What Worked Then, Won't Work Now? | Guest: Mark Bowe | 6⧸26⧸19
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 2 minutes
Words per Minute
175.25331
Summary
Glennon Stu talks about the first Democratic Debates, and how the left is trying to delegitimize Donald Trump. Also, a story about a scammer who thought he was calling from Apple, but it was actually coming from a fake phone number.
Transcript
00:00:00.000
I'm Hillary, that's your 4-Minute Buzz, and now here's Glennon Stu with the start of the show.
00:00:20.120
You have neck, shoulder, back, hip, knee pain, foot pain, whatever it is.
00:00:25.460
What are the things you can't do because of pain?
00:00:27.820
Just going for a walk, playing golf, playing tennis, playing with your kids.
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This has been a paid commercial on this network for years.
00:00:51.200
I didn't start talking about them until it worked for me.
00:01:10.700
We've got all kinds of things, including a look at the debate tonight that you don't want to miss.
00:01:28.620
And we begin this choice tonight with the first debate.
00:01:34.100
But Democrats really have a choice between somebody who says,
00:01:38.200
I have to make deep structural changes in the way the American economy even works.
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We're not going to do this free market thing anymore.
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We're going to change the way the Supreme Court works.
00:01:50.060
Somebody who wants to burn the system down or somebody who says, I just want to restore sanity.
00:02:12.820
Well, the left is just as pitchforky now as the right was.
00:02:17.380
Could they go for somebody who is a flamethrower that actually does want to burn the system down?
00:02:34.080
We'll talk about that and the tactics that they're using to discredit Donald Trump.
00:02:54.480
If you've ever used banks, you know, the digital payment service to send somebody money, wire transfer, digital payment.
00:03:02.800
Cyber thieves have now found a way to steal from your bank account by using that service, the digital banking and digital payment service.
00:03:11.960
Scammers are using a combination of spoofed phone calls that look like they're coming from your bank.
00:03:16.480
Hack text messages, ultimately breaking into consumer bank accounts and stealing their money.
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He got a call from Apple and it said on the ID Apple and it had their customer care number.
00:03:29.000
And I checked, you know, to make sure it was the real number.
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They had spoofed the Apple number on an Apple iPhone to tell me that I was in big trouble and needed to press this button to talk to a customer service representative.
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Now, luckily, I've had enough of these things that I that I didn't do that.
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My big rule is if someone calls me for any reason, that's an important thing.
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I always go to I will go get the number like off the back of my credit card.
00:04:02.200
Never call back the number they leave you ever or press the button to be connected to someone.
00:04:07.940
Always just hang up and then call the company directly on the number that you know is their number.
00:04:11.880
So the reason why I bring this up is this is how good they're getting at at getting your information.
00:04:22.420
Take the number and then go look up the real number on the back of your credit card or online and call that number and say, hey, I just got a phone call from Mr.
00:04:35.040
Anyway, LifeLock will detect a wide range of identity threats like your Social Security number for sale on the dark web.
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00:05:31.100
Yesterday, I posted something about Project Veritas.
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So I said, this is the most important story, possibly one of the top three stories of the year.
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I think it's the most important story because it's showing how Google is trying to manipulate you, what their plans are to control, control information and to control and program people.
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I had so many people write back or tweet, oh yeah, right, like you're not talking about the woman who Donald Trump raped.
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Here's the Trump accuser on CNN with Anderson Cooper, who knows he's in the Titanic.
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He's standing on the part of the Titanic that snaps in half.
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He knows he's like, I got to get to a lifeboat.
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I was not thrown on the ground and ravished, which the word rape carries so many sexual connotations.
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I think most people think of rape as a, I mean, it is a violent assault.
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I think most people think of rape as being sexy.
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If you can stick around, we'll talk more on the other side.
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Would you have a rape fantasy about me right now?
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Now, she also has the clothing and she's never worn the clothing since.
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The clothing she was wearing on the day that she was supposedly raped by Trump.
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The mayor of New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio, who of course is running against
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President Trump, has said that if you were to bring a case forward, he will pursue it.
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He will have the New York City Police Department pursue it.
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It is the greatest police department in the world.
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I've been talking to experts and they say that we've passed the legal.
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Yes, there was a statute of limitations in place at the time that this happened in late 1995 or 96.
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And Mayor de Blasio, when he heard your story, said that he would pursue, on your behalf, an investigation.
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And so you have the dress that you were wearing.
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They have, you know, emailed me to tell me that, you know, as you say, the statute of limitations is passed because...
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I don't want to say what, you know, because I don't know what it is.
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Does it seem, does it seem, I've heard people speculate, that maybe she was a little, maybe, tipsy on this particular interview?
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I mean, she's certainly slurring words and such.
00:09:01.820
I don't, I don't, I don't, look, I don't, I don't, okay.
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And I, they tell me straight up, they say, whatever, whatever you get out of this conversation, I want you to remember, uh, well, I don't, I don't remember what they said out of that, but they told me stuff.
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And, uh, I'm telling you, there's, it's past the time.
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Why would you tell a story like this at this time, right?
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But you go 20 years, 25 years, without telling the story about, about this, you know, alleged assault.
00:10:03.380
And we were there, and he was touching lingerie in a very rapey sort of way, okay?
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And he came up to me and said, uh, hey, would you try this lingerie on for me?
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And I said, well, that's kind of a, uh, strange, uh, strange request, because, uh, usually, uh, people don't let you try on, uh, like, underwear and stuff.
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And so I said, uh, okay, I'll just go into this room.
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Would you like to be there, uh, while I change in, into this lingerie?
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And he was, I distinctly remember he was wearing a trench coat or a overcoat or a big long, I mean, it's just his tie was, uh, in the way of his wee wee.
00:11:09.180
So I couldn't tell that he opened up his fly, but I talked to a lot of people and it happens.
00:11:16.820
Cause I, that's an amazing, I just, it does, does not seem to hold up to the very basic levels of, of a credibility check.
00:11:26.760
Um, because I mean, cause a couple of things, number one, uh, you are releasing this book 25 years later.
00:11:40.260
Cause no, cause I mean, you want people to know the truth about Donald Trump, right?
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You want people, you want people to know the truth about Donald Trump, that he's this really bad guy, right?
00:11:55.240
What you have now is the mayor of the city who could actually look into this is telling
00:12:01.080
you, we will look into this now, despite whether he actually can or not, he doesn't understand
00:12:11.820
Like the people that emailed you that you didn't consult.
00:12:16.620
But the added advantage here, and this is a miracle situation.
00:12:20.560
If you're in, if you're in this situation, you're writing a book, you're trying to obviously
00:12:23.460
let people know the truth about this awful person who's a president of the United States
00:12:26.640
and up for election and all these things is the mayor of the city is also running for president
00:12:33.660
So he is incredibly motivated to find anything negative about Donald Trump.
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Here's the, here's the, here's what says it all.
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Let me go and reframe this CNN interview with Anderson Cooper.
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The porn rape carries so many sexual connotations.
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When you start listening to her like this, play it again.
00:13:19.280
Which the word rape carries so many sexual connotations.
00:13:30.100
I think most people think of rape as a, I mean, it is a violent assault.
00:13:34.040
It is not, I think most people think of rape as being sexy.
00:13:44.380
If you can stick around, we'll talk more on the other side.
00:13:53.740
What would any journalist that was really trying to get to the truth do in that situation?
00:14:00.860
What would a journalist do even if he just hammered it out of his mind?
00:14:07.960
What is the one thing you would never do at that moment?
00:14:18.640
You'd say, I know I'm supposed to take a break here, but hold on just a second.
00:14:29.020
You think you have now a chance to take her apart because it's all starting to unravel.
00:14:37.300
The last thing you do, unless you're part of the defense of this woman, not prosecution
00:14:47.260
If you're part of the defense, you immediately go, your honor, we need a recess.
00:14:54.140
Look, it's a woman who's claiming to be, you know, claiming to be raped.
00:14:58.260
And usually those people are not attacked in an interview.
00:15:03.160
However, if it was a Republican who, you know, if it was, you know, Roy Moore who's on the
00:15:09.260
air and he's being pressed and he says something like that, like that's not going to be just
00:15:15.180
If you are trying to find the truth, you don't take a four minute break where one of her handlers
00:15:22.400
can come up to her and go, um, you, uh, we should end this interview.
00:15:34.900
I think as, as you, as you are in that it's, it's a, it's a gentle treatment of someone who
00:15:40.720
However, I think when it comes down to it on the other side, that would not be the treatment
00:15:53.580
Uh, so we'll talk about that coming up in just a moment.
00:16:14.900
And I know this because I was in constant pain.
00:16:20.980
Got up every single day and thought, I can't do this for another day.
00:16:30.800
And I mean, that would happen to me on days that I was, you know, off and just had to be
00:16:35.480
there with my family and just had to, you know, do normal stuff, not even work.
00:16:42.660
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00:17:38.940
You just brought up a lot of memories today as I'm listening to the program.
00:17:48.480
I would just like to report a credible accusation of assault against the president of the United States.
00:18:27.220
And I'm, and I look behind the genius bar and there's Donald Trump.
00:18:31.780
Who, you see, you've heard him say he's one of the most brilliant geniuses in the world.
00:18:40.440
And I thought he was going to help me with my purchase.
00:18:44.240
And instead he put his hands on me and he began to strangle me.
00:18:50.520
Yes, and then, and then, when it happened, Donald Trump murdered me.
00:19:02.520
And he murdered me right in the middle of the Apple store.
00:19:20.880
Okay, but I, I just want to tell you that he was.
00:19:49.860
Yes, at the time, I told three friends about the attack.
00:20:02.740
None of them, because none of them were alive in 1938.
00:20:09.020
It's also, well, it's only available for people who are premium subscribers.
00:20:12.980
Um, if they, they just have to purchase the membership, and then, and then if they pledge
00:20:28.020
Uh, but it was a, it was a thrilling tale of her murder.
00:20:38.940
I would like to get your individual perspective.
00:20:46.200
Uh, so there was a, a, uh, you have a relative, close relative, who used to work at the store
00:20:56.800
He was working there when your daughter met him, right?
00:21:04.480
No, no, I'm just, I, Tim, I mean, like, no one, I have to explain who Tim is in any way.
00:21:16.440
So the, my question would be, and maybe it's changed over the years.
00:21:19.480
This was, I don't think he was working there in 1996.
00:21:27.840
Like my impression of the store, which is like the most like ritzy store in the universe.
00:21:34.620
Is not that you could get away with a sexual assault in the middle of it.
00:21:45.200
Tim has told me these absolute horror stories, horror stories that have happened to him in,
00:21:52.940
First of all, people who shop at Bergdorf, they just think that they, they have no,
00:22:03.160
This is a place that honestly, the, it's a, it's a block long on the, for the men's store,
00:22:10.400
And it's a full city, New York city block for the women's store.
00:22:22.580
My wife and I, we went to Bergdorf's first time we were living there.
00:22:38.860
But there are some things that happened behind the scenes that are stunning.
00:23:15.180
You're going to go to a show with Bill O'Reilly and I.
00:23:19.020
You're going to go through some other shows on the ship with me.
00:23:22.920
You might even go to shore with me and get a tour of Athens.
00:23:35.940
Being on a cruise with you for that long, I'll be very drunk.
00:23:44.220
They're still offering their early bird discount.
00:23:58.380
And coming soon, Mercury One has the museum going on.
00:24:00.800
They're building it right now here in the studios.
00:24:11.040
We're just talking about this woman who is claiming rape,
00:24:21.580
And Bergdorf Goodman, so you know, is Neiman Marcus on steroids.
00:24:27.500
It is, would you say, the most exclusive women's and men's store in America?
00:24:37.700
Because it's not like, I mean, what's the level below that people would know?
00:24:44.980
So everybody goes, you think Neiman Marcus is like hoity-toity.
00:25:07.200
Yeah, when he first comes in and Liza Minnelli is stealing a tie.
00:25:13.260
And he's like, I'll take 10 of those sweaters, six in this color, 14 in that color.
00:25:24.260
And then she takes the tie and he goes across the street.
00:25:27.980
She goes across the street and the security guard stops her.
00:25:34.040
And then Dudley Moore steps up and he's like, no.
00:25:47.020
So, and my son-in-law worked at Bergdorf Goodman.
00:25:59.280
They'll come in and they'll come in with their Great Dane and their dog will crap in
00:26:05.860
the middle of Bergdorf's and they won't say anything.
00:26:09.320
They'll just walk away like, will somebody please clean this up?
00:26:26.060
If you were known like Donald Trump, you could see going into a dressing room and perhaps
00:26:33.780
But if there was rape going on and somebody said, help, I'm telling you the Bergdorf people
00:26:42.800
She said that it was tights or a leotard of some sort.
00:26:46.520
And why wouldn't you if you're being raped by Donald Trump?
00:26:59.100
First of all, that bodysuit was probably five hundred to a thousand dollars if it was just
00:27:13.200
Buster Brown doesn't let you try on shoes without socks.
00:27:16.920
You think they're going to have lingerie or a bodysuit?
00:27:27.460
And I'm telling you the help would have been there.
00:27:29.760
Now, if somebody was having consensual sex in a room, that's different.
00:27:34.900
I'll bet you that Bergdorf is like, especially for somebody who would spend a lot of money.
00:27:43.500
I think they would just be like, they were having sex in there and there's nothing I can
00:27:49.060
do because they spend thousands and thousands and thousands of dollars and they wanted to
00:27:56.020
But I'm telling you, they would have been right there.
00:28:05.960
If that was going on, she would have the bodysuit because they would force her to buy it.
00:28:13.060
Which is kind of nasty to think of the whole thing.
00:28:24.260
She told two people and they kept her secret for all this time.
00:28:27.800
I just, I, none of that story makes sense to me.
00:28:33.580
Especially the way she's acting now is so bizarre.
00:28:42.260
Which, quite honestly, which makes her story kind of more real, but as consensual.
00:28:52.040
If she thinks, if she has rape fantasies, okay, then she would go into some store and some
00:29:03.260
Why don't you try that on and I'll come in with you.
00:29:05.320
And as she said herself, she thought, this is funny.
00:29:10.960
And when he said, no, I'm not aware that's your size.
00:29:15.940
That's a, that, that's just what a rape fantasy.
00:29:25.160
Because no woman, no man, no one would ever do that.
00:29:30.300
Imagine, imagine somebody coming up and some woman coming up to you in a store and saying,
00:29:35.340
you know, you'd look really sexy in that and really kind of coming on to you.
00:29:44.340
Would you come in with me and just see what you wouldn't do that?
00:29:54.260
Her, her defense on that is that she thought it was funny and playful and did not think anything
00:30:01.480
You know, it, it seems very strange in retrospect at the very least, but that is what she says.
00:30:07.300
She's like, oh, I just thought he was just coming in.
00:30:12.300
And she has a book that she is selling to tell that story.
00:30:15.960
It just seems like if you're not going to, if someone's going to offer you the guy who's
00:30:19.240
running against him, Bill de Blasio, running the city of New York is saying, yeah, I don't
00:30:28.520
He has every incentive in the world to do this.
00:30:32.300
I got an email that said like, I probably wouldn't work.
00:30:35.520
Like if you're, if your idea here is to prove that the president of the United States is a
00:30:41.200
rapist, which obviously we would all agree that if he actually did this thing, it shouldn't
00:30:51.360
If it's true, obviously what you want to do is to make sure that he pays a massive price
00:30:56.560
for it, Bill de Blasio, whether it's true or not, does try to prove that it is true now
00:31:03.280
She doesn't want to pay the price of falsely accusing someone of rape.
00:31:16.200
Well, I mean, I think Donald Trump could still go after, but he's not going to.
00:31:19.940
Why even if you're the attorney for the president, you just want people to stop talking about
00:31:30.240
However, if she would file charges, then he can come after her with the weight of the
00:31:42.620
And at least in theory, although I can't imagine again, if you, if the mayor of your
00:31:46.280
city is offering this sort of assistance, I can't imagine she'd actually get in trouble
00:31:52.020
The problem is how are you going to, you're never going to be able to prove it's not, it
00:32:01.660
Did you see the ridiculous video that came out this week?
00:32:06.340
With the rope loosely around it and nobody even cinched it up.
00:32:11.420
Wouldn't you, if that had happened to you, wouldn't the first thing you do be like,
00:32:30.160
They're coming up and like tugging on it and stuff.
00:32:32.680
Just wanted to make sure you all knew that that noose was around my head, my neck.
00:32:39.260
And then as soon as he finds out that their body cam's on, he tells him to turn it off
00:33:01.820
And Beto and Elizabeth Warren are the two big stars.
00:33:22.540
She's actually ahead of Bernie with move on.org fans, members by 20 points.
00:33:32.160
I think she is, you know, you look at Bernie and you think he's a crazy old man now.
00:33:38.300
I can't think of the single thing that is appealing about that guy.
00:33:50.300
Cause cause you had a great show last night on Gillibrand.
00:34:00.300
Especially because she was known as a conservative.
00:34:03.000
She was known as a moderate Democrat forever until she became a Senator.
00:34:07.080
And then she's now left of Sanders, which is just laughable.
00:34:09.800
She's just does not believe anything, which you proved, I think to were the beyond a reasonable
00:34:14.860
But, you know, like for example, Sanders is saying she wants to pay.
00:34:19.000
He was Sanders is saying he wants to pay off all college debt where Elizabeth Warren
00:34:23.120
is like, well, I want to pay off, you know, college debt.
00:34:25.600
But if you make over $250,000 a year, we're not going to pay off your debt.
00:34:30.300
Like, she's like, my plan is going to cost $800 billion.
00:34:35.840
Well, I'm also going to give away free ice cream on every street corner in America.
00:34:41.720
But I mean, they're both basically the same candidate, right?
00:34:53.140
She doesn't look like Scubble from Little Mermaid.
00:35:00.720
Where she, I think, is, you know, built by scientists in a lab for the ultimate candidate
00:35:13.040
If you're thinking about electability, I mean, can Bernie Sanders win a national election?
00:35:19.040
And I think Democrats look at it and say, like, there's no way this guy's going to win.
00:35:27.360
I got to tell you, if I think, I would think if I were a Democrat, I would be for Beto just
00:35:39.920
For non-military households, which would disproportionately hit liberal households much heavier because
00:35:50.160
proportionately, the people in the red states are the ones who are going into the military.
00:35:56.400
So if you haven't served in the military, you have to pay a war tax.
00:36:03.620
And it seems like, too, you'd also be hitting people who are opposed to the war disproportionately.
00:36:07.740
It's like, this is like, how can I screw my own base but look like I'm against war?
00:36:23.120
Because the war thing, war tax is basically saying, look, I'm super duper against war.
00:36:32.740
But he can't say he's going to tax the military families, right?
00:36:38.940
Like, these people are going over and fighting for our freedom and they're going to tax them
00:36:47.220
He's trying to appeal to veterans saying, I'm going to tax everybody else, but not you,
00:36:59.020
And so he's trying to appeal to the veterans, but the veterans are not going to be voting for
00:37:10.580
You know, everyone was so fired up about him, but we here in Texas, we're watching the
00:37:14.980
race closely and it's like, you don't, you don't mean this guy.
00:37:24.140
He's every time he starts talking, he's dripping with sweat.
00:37:28.660
So he's like, well, just like this, this is your Kennedy.
00:37:38.000
Who is going to, who is, who is she going to, Elizabeth Warren?
00:38:09.280
And Elizabeth Warren is the angry teenager for having to sit there.
00:38:12.800
Oddly though, they, they did break this up randomly.
00:38:15.500
So what they did is they broke up the candidates into above 2% and below 2%.
00:38:21.760
So Elizabeth Warren, basically, I would say lucked out because she has none of the top tier
00:38:28.560
And it's still, while I think it would be risky later on in the campaign if this happened,
00:38:32.640
because it's very possible people would just not watch it.
00:38:35.140
But it's the first debate of the entire election.
00:38:40.780
I just can't wait to see who's going to out left.
00:38:42.680
I mean, she's asking for reparations for gay and lesbian couples.
00:38:46.360
I mean, I just think this is, this is just going to be fantastic.
00:38:51.040
By the way, Cory Booker would be the other one who would be above 1% or 2%.
00:39:05.980
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It's American Financing, the only mortgage company I have ever endorsed.
00:40:20.820
American Financing Corporation, NMLS 182334, www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org.
00:40:31.460
Next hour, I want to show you and talk to you about a couple of items that happen to be sitting in my studio.
00:40:39.700
The Amuncipation Proclamation, the 13th Amendment, both signed by Abraham Lincoln and the Gettysburg Address.
00:40:47.300
And how you can see these in person at our pop-up museum, mercuryone.org.
00:41:02.840
And now here's Glenn and Stu at the next hour of the show.
00:41:06.280
Man, there's so many things that you have to worry about that you shouldn't have to worry about.
00:41:12.560
And everything that we used to do is not secure anymore.
00:41:21.940
Home Title Lock is the only company that is standing literally at the virtual gate or the virtual vault door for over 90% of all home titles in America.
00:41:32.600
Somebody can come in and steal your title electronically.
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Take 30 bucks and about 30 minutes and you're done.
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We've had people that have had their houses repossessed.
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Register your address now and verify that you're not already a victim and get 30 days of free protection.
00:42:30.740
There's two categories that the Democrats have to choose from, really.
00:42:38.940
And I'll explain those groups and what to watch for tonight.
00:42:44.020
And also, we're going to take a look at the poll numbers.
00:42:49.220
The poll numbers may tell you everything you need to know for not today, but for what is coming after this field is whittled down a few.
00:43:14.960
You know, if you're not in pain, oh man, before I hit 50, 48, pain, aches and pains and getting sick and all that stuff, that never happened.
00:43:37.060
Now, if you can't do that for some reason or another, you don't want to, you're going to start to have pain.
00:43:44.980
I swear to you, this really confirms my thought that the founders, they weren't that brave.
00:43:54.920
They could shoot me, but I haven't even had any aspirin.
00:44:09.460
Imagine a world without pain relief, without aspirin, without, quite honestly, without drugs.
00:44:15.600
Now, we have so many ways to relieve our pain, and pain is a thing of the past if you're willing to go down the road of these narcotics.
00:44:26.240
I'm not willing to go down that road, and I don't think you are either.
00:44:31.360
They're bad, and they can slip out of control easily.
00:44:36.900
And they just make you not care about it so much.
00:44:59.360
If it doesn't work, you're not out of anything.
00:45:25.720
Last night on TV, we did our socialist spotlight, which is always fun.
00:45:30.960
To do the socialist spotlight, because there are a few socialists out there.
00:45:35.860
And I'm going to give you the update on the socialists that we highlighted yesterday.
00:45:55.320
How many people like that do you think there are up there, Stu?
00:46:03.300
Yeah, like the difference between Bernie Sanders and Kirsten Gillibrand.
00:46:09.920
He went to the Soviet Union on his honeymoon, famously.
00:46:15.580
You know, Kirsten Gillibrand was known as a conservative in the House and all of a sudden
00:46:22.540
O'Rourke, you can't tell what O'Rourke actually believes.
00:46:28.420
He's been all over the board depending on who he's in front of.
00:46:33.460
So there's a definite split there as well as to who's a true believer and who realizes
00:46:39.520
the, you know, the mood of the Democratic Party right now and is moving to fit it.
00:46:44.460
So I want to talk to you a little bit about the poll numbers because the poll numbers
00:47:01.140
However, there are 22 other people on the stand.
00:47:05.800
Now, maybe, maybe it's just that when everybody else joins, you know, when everybody else is
00:47:14.000
eliminated, Joe Biden will pick up a lot more points because there's a lot more people like
00:47:20.980
But I don't think that's true because the people that are acting like he is.
00:47:30.840
So it's so it's it's it's like everybody who wants to be in the center, who just wants
00:47:36.960
to restore America to sanity, as they would say.
00:47:40.920
I wouldn't say, but as they would say, those people are about 35 percent, 38 percent, would
00:47:51.440
I mean, I think there's a good a good opportunity to point that out.
00:47:56.000
And that you're at Biden, you know, let's say he has 30 percent.
00:48:03.320
I mean, Klobuchar has one or two Yang, maybe one or two Hickenlooper, one Bennett, one or
00:48:17.960
Now, let's total up the number of the pitchfork people, the people who literally want to overturn
00:48:28.700
So they're people who are talking about changing the Constitution, getting rid of the free market,
00:48:36.420
I mean, people who are talking about deep foundational and structural change.
00:48:57.100
Then you have Kamala Harris, who would be in the very left side of this at eight.
00:49:03.900
You have already, you've already surpassed Biden.
00:49:08.840
And again, like I, after this, O'Rourke, you're going to put over on the left side as
00:49:12.180
well, I think, even though I don't, I think he's another one like Gillibrand who doesn't
00:49:15.040
really believe anything, but he's running certainly as a, as a leftist.
00:49:26.560
Yang, I think you'd put, he got 2% in that poll.
00:49:28.680
You put him maybe on the more conservative or moderate sort of side.
00:49:37.120
Um, Gabbard, you'd have to put over on the left, uh, 1%.
00:49:44.500
You got Bullock would be on the, on the moderate side, maybe.
00:49:55.000
I mean, this is, I mean, she has been, just had a rough role.
00:49:58.420
The, the one you might have a tough time placing at this point because he's given such little
00:50:06.940
Buttigieg is a guy who's saying, I want to change the Supreme Court.
00:50:14.000
Um, he, he advocated a 49.999% top rate in taxes.
00:50:19.540
Now, again, on the Democratic side, where do you put that?
00:50:23.020
I don't even know where to place that because as of the United States, that's a crazy proposal.
00:50:30.040
For Democrats, though, a lot of them are saying 70 and 80%.
00:50:33.060
So, I don't know if he's moderate or not, but I mean, I think you probably put him on the
00:50:38.560
left side of this, though he, you could also just leave him in the middle.
00:50:43.560
But if you add all this stuff up, you're at 29, 37, 39, 40, 43, uh, 48 on the left.
00:50:50.300
And on the quote-unquote moderate side, you've got 32 for Biden, but one for Klobuchar, 33.
00:50:59.180
So, really, like, you know, it depends on how this breaks out.
00:51:02.640
Biden, however, is, has a case to be, to make to the left.
00:51:07.660
I mean, the guy was in a, the most progressive administration, arguably, in history with Obama.
00:51:13.120
I mean, you could certainly, there's other ways to argue that, but I mean, you could certainly
00:51:15.960
make the case that he did more leftist things than any other president.
00:51:23.360
He had a very progressive voting record coming into Congress, as I think the, he was number
00:51:27.440
one or two, as far as the most liberal senators when he was put in as VP.
00:51:31.760
Yes, he has some positions that are, generally speaking, old, that they're trying to say,
00:51:42.100
At the time, 1981, his positions were pretty liberal for 1981.
00:51:45.200
It's just that they don't look so liberal now, because that was a long time ago.
00:51:49.560
I mean, people confuse Biden's being moderate and just being old.
00:51:52.960
He's just been around for a really long freaking time.
00:51:55.720
And he's a politician, unlike Sanders, who really is an ideologue.
00:51:59.220
I mean, you know, Biden has somewhat conservative sounding quotes from his past, because in the
00:52:06.640
past, the Democrats were trying to portray themselves as were the middle of the road.
00:52:11.200
Like, he was fitting the times, which, you know, I can understand.
00:52:16.580
I mean, if you're a Sanders supporter, that's not good enough for you.
00:52:19.680
But I mean, once it comes down to Biden, you know, against a couple of people on the left,
00:52:25.420
he's going to be able to make a pretty good argument.
00:52:27.200
I mean, remember, he was the one that announced the gay marriage acceptance for the Obama administration.
00:52:37.220
You have to put yourself put yourself into the way the the Republicans felt.
00:52:43.560
The Republicans had some good choices as well, besides Donald Trump, that would work within
00:52:52.380
No, they wanted somebody that would not work in the system.
00:52:57.460
They wanted somebody to overturn the the apple cart.
00:53:04.360
What you have to watch in these debates tonight are for the people who want to overturn the
00:53:10.520
apple cart, the pitchfork Democrats, the ones who are not saying that Donald Trump is the
00:53:19.360
They're all going to say Donald Trump is the problem.
00:53:20.720
But what they're going to say also, the pitchfork Democrats, is Donald Trump is a nightmare.
00:53:32.480
This financial system doesn't work, meaning the free market system.
00:53:36.220
They may even come out and say that we have to fundamentally transform this financial system.
00:53:41.920
So the free market they want to take in and and turn upside down.
00:53:48.440
They want to destroy the system that they think is broken and replace it with system X.
00:53:57.060
OK, Joe Biden, on the other hand, is the kind of candidate who is saying, no, we don't
00:54:03.260
need to destroy the system to get rid of essentially Trump.
00:54:07.500
If you come back to the Obama era, it would be great.
00:54:10.380
And that approach didn't work with with Mitt Romney in 12.
00:54:18.620
I think it's not going to work this time around.
00:54:23.380
And the only reason the only reason I think Biden is perceived as let me put it this way.
00:54:32.020
Biden is the guy that I wouldn't want to be the presidential nominee, because I think there's a chance that you get enough.
00:54:44.560
What we used to call blue dog Democrats, people who usually vote Democrat, but they couldn't vote for Hillary Clinton, the Obama Trump voters.
00:54:55.180
And the the female Republican voters who just don't like Trump because they don't like how, you know, stylistically, stylistically.
00:55:06.400
OK, that would look at Trump and Biden and say they're interchangeable, even though they're not.
00:55:12.760
And I just feel more comfortable with him because he speaks, you know, softer, yada, yada, yada.
00:55:27.720
However, I think the Democrats want to embrace this burn the entire thing down.
00:55:45.340
And so I think when you look at the numbers, what are the numbers again?
00:55:49.160
You when you add them all together, we have 48 on the left, 35 moderate.
00:55:57.400
You know, you can make if you want to make a case for Biden here getting through this, you can find one.
00:56:02.460
I mean, if you look at the if you look at the other side, because you're talking about like they wanted someone to turn over the system.
00:56:08.400
If you look at 2016 from another perspective, one of the things that kept happening was Donald Trump was sort of in his own wing, really the only person running in that area.
00:56:19.020
And everyone kept saying, well, when these other candidates drop out and they start losing, they're going to coalesce behind somebody in in that wing, the non Donald Trump wing.
00:56:32.860
People just kept going over to one relatively easily.
00:56:36.180
But I wonder that's because that's because people think I just want to win.
00:56:44.920
OK, that's what that that's what the thing was.
00:56:49.420
And I don't know that that is a strong enough pull for the radicals of the left.
00:56:55.640
Yeah. You know, for the millennials and everything else, they don't want to vote for Joe Biden.
00:57:01.120
They want somebody that will stand up for their ideas.
00:57:04.660
So Joe Biden may win, but it won't be the young and it won't be the radicals.
00:57:19.800
It's interesting because I think there's a there's a thing going on on the right, generally speaking, where you're like you're looking at these debates.
00:57:28.700
But it's like when you are when you're when your team has just won the championship game.
00:57:34.440
You want to watch the other conference championship game because you want to see who it is.
00:57:38.420
And sometimes it's difficult to pick who you would want.
00:57:40.640
I mean, because I think Biden would be there's a lot of people in that middle area, those Democrats that voted for Trump who may be won over by Biden.
00:57:47.380
Or those Republicans who generally vote for Republican, but they can cross the aisle one way or another.
00:57:57.060
Trump's best way to get elected is someone like Elizabeth Warren.
00:58:02.100
The people in the middle are like, holy crap, she wants to do what?
00:58:05.840
You know, I'm not in love with Trump, but I got to go with him.
00:58:10.100
However, it's also a high risk thing to root for someone who's that Trump can beat, because if you get a Warren or a Sanders in there, yeah, they might be easier for Trump to beat.
00:58:21.280
But if he doesn't beat them, the entire country could really be transformed even more than when we saw it with Obama.
00:58:27.580
I mean, Sanders or Warren is like that is hardcore ideologue remaking the country.
00:58:34.660
The country is you'll have, you know, Ocasio-Cortez and her ilk.
00:58:39.300
Look, that's what will be running the country, and it will not be the same.
00:58:51.460
You know, we found out yesterday about Google or two days ago from Project Veritas.
00:58:58.800
I don't know if you saw the Google executive talk to Ted Cruz.
00:59:02.020
We should play that audio when we come back in about a minute.
00:59:08.940
They are literally, in their own words, in their own, you know, what do you call it, the PowerPoint presentation, in their own Google's own PowerPoint presentation, they are saying the people are programmed.
00:59:36.520
Nobody wants this to happen, and they are tracking your every move, and they are going to be nudging you.
00:59:44.480
So don't worry about Facebook, because Facebook can't gather any information.
00:59:57.360
If you sign up for a year, that's what it costs you.
01:00:13.560
If I were king of the world, and I could make everybody pay attention to one thing, I think it would be the expose of Project Veritas this week.
01:00:36.000
I think what they exposed needs to chill people to the bone.
01:00:43.100
You need to wake up, because we are quickly, quickly leaving a time to where we can change this.
01:00:55.520
I was listening to Tim Pool the other day, and the way he explains it, I happen to think that he's right.
01:01:06.500
He is the guy who has really been following this and knows, and we are looking now not at, oh, they're going to do facial recognition.
01:01:19.900
Oh, they're watching and gathering all of our information on this.
01:01:27.240
Worry about them collectively, because when they have all of these devices, they control you, and they know it, and they talk about it, and the experts talk about it.
01:01:44.940
This is total control and the ability to manipulate 350 million Americans, let alone everybody worldwide.
01:01:55.020
This is why Europe is so against Facebook and so against Google.
01:02:05.460
We're doing what China is doing to their people, except we're just doing it with private businesses.
01:02:11.120
So Ted Cruz was talking to this woman from Google.
01:02:16.340
Now, imagine that you had a huge scandal break, and you're sitting down in front of Congress, and you answer this question this way.
01:02:25.380
A lot of Americans have concerns that big tech media companies, and Google in particular, are engaged in political censorship and bias.
01:02:34.420
As you know, Google enjoys a special immunity from liability under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.
01:02:42.760
The predicate for that immunity was that Google and other big tech media companies would be neutral public fora.
01:02:52.300
Does Google consider itself a neutral public forum?
01:03:01.080
Are you familiar with a report that was released yesterday from Veritas?
01:03:06.000
That included a whistleblower from within Google, that included videos from a senior executive at Google,
01:03:14.740
and that included documents that are purportedly internal PowerPoint documents from Google?
01:03:19.700
Yes, I heard about that report in Industry News.
01:03:29.840
So you didn't review the report to prepare for this hearing?
01:03:32.460
It's been a busy day, and I have a day job, which is digital well-being at Google.
01:03:37.240
So I'm trying to make sure I keep the trains on the train.
01:03:38.800
I'm sorry this hearing isn't pinging on your day.
01:03:43.820
Look, Patriot Mobile, we know who these people are.
01:03:46.220
And quite honestly, your phone company is the same.
01:03:49.880
They are taking, if you have a cellular service with one of the big phone companies,
01:03:54.060
they are taking your money and they're giving it to places like La Raza and Planned Parenthood.
01:04:18.420
Stop doing business with people who are against your values.
01:04:23.900
Start doing business with people who are for your values and are supporting freedom of speech and the Bill of Rights.
01:04:43.600
I'm sitting right across the room right now from the 13th Amendment, the Emancipation Proclamation.
01:05:00.120
As we approach Independence Day, we wanted to do something very special and very different here at the Mercury Studios.
01:05:12.920
We have a museum that is opening up this Saturday, and we invite you to come.
01:05:19.560
It is called Twelve Score and Three Years Ago, The Unfinished Promise of Unity.
01:05:31.920
And this also has, I don't know what you call it, augmented reality in it as well through the museum.
01:05:40.020
You'll be able to experience things in a different way.
01:05:44.720
But before you get into the slave ship, we ask several questions.
01:05:55.740
Was American slavery any different than the slavery that was happening elsewhere in the world?
01:06:05.560
How many people came to other parts of the world?
01:06:12.960
You're going to learn things that you have never heard before.
01:06:20.480
But we also are doing then and now because I want to show you the patterns.
01:06:25.320
When you learn from history, you can make sure that you don't repeat it.
01:06:34.100
And some of the things, I mean, walking out into our atrium here, we have probably the studios.
01:06:40.760
How many square feet do you think that atrium is?
01:06:47.720
I mean, it's enormous, this atrium in this building.
01:07:00.080
Our atrium, I had to write a letter to the staff yesterday.
01:07:03.420
Apologizing, I said, I'm not usually one for trigger warnings, but these are understandable trigger warnings.
01:07:11.720
There are weapons of destruction against humanity that are in our atrium that I've never seen before that are just horrific.
01:07:25.540
There's in the center of our everybody was freaking out when we put up the Klan display and showed everything is broken up into nine different categories.
01:07:38.200
And this one is the silencing of of speech, the silencing of people, making sure that you intimidate and frighten people into silence.
01:07:49.680
And so we have the the KKK display and it's pretty intense.
01:08:00.300
I had to write to the staff and said, I I'm really sorry.
01:08:04.460
You know, I understand, you know, how all of us feel about this.
01:08:08.840
And please forgive us that this is where we're doing the museum and look out because it's going to get worse later today, because then we brought in.
01:08:19.620
You remember the cage that they were burning people alive in.
01:08:23.920
ISIS, ISIS, and then they were dunking in pools.
01:08:31.220
We have a cage that has two ISIS execution uniforms, the orange jumpsuits.
01:08:47.520
We have a few of them, and I think we've avoided the one with blood all over it.
01:08:52.600
Um, but these mannequins and these jumpsuits are are in this cage.
01:08:59.020
Uh, and it is and we have the uniform of an ISIS member of someone that was killed.
01:09:06.280
So we have the mask and the uniform and the gun and everything.
01:09:16.100
Um, but we, you will walk away with an understanding of, of history that you've never had before.
01:09:26.860
You will see things that no one has ever seen before.
01:09:30.240
You will see things that are really hard to see, for instance, in the studio.
01:09:33.900
And I have to talk about them here because we got to get them back to a secure room.
01:09:37.060
Um, but these three pieces we've been working with the Lincoln, uh, museum.
01:09:47.140
First, the Gettysburg address, uh, written in Lincoln's own handwriting.
01:09:55.820
He threw away the original or actually he gave it to some newspaper guy who then transcribed
01:10:04.700
And later Lincoln was asked, could you write that out?
01:10:11.340
This is the actual emancipation proclamation that was signed by Abraham Lincoln.
01:10:20.280
And if you're watching the blaze, you'll be able to see it.
01:10:22.880
Uh, uh, and you just have to come to the museum or, or sign up for the blaze to see it, but
01:10:28.520
you can barely read the, this is in worse shape than the declaration of independence.
01:10:36.640
And again, signed by Abraham Lincoln, they see the light of day in the museum about three
01:10:44.340
So they're very, it's very, very rare to see them.
01:10:47.680
If you'd like to see them along with the Juneteenth, a proclamation, proclamation number three,
01:10:55.780
Uh, did you, had you ever heard of Juneteenth before you moved here?
01:10:58.620
Not until I moved to Texas, but it's a big deal here.
01:11:03.800
It is actually a national holiday, but it is one of those things where it just has the
01:11:07.940
name of like a mall store, like they like a mall, a sale.
01:11:17.680
Texas, the news of the slaves being free hadn't traveled down to Texas for, I think, almost
01:11:28.020
And so the slaves found out when the proclamation, uh, finally arrived and it was, I think, June
01:11:37.500
And when the proclamation finally arrived in Texas and it was announced, the, the slaves
01:11:49.920
We have that actual proclamation that came in to Texas, uh, here as well.
01:12:00.000
Um, I asked that you would, uh, help us help stop slavery today.
01:12:06.720
This really is to make you into a modern day abolitionist.
01:12:10.900
We have looked for so many different ways to, to say to people, stop dwelling on blame
01:12:19.680
on the past because we're doing the same thing.
01:12:23.800
Now, there are a few abolitionists that are standing up for Christians, Christians right
01:12:30.640
How are the churches not flocking to help the Christians in the world who are being persecuted,
01:12:40.740
The things that we have from the Middle East right now that are in this building are horrifying.
01:12:48.620
We're talking about in, in Washington and the news, we're talking about the border being
01:13:02.640
It's actually stunning the things you will learn about American history that you didn't
01:13:13.600
It is stunning when you learn about things that are going on right now and you see the
01:13:19.320
actual items and it actually will be very uplifting for you and your family at the end.
01:13:27.320
It's this Saturday here in Texas and, uh, it goes until July 7th.
01:13:33.580
Now, right now, if you buy a ticket at mercury one.org, you buy 50 tickets, if you want to
01:13:39.480
bring, you know, everybody in your church or whatever, you'll be upgraded.
01:13:43.920
We're going to select one person that bought tickets from now until this time tomorrow.
01:13:49.460
Uh, and we will pull a name tomorrow at this time.
01:13:53.160
And whenever you bought your tickets for, you can choose, uh, whoever is here.
01:13:58.100
And, uh, you know, if I'm, if I'm here, I think I'm the last thing I'm doing is July
01:14:02.680
4th, uh, cause I've got something I have to go to New York for, but David Barton will be
01:14:11.960
If you buy when I'm here, I will give you a personal tour and the personal tours are,
01:14:18.380
are really great, but I want you to know I'm going to be here the whole time.
01:14:22.420
Uh, starting this Saturday, I'm going to be here every day and I really want to shake
01:14:33.560
If you're anywhere in the area or you have the means to be able to fly down, please do.
01:14:39.200
Mercury one.org is where you'll find all of the information for 12 score and three years
01:14:43.740
ago, the unfinished promise of unity 12 score tickets now at mercury one.org.
01:14:57.780
We have a Supreme court update coming up in just a second.
01:15:00.880
Uh, we live in, in really dangerous times and there are things that we have to teach
01:15:05.780
our kids that, um, you know, that, that, that they won't, that we never had to learn.
01:15:12.280
We never had to learn about, Hey, school shootings, mass shootings.
01:15:18.500
If there's a mass shooter, uh, how can you help if there's a mass shooter?
01:15:23.440
We didn't have to do any of those things right now.
01:15:26.540
The USCCA that's the United States concealed carry association is giving for free.
01:15:37.480
And that is the complete mass shooting survival guide.
01:15:40.500
I can't believe I'm saying that you should have this, but you should.
01:15:48.700
They want to show you the USCCA wants to show you what they do to help protect everyday
01:15:54.300
Americans and help protect responsible gun owners.
01:15:58.300
So if you want this complete mass shooting survival guide, and that is, you know, what you need
01:16:03.940
to know about mass shootings, how to survive attack proven strategies for stopping shooters.
01:16:09.400
You just text the word Glenn G L E N N to the number eight, seven, two, two, two.
01:16:15.520
You'll get your guide compliments of the USCCA hurry because this offer ends June 28th.
01:16:21.940
So text the word Glenn to the number eight, seven, two, two, two.
01:16:25.740
That's G L E N N to the number eight, seven, two, two, two.
01:16:32.420
Let's talk a little bit about the Supreme court.
01:16:36.840
We're expecting some pretty significant court rulings.
01:16:50.300
So tomorrow will be the last day of the decisions.
01:16:52.140
There's, there were eight cases remaining, three announced today, five will come tomorrow.
01:16:57.380
So the three that came out today, you've got, um, one on the kind of a criminal justice sort
01:17:03.420
of situation where, whether you have to go with a judge or, or a jury, um, basically, um,
01:17:10.100
this had Gorsuch siding with the liberals, uh, for a, uh, for the ruling.
01:17:14.820
And it kind of fits with his sort of libertarian take on things, um, in that he's basically
01:17:20.160
saying like, you got to have a jury for these things.
01:17:21.940
And there's a law that basically kind of has the judge making the decisions on certain aspects
01:17:31.780
I, I don't, I, I mean, I have to know the ins and outs and I have to read the review,
01:17:35.060
but just what you said, yes, I feel like I would agree with him.
01:17:38.360
Generally speaking, you'd look at this and say like the Kavanaugh's and Alito's of the world
01:17:41.560
are more like, uh, you know, criminal, like they're tougher on criminals, you'd say,
01:17:47.380
But I mean, this is a known split between them.
01:17:51.520
There was another thing about licensing for beer and wine stores in Tennessee and another
01:17:56.080
one about, um, do we know how they ruled on that?
01:18:01.320
I just, I mean, just so you can give it real quick.
01:18:04.220
It's about the 21st amendment and, uh, the rights of States to be able to make their own
01:18:08.900
liquor laws and I, you know, it, uh, so which way did they come down?
01:18:23.240
So that's a, um, and then I, I didn't again, look all that much into that one.
01:18:28.440
Um, and then there was another one about, I thought it was actually a big one, which was
01:18:31.900
this, this concept of you have to basically, um, if there's a question about how an
01:18:38.520
agency came up with their own regulation, do you defer to that agency's reading of the
01:18:44.320
regulation or do you essentially judge it against the constitution?
01:18:48.620
Uh, and of course, uh, yeah, that one did not go the way I would have wanted it to.
01:18:54.280
I mean, and that's been a standard that's been around for a while.
01:18:58.080
Um, there's some definitely appetite to overturn it.
01:19:01.220
Um, but so far, no, there should be an appetite to overturn that an agency and, you know, liberals
01:19:06.620
need to understand this and conservatives need to understand this.
01:19:10.140
Your agency can make any deal that it wants right now under a, uh, a Republican and they
01:19:17.060
could say, you know what, we're going to take all the guns away from all Democrats.
01:19:21.080
I mean, I mean, this is obviously extreme, extreme, but if the agency is the final arbiter
01:19:26.640
of that, not the constitution, they can do whatever they want.
01:19:31.860
No, they did state that while they allowed it here, there are limits to it and they outline
01:19:38.600
Uh, you have, um, a couple of the big ones left.
01:19:44.440
Uh, there's two gerrymandering cases, uh, that are, they've been watched pretty closely.
01:19:51.500
What are they, what, what are the ramifications if it goes one way or the other?
01:19:54.840
Uh, well, I mean, it's part, it's about partisan gerrymandering.
01:19:58.600
So, you know, that's one of those things where the left is very fired up about that because
01:20:03.120
Republicans have been in control of these states so often recently that they've been
01:20:06.640
able to redraw these lines to their advantage, which of course is what the Democrats do when
01:20:10.740
Um, but now they're thinking about it because Republicans have done it more recently.
01:20:14.820
Uh, so they've overturned, you remember Pennsylvania had an issue with this that was, uh, overturned.
01:20:19.740
Um, and so we don't know how this one turns out yet.
01:20:22.160
Uh, but you know, the left is, you know, I mean, I would like it to just be very standard
01:20:29.080
Well, you know, that was the way it was in the letters between, uh, John Adams and Thomas
01:20:34.120
They said, you know, we should have put more Deuteronomy in it and we should have divided
01:20:42.120
Uh, and that's what their idea was in Deuteronomy.
01:20:45.640
It's a stake is, you know, your, uh, collection of, let's say 500 families and that's a stake.
01:20:51.620
And then when there's 550, uh, you start to split that stake into two.
01:20:59.880
So there's never more than 500 people because that way, when you're electing a representative,
01:21:05.380
you know, that person, that person lives real close to you.
01:21:10.280
The gerrymandering system has snaked these things out.
01:21:15.900
You also have an Indian reservation case and one about whether you can draw blood from someone
01:21:20.800
who's hammered, uh, when they're unconscious, because, which is pretty interesting without
01:21:32.240
I think that's right there with a good and plenty clause of the constitution.
01:21:41.480
And now here's Glenn and Stu with the last hour of the show.
01:21:46.200
Our sponsor is, uh, is, it's cruise builders, right?
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We're going to Venice, which is the one that you want to see the most.
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Um, I've stood, I haven't gone through the actual ruins, but I stood on the, the, uh,
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on Mars Hill right at the Acropolis, looking up to it.
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And I mean, I, it was, it's like you're standing in a movie.
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I, I honestly can't, I don't, I have not thought of that, but I don't know.
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Um, I think he's going to take the cruise up to Croatia with us.
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Um, we'll be with you the whole time teaching you history.
01:22:45.620
You, you don't, don't, don't, you don't even have to bring your wallet.
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I'm not going to be wearing pants because I don't need a pocket.
01:22:58.620
If you can come sail away and learn the roots of what made America great and how it grew
01:23:14.580
So a couple of weeks ago, my son and I are crossing the country.
01:23:17.840
We're taking a road trip and we stop at this place, uh, in, uh, Denver and it's a business
01:23:24.540
and the TV is on and we walk in and we can't see the TV and all of these adults, the customers,
01:23:31.740
everybody, they're all standing around and they're watching this TV.
01:23:34.400
And I think, oh, geez, what big news thing has just broke?
01:23:46.420
And they were watching a show that I thought I was the only one fascinated with.
01:23:56.540
I don't know if you've ever seen this show, but it is great.
01:24:00.660
We have the host Mark Bow on with us in one minute.
01:24:09.560
Also give you some more updates on the Supreme court and, uh, the debate that happens tonight.
01:24:15.720
It's the first big debate and, uh, and that awful picture from over the border coming up
01:24:22.280
Our sponsor this half hour is real estate agents.
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We have a thousand active agents and we have another 5,000 that are on a waiting list.
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We have lots of agents all across the country that want to be a part of real estate agents.
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are because I have to say, I trust these people so I can send them to you.
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I'll trust this person with, uh, my biggest investment probably in my life, my house,
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They have to, I have to trust that they have a high sense of urgency.
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That's why when you first contact real estate agents, I trust you usually get a return.
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I mean, unless it's in the middle of the night, usually get a return in about five minutes.
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No more than an hour, but usually about five minutes.
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We, we want the people who feel urgency and know what they're doing.
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You'll still be the type who thought it was better to just play nice.
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So I want you to listen to this, this guy's credentials.
01:26:13.620
He is the host of DIY's, uh, Barnwood Builders.
01:26:18.120
He worked his way through West Virginia university.
01:26:20.680
He was a coal miner, earned a bachelor's degree in business administration.
01:26:25.320
He's also a craftsman, a businessman, a historian, and a passable break dancer.
01:26:31.780
Uh, he holds a master's degree in safety management from, uh, West Virginia university college of
01:26:39.000
He founded his company antique cabins and barns in 95.
01:26:43.140
He expanded that business into what it is today.
01:26:45.980
Barnwood living, uh, and they started to make a, uh, documentary film, I believe about old log cabins.
01:26:55.080
And it turned in to what now is a hit, uh, TV show, uh, that I find fascinating.
01:27:06.980
Uh, are you surprised by the success of the show?
01:27:14.480
You know, sometimes we're all in a pickup truck driving down the road and we just look at one
01:27:18.780
another without saying a word, just bust out in laughter that, you know, six hillbillies have
01:27:33.480
First, I own an old log cabin and that's why your name came up, um, is because I'm restoring
01:27:39.400
an 1800s, uh, uh, cabin that, uh, is in Idaho, one of the first settlers, uh, and, uh, we're
01:27:47.660
expanding it and, and taking it apart has been a nightmare because we're just so, you know,
01:27:55.480
you take out the chinking and the thing almost falls down, which, uh, I didn't, I didn't know
01:28:05.700
I was stopped by this 80 year old woman in the grocery store.
01:28:10.340
And I said, yes, she said, you just bought the property with this, uh, with this 1880s
01:28:19.140
And you are, you, what have you done with that cabin?
01:28:21.620
I heard you took that cabin down and I'm like, no, no, no, we haven't.
01:28:28.240
I'm like, I know, do you ever get any heat from people on taking these things down?
01:28:38.460
Um, well, first of all, I'd like to say that my marketing team, which is, uh, me didn't
01:28:43.580
do a very good job of making ourselves known to you, or we would have taken it down.
01:28:50.400
So I've got to get on the marketing department, which is myself.
01:28:54.380
Well, you have a strong talking to, I honestly, I didn't even think about calling you guys,
01:29:00.300
you know, cause I mean, I'm just, uh, you know, I'm just doing it myself.
01:29:05.520
Um, but, uh, you know, we just, we just hired a guy to do chinking, which I think somebody
01:29:12.880
I know it's not racist, but it sure sounds racist.
01:29:15.540
Uh, and, uh, there's so few people that I apparently do it right.
01:29:20.180
But as I'm interviewing this guy, I don't know what to, I'm just like, can you put the
01:29:31.820
I think that, uh, to your point earlier there, we do have, and come across some really
01:29:38.180
historic buildings and we try to leave those in place.
01:29:40.540
Um, you know, if it's a first building or it's got, you know, a document of history,
01:29:46.640
the thing to do first is a consultation with the homeowner, um, and, and see if they want
01:29:52.400
But, you know, a lot of times, uh, for example, you know, these bicentennial farms and some
01:29:57.280
of the other things that are, that are, you see in Ohio and Pennsylvania, these, these
01:30:01.340
structures are not a lot more used, um, because farming and lifestyles have changed.
01:30:06.160
So what you're seeing is a lot of dilapidated farms across the country.
01:30:10.040
So I feel like if we're not repurposing these structures, then, then we're going to forget
01:30:15.220
about, you know, this history because they're going to just rot, you know, they're going
01:30:19.080
to fall over and, you know, mother nature takes care of enough things like, you know, tornadoes
01:30:23.380
have gotten a lot of calls in the last two weeks.
01:30:25.460
So I think, um, you know, we're, we are seeing a lot of the landscape change.
01:30:33.340
And as somebody who's, I was just building a fence and taking down an old fence and, you
01:30:39.800
know, some of these fences were put in with telephone poles.
01:30:42.300
And I have to tell you, if I didn't have power tools, if I didn't have, you know, uh, you
01:30:49.360
know, uh, uh, uh, a backhoe, I don't, I would have stopped.
01:30:55.680
I can't believe when you see these old homes that you are taking down, these old barns
01:31:04.660
These guys, you cannot walk away from, uh, uh, an old barn or something like that and not
01:31:11.760
walk away with just tremendous amounts of respect for how hard people worked.
01:31:19.700
You think back to the pioneers and you think that they show up in a wagon and, and there's
01:31:24.320
a family and they start cutting down trees and dragging the trees out, you know, with
01:31:28.400
force and then taking a broadaxe, squaring that beam up, then putting a dug tail notch
01:31:33.920
on it with a handsaw and, and, and start to stack those logs.
01:31:39.520
It's got 10 by 10 beams that are six feet long.
01:31:42.540
And every time we can, when we're just thinking, how in the world did they get here and who
01:31:48.660
So, um, so if somebody has a barn, uh, and can they just call you and you'll look into
01:31:58.100
Are they given to, to restore what, how does this work?
01:32:02.720
Well, you know, like in any other business, uh, Glenn, we, we like buy low and sell out.
01:32:07.540
And, and I always say that we're slow, but we're expensive.
01:32:12.020
So, so we, you know, years ago we used to, um, take them down and clean the site up real
01:32:18.320
And, and then over the years, you know, barn has become more popular.
01:32:21.760
Um, so I buy the barns now and I give, I think I give more than most people do because
01:32:27.280
I understand the history and, you know, it's really hard to purchase somebody when you're
01:32:34.480
And that's always a difficult part for, for me as, as a businessman is that, you know,
01:32:40.780
So, you know, we, we hadn't got a new barn in a while.
01:32:45.260
Well, uh, Mark, it's good to talk to you and I may take you up in the future on, uh, cause
01:32:49.380
I want to build a, I want to build a barn, but I don't want to build a new one.
01:32:52.540
I'd, I'd like to take an old barn and reclaim it and then, and then shore it back up and
01:32:57.980
I just, I just love these old, uh, structures and you're exactly right.
01:33:03.280
I, this, why I love you is, is you guys are saving history that has just been left to
01:33:10.220
fall apart and it will rot if we don't save them.
01:33:17.000
Well, you know, I think a lot part of, uh, to the success of our show, um, has to do with
01:33:22.460
the fact that we honor those old time skills and those trades that is used to build these
01:33:28.860
And the other thing about us, we don't, I don't argue, you know, we, we have fun working.
01:33:35.160
And, um, at the end it's, you know, I've got a saying that you work hard behind and take
01:33:40.860
And I think if you do those three things, um, you know, it, it, it shows in your work and
01:33:54.440
Have you ever been in a room with a hillbillies?
01:34:06.760
So I've seen Daniel Craig's version of a hillbilly.
01:34:16.300
That is a Barnwood Builders and you can find out more about it at barnwoodbuilders.com.
01:34:20.760
If you've never seen the show, it's on DIY and it is really, truly great.
01:34:30.720
Maybe they would have done it as part of the show.
01:34:32.380
You wouldn't even have to make, do you have to pay for those in those reality shows?
01:34:43.400
So the show just comes in, they get, they get, they get the episode and that they're
01:34:46.760
just like basically covering a normal transaction that would have occurred anyway.
01:34:49.900
You know, it's amazing is they take these things apart and they take them apart so carefully
01:34:55.940
So it's like this old, you know, whittled, you know, uh, plug, like a nail that's made
01:35:03.760
out of wood that they whittled out and drilled a hole in holding this whole barn together
01:35:15.120
We dug, we dug holes with a, with a, you know, a drill.
01:35:19.840
I don't know what you, I don't even know what you call it, but you know, on the front
01:35:23.920
of a cat drilling down to drop the posts in, I, I dig out that for four feet down by
01:35:36.780
I don't care if cows are living in the living room.
01:35:45.240
I mean, you know, when you have, when you have, uh, your food doesn't come right in the
01:35:53.140
But I will tell you this, that is, you can't do this right now, like a post, right?
01:36:07.620
But this is, uh, you, all you have, wait, all you had to do is walk over with a bag, grab
01:36:14.540
the things marked that I just told you I wanted, put them in the bag, put some straws and some
01:36:23.440
It's, it's better than chasing it around a field though, uh, and trying to capture it
01:36:34.800
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Now, have you seen the picture, this horrible, horrible picture of what appears to be a father
01:38:32.620
Trying to cross the river to come into the United States and they're on the American side
01:38:39.600
Well, that's and how that happened is just crushing.
01:38:44.560
They were going to go across and try to get asylum in the United States.
01:38:48.740
They the the legal bridge, I guess they were supposed to cross that was closed for a couple
01:39:01.580
Um, and so the plan is basically the the dad is going to swim across the river with the
01:39:12.420
So, I mean, this I mean, look, this is issue, you know, when it comes to policy is one thing
01:39:20.960
So basically, so basically he puts his his two year old in this in it like in his shirt.
01:39:27.940
So the two year old gets stays on his back, crosses the river safely, puts the the two
01:39:34.500
year old down on the American side, starts going back for the mom.
01:39:38.480
The toddler doesn't understand Christ to go after him.
01:39:47.000
And then and but then loses control in the current.
01:39:50.680
And I mean, and the mom is on the other side of the river watching all of this happen.
01:39:55.380
So the picture, I mean, it is devastating is, you know, this father with his daughter caught
01:40:02.420
is like inside a shirt and her arms are like wrapped around him.
01:40:05.680
It is, you know, they are talking about it in the media as if it's this.
01:40:09.140
It's it's like, you know, the Syrian picture that we all know or the picture from Vietnam
01:40:21.400
The point, however, it communicates is something completely different than what the media is
01:40:30.180
You know, I yesterday also at the same time, you know, they didn't cover the picture of
01:40:35.540
the border patrol guard that saw this happening in another area and jumped in to save the
01:40:45.240
They were losing control and the border patrol happened to be there and the guy saw that
01:41:01.060
And, you know, yesterday with Nancy Pelosi coming out and saying, oh, you know what?
01:41:04.800
We're going to have all this funding for all these new spaces.
01:41:09.840
I mean, they definitely need funding right now.
01:41:14.760
But but they're not doing anything at the same time to stop it.
01:41:22.100
And I think you look at the interesting part of this as well.
01:41:28.020
Who are these people that are coming to the United States?
01:41:31.060
These are asylum seekers because of war, violence, terrorism, gangs in Honduras and in Central
01:41:38.740
Well, this family, however, not that situation at all.
01:41:42.520
They actually came because they were he I think they had I want to say they had two kids,
01:41:48.660
but they were trying to raise a family and could not earn enough money in Mexico.
01:41:52.500
And they were planning on on asking for asylum, which is not how that should work.
01:41:57.800
If you I think he legitimately was working at a Papa John's in Central America and not making
01:42:04.540
He was struggling too much to support his family.
01:42:06.900
And so this is more of the traditional as you would think about illegal immigrant who
01:42:12.260
However, as they admit they were going to ask for asylum, which is exactly the point Trump
01:42:17.780
and other Republicans have made in that they're they're using asylum for something it's not
01:42:26.480
It is a little different than our traditional arguments about illegal immigration, because
01:42:29.800
these are asylum claims and these asylum laws have to be changed.
01:42:35.080
And when when when, you know, a group of people who want to come here illegally realize, OK,
01:42:40.820
if I do asylum, I have much better chance of being able to stay in the United States and
01:42:45.000
they're utilizing that they're manipulating that system.
01:42:50.200
So right now it's it puts all the onus on the United States to basically believe every
01:42:54.680
single person who comes across the border and says the word asylum.
01:42:58.560
So that's why there's this overwhelming amount.
01:43:01.800
And that is reportedly what is going on with this this terrible, terrible situation with
01:43:08.960
I mean, it's I mean, if you have kids, it's really tough to look at something like that.
01:43:13.340
I mean, it is and it's heartbreaking because you feel for people who look, I'm working, I'm
01:43:30.220
You could get a visa and just come and work here.
01:43:34.380
It's not acceptable, though, to break the law and look.
01:43:40.040
I mean, they keep saying like this highlights the perilous journey.
01:43:51.720
You have a poor kid and his and her father dying here.
01:43:56.080
And the lesson is not, hey, guys, don't attempt that same behavior because the same thing may
01:44:02.240
There might not be a border agent to pull you out of the river next time.
01:44:04.820
And if there were Hispanics that were doing this to get away from Cuba at the height of
01:44:09.260
its problems, do you think conservatives would be would be saying, hey, hey, we need a wall
01:44:18.820
We would be saying we got to help these people in real asylum.
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The the elites are are failing to report on history and you will see the things that the
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If you buy your tickets today at Mercury One dot org, you can tomorrow morning.
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I'm going to pick out a name and let's say about 10 tickets.
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You and your your nine friends or family members are going to get a tour with whoever you pick.
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If I'm, you know, somebody you want to go to do the tour with.
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But we spend like an hour together and and and you get it for free.
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So, you know, all you have to do is buy a ticket today.
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I don't know who she picked to go on a tour with.
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The museum opens up this Saturday and runs through July 7th.
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There's not doing well, with the exception of Joe Biden, that says Trump is the problem.
01:47:31.440
Then there's the other category of people who say America is the problem.
01:47:35.080
So let's who do you have a list of what the main thrust of these campaigns are?
01:47:45.820
So we had a kind of broken them down into a quote unquote moderate, which is not actually
01:47:52.220
moderate, but like a Joe, but the Joe Biden category.
01:47:54.680
And there you have, I mean, Biden, Klobuchar, probably Yang, Hickenlooper, Bennett, Bullock,
01:48:03.520
But they've all kind of they've all kind of staked out their own thing, haven't they?
01:48:08.400
Yeah, some of them have like certain like, you know, and a couple of like Hickenlooper
01:48:12.380
and Delaney are somewhat notable to conservatives because they both came out in big speeches
01:48:18.080
and said, you know, socialism is not the answer.
01:48:20.600
And that's like, obviously, they're both at zero percent.
01:48:29.340
I mean, he's taken on Second Amendment, single issue gun campaign, basically.
01:48:33.960
There's a few of those who are kind of, you know, break down on that.
01:48:37.640
Like, for example, another one I would put in that category, single issue category, Jay
01:48:41.660
Inslee, who's been talking about climate change almost exclusively.
01:48:49.960
People and there is just not even in the among Democrats like that is a low priority for
01:48:55.360
And you see that reflected in their numbers when it comes to guns.
01:49:02.520
And he talks about guns more than any other candidate.
01:49:08.380
Interestingly enough, Tulsi Gabbard is number one on that.
01:49:12.000
She talks about foreign policy about 70 percent of the time.
01:49:21.720
I mean, she has a very strange history when it comes to, you know, all sorts of issues
01:49:26.660
And they're very against what the mainstream Democrat position would be on such topics.
01:49:30.720
Also, like the big defender of Assad in Syria, like she has been on that route also was this
01:49:38.800
just came out about two days ago, an exclusive huge dump of transition documents of the Trump
01:49:47.460
The Trump administration actually vetted her for a role in foreign policy, which is this
01:49:53.380
is she's the only candidate in the field that was vetted for a role inside the Trump
01:49:59.720
But she is a very much a non-interventionist, which coincides a lot.
01:50:09.080
And he's, you know, when the media needs to say that.
01:50:11.920
And then he's a he's a non-interventionist when they need to say that.
01:50:19.020
And I would say the number one overall issue for Democrats, as they've talked about so
01:50:27.140
Health care, as well as Gillibrand, Klobuchar and, you know, some of the more minor.
01:50:39.900
Health care, foreign policy, climate change, income inequality, gun control, immigration, social
01:50:45.540
justice and corporate power has been all put together by the Washington Post.
01:50:50.740
What's the number one thing Biden is talking about?
01:50:58.940
And I think it's interesting because you think of Biden, he's in a situation where he doesn't
01:51:09.440
Like he doesn't need to excite people with policy right now.
01:51:12.660
So he just needs to kind of stay in a place that's generally speaking, non-controversial
01:51:23.040
So, again, like there's not an there's not a lot of impact among voters with climate change.
01:51:27.660
I thought he would be more along the lines of doing something mushy, not talking about
01:51:34.680
social justice like everyone else is talking about social justice, just talking about the
01:51:39.740
And, hey, I'm Lunch Bucket Joe and I can relate to you and we're going to make sure that
01:51:47.420
And I can see that climate change, though, is basically you saying, what's the communication
01:51:52.220
We want the planet to be nice for everyone, right?
01:51:59.560
It's an easy topic for the left among the left.
01:52:05.360
Same thing, you know, like that is not a controversial, tough issue where you're splitting, you know,
01:52:11.420
Like some people would say, OK, we want the Second Amendment.
01:52:14.440
Some people would say we want Australia's laws.
01:52:22.240
Yes, you're going to have there's a split between like we're going to remake the entire
01:52:26.420
economy and give, you know, make cow, you know, regulate cow farts.
01:52:30.160
There's the Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez sort of craziness.
01:52:33.000
But generally speaking, it's an easy topic to talk about for Democrats because we got to
01:52:43.180
Yeah, health care was one and family issues at number two.
01:52:47.400
She also has education and climate change is up there as well.
01:52:51.760
I would have said corporate power, I think, on that one because that's a big focus for
01:52:55.260
One of her big topics is breaking up the big tech companies.
01:52:58.020
Which is interesting because, you know, right now the big tech companies are trying to
01:53:02.000
destroy Republicans while Elizabeth Warren is out there campaigning on trying to break
01:53:09.520
So I think it's an interesting debate tonight in that I don't like they're all I think would
01:53:18.140
Like there's a there's a field of now 25, 20 of them you'll see on the debate stage tonight
01:53:23.240
They're all be really bad presidents for my taste and your taste as well.
01:53:27.200
But you do want to know who you're going against and you want to know how extreme that
01:53:31.260
So if Donald Trump is going up against Elizabeth Warren, that's a different race than Donald
01:53:35.040
Trump going up against Joe Biden or Andrew Yang or somebody else.
01:53:39.160
So he said it was he said it looked boring, but he was going to watch it.
01:53:46.500
You want to be able to pick up on those things.
01:53:52.580
The way they did this is they said, OK, you got to get a certain amount of donors, 65,000
01:53:56.880
individual donors, and you need to show up at least at one percent in these polls.
01:54:04.680
You know, there was one other candidate, I think it was on, I think it was Bullock that
01:54:14.120
Anyway, long story short, they got 20 people to qualify to qualify.
01:54:18.100
And they said, well, how are we going to split this up?
01:54:20.420
Democrats have been saying, you know, remember last time after the hacks, we realized they
01:54:23.760
really were favoring Hillary Clinton over over Bernie.
01:54:26.400
So they wanted to make sure everything was completely random.
01:54:31.820
And what happened was you really only got one front runner in this first debate.
01:54:47.680
When you have these ridiculous opinions like the left does, you can't make it work.
01:54:54.160
So the split is interesting on several different levels.
01:54:57.580
Elizabeth Warren is probably the most interesting piece of this, because she she is not there
01:55:03.160
to fight against Bernie Sanders or Kamala Harris or Joe Biden.
01:55:17.040
The next time there may not be that audience at the kiddies table.
01:55:20.680
And it's they're trying to say it's not the kiddie table, but it's hard to it's hard to
01:55:24.040
claim that because she is basically in third place in most polls and there's no one else
01:55:30.740
So she's in this position where I think this helps her.
01:55:35.140
I believe it helps her because she doesn't have to do really anything.
01:55:39.160
She's not a target of a lot of lower candidates because she's in third place.
01:55:44.480
And all she has to do is kind of trot out some basic policy proposals that will be well
01:55:50.680
And she doesn't have to worry about getting any fights and losing.
01:55:53.600
My guess is she's going to come out of this unscathed.
01:55:56.020
Now, Elizabeth Warren is uniquely capable of screwing things up.
01:56:01.220
I mean, if you're if you're at zero percent and you can get into a fight with number three.
01:56:06.960
Yeah, I mean, it might be worth it might be worth trying.
01:56:10.060
Well, this is the sort of Apollo Creed concept in that if you're in Rocky, he's like he's
01:56:15.900
flipping through the book of all the unknown candidates like how about this guy?
01:56:20.060
What about the Italian stallion and his trainer smartly says he's a southpaw.
01:56:25.880
I don't want you messing around with any southpaws like that's the problem here.
01:56:29.280
You have big hitters who are just going to they don't care.
01:56:33.380
There's nothing to lose for, you know, Tulsi Gabbard or John Delaney.
01:56:41.760
That's why I think, though, I think on the other debate, that's going to be more of an
01:56:49.900
I mean, Warren is a is a secondary figure in all of this, and I don't think is going
01:56:58.560
I think it also helps people like Cory Booker, Beto O'Rourke and Amy Klobuchar, who are at
01:57:03.720
that level where they're usually two percent or above, which is, you know, actually notable
01:57:09.540
compared to a lot of these candidates that are at zero.
01:57:12.060
But, you know, you know, Beto O'Rourke is coming in at four percent of the vote, five
01:57:16.460
He has a chance to actually be on a big stage and be the focus.
01:57:21.740
Same thing with Cory Booker, who in front of every stage will always try to draw attention
01:57:26.580
He's going to be able to maybe have a chance at that.
01:57:30.740
What movie character is he going to be tonight?
01:57:42.040
If it comes down between Biden and Bernie Sanders.
01:57:55.780
If it comes down between Biden and Elizabeth Warren, who gets the nomination?
01:58:08.580
I think Sanders has his his hardcore crew, but that's it.
01:58:12.080
I think Warren can can bring a little more people along.
01:58:14.700
I think when it if it's Biden and Kamala Harris.
01:58:22.860
And I think she's hurt by this debate split, by the way, because she's kind of put in this
01:58:25.920
position where the Sanders Biden thing is going to be top tier.
01:58:29.420
So anybody under that, and I think that includes Buttigieg, includes Harris, it includes Gillibrand.
01:58:40.020
She walks that line between the groups better than some of these other candidates.
01:58:43.680
Like, you know, she's come out with some real pro-Israel comments, Kamala Harris, which
01:58:49.540
Buttigieg, I think, has that potential as well.
01:58:52.220
You know, I think someone like a de Blasio would be better served to be in that second
01:58:57.480
debate because he is a guy who is going to take these big bomb shots and try to, you know,
01:59:05.000
And the fact that he's in this debate with Elizabeth Warren and that maybe less people
01:59:08.780
are watching and that actually might hurt a guy like de Blasio.
01:59:12.960
But I think like Kamala Harris, Buttigieg, and Gillibrand, although I don't see how Gillibrand
01:59:18.720
is ever coming out of the dark corners of this race she currently is in.
01:59:23.520
If you had any chance, you'd like to see Gillibrand, if you're in her campaign, in this debate with
01:59:29.020
Elizabeth Warren where maybe someone else shines.
01:59:31.800
Someone other than Elizabeth Warren will make a name for themselves or have some sort of
01:59:37.760
And in the other debate, it might not happen because you've got Sanders and Biden fighting
01:59:44.960
You have four of the top five contenders all at the same time.
01:59:47.880
If you're in that bottom tier, how are you breaking out of that?
01:59:50.580
It's going to be difficult for, you know, someone like Eric Swalwell, right?
02:00:03.840
The other one, you have a chance for a secondary candidate to make some noise.
02:00:07.460
And that's why a Booker or Klobuchar could actually make some, Beto maybe, do some damage
02:00:22.740
By the way, we can watch this for you so you don't have to.
02:00:26.360
We'll give you all of the blow-by-blows tomorrow.
02:00:28.560
And also on tomorrow's program, it looks like the big Supreme Court decisions are coming
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The census decision looks like it may be written by John Roberts, which is never good.
02:00:43.860
We'll get into that tomorrow with the experts as they come out.
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I've sat on everything and things that are supposed to keep you really comfortable and
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I don't know what you're paying for, but it isn't support.
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What is comfortable for me may not be comfortable for you.
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And that's why they also have the money back guarantee.
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Get $100 off now at xchairbeck.com or call 844-4X-CHAIR.
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On tomorrow's show, we have the Supreme Court decisions and analysis on it.