, another great example. Abby Johnson worked at Planned Parenthood,
00:43:47.080 was very much involved in the reality of abortion, has now become a major, major pro-life advocate.
00:43:52.480 Why? Because she saw the reality of it. In fact, you know, if Norma McCorvey,
00:43:56.080 Corvey never, never did, or if she did have this deathbed confession or whatnot,
00:44:00.140 one explanation of that is that she never had an abortion. You know, she says, I've never had an
00:44:04.320 abortion myself. I was not able to get an abortion before that court case. Well, that would explain it
00:44:08.380 because the huge pro, pro, former pro-abortion, now pro-life advocates, the ones who became most
00:44:14.440 clearly pro-life are the ones who had most clearly seen the reality of abortion. You know, it's,
00:44:20.720 there are just so many people who've gone from the pro-abortion direction to the pro-life direction.
00:44:25.880 Very few people have gone the other way around. I mean, you just, even I'm in my own, anecdotally,
00:44:29.800 I myself, when I was a teenager, I thought abortion made perfect sense. I didn't, I didn't,
00:44:33.820 I didn't understand the objection. You know, I grew up in a secular kind of culture.
00:44:37.120 I would have called myself an atheist or an agnostic. I just thought, I don't see what the
00:44:40.460 big deal is. Then I had a conversation with a bioethicist and she convinced me. And I saw,
00:44:45.420 I just, just through argumentation, I sort of saw the problem at the heart of abortion. I saw
00:44:50.840 the reality of it. Then obviously over time, my thinking deepened certainly on the nature of human
00:44:57.680 life and human dignity. And, and now I look back and I see, I realized there's no argument at all
00:45:02.760 for abortion other than this kind of selfishness and materialism that we're all steeped in, in the
00:45:08.060 pop culture. So I, you know, I, I hope Norma McCorphy for her own sake, uh, was not a liar all those
00:45:14.060 years and a, and a secret defender of abortion. But you know, if she was, that's too bad. And the
00:45:19.200 movement, the movement moves on with the people who, who know the reality of it. Before we go,
00:45:23.360 I just have to get to this. This is, this is the funniest story I saw. I think that this actually
00:45:28.180 tickled me the most from the New York times. We talked yesterday or the day before about Tesla
00:45:36.540 and about how Elon Musk took the red pill. So he says, you know, think for yourself,
00:45:41.080 question the liberal narrative, right? So the headline is Tesla owners try to make sense
00:45:47.420 of Elon Musk's red pill moment. They're trying to make sense of it. They want, they're going to
00:45:53.000 go return their cars because now Elon Musk might not be a total dyed in the wool liberal. His politics
00:46:00.080 might be slightly complicated because he's questioning the liberal narrative. You know,
00:46:04.860 the best part of this whole Elon Musk thing is it tricked a bunch of liberals who bought electric cars.
00:46:09.940 which frankly gave me some ideas. I thought maybe we should now convince the left that those paper
00:46:19.660 straws, it was really frustrating paper drinking straws that turned to pulp, that they're actually
00:46:24.080 a neo-Nazi hate symbol so that we can get those banned and go back to the plastic straws. So it gave
00:46:28.660 me a lot of different ideas. But that was, the basic point was they found out that Elon Musk's
00:46:34.060 politics were not totally liberal and therefore they, they got to ditch the car. If you think
00:46:42.440 Teslas are problematic, just wait until you hear about Fords. Just wait until you, I, apparently people
00:46:48.660 don't know this about Henry Ford. Henry Ford had some problematic politics, you might say.
00:46:55.080 Uh, particularly when it regards, uh, that certain nomadic tribe, that ancient tribe known as the
00:47:01.340 Jews. Uh, Henry Ford published a four volume work called The International Jew. Book one of that is
00:47:07.660 The International Jew, The World's Foremost Problem. Balder von Schirach, one of the Nazi leaders,
00:47:14.360 uh, said, this is what he said of Henry Ford's book. I read it and became anti-Semitic. In those
00:47:22.340 days, this book made such a deep impression on my friends and myself because we saw in Henry Ford,
00:47:27.240 the representative of success, also the exponent of a progressive social policy. Henry Ford was the
00:47:33.060 only American mentioned in Mein Kampf, mentioned glowingly. Hitler himself writes, every year makes
00:47:39.640 them, referring to the Jews, more and more the controlling masters of the producers in a nation
00:47:44.520 of 120 million persons. Only a single great man, Ford, to their fury, still maintains full independence.
00:47:53.240 So, you know, Henry Ford, he's got some baggage here, right? And, uh, people still buy Ford cars.
00:47:59.600 That is to the broader point on the Teslas, something perhaps we should say to the left.
00:48:05.760 Uh, the personal views, the politics of people who create products or who write great works of
00:48:13.940 literature, who, who create great works of art, who cares? It's kind of my same reaction to the
00:48:20.520 last story we were talking about. I don't, I don't care. I don't know Henry Ford. Henry Ford doesn't
00:48:25.320 mean anything to me. I like Ford cars. I think Mustangs look cool. Fine. Arthur Kessler was a great,
00:48:31.700 uh, great novelist, wrote one of the, one of the great anti-communist novelists of all time,
00:48:36.460 Darkness at Noon. He was, I think, a pretty credibly accused of rape. Didn't seem like such
00:48:42.260 a great guy. Some of the great, I mean, we know this just from celebrities all around us. A lot
00:48:46.680 of celebrities whose work we really enjoy are dirty, rotten, no good, terrible people.
00:48:53.840 For most of the history of art, we've just ignored that sort of thing because we don't really care.
00:48:57.420 But now we've become in this so highly sensitive, just seeking to be offended by anything and
00:49:03.380 outraged by anything culture that forget Arthur Kessler, forget Henry Ford, forget all these people.
00:49:08.540 Now, just because Elon Musk suggests maybe he's not a total progressive liberal, totally 100% of the
00:49:16.520 time, the New York Times is publishing stories about how people don't want their Tesla cars anymore.
00:49:21.800 That is a trigger happy culture. That is a culture that would appear to have
00:49:26.060 too few problems. That's our show. I'm Michael Knowles. This is The Michael Knowles Show. See you
00:49:30.700 tomorrow.
00:49:36.020 If you enjoyed this episode, and frankly, even if you didn't, don't forget to subscribe.
00:49:41.880 And if you want to help spread the word, please give us a five-star review and tell your friends
00:49:46.280 to subscribe. We're available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and wherever else you listen to podcasts.
00:49:51.860 Also, be sure to check out the other Daily Wire podcasts, including The Ben Shapiro Show,
00:49:57.220 The Andrew Klavan Show, and The Matt Walsh Show.
00:49:59.820 The Michael Knowles Show is produced by Ben Davies and directed by Mike Joyner.
00:50:04.720 Executive producer, Jeremy Boren. Supervising producers, Mathis Glover and Robert Sterling.
00:50:10.500 Technical producer, Austin Stevens. Assistant director, Pavel Widowski. Editor and associate producer,
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00:50:24.080 Ryan Love. The Michael Knowles Show is a Daily Wire production. Copyright Daily Wire 2020.
00:50:29.700 Hey everyone, it's Andrew Klavan, host of The Andrew Klavan Show. Journalists think hydroxychloroquine
00:50:34.580 is a scandal, but they treat Obamagate like their own backsides. They can't find it with a flashlight
00:50:39.820 in both hands. We'll talk about it on The Andrew Klavan Show. I'm Andrew Klavan.
00:50:46.680 The Andrew Klavan Show.