Best of The Program | Guests: James Altucher & Tom Fitton | 8⧸19⧸20
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Summary
In this episode, we cover the Democratic National Convention, the stolen election of 2020, and why New York City is never going to recover from the pandemic that has ravaged the city for years. We also cover the man who is trying to spy on the internet, and spread the truth about the world coming to an end.
Transcript
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hello america today was kind of a whirlwind kind of uh program that you don't want to miss we
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we tried to cover the uh the the wonderful democratic convention and wasn't it wonderful
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stew loved it yeah uh helen has been watching it and then our crew uh helen is a democrat from new
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york yeah uh it was her night at least last night tomorrow it's uh frederick frederick where is he
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from do we know he's from montana okay uh that's how many people are watching this thing and then
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we're watching it as well so you don't have to we have all the update that's worth updating we also
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have the truth on the the stolen election of 2020 are the democrats setting this up to be a contested
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election you bet we talked to judicial watch which will your hair will fall out it is so frightening
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also the guy who is trying to monitor google and facebook and youtube and prove that they are
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manipulating average voters and we also talk about all kinds of fun stuff about you know the world
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coming to an end all that and more on today's podcast
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welcome to the program james how are you good glenn how are you doing thanks for having me on the
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show you bet a long time we haven't uh we haven't talked to each other it's nice to have you on yes uh so
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go briefly over your your thesis here that new york city is never coming back
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well there's a lot of you know there's only so far you can pull back a slingshot before it breaks
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and right now we have at least 30 to 50 percent of the restaurants and storefronts in new york city
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are out of business permanently and there's not it's not like there's tenants dying to come back in
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these are gone which means commercial real estate is going to get affected also you have all of these
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companies now going remote forever city group jp morgan google twitter all these companies that
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means all the office space empty they're going to need to rent less office space again commercial
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real estate and the entire economic ecosystem around those things are going to zero meanwhile new york
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city the deficits are rising people are fleeing there's more apartment vacancies than ever so
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the tax base is going down both from businesses and residents fleeing so how are you going to make
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the revenues to make up for the deficits and all the bankruptcies and one out of four evictions are
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going to happen so i think i don't know what you do even if you know covid come is is fine and people
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start coming back there's just going to be too many bankruptcies there's going to be nobody paying
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for all the deficits that new york city is racking up now what what happened and you can't it's not
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like you can cut back on those things or the city will just decay i mean that is a very expensive city
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just to keep running and if you don't have those you don't have those buildings what happens to them
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i mean new york city offices are technically open right now but they're all empty like they're about 90
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empty because companies are going remote and you know here's the difference between other periods
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is now people have the bandwidth to go remote we never had the bandwidth to have remote office
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meetings before so there's no big rush now for employees to come back in fact companies are making
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much more money being more productive with employees not at the office again they can rent less office space
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they don't have to pay those city taxes those property taxes so i don't know how new york city is going
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to raise the money to pay for the services that they normally do and again this is not like a
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temporary situation oh when when the pandemic's over everyone comes back to work no everybody's already gone
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they've already left and and that's not a bad thing for the country by the way it means you could have
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opportunity now everywhere financial opportunities being dispersed all through the country you don't have
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to just be in manhattan or la or san francisco you could be in st louis or nashville or miami or dallas
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you could be anywhere now and have opportunity it's not just hey come to manhattan everything's here
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nothing's there anymore business is not there you know stores are not there no one's waking up and
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saying i need to start a pizza restaurant in new york city today because i might go out of business the
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next day yeah it's it's it's really sad i mean i love new york if you have ever lived there you have a
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love hate relationship with it um there's lots of things about it that you might hate but it balances
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out to where the the access to things is so off the charts and not like any other city that you put up
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with it but now that is that's that's all gone one one nice thing about it is people are starting to
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look at the cities that they want to live in they can live in and as you said will we now will have
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you know i miss the america where you go to towns and they're all different you know there was a while
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where they were all gap and all you know uh you know and taylor's and every town was the same this
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this provides an opportunity for one town to be high tech one town maybe to be uh focused on on you
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know something else where those people that think alike just kind of want together that they don't
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have to but they just kind of want together there so you'd have these cities that would have real
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different personalities right like over 400 000 new yorkers have left since march and many more are
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going to leave when eviction moratoriums are off i mean one out of four uh new yorkers are up for
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eviction and again you know 30 of the restaurants and stores out of business all the major companies going
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remote people are dispersing to the cities they always wanted to live in doesn't mean opportunities
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going away it just means finally opportunity is going to be spread out throughout the entire united
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states so the frontier now is not going to be in manhattan or la it's going to be wherever you are
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so james you are uh you're an angel investor you're you're really up to speed on a lot of things i've
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been talking about the tech disruption that was going to come um and it and i kept saying it's going to
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come between 2020 and 2030 where uh technology just changes enough stuff there would be enough
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disruption of 20 to 30 percent unemployment we won't live the same way we won't work the same way
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jobs will be taken we're going to have to retrain i think covid actually pushed that in faster i think
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we're seeing the tech disruption now well look at it i mean covid has been the great accelerator look at
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you know zoom for instance zoom added 400 million new users 400 million who now realize oh i i could
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see people on video now for the first time ever i could have remote meetings i could be productive
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and then you have ai and automation a year ago everyone was afraid of it but now every store is
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going to be you know cashless checkouts and you know there's going to be much more automation
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there's going to be much more robotics so what happens to the people who have those jobs
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well this has been an excuse to say hey we don't need anybody anymore we're going to go cashless
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and people are going to have to figure out what to do the infrastructure is not there for people to
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figure it out but you're going to have to be much more people are going to have to be up on these
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skills in one way or the other and like i said opportunity is going to be spread out throughout the
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entire country not just in new york city where they sort of hoarded opportunity for a long period
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so what james what happens to a city like new york and it's going to be all these cities i mean
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why live in a dense city where crime especially with the way things are going now where crime is bad
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decay is bad taxes would be high what happens to these cities it's going to be hard i mean look
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i'm a new yorker i even own a storefront in new york and people aren't going to want to pay
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38 for avocado toast anymore if they could move to phoenix arizona and pay a buck 50 for an egg
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sandwich like and still make new york salaries and still work remotely for companies that are based
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wherever so what happens to a city like new york city services start to go down crime goes up uh
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there's going to be less ability to afford health care there's going to be again how are they going to
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pay deficits they're going to have to raise taxes to the few people who stay remember new york city
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only one percent the top one percent of new york city pays over 40 of the taxes in new york city
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what happens when you don't even have that revenue how are you going to provide any what happens to the
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transit system what happens to all the public services that new york city offers the universities
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the the subways and so on it starts to go down the police starts to go down and what happens to
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the universities themselves i mean they're not you're not back the universities right there i mean
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right now new york city is at all-time vacancies well what happens when 600 000 students in new york
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city college students are told oh we're going to do remote for for six months or a year they're not
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going to rent apartments hence more vacancies hence more bankruptcies hence more buildings go into
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litigation hence more you know again worse services uh to neighborhoods and crime goes up and who knows
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i mean i don't it's it's hard to predict when you have a city that's just combusting in ways that
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hasn't happened before and people say oh no people want to come back now people have already left the
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employees who are forced to be remote they've said oh well i can choose anywhere in the united states
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you know united states is beautiful new york city is not the only city people have spread out already
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it's not it's not my opinion like this is already fact that 400 000 residents have have left since
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march i will tell you that you know i bought the paramount movie lot here in dallas um so i've
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these gigantic movie studios uh and uh i went up to my ranch in the mountains for three months
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uh and did everything remote from my house and then from the ranch and every day i got up and i
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thought why am i why am i why am i going back why why am i going back and for me the technology is not
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quite robust enough to be able to do it um but for the average person it absolutely is and i know
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they're all saying the same thing and and glenn you're running a media company so you need video and
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audio quality beyond perfect correct so the average person who just wants to do remote meetings
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and and and still be at home without the commute without dealing with all their cubicle neighbors
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whatever they're happy and yes some of them like to go back to work and and and people are going to
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miss uh the the social conveniences of work they'll find it elsewhere but they'll miss it at work but
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it's not it's not going to be their decision companies themselves are cutting costs by not having
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people go back to work using covid as an excuse oh we have to be safe now for covid but they're
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going to eliminate the six out of seven floors that they rented in a major office building in new york
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which means commercial real estate goes bankrupt which means you know litigation means potential
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financial collapse means less tax revenues for new york city and again lower services to pay for
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education health care police social services it's and again as a new yorker it's scary but as
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a u.s citizen you say well okay the economy is not up or down it's just tilted things are going to spread
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out throughout the u.s opportunity is going to spread out and you don't have if you've traveled to any
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other city other than new york there's beautiful spots all over the united states i wish the best for
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new york i'm a new yorker my kids are new yorkers i lived there all my life but you have to face
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reality there's problems that can't go away it's or they're already fact so james one last question
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people still i think americans are slowly coming to the realization it's not going to be the same
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anymore we're not we're not we're not going back there there's it's just not happening um you know
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trying to build in some parts of the country you just can't get supplies um it's very different
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than even the great depression um there are things that you just can't get uh and i think people haven't
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really felt it all yet when do you think we're all going to come to the conclusion oh wow uh america
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and the world is just never going to be like it was it's such a great question glenn because a few
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months ago people were asking when are things going to go back to 2019 and then a few weeks
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after that they were saying well when is there going to be a new normal and now i think it's
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starting to people are starting to realize there is no new normal it's a it's a great reinvention is
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what's happening everything is not quite starting from scratch but like you say automation is on the
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rise so that's going to affect people's lives uh zoom adding 400 million people essentially
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you know two united states uh zoom added that number of users that's going to affect the way
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we we work and interface with each other and interact and so on so i think people who are ahead
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of the curve here are going to start looking for the skills they need whether those are you know
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marketing skills sales skills technical sales skills you know setting up e-commerce sites you know
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whatever it is are you but go ahead well i think i think we're going to start to realize over the
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next year that there is no these things are going to get worse in the major cities and you're going
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to see more and more of an exodus from the first tier cities to the second tier cities and people are
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going to start to realize more and more every month that okay maybe a lot of people are in denial but
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i'm going to start making changes in my life and gradually everyone will come to that realization
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and and i don't say this with glee i wish i know i know we're the same but this happened so um
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james i i i don't know if you've been following what the uh economic forum has been doing with the
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great reset they've been working on it for a while before covid and i would love to i'd love to check
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back with you uh after you've kind of looked into that i think we'll probably disagree on
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you know uh maybe uh whether it was a good thing or a bad thing and what it means but
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it it needs to be discussed out in the open because the world is changing um and i think
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the average person needs to be involved in what that means for our future so i'd love to have you
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we've spent too much time outsourcing all of our political decisions to leaders who haven't frankly
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accomplished anything for the past 50 years so yes we'd love to go back and talk about it i'm well
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aware okay great um james thank you so much um and i'm i sent your article around and i sent it around
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with this is the saddest article you will read in a long time and everybody emails me back and goes
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it's i can't disagree with it and that's what makes it so sad thank you very much james
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covid has made the world up for grabs it's going to be completely redesigned it's called the great
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reset uh and who's going to be designing it certainly if you are somebody that likes to hold
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all of the power you're not going to give that to donald trump he stands in the way of all of that
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uh the constitution stands in the way of that our history stands in the way of that that's why
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everything is being challenged right now but you also have to uh ensure a win so you want to at least if
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you can't pull it off you at least have to con uh to convince the american people that you can't have
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any confidence in the vote and that is the campaign that the democrats are on right now the group that
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is really the one that is watching over our right to vote over this uh pandemic is judicial watch the
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president is tom fitton and he's with us now hi tom how are you hey gwen good to be with you again
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thank you so let's just go through some of the things that um you know that they are they are saying
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now uh about our elections and that we really need to jump on the vote through the mail that seems insane
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but they're saying that there's never any problem with the mail-in vote can you give me the facts on this
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well if there are going to be problems with voter fraud it's going to happen through mail-in and
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absentee ballots everyone agreed prior to it become a partisan issue just now is that that's where you
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have the opportunities for fraud is you're voting away from the oversight of government officials and
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party activists who go in and monitor the polls but on top of that we've got a radical ramping up of
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people voting by mail at least there's this push i think there'll be 92 93 million ballots and ballot
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applications that will be mailed without anyone asking for them 50 i think it's 51 million ballots
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alone will be mailed without anyone asking for them and that's a number that is is far and above
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by multiples of any prior move i mean you've had a few states here and there who have vote by mail
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programs that were set up after years and years and frankly still aren't trustworthy this is a radical
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escalation of this vote by mail and in 2016 when 319 000 absentee ballots mail-in ballots were thrown out
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imagine what the numbers are going to be now so you've got the vote by mail you've got voter fraud
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opportunities about harvesting fraud opportunities but i i think there's this emerging issue that i
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think we all need to be concerned about if and frankly the left should be too votes being thrown
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out by the millions because they don't get there on time because they can't be counted and the system
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breaks and if that happens and this and and and states are challenged all of that goes to the house
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and the senate ultimately and in essence nancy pelosi decides practically speaking who could be the next
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president so if you if you look at the mail fraud that we have had uh in the in the past the the mail
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fraud happens when let me give you a few examples uh west virginia postal worker last week indicted for
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manipulating eight voters absentee ballots uh in 2019 oakland county uh clerk outside detroit charged
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with illegally altering 193 absentee ballots minneapolis a man was charged with helping 13 others
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falsify absentee ballots ahead of the 2018 election dallas county texas man convicted after seven in
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700 mail-in ballots were witnessed and signed by a fictitious person uh north carolina's ninth
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congressional district race scheme was uh to steal 1200 absentee ballots and fill them out in a race
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that was decided by only 900 votes so when the democrats and and uh michelle obama said you got
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to go out and vote like your life depends on it because sometimes uh in 2016 they were voted by an
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average you know they lost by an average of two votes these numbers may seem small but in the right
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districts it changes everything well that's exactly right you've got the presidential race at issue
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and then you have these lower um these races down the ballot you know including in the house uh that
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can be overturned through fraud you know and the other reason we want a process in place that frowns
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upon fraud and secures the vote is so that people feel comfortable voting that's one of the reasons we
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have voter id that's what the court just said you know it's not we don't have to prove fraud
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the purpose of voter id is to ensure people and reassure people that the elections count and
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matter and uh right now it's chaos i tell you glenn there's been nothing like it in american history
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where you have nearly 100 million ballots and ballot applications being thrown out flooding the mails
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10 percent right now 10 of first class mail is late when you look at the percentages of ballots that
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are returned you're talking potentially millions of ballots that won't get to the place they're
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supposed to be so this is a an opportunity for fraud that we've never seen before and i said as i said
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as importantly you can't be sure your vote will count unless you vote in person that's the best
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way to ensure your vote is will be counted and i'm not guaranteeing your vote won't be negated because
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someone got your mail ballot and votes in your name and there's a dispute there but you know you
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can't rely on the system because i think it's going to break or i fear it's going to break and uh when
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you're talking the percentages of ballots to get thrown out the percentages in my view are too high for
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me to risk my vote to vote by mail i mean if it were four years ago i'd say you know i wouldn't
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necessarily say don't vote by mail you're likely to lose your vote i i wouldn't advise anyone to vote
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by mail these days so tom how i was listening in the news today they are in riots in belarus um because
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russia was interfering in the election um and the opposition is saying to the world please don't
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recognize this administration and i think in belarus they probably are right um but i see that kind of
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scenario playing out no matter who wins this time this is a constitutional crisis on the horizon
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that we've never faced the left is already gaming it out plan we've already planning it there's a go and
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look at this document created by the transition integrity project and who's and who's the war
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gamer for them and for joe biden when they were doing a little war game john podesta so someone who's
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a leading white on the establishment and they're talking about having states threaten to secede from
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the union unless they get their electoral count uh electoral votes counted uh i guess despite allegations
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of fraud so they're prepared for a revolution i mean we're kind of seeing it already their
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revolution there's a revolution in portland you've got the violent communist insurrection
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in many cities as it is and believe me they're preparing to apply it to the presidential election
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you can read about it in the new york times what do you say to the people who say well then why isn't
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the president uh stopping what's going on at the post office
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well the train's left the station uh the the states have decided they're going to mail these
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ballots those 51 52 million ballots going out that's going to happen the post office is going to do what
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it can do with the volume uh but you know on a good day you have five to ten percent of the material
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not get to where it's supposed to be or get there late so to me that's an unacceptable risk for voting by
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mail and that's what we need to be talking about if i were the president and frankly honest democrats
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are now beginning to talk about because they're nervous they recognize these issues you should be
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voting in person michelle obama highlighted that in her talk the other day you know what's really
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been interesting is to see people like stacy abrams who for months the the far left um candidate
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from georgia who lost forgot the governorship there she was on tv again yesterday for the dnc
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telling people they shouldn't have to decide between their vote and their lives so they're
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scaring the bejesus out of people from voting in person that's suppressing the vote glenn that's
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suppressing the vote and i think some democrats are thinking what are we doing here we're going to tell
00:25:10.720
people to vote by the mail no one really trusts the mail maybe we need to go back to the basics here
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and start getting you know getting people to the polls in person uh even dr fauci says you can vote
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in person so the the coronavirus isn't a serious excuse anymore what is who is watching all of this tom
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that is uh trustworthy to you know at least the majority of people um that that we can we can look
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to that is is monitoring all of this is there anybody i know that's what you are doing but the
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right trusts you left doesn't trust you so who do we turn to we can you know glenn you you and i and
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groups like us we can do a 50 000 view you know a 50 000 uh foot view you know but at the polling
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places that's where the parties have to provide the oversight and when it comes to oversight the left is
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far and beyond the republicans they've got they do they're working you know they're organizers this
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is what they do and so you'll have leftist poll workers who are lawyers and sophisticated and know
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how to challenge and on the right you'll have volunteers fairly trained young or not sophisticated
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in terms of areas of law and um they'll be outmatched and then on top of that you've got the political side
00:26:36.960
because we think it's going to be decided by lawsuits and these fights at the lower levels no
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it's going to be decided in congress ultimately that's the way our constitutional system works
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and uh that they i've already gained that out and i could tell you the republicans and and
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conservatives are completely don't know much about how that would work in congress what do you mean
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they've what do you mean they've already gained that out well you're talking about and this transition
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integrity project where john podesta games out the election being resolved by the house and the
00:27:09.520
senate and if there's no decision by a date certain in january i think it's january 6th or a little bit
00:27:18.320
later uh you know who becomes president in an acting capacity nancy pelosi nancy nancy pelosi
00:27:26.400
i think you'd probably just drop the phone uh after uh speaking uh words that would give most
00:27:37.040
people a heart attack um tom so i mean it's that's the way it's going to work and you know what's
00:27:41.600
interesting is each each delegation of the house has a vote it's not by person it's not by vote it's not
00:27:48.560
by house member and currently republicans have a majority of the delegations in the house
00:27:54.000
so that's why democrats and the left are gaming it out and you know if if it comes down to a kind
00:28:00.400
of an honest political fight that's one thing but we already went through a coup do you think it's
00:28:06.480
going to stop of course not well it's been cheery talking to you tom thank you for we got a height
00:28:14.880
we got to know what the problem is i know there to address it it's it's i'm not trying to be negative
00:28:19.760
i'm just trying to highlight the real issue so we can't so we're not surprised how can people help
00:28:26.720
well individually they should figure out how they can become poll workers
00:28:31.040
figure out what the rules are in your state contact your local party and and volunteer
00:28:36.080
uh encourage your mem you encourage your your your circles to vote in person who's watching over the
00:28:43.520
the post office to me it's kind of like a meta issue it's like are they can you trust the post
00:28:51.440
office to get the ballots to the your location on time no don't use it okay and frankly you know
00:28:59.360
it's not too late to pull back and you can call your elected officials at the state level don't mail
00:29:04.400
those ballot applications unless someone asks for them do a traditional absentee ballot program where
00:29:09.600
someone proactively has to ask for a ballot don't drop ballots into the mail unless they're requested
00:29:16.000
it's not too late to pull back we've got three or four weeks but uh the train you know the train's
00:29:21.760
about to leave you're listening to the best of the glenbeck program
00:29:29.280
nasa is actively monitoring a strange anomaly anomaly say it anomaly thank you in earth's magnetic
00:29:44.000
field a giant region of lower magnetic intensity in the skies above the planet this is about the polar
00:29:50.320
shift thought i'd throw that in because last week and we just missed the closest uh the the closest
00:29:57.200
asteroid uh in history unbelievably close right you know they consider a close call four million
00:30:04.000
miles four million miles right right this was the same distance as it is from dallas to boston it was
00:30:10.960
1800 miles it doesn't give me yeah yeah it was a bad one car sized asteroid yeah uh doesn't really give
00:30:20.560
me a lot of confidence that nasa is up on this one no uh it doesn't inspire yeah it doesn't confidence
00:30:28.480
at all no it really doesn't really doesn't but hey we're not calling black holes black holes anymore
00:30:32.720
and that's what's important you know what i mean so no more uh siamese uh twin galaxies galaxies and stars
00:30:40.480
so and have we got that yeah but but we did miss the asteroid that almost hit us but we saw it after
00:30:48.080
it went by though so yeah we saw it we're like whoa was that close what was that yeah man whoa what was
00:30:54.560
that that's uh that's that's pretty good that's pretty good so i'm just looking for good news um
00:31:04.400
about suicide rate that's probably not good how about how about this one how about this one uh
00:31:20.960
which hall of fame is glenn going into any idea i'm already in i'm already in so i'm just curious
00:31:25.920
as to i think it's the hardware hall of fame okay that would make more sense than what he's actually
00:31:30.160
going into the hardware store hall of fame there it is okay okay here it is uh well they've done
00:31:36.320
a study on our dogs now uh and uh and uh it's it's you're gonna you're just gonna find more reasons
00:31:45.200
not to like your neighbors um so they compared democrats to republicans as dog owners uh democrats are
00:31:54.160
twice as likely to spay or neuter their dogs uh right okay and i think population control that makes
00:32:00.800
sense population control yeah and also they probably live in cities much more and they probably
00:32:06.400
are like oh i don't if a burglar comes in i don't want him to rip the face off of somebody i do i do
00:32:12.640
so i keep all that testosterone right there in the body of that dog um they the company used gps
00:32:19.440
technology to tap into its database of 1.6 million dogs compare it to voting data from the 2016 election
00:32:26.480
now remember all your all your information is completely private oh yeah completely private
00:32:35.040
uh so here among the findings dog names uh for democrats among the top five most popular for
00:32:44.240
democrats diamond prince princess king and bodie bodie bodie yeah i don't know i don't know anybody
00:32:54.720
that has diamond princess king or bodie i did have prince as a dog when i was you know kid
00:33:03.600
uh and then with republicans listen the difference brutus ruger
00:33:11.600
sassy buckeye and baby and you know baby is not a little dog baby's like the big dog that's like yeah
00:33:19.920
yeah that's absolutely true baby's the biggest dog on the block out of all of them baby's the one that's
00:33:24.320
gonna kill you easiest republicans tend to think bigger is better 13 percent more likely than
00:33:29.680
democrats to have dogs weighing more than 25 pounds not 25 pounds that's not a dog
00:33:35.120
pat's dog how much does it weigh five pounds uh yeah it's a soaking wet maybe or a rat republicans
00:33:41.280
are 20 percent more likely than democrats to have mixed breed because most republicans we just you know
00:33:47.680
you just go out to a shelter and get it for all the shelter talk that all the left does no they
00:33:53.680
want their pure bread they want their oh no this is a special breed this is a doodle
00:33:59.680
pick up whatever dog bit us on the way home that's how we get dogs yeah right still attached to your
00:34:05.040
leg when you walk in the front door now tell me if this doesn't make sense what are the dogs name
00:34:10.240
three dogs that you just don't like you would not want to own and i don't mean because of danger i just
00:34:14.960
mean they're like oh my breed sucks uh uh pit bull pit bull but that's because of danger uh what's
00:34:22.720
the dog that you have that with the smashed nose uh pug yeah they're bad asses yeah so i don't want
00:34:27.520
a pug i don't want a pug and i don't want what breed do you have i don't want to put the rat breed
00:34:31.600
yeah i've got the glorified rat okay you got a problem i would want to i wouldn't want a chihuahua
00:34:36.880
i wouldn't want a chihuahua okay yeah you don't like mexicans obviously right don't i don't want to
00:34:41.680
pug i wouldn't take a bulldog but i wouldn't want a pug oh pugs are awesome yeah bulldogs are
00:34:46.480
pretty great too though those are great dogs yeah except you feel bad for them because they're
00:34:49.360
always walking around going oh yeah that's the best part right yeah it's like me i it's it's like
00:34:55.680
me on a leash that's all that is uh and uh uh and the other one you said it poodle yeah no yeah democrats
00:35:05.440
are six times more likely to have poodles oh i believe that or poodle mixes absolutely absolutely
00:35:12.160
the labradoodle thing is a big thing now that's part labrador part poodle if i'm getting the words
00:35:17.200
correct and they look great when they're puppies and then yeah they kind of look almost like horses
00:35:23.360
like curly-haired horses and when you get to get to adulthood you're like okay you can go play with
00:35:28.960
the neighbor's house now permanently yeah i don't like you anymore i mean there should be a puppy
00:35:35.200
exchange there really should be a christmas puppy exchange where once the dog yeah first of all they
00:35:41.920
have to be potty trained but then they're given to you like in a little gift box and then every six
00:35:49.840
months or so all of a sudden the dog is young again and you're like oh look hello that's mall again
00:35:56.400
and it's just a service that comes in and switches the dog and you get a new puppy what happens to the
00:36:01.120
old dogs we don't ask questions we don't ask questions but they're just no longer there but
00:36:06.560
the rumor is they wind up in uh in southeast asia no no no no they go on to live great lives in a
00:36:16.160
puppy that's what i meant beyond understanding and uh we just don't want to talk about that puppy
00:36:22.400
kingdom because we don't want we don't want people to wreck it right uh and they will they will so they
00:36:28.560
wreck everything yeah uh and uh final thoughts here on the uh on the convention uh tonight
00:36:40.240
big lineup tonight tonight is uh what's her name kamala yeah it's kamala time
00:36:46.000
that's uh somebody else that's pretty exciting agonizing us speaking tonight as well uh of
00:36:51.040
course they're all agonizing you know it's interesting because the democrats today are
00:36:56.000
so bad that sometimes you find yourself a little nostalgic for the bill clinton days then you see
00:37:00.480
him speak it's like okay that's right that's why oh yeah he was terrible that's right i remember that
00:37:05.600
and he was probably molesting all sorts of people but when when we thought oh my god isn't it amazing
00:37:10.080
that that photograph came out the day he was supposed to speak at the dnc and they let him do it
00:37:14.960
anyway do you know who released it london and paper how come when did we just when did we just
00:37:21.920
give all of our reporters a pass and say nah just stay asleep let's have the foreign press do anything
00:37:30.640
the rumor is they paid a bunch of money for the photos um so sometimes sometimes u.s papers will not
00:37:36.720
do such things actual journalistic efforts though we have a lot of tabloids too so i'm not sure why
00:37:41.920
none of them decided to pony up for those photos she is coming out and saying she said uh he was
00:37:46.960
nothing but a gentleman right that's what that's what i know and nothing but a gentleman yeah she
00:37:52.000
was she was she was trying to say that he did not molest her which and that's good great uh the less
00:37:57.680
molesting he did we know he did some the less the better though we're we always cheer on less
00:38:02.080
molesting from bill clinton have you heard have you ever heard of the uh fashion the tycoon from
00:38:09.760
canada named peter nygaard yeah i'm the only one in the room that should have heard of him and i've
00:38:15.600
never heard of him um this guy is out of control this is the big scandal in canada um this guy is
00:38:25.120
i think i did hear about yeah he is canada's uh robert epstein not robert epstein um jeffrey
00:38:33.600
jeffrey epstein um and i mean it's the same story and guess who made visits to his private island all
00:38:43.120
the time prince andrew oh i mean prince andrew wow he's a bad and wasn't was fergie married to
00:38:52.720
prince andrew is that who she married you are any any of these questions in this arena i have literally
00:38:59.200
no knowledge of i don't know who these people are sounds right that sounds right and she was made
00:39:03.680
out to be a monster and prince i think prince and look that up stew i think prince andrew was married
00:39:09.840
to her and they made her look like a monster this guy yes former wife of prince andrew oh this guy is
00:39:15.680
i'd love to hear from fergie about this uh it's a it's a it's a weird weird one i mean the people
00:39:24.480
they're putting on stage should they should be ashamed of themselves they put on this this uh
00:39:29.120
you know andrew cuomo who comes on after he's killed more people than any other public official
00:39:36.560
in the world it comes with the coronavirus well it comes with the corona oh coronavirus yeah you're
00:39:41.280
right now yeah okay uh and he's out there touting a new book yes he's freaking releasing a book about
00:39:49.120
how brilliant he was during the coronavirus when he's criticizing arizona that has one seventh of
00:39:55.120
the deaths of of new york he's releasing a book his last book which i just love this his last book he
00:40:01.920
got a bonus of seven hundred and seventy eight thousand dollars i think it was and he sold thirty
00:40:06.560
two hundred copies so they paid him two hundred and thirty some odd dollars per book that he sold
00:40:14.800
which is not what they charged in stores it was actually less than that well canada uh yeah
00:40:20.560
it's always it's always higher in canada it's always higher in canada and then the the woman who
00:40:26.320
they put out there to completely exploit her grief as her father who is a trump supporter died of
00:40:34.640
coronavirus and her big point was you know his only pre-existing condition was trusting donald trump
00:40:42.640
i mean the most exploitative thing i have ever seen this poor woman who lost her dad
00:40:51.280
and obviously is not dealing with it well but who would right she's now trying she's and i went back
00:40:57.520
and looked at her posts almost all of her posts were upset at the governor not the president the
00:41:03.520
president was occasionally mentioned you know in the thing this trump and you know like how he's
00:41:07.440
mentioned in every freaking story for whatever reason but it was almost all about the governor she
00:41:11.280
wrote a letter to the governor did not mention trump she mentioned the governor the governor the
00:41:15.040
governor the governor now they've remixed the story to make it all trump's fault so that she can come
00:41:20.240
out in the middle of the democratic national convention and blame trump because no one cares
00:41:24.000
if he's blaming the governor of arizona if she's blaming the governor of arizona despicable and you know
00:41:29.600
of course there's a million problems with the stuff that she said and it's hard you can't blame her
00:41:33.920
she's grieving but the democratic party is ghoulish they are taking this poor woman who lost her father
00:41:42.160
and just running her out in front of the cameras to try to get a couple more bucks from donors and a
00:41:47.760
couple of votes from stupid people who will never look into the story i mean it is they are disgraceful
00:41:53.520
in every single way possible i've never seen such bald face lies and such serious lies as i have during
00:42:04.720
this convention uh and all you need is to do your own homework which reminds me there is a story out
00:42:10.800
i have to give it to you tomorrow did you see that scientists are now saying that it is very important
00:42:17.280
that people do not do their own homework when it comes to science yeah so i read that what did you read
00:42:22.880
that yeah no do not you or do you do not have the qualifications uh you know and they start with
00:42:28.560
an easy example is fluoride and you have no business looking into all of these things leave that to the
00:42:36.240
experts oh my wow oh my gosh i've never seen anything like it