Verdict with Ted Cruz - May 23, 2025


BONUS: Jewish Couple Shot in Hate Crime - Daily Review With Clay and Buck - May 22 2025


Episode Stats

Misogynist Sentences

8

Hate Speech Sentences

36


Summary


Transcript

00:00:00.000 This is an iHeart Podcast.
00:00:02.400 Guaranteed Human.
00:00:04.640 Welcome in Thursday edition Clay Travis Buck Sexton show.
00:00:09.860 We've got some good news and some awful news.
00:00:12.980 So I will start with the good news.
00:00:15.440 Early this morning, the big, beautiful bill passed the House of Representatives 215 to 214.
00:00:23.740 It is now on to the United States Senate where expectations are that it will pass at some point in the next month
00:00:31.940 and become the law of the land more flexibility in the United States Senate
00:00:39.000 because it's a little bit better of a majority, 5347, than what Mike Johnson was working with on a regular basis in the House of Representatives.
00:00:50.220 So all of that very, very positive news that happened early this morning.
00:00:56.420 Unfortunately, an awful thing happened late last night in our nation's capital
00:01:02.860 when two young, soon-to-be-engaged individuals, one from Kansas, the other from Jerusalem.
00:01:12.380 It's an awful story.
00:01:13.820 The man in this relationship was planning to propose, had already bought her a ring,
00:01:20.820 and they were shot and killed in cold anti-Semitic blood on the streets of our nation's capital.
00:01:28.980 And this is what Globalize the Intifada leads to.
00:01:34.100 This is why everyone on a college campus that has been moronically walking around saying,
00:01:39.460 Globalize the Intifada.
00:01:41.280 This is what they are calling for.
00:01:42.920 This is unfortunately what happens in Israel quite often.
00:01:46.880 A terrorist comes up and kills someone because they happen to be Jewish.
00:01:52.280 And it felt sadly inevitable to me that this would occur.
00:01:58.520 But here is, I want to play the audio because there's no uncertainty about exactly what happened here.
00:02:03.500 Here is the individual who will soon be charged with a crime if he has not already been,
00:02:08.600 shouting, free, free Palestine, after he murdered two Israeli diplomats on the streets of Washington, D.C.
00:02:16.300 Here's cut to.
00:02:16.920 Free, free Palestine!
00:02:19.760 And free, free Palestine!
00:02:22.000 And free, free Palestine!
00:02:25.920 And free, free Palestine!
00:02:28.560 So there's no uncertainty about what his motives are.
00:02:32.940 This is a chant that has been screamed loudly on college campuses everywhere in many different American streets by people who claim that Israel is the bad guy in the wake of October 7th.
00:02:45.200 Let me make sure that you know these individuals' names.
00:02:48.300 This is the Israeli ambassador, Yakel Leiter, discussing these victims and talking about his conversation with President Trump.
00:02:58.300 The young man purchased a ring this week with the intention of proposing to his girlfriend next week in Jerusalem.
00:03:06.440 They were a beautiful couple who came to enjoy an evening in Washington's cultural center.
00:03:12.280 On the way in, Ms. Bondi was kind enough to hand me the phone.
00:03:17.120 On the other line was the President of the United States, Donald Trump,
00:03:21.240 who told me that his administration is going to do everything it can possibly do to fight and end anti-Semitism
00:03:32.020 and the hatred that's being directed, the demonization and delegitimization of the state of Israel.
00:03:37.800 Okay, Buck, you and I, I don't think, sadly, are surprised.
00:03:44.080 I was just about getting ready to go to bed when the alert popped up on my phone late last night, a little bit after midnight.
00:03:51.460 And to me, it felt inevitable based on the way that the United States, many people in the United States, on the left in particular,
00:03:59.640 but also there's people on the right who are anti-Semitic.
00:04:01.760 This is where I would say the left and the right, unfortunately, sometimes have agreement,
00:04:07.820 but it's far more pronounced, certainly, on the left wing right now, anti-Semitism is.
00:04:14.820 And this, to me, is a natural result of being unable to distinguish between good and evil,
00:04:21.360 such that you then engage in evil acts yourself because you believe you're doing something that is right and just.
00:04:28.000 And this is the importance of being able to teach right and wrong.
00:04:31.940 And, unfortunately, the younger you are in this country, the more likely you are to buy into the idea
00:04:37.620 that the Israeli state is the bad guy here.
00:04:41.760 We recognize that, first of all, I just, it's heartbreaking to see this.
00:04:51.120 And I sit here and just say that murdering a beautiful couple like this in cold blood outside a social event,
00:05:00.640 I don't know what could be more demonic, senseless.
00:05:03.880 And, you know, it's interesting to me that the media, whenever there is a, anything that they can say
00:05:13.080 somehow involves right-wing ideology, they'll speak of something called,
00:05:16.960 and we've discussed it on the show, stochastic terrorism.
00:05:20.400 So, numerically random terrorism is effectively what it is.
00:05:24.740 Like, if you do this enough, if you spread this message enough,
00:05:28.160 somebody will commit an act of terrorism.
00:05:29.940 They'll talk about that if they can say that this is somehow racist right-wing ideology.
00:05:35.380 Meanwhile, the left is soaked in anti-Israel, anti-Semitic hatred, top to bottom, day in and day out.
00:05:44.640 It's in the media.
00:05:45.820 It's on campuses.
00:05:47.520 There are safe harbor given and platform given to it in the Democrat Party.
00:05:51.440 And we are just to think that this now happens in some kind of vacuum.
00:05:57.240 You know, this comes up, Clay, when we have the discussions about,
00:06:00.740 they can't say that Trump is Hitler, but they oppose violence against Trump.
00:06:05.820 That doesn't really make sense, does it?
00:06:07.860 If you believe that Trump was Hitler, which is an insane person's statement,
00:06:11.840 but the Democrats have said it countless times, as we know.
00:06:14.300 But if you truly believed that, then you would want to do anything to remove that threat from the United States.
00:06:21.900 And, of course, we saw that two people tried in the election cycle,
00:06:25.640 and one put a bullet through Trump's ear.
00:06:27.640 If you truly believe that there is a genocide going on in Gaza,
00:06:32.180 first of all, you can't read or you can't process information,
00:06:37.580 because this wouldn't be a long and drawn-out war if it was a genocide.
00:06:41.440 Israel could just flatten all of Gaza in a matter of days, no ifs, ands, or buts,
00:06:46.800 and that would be the end of it.
00:06:47.720 They could kill every man, woman, and child in Gaza if they chose to do so.
00:06:51.400 The reason the war is taking so long is, first and foremost, Hamas and the Gazans
00:06:57.240 refused to release civilian hostages that were taken at the start of this war
00:07:03.440 in the horrible October 7th terrorist massacre.
00:07:06.160 So, to me, there is such an inversion of morality that goes on here.
00:07:13.020 And I point this out as well, Clay, because, you know, you said this yesterday,
00:07:16.440 I've been advancing this point on the show as much as I can,
00:07:20.880 because I started out in Middle East studies in my life back in college,
00:07:25.520 working the Arab-Israeli, working on the Arab-Israeli issue.
00:07:28.180 My first ever real internship was for Dennis Ross, the U.S. ambassador under Clinton
00:07:33.280 for the Arab-Israeli peace accords.
00:07:35.660 So I've been following this for a very long time, and I'm aware of a lot of the different dynamics,
00:07:41.340 but in this country, it has turned into a shrill, left-wing, rallying cry, absent facts,
00:07:49.920 and just full of hatred.
00:07:52.420 And that results in things like we've seen on the campuses, which is completely disgusting,
00:07:58.100 and then could even result in things like this.
00:08:00.600 I would want to ask these individuals who are on the campuses,
00:08:04.700 I want to ask the people who are always talking about the genocide in Gaza,
00:08:10.380 where are they on the genocide?
00:08:12.080 And I know it sounds like a whataboutism to some people that want to make that claim, Clay.
00:08:16.760 Where's the talk about the genocide going on in South Sudan?
00:08:20.580 Do they care about every human life and depression?
00:08:23.520 Do they care about hospitals being bombed?
00:08:25.240 How many of you even know that a hospital is just bombed in South Sudan?
00:08:27.760 Man, they have no idea.
00:08:29.820 They don't pay any attention.
00:08:31.180 Because that is a fight among a lot of different ethnic groups,
00:08:35.200 but Arab Muslims, black Africans, there's no white people involved.
00:08:40.120 And when there's no white people involved, even though 400,000 people have died,
00:08:45.540 there have been mass rapes, there has been ethnic cleansing.
00:08:49.600 I mean, the most horrific stuff imaginable.
00:08:51.540 It's been going on for over a decade, I might add.
00:08:53.660 And yet none of the people that are walking around with cafe-as on,
00:08:57.100 talking about how every life matters and stop genocide,
00:08:59.720 they don't know a damn thing about it.
00:09:01.160 You know why?
00:09:01.820 Because they're cosplaying as revolutionaries,
00:09:04.200 and they're just feeding in to this anti-white narrative
00:09:07.340 that they think somehow explains the Israel-Hamas war.
00:09:12.680 And that is how stupid they are,
00:09:14.580 and that is how malevolent their ideology is,
00:09:17.100 and it results in things like we saw last night.
00:09:19.660 I think all that's very well said.
00:09:23.380 I know there are maybe some people out there with kids, grandkids,
00:09:25.960 that don't get this.
00:09:27.600 Let me give you two things that I think are very simple
00:09:30.760 that you can share with them and ask them to think about.
00:09:35.180 One is, and I was over in December,
00:09:38.260 and I don't remember who told me this,
00:09:40.300 but I've heard it repeated since,
00:09:42.040 but the first time I heard it was in Israel.
00:09:44.240 Israel, and it is this.
00:09:47.400 If Israel put down its weapons,
00:09:50.200 it wouldn't exist tomorrow.
00:09:52.340 If every other country in the Middle East that hates Israel
00:09:55.860 put down its weapons,
00:09:57.000 there would be peace in the Middle East.
00:09:58.840 Israel is not the aggressor.
00:10:01.000 Israel is trying to protect itself,
00:10:03.340 and most of its foes want Israel,
00:10:06.120 as you saw on October 7th,
00:10:07.700 the Jewish people in Israel wiped off the face of the earth.
00:10:11.900 That's what from the river to the sea means.
00:10:15.180 So that's an easy one that I think everybody can grasp,
00:10:18.820 and two is another analogy we have made,
00:10:21.220 and I think it's a good one because people sometimes say,
00:10:23.820 okay, well, why do you care?
00:10:25.460 How do you decide who's good, who's bad?
00:10:27.240 Well, I was there in all the kibbutzes
00:10:30.440 where all the innocent people were murdered
00:10:33.040 when Hamas decided to come into Israel
00:10:36.800 and rape and pillage and murder across a wide expanse.
00:10:40.980 But I want you to think about this.
00:10:45.140 When Biden had our southern border wide open,
00:10:48.300 or even now, if somehow it were to occur,
00:10:51.640 if a Mexican terror organization
00:10:55.320 came across our southern border
00:10:58.480 and killed 1,200 Americans
00:11:01.660 and kidnapped hundreds of them
00:11:04.660 and went back into Mexico
00:11:07.320 and claimed that they shouldn't be attacked
00:11:10.600 because women and children might be harmed,
00:11:13.260 what would we do to the part of Mexico
00:11:16.380 that the terrorists were in?
00:11:18.700 Buck, you were in the CIA.
00:11:19.920 What do you think we would do
00:11:21.380 if they killed 1,200 Americans,
00:11:23.520 went back across their border,
00:11:24.860 and had hundreds of hostages?
00:11:26.700 Well, I joined the CIA because of 9-11.
00:11:29.700 So we can even use a more direct historical analogy here.
00:11:33.080 I think that October 7th was Israel's 9-11.
00:11:35.540 Yeah.
00:11:35.940 And very clearly,
00:11:38.100 and as a matter of percentages,
00:11:39.620 I think it might even be higher than 9-11.
00:11:41.700 Oh, infinitely, infinitely higher
00:11:43.560 because the Israeli population is so much smaller.
00:11:45.640 So when you factor this out,
00:11:48.620 yeah, after 9-11,
00:11:50.080 I will add, by the way,
00:11:51.220 there's actually a pretty good
00:11:52.320 hunt for bin Laden on Netflix.
00:11:54.960 If anyone's curious to look for something,
00:11:56.300 it's pretty well done.
00:11:57.400 My old friend Gary Bernson,
00:11:58.680 who led the Jawbreaker team, is on it.
00:12:00.380 Mike Morrell, whom I worked for in the CIA,
00:12:03.020 who's a lib and a Hillary guy,
00:12:04.700 but there's some people that were there
00:12:07.020 doing the work,
00:12:08.860 and they're pretty good.
00:12:10.460 But Clay, people, I think,
00:12:12.400 sometimes leave this part out of our response.
00:12:14.800 After 9-11, we said to the Taliban,
00:12:17.000 okay, you guys have him?
00:12:19.380 You hand him over or else.
00:12:21.600 They chose or else.
00:12:23.520 Yeah.
00:12:24.400 We had no choice.
00:12:26.320 There is no choice
00:12:27.200 because the choice to not do anything
00:12:29.280 would be the choice to let evil win.
00:12:31.940 And Israel has the same choice
00:12:33.940 after October 7th.
00:12:35.400 And this is the, you know,
00:12:36.640 this is where I get very frustrated
00:12:38.760 because there are people out there
00:12:40.000 who think themselves clever
00:12:41.040 because somehow the only thing
00:12:42.560 they ever have a problem with
00:12:43.700 is a response to terrorism.
00:12:45.540 Yeah.
00:12:45.760 It's always the response isn't good enough.
00:12:47.480 It's a little bit like arguing
00:12:48.560 with somebody who's wrong
00:12:49.760 and just says,
00:12:50.560 I don't like your tone.
00:12:51.940 I don't like your tone.
00:12:53.100 Well, how are we going to,
00:12:54.820 or is it,
00:12:55.340 who's right is what matters, okay?
00:12:57.060 You can complain about my tone all day.
00:12:59.000 And Hamas brought this war upon themselves.
00:13:01.280 They could have ended this war
00:13:02.600 after October 7th
00:13:03.760 for months and months and months,
00:13:05.080 given the hostages back
00:13:06.260 and had an unconditional surrender.
00:13:07.920 They chose not to do it.
00:13:09.440 They don't just hold Israelis hostage.
00:13:11.000 They hold themselves hostage.
00:13:12.460 That's the problem.
00:13:13.460 They've decided
00:13:14.200 we would rather light ourselves on fire
00:13:16.640 as a people in Gaza
00:13:17.760 than join civilization
00:13:19.240 and stop this madness.
00:13:21.900 Wall Street Journal last weekend
00:13:23.640 had a piece
00:13:24.720 that I thought was important.
00:13:25.940 I shared it.
00:13:26.720 People say,
00:13:27.200 why did Hamas do it?
00:13:28.740 Well, certainly,
00:13:29.400 they're horrible anti-Semites, right?
00:13:32.500 They want Israel wiped off
00:13:34.200 and the Jewish people
00:13:35.740 wiped off the planet.
00:13:37.840 But in particular,
00:13:39.160 the timing of October 7th
00:13:41.100 seems to have been
00:13:42.160 directly tied to fear
00:13:43.900 that Saudi Arabia
00:13:45.260 was going to normalize
00:13:46.500 relations with Israel
00:13:47.840 and that would lead
00:13:49.260 to more peace
00:13:50.120 in the Middle East.
00:13:51.280 And they didn't want
00:13:52.200 that to happen
00:13:52.940 because they thought
00:13:53.760 that would undercut
00:13:54.840 their political posture.
00:13:56.900 So the reason
00:13:57.700 they attacked
00:13:58.500 on October 7th
00:13:59.960 was they were trying
00:14:01.420 to stop peace
00:14:02.740 from spreading
00:14:03.580 even more substantially
00:14:04.900 in the Middle East.
00:14:06.120 They're evil.
00:14:07.420 And I think you saw
00:14:09.180 the motivation
00:14:09.780 in any of you out there
00:14:10.820 with kids or grandkids
00:14:11.900 walking around saying,
00:14:13.220 globalize the Intifada.
00:14:15.320 I think that they are
00:14:16.860 so poorly educated
00:14:17.860 that they do not even understand
00:14:19.320 how much of morons
00:14:20.520 they truly are.
00:14:21.300 Look, we're going to talk
00:14:22.880 more about this.
00:14:23.940 We're going to go to Israel
00:14:24.920 and talk with Yael Eckstein.
00:14:26.680 She works at the
00:14:28.100 International Fellowship
00:14:29.700 of Christians and Jews
00:14:30.600 about what the reaction is
00:14:31.780 in Israel,
00:14:32.840 which I'm sure is
00:14:33.900 widely discussed
00:14:34.920 and was crushing
00:14:36.040 to so many people
00:14:36.780 over there to hear
00:14:37.500 that two young,
00:14:38.920 innocent people
00:14:39.640 who were soon to be engaged
00:14:40.820 were murdered in cold blood
00:14:41.840 for being Jewish.
00:14:42.700 This is why our friend
00:14:44.020 Carol Markowitz tweeted
00:14:45.000 that Jews need to go buy
00:14:46.080 as many guns as they can.
00:14:47.380 And she in particular,
00:14:48.400 she's on a plane
00:14:48.940 or she'd be with us today.
00:14:50.200 Maybe we can get her
00:14:50.760 on tomorrow.
00:14:51.760 But she in particular,
00:14:52.940 Buck, you know this,
00:14:53.900 went and taught herself
00:14:54.860 how to fire a gun
00:14:55.820 after October 7th.
00:14:57.880 And there are a lot
00:14:59.040 of women out there
00:15:00.000 in particular.
00:15:00.720 I took her out
00:15:01.240 and taught her
00:15:01.760 how to fire guns.
00:15:02.880 We took her out
00:15:03.380 for a range day
00:15:04.220 so that she knew
00:15:04.900 how to defend herself.
00:15:06.360 So many people
00:15:07.260 are like this.
00:15:08.800 I mean, I talked about
00:15:09.420 when I was in Israel,
00:15:10.140 I met a woman
00:15:11.360 who's working
00:15:11.800 with the IFCJ.
00:15:13.040 Young mom
00:15:13.680 walks around
00:15:14.760 with a handgun
00:15:15.680 on her hip
00:15:16.200 everywhere she goes now.
00:15:17.440 She was in the hospital
00:15:18.280 having just delivered
00:15:19.140 a baby on October 7th.
00:15:20.920 And her mom
00:15:22.500 was killed
00:15:23.020 on October 7th.
00:15:24.320 Her brothers
00:15:25.660 had to go rescue
00:15:26.620 her husband
00:15:28.480 who was holding
00:15:29.020 a butcher knife
00:15:29.760 right by the door
00:15:30.860 to try to stab people
00:15:31.980 if they came in
00:15:32.640 to kill their infant children.
00:15:34.920 I mean,
00:15:35.140 this is the reality
00:15:36.080 of what people
00:15:36.780 in Israel deal with
00:15:37.760 every day
00:15:38.280 and unfortunately
00:15:38.920 globalize the
00:15:39.800 intifada spread here.
00:15:41.420 If you want to educate,
00:15:42.680 you want people
00:15:43.080 to learn more,
00:15:43.860 trust me,
00:15:44.160 just go to
00:15:44.820 ifcj.org.
00:15:46.560 You can learn.
00:15:47.660 Click there
00:15:48.140 so you can talk
00:15:49.380 to the kids
00:15:49.860 and grandkids
00:15:50.540 in your family.
00:15:51.500 Please just trust me,
00:15:52.400 ifcj.org.
00:15:54.200 Go learn
00:15:54.760 what is going on,
00:15:55.860 what Israel
00:15:56.400 is having to deal with
00:15:57.480 and trying to defend
00:15:58.500 itself
00:15:59.020 in its very existence.
00:16:01.620 ifcj.org
00:16:02.740 is that website.
00:16:03.840 Click the learn tab,
00:16:05.460 ifcj.org.
00:16:08.580 Canadian women
00:16:09.360 are looking for more,
00:16:10.680 more out of themselves,
00:16:11.760 their businesses,
00:16:12.680 their elected leaders,
00:16:13.460 and the world around them.
00:16:14.880 And that's why
00:16:15.320 we're thrilled
00:16:15.820 to introduce
00:16:16.480 the Honest Talk Podcast.
00:16:18.520 I'm Jennifer Stewart.
00:16:19.780 And I'm Catherine Clark.
00:16:21.000 And in this podcast,
00:16:22.080 we interview
00:16:22.620 Canada's most inspiring women.
00:16:24.760 Entrepreneurs,
00:16:25.460 artists,
00:16:26.140 athletes,
00:16:26.740 politicians,
00:16:27.400 and newsmakers,
00:16:28.320 all at different stages
00:16:29.360 of their journey.
00:16:30.500 So if you're looking
00:16:31.520 to connect,
00:16:32.320 then we hope you'll join us.
00:16:33.740 Listen to the Honest Talk Podcast
00:16:34.960 on iHeartRadio
00:16:36.100 or wherever you listen
00:16:37.080 to your podcasts.
00:16:39.180 Welcome back in.
00:16:40.440 Clay Travis,
00:16:41.480 Buck Sexton Show.
00:16:42.780 We head up to Capitol Hill
00:16:44.080 now to be joined
00:16:45.140 by Senator Rand Paul
00:16:46.520 of Kentucky.
00:16:48.420 Senator,
00:16:49.240 we saw the big,
00:16:50.840 beautiful bill
00:16:51.840 passed by one vote
00:16:53.600 in the House,
00:16:54.760 215 to 214,
00:16:56.200 I believe.
00:16:56.800 It is now on
00:16:57.680 to the United States Senate.
00:16:59.840 What happens there now?
00:17:01.640 What should we know
00:17:02.540 about what the process
00:17:04.700 is in the Senate,
00:17:05.940 what you want to see?
00:17:06.940 You know,
00:17:08.640 there's some good
00:17:09.220 and some bad
00:17:09.940 to the bill.
00:17:10.600 The good is the tax cuts.
00:17:12.240 You know,
00:17:12.420 I supported these in 2017.
00:17:14.700 Some of them
00:17:15.240 will be making permanent
00:17:16.260 and some of them
00:17:17.380 will be adding, too.
00:17:18.840 I'm very supportive
00:17:19.720 of that.
00:17:20.340 I'm supportive
00:17:20.860 of spending cuts.
00:17:22.300 I think the spending cuts
00:17:23.160 are wimpy,
00:17:24.200 anemic,
00:17:24.900 and unfortunately
00:17:25.720 won't do much
00:17:26.640 to change the course
00:17:27.520 of the country
00:17:28.000 towards a more
00:17:28.620 fiscally responsible path.
00:17:31.820 The thing I really object to,
00:17:33.260 though,
00:17:33.460 and it prevents me
00:17:34.200 from supporting it
00:17:35.020 at this point,
00:17:36.620 is that it adds
00:17:37.600 either $4 or $5 trillion,
00:17:39.860 depending on which version
00:17:40.840 you look at,
00:17:41.960 to the debt ceiling.
00:17:43.200 This will be
00:17:43.640 an historic increase
00:17:44.640 in the debt ceiling.
00:17:45.500 We've never added
00:17:46.160 this much at one time.
00:17:47.660 And frankly,
00:17:48.340 conservatives have never
00:17:49.240 voted to these things.
00:17:50.340 Typically,
00:17:50.620 they've been passed
00:17:51.560 by Democrats
00:17:52.660 and sort of the big government
00:17:54.420 Republicans
00:17:54.960 are forced to get together.
00:17:56.680 I always called it
00:17:57.620 a day of shame.
00:17:58.740 They had to go down
00:17:59.360 in the well
00:17:59.840 and admit
00:18:00.320 that their big spending plan
00:18:02.340 had caused the debt
00:18:03.560 to rise alarmingly.
00:18:05.020 But now it's
00:18:05.860 conservatives voting for it.
00:18:07.060 And my fear is
00:18:07.920 that this will be
00:18:09.360 the end of fiscal conservatism
00:18:11.140 here and in the country
00:18:12.420 because there's very few.
00:18:14.220 I mean,
00:18:14.400 there were one or two
00:18:15.140 in the House
00:18:15.620 that opposed this
00:18:16.400 because the debt
00:18:17.080 rose too much.
00:18:18.280 Right now,
00:18:18.700 it's just me
00:18:19.300 and the Senate.
00:18:20.280 And it's not because
00:18:21.120 I oppose Donald Trump
00:18:22.300 or not because
00:18:22.800 I oppose the tax cuts
00:18:24.460 or any of the spending cuts.
00:18:26.380 But I just don't think
00:18:27.700 we should be the party
00:18:28.820 that raises
00:18:29.780 the debt ceiling
00:18:30.500 $5 trillion.
00:18:32.320 You know,
00:18:32.840 come September,
00:18:34.480 the deficit this year
00:18:35.400 is going to be
00:18:35.760 about $2.2 trillion.
00:18:37.700 That's all Republican now
00:18:39.220 because Republicans
00:18:39.860 have voted
00:18:40.260 for these spending levels.
00:18:41.480 They're anticipating
00:18:42.520 $2.8 to $3 trillion
00:18:44.080 next year.
00:18:44.940 That's just not conservative.
00:18:46.380 And somebody's got to be
00:18:47.340 left in the country
00:18:48.180 who will speak truth
00:18:49.280 to power
00:18:50.600 that will say,
00:18:51.380 basically,
00:18:52.060 we're supposed to be
00:18:53.260 the conservative party.
00:18:54.600 Senator Paul,
00:18:56.500 are we at a point
00:18:58.080 where we just need
00:19:00.080 to be honest
00:19:00.640 as a country
00:19:01.380 that if there is
00:19:02.860 no political will
00:19:05.040 to change,
00:19:07.620 alter,
00:19:08.380 whatever somebody
00:19:09.100 wants to say about it,
00:19:10.780 Social Security,
00:19:12.140 Medicare,
00:19:12.980 Medicaid,
00:19:14.040 maybe really just
00:19:15.060 Medicare in that
00:19:15.880 equation,
00:19:17.180 and defense spending
00:19:18.040 is not going to get cut
00:19:18.920 if anything is going to go up,
00:19:20.600 we're not going to tackle
00:19:21.540 the debt, right?
00:19:22.360 I mean,
00:19:22.560 is that mathematically
00:19:24.280 what we are stuck with?
00:19:25.600 Is there some other way?
00:19:27.540 I just worry that this is,
00:19:28.840 you know,
00:19:29.060 I remember when you came in
00:19:30.400 on the Tea Party wave,
00:19:31.560 we've been talking about
00:19:32.460 this issue for a long time.
00:19:34.220 There's a bit of fatigue
00:19:35.040 over,
00:19:35.600 guys,
00:19:35.840 the debt bomb is ticking,
00:19:36.860 the debt bomb is ticking,
00:19:37.840 and everyone goes,
00:19:38.260 oh my gosh,
00:19:39.080 let's do something about it.
00:19:40.320 You go,
00:19:40.480 okay,
00:19:41.060 maybe we need to reform
00:19:42.060 entitlements.
00:19:42.660 They go,
00:19:42.860 you're out of office.
00:19:45.180 Yeah,
00:19:45.660 well,
00:19:45.840 you know,
00:19:46.100 I've been pretty honest with it.
00:19:47.460 You know,
00:19:47.740 since I was elected
00:19:48.520 and when I was running
00:19:49.220 for office
00:19:49.680 the first time,
00:19:50.340 I said,
00:19:51.180 Social Security's running out
00:19:52.140 of money,
00:19:52.560 so is Medicare,
00:19:53.560 and we're moving longer.
00:19:54.520 We're going to have to
00:19:55.020 gradually raise the age
00:19:56.320 of eligibility.
00:19:57.860 And I would laughingly say,
00:19:59.620 you know,
00:19:59.880 people would say,
00:20:00.580 do you hate old people?
00:20:01.600 And I say,
00:20:01.980 no,
00:20:02.180 I aspire to be an old person.
00:20:03.760 You know,
00:20:03.940 I'm on my way.
00:20:04.900 I,
00:20:05.420 you know,
00:20:05.620 I want to collect
00:20:06.140 my Social Security,
00:20:07.080 my Medicare.
00:20:07.880 And so in order to save
00:20:09.220 these systems,
00:20:09.840 they have to be reformed.
00:20:11.220 But when we take them
00:20:12.120 off the table
00:20:12.880 and we present deficits
00:20:14.600 as big as the Biden
00:20:15.760 deficits are bigger,
00:20:16.960 we're just as guilty.
00:20:18.340 We no longer can point
00:20:19.440 to them and say,
00:20:20.000 oh,
00:20:20.080 these are the Biden deficits
00:20:21.220 or the Biden inflation
00:20:22.520 that came from the deficits.
00:20:24.380 We'll be looking in the mirror
00:20:25.680 because we'll have
00:20:26.520 the responsibility now.
00:20:27.700 And I just,
00:20:28.460 I think there still needs
00:20:29.420 to be a conservative
00:20:30.300 resistance against
00:20:31.820 big spending
00:20:32.820 and against debt.
00:20:33.980 And it is important.
00:20:35.060 Our interest rate's
00:20:35.780 about a trillion dollars.
00:20:36.940 Our interest payment's
00:20:37.820 about a trillion dollars a year.
00:20:39.120 But interest rates
00:20:40.300 are still edging up.
00:20:41.500 You know,
00:20:41.640 the interest rate
00:20:42.200 for 30 years at 5%.
00:20:43.600 So we are gradually
00:20:46.080 turning over
00:20:46.840 into a higher interest rate
00:20:48.260 and it's going to crowd out
00:20:49.680 all spending
00:20:50.340 at some point in time.
00:20:51.780 The deficit for this year
00:20:53.480 will equal the budget.
00:20:55.780 Congress votes
00:20:56.300 on a discretionary budget
00:20:57.580 of about 1.8
00:20:58.880 to $2 trillion.
00:21:00.580 That's equal to the deficit,
00:21:02.180 which means 100%
00:21:03.660 of the budget we vote on
00:21:05.160 will be borrowed this year.
00:21:07.260 So this should not be
00:21:08.600 about allegiance
00:21:09.320 to Donald Trump.
00:21:10.260 I like the president.
00:21:11.320 I voted for him.
00:21:12.100 I support him.
00:21:13.220 And I'm with him
00:21:13.800 on so many things.
00:21:14.800 His cabinet,
00:21:15.840 Maha movement,
00:21:16.680 all that stuff.
00:21:17.660 But it doesn't mean
00:21:18.460 we should quit
00:21:18.960 being fiscally conservative
00:21:20.040 and asking the difficult
00:21:21.080 questions about
00:21:21.980 are we for big debt?
00:21:23.520 Are we not for it?
00:21:24.440 Are we different
00:21:25.660 than the Democrats
00:21:26.340 when it comes to
00:21:27.080 deficit spending?
00:21:28.380 And right now,
00:21:28.980 we're looking kind of
00:21:29.880 like the Democrats
00:21:30.480 as far as a result.
00:21:32.140 We're talking to
00:21:32.860 Senator Rand Paul.
00:21:33.580 I want to build on
00:21:34.160 what Buck said
00:21:34.800 because I do think
00:21:35.380 it's interesting.
00:21:35.920 The Tea Party movement
00:21:37.480 started,
00:21:38.120 you can correct me
00:21:38.640 if I'm wrong
00:21:39.160 because I may be
00:21:39.940 a little bit off
00:21:40.720 but I think I'm right,
00:21:41.820 when under Obama
00:21:43.060 the national debt
00:21:44.260 approached $10 trillion.
00:21:46.400 Since that time,
00:21:47.780 we have nearly
00:21:48.660 quadrupled
00:21:49.660 the national debt
00:21:50.880 because it's rapidly
00:21:51.820 approaching $40 trillion.
00:21:54.540 And as you just laid out,
00:21:56.760 we're headed for
00:21:57.940 $50 trillion,
00:21:58.820 $60 trillion.
00:22:00.100 And it just feels like
00:22:01.880 Buck and I talk about this
00:22:03.180 sometimes on the program
00:22:04.400 because we see the responses
00:22:05.960 when we bring it up.
00:22:07.260 You say,
00:22:08.060 hey,
00:22:08.680 this is unsustainable.
00:22:10.000 People say,
00:22:10.480 well,
00:22:10.560 you should just cut costs.
00:22:12.060 The problem is,
00:22:12.940 if you look at the basic math
00:22:14.420 of what Medicare costs,
00:22:16.540 of what Social Security costs,
00:22:18.960 what the debt costs,
00:22:20.540 and I don't think
00:22:21.100 most people want to
00:22:21.840 replace national defense,
00:22:23.600 even though now
00:22:24.280 we're spending more money
00:22:25.220 servicing the debt
00:22:26.200 on interest
00:22:26.880 than we are
00:22:27.700 in national defense,
00:22:28.600 that eliminates
00:22:29.680 about 86%-ish
00:22:31.500 of the overall budget.
00:22:33.180 Even if you cut
00:22:34.420 every other part
00:22:35.560 of the budget,
00:22:36.600 you're still going to,
00:22:38.140 as you just laid out,
00:22:39.540 end up in a deficit situation.
00:22:41.960 To me,
00:22:42.520 the only possible solution
00:22:44.120 is you have to address
00:22:45.960 entitlement spending
00:22:46.940 in a significant way.
00:22:49.060 And you know this
00:22:49.580 better than anybody.
00:22:50.660 It seems like
00:22:51.520 95% of politicians
00:22:53.820 just say,
00:22:55.300 hey,
00:22:55.500 I got to get elected
00:22:56.220 in two years.
00:22:56.900 Hey,
00:22:57.140 I got to get elected
00:22:57.840 in four years,
00:22:58.640 six years,
00:22:59.120 whatever it is.
00:23:00.040 We'll just kick the can
00:23:01.100 down the road
00:23:01.880 and pretend
00:23:03.260 that the looming
00:23:05.260 debt crisis
00:23:06.560 doesn't actually exist.
00:23:08.700 Well,
00:23:09.120 you know,
00:23:09.280 one of the reasons
00:23:09.960 we put forward
00:23:11.040 the penny plan budget
00:23:12.160 to balance the budget
00:23:13.060 is to illustrate
00:23:13.860 that it can be done
00:23:15.160 and it can be done
00:23:16.180 by cutting only
00:23:16.840 a few percentage points.
00:23:18.080 But you have to cut
00:23:18.540 a few percentage points
00:23:19.320 of everything.
00:23:20.540 So when I started
00:23:21.240 proposing this
00:23:21.900 10 years ago,
00:23:22.680 spending wasn't
00:23:23.360 nearly as bad,
00:23:24.220 but it was headed
00:23:25.260 in the wrong direction.
00:23:26.900 10 years ago,
00:23:27.660 you could free spending.
00:23:29.120 Don't just don't
00:23:29.620 increase spending.
00:23:30.360 Spend the same amount
00:23:31.040 each year for five years
00:23:32.100 and the budget would balance.
00:23:33.400 Then a couple years later,
00:23:34.640 we called it the penny plan.
00:23:36.300 You had to cut 1%
00:23:37.180 across the board
00:23:37.920 of everything on budget
00:23:38.920 to balance the budget,
00:23:40.300 to balance the annual budget.
00:23:41.700 Then it became
00:23:42.320 the two penny plan.
00:23:43.640 Then COVID hit
00:23:44.680 and it became
00:23:45.080 the six penny plan.
00:23:46.400 And so that's about
00:23:47.280 where we are right now.
00:23:48.080 You'd have to cut
00:23:48.540 a 6% across the board.
00:23:50.460 But I tell people,
00:23:51.640 look at it this way.
00:23:52.560 If you still had 94%,
00:23:54.380 let's say your big deal
00:23:55.640 is your mother
00:23:56.320 and grandmother
00:23:56.940 had Alzheimer's disease.
00:23:58.640 You want the government
00:23:59.480 to do research.
00:24:00.600 So they come in to me.
00:24:01.720 They all wear purple ribbons
00:24:02.900 and I have a great deal
00:24:03.700 of sympathy.
00:24:04.260 I have family members
00:24:05.100 who have had that.
00:24:06.380 And I say to them,
00:24:07.680 well, you know,
00:24:08.100 we're short of money
00:24:08.860 and you got 100 million
00:24:10.000 last year.
00:24:11.100 Could you live
00:24:12.200 with 94 million this year?
00:24:14.380 And every one of them,
00:24:15.480 they're tearful,
00:24:16.720 thinking about their loved ones.
00:24:18.020 They're talking about
00:24:18.680 something very personal
00:24:19.520 with them.
00:24:20.180 And they look at me
00:24:20.820 and they say,
00:24:21.560 well, sure,
00:24:22.420 if the country's short of money,
00:24:23.580 we could do with 94 million.
00:24:25.340 And see,
00:24:25.680 that would be the same truth
00:24:26.600 of everybody.
00:24:27.620 Everybody would just have
00:24:28.480 to deal with $94 out of 100.
00:24:31.120 And it would be less
00:24:32.560 about eliminating
00:24:33.440 anything to anyone
00:24:34.440 but cutting everybody
00:24:35.340 to 6% and just saying,
00:24:36.680 we've got to do it.
00:24:37.660 You do it for a couple years,
00:24:38.880 we balance,
00:24:39.620 the country begins to grow,
00:24:40.940 receipts grow again,
00:24:42.240 and actually government spending
00:24:43.280 could gradually go up
00:24:44.520 after a while.
00:24:45.800 But I don't know.
00:24:47.160 I'm not afraid to do it.
00:24:48.100 And I don't know
00:24:48.500 that I'm any less popular
00:24:49.560 than I was when I ran.
00:24:51.180 You know,
00:24:51.520 I got 62% of the vote
00:24:53.040 last time in a state
00:24:54.480 that has a significant population
00:24:56.100 that's dependent on government.
00:24:58.160 And I have great sympathy for them
00:25:00.100 and I want them all to do better.
00:25:01.500 And I say,
00:25:02.060 I don't want to cut you off Medicaid.
00:25:03.600 I want to get you
00:25:04.140 private health insurance
00:25:05.140 with a private job
00:25:06.200 and better payment.
00:25:08.100 And so,
00:25:09.120 I don't know.
00:25:09.900 I think people do understand it
00:25:11.380 if you're sincere.
00:25:12.600 I think a lot of the people
00:25:13.740 that are weaselly and waffly
00:25:15.220 and never really commit
00:25:16.240 one way or the other
00:25:17.120 and then go home
00:25:18.500 and tell everybody
00:25:18.940 they're for a balanced budget.
00:25:20.400 See, this is a problem
00:25:21.060 with Republicans.
00:25:21.960 It's going to,
00:25:22.660 they're going to lose face
00:25:23.980 and they're going to lose
00:25:25.200 any semblance of sincerity
00:25:26.560 because they're going to go home
00:25:27.880 to the Chamber of Commerce
00:25:28.880 and to the Rotary
00:25:29.640 and talk about balanced budgets
00:25:30.900 next year or this summer.
00:25:32.760 And yet the deficit's
00:25:33.880 going to be $2.2 trillion
00:25:35.120 and all of it is responsible
00:25:36.960 to Republicans now.
00:25:37.860 This is no longer
00:25:38.480 the Biden deficit.
00:25:39.560 This will be the GOP deficit.
00:25:41.580 And in the next two years
00:25:42.640 they're going to borrow
00:25:43.120 $5 trillion.
00:25:44.780 Somebody's got to stand up
00:25:46.120 and shout no.
00:25:47.880 Well, Senator Paul,
00:25:49.200 at least down the line,
00:25:50.480 if this doesn't stop,
00:25:51.740 you'll be able to look
00:25:52.640 at all of us
00:25:53.200 when we're facing
00:25:53.780 a true financial crisis
00:25:54.920 and say,
00:25:55.400 I did tell you guys
00:25:56.440 this was coming.
00:25:57.320 So I know that won't,
00:25:58.600 that will be cold comfort,
00:25:59.620 but you're very much
00:26:01.100 on the record with this one.
00:26:02.220 I worry that American politics
00:26:04.040 have unfortunately
00:26:05.480 gotten on this
00:26:06.540 unstoppable amusement park ride
00:26:09.300 and we're going to run
00:26:09.800 out of track.
00:26:10.460 But anyway,
00:26:11.240 I also wanted to ask you
00:26:12.520 something,
00:26:14.180 well actually no,
00:26:14.800 this is very serious too.
00:26:16.140 I was going to say
00:26:16.820 go to a lighter direction,
00:26:17.700 but no, not really.
00:26:19.160 What you're finding about
00:26:20.780 or what we're all finding out
00:26:22.240 about really the new version
00:26:24.900 of how the Democrats
00:26:26.020 viewed Biden
00:26:27.440 during the election,
00:26:29.500 this book that's come out,
00:26:31.220 all of this stuff,
00:26:33.140 where do you come,
00:26:34.060 I mean as a doctor
00:26:35.100 as well as somebody
00:26:36.000 who's in politics
00:26:37.000 at a high level,
00:26:37.860 I mean nobody's
00:26:39.260 really supposed to believe
00:26:40.200 that your Democrat colleagues
00:26:41.400 in the Senate
00:26:41.820 didn't know Biden
00:26:42.860 wasn't all there,
00:26:44.020 right?
00:26:44.420 Or what?
00:26:46.260 No, this is really shocking.
00:26:47.960 You're going to discover,
00:26:49.320 can you believe it,
00:26:50.280 that Biden was actually
00:26:51.360 mentally impaired
00:26:52.160 and no one knew about it
00:26:53.320 until Tapper wrote his book.
00:26:55.160 This is just shocking.
00:26:56.520 I mean what great reporting.
00:26:58.100 Tapper has revealed
00:26:59.160 that President Biden
00:27:00.740 was missing a step or two.
00:27:02.500 No, I mean everybody
00:27:03.540 saw it from miles away,
00:27:05.500 the shuffling gate,
00:27:06.620 the absent stare,
00:27:08.340 the looking one way,
00:27:10.080 looking for people,
00:27:10.960 never really certain
00:27:11.700 of where he was,
00:27:12.700 and then the rambling,
00:27:15.200 incoherent sentences.
00:27:17.560 So, you know,
00:27:18.200 if it were just someone
00:27:19.020 you knew,
00:27:19.480 you'd feel sorry for them.
00:27:21.000 But if it were my loved one,
00:27:22.900 I would be mad at the family
00:27:25.700 for putting something
00:27:26.360 like that out.
00:27:27.380 I think actually
00:27:28.100 one of the most insulting things
00:27:29.540 was Jimmy Carter's family.
00:27:31.260 As Jimmy Carter was dying
00:27:32.680 and really not conscious,
00:27:34.780 they rolled him out
00:27:35.720 for display of the cameras
00:27:36.880 after having just voted.
00:27:38.980 And, you know,
00:27:40.020 it's a sad time.
00:27:40.860 Look, Jimmy Carter
00:27:41.500 wasn't a great president.
00:27:42.680 He was a great humanitarian,
00:27:44.420 I think,
00:27:44.760 and not a bad person
00:27:45.700 after the presidency.
00:27:47.440 He should have been
00:27:47.960 remembered for that.
00:27:48.920 Instead,
00:27:49.400 I can't shake the image
00:27:50.320 of, you know,
00:27:51.220 his mouth open,
00:27:52.360 unconscious,
00:27:53.420 and his idiot family
00:27:54.640 parading him out there
00:27:55.700 in front of cameras
00:27:56.420 to say he just voted.
00:27:57.920 You know,
00:27:58.240 that's kind of what they did
00:27:59.440 to Biden for four years.
00:28:00.780 And it would have been
00:28:01.980 much better.
00:28:02.840 And, you know,
00:28:03.320 he could have been remembered,
00:28:04.860 you know,
00:28:05.160 I guess at least
00:28:05.780 just for being a crook,
00:28:06.900 you know,
00:28:07.240 as a vice president
00:28:08.180 instead of, you know,
00:28:09.240 being a bumbling president.
00:28:10.760 Do you believe
00:28:11.920 that they found out
00:28:13.780 on Friday
00:28:14.740 that he had
00:28:15.860 stage four cancer?
00:28:18.400 You know,
00:28:19.040 maybe.
00:28:19.560 And I don't really fault
00:28:20.700 people as much for this.
00:28:21.820 If you've looked
00:28:22.420 into prostate cancer
00:28:23.860 and a lot of men
00:28:24.780 have looked into
00:28:25.580 the pros and cons
00:28:27.040 of the blood testing,
00:28:28.000 it really has evolved
00:28:30.100 and changed a lot.
00:28:31.300 So they used to have
00:28:31.840 everybody at 40
00:28:32.800 start taking a PSA.
00:28:34.400 But then they started
00:28:35.000 finding elevated PSAs
00:28:36.380 and people having
00:28:37.000 their prostates removed,
00:28:38.040 which is not a benign
00:28:39.060 procedure.
00:28:40.840 And it's sort of unclear
00:28:42.320 whether they were
00:28:42.900 early cancers
00:28:43.580 that might have stayed
00:28:44.240 and hidden for dozens
00:28:45.240 of years.
00:28:45.780 And so the numbers
00:28:46.880 of surgeries
00:28:47.440 have skyrocketed.
00:28:48.780 Then they decided
00:28:49.720 after 70,
00:28:50.560 you're more likely
00:28:51.060 to die from something else.
00:28:52.180 They don't take
00:28:52.920 the PSA at all.
00:28:54.440 And so it's weird
00:28:55.220 because we all
00:28:55.780 have this mortality
00:28:56.600 and we're like,
00:28:57.300 I'm 71.
00:28:58.000 I feel pretty healthy.
00:28:58.720 I think I should get a PSA
00:28:59.960 or I'm 82 and feel healthy.
00:29:01.740 Maybe I'll get a PSA
00:29:02.780 or maybe I'll just
00:29:03.740 roll the dice.
00:29:04.640 I'm getting older.
00:29:05.340 I'm going to die
00:29:05.860 from something.
00:29:06.800 So these are,
00:29:07.700 they're difficult
00:29:08.260 and personal decisions.
00:29:09.380 So I don't fault him
00:29:10.880 for any of that.
00:29:11.480 And I think there is
00:29:12.000 a chance he did know.
00:29:12.940 They said he got a PSA
00:29:14.200 that was probably normal
00:29:15.740 back when he was 71.
00:29:17.500 And it's a slow-going cancer
00:29:19.180 and there's,
00:29:19.840 you know,
00:29:20.120 he's 82 or 83.
00:29:22.560 And, you know,
00:29:23.640 the downside
00:29:24.300 to the surgeries
00:29:24.980 are a lot of different
00:29:26.420 side effects
00:29:27.040 from the surgeries.
00:29:27.600 The surgery is not
00:29:28.240 a perfect surgery
00:29:29.040 by any means.
00:29:30.560 And so I don't know.
00:29:32.340 I guess I don't fault him
00:29:33.460 because I think
00:29:33.880 the decision-making process
00:29:35.060 is a very personal one
00:29:36.200 that a lot of men
00:29:37.280 are having to go through.
00:29:38.640 And really,
00:29:39.280 it's not an easy one
00:29:40.240 because it's not...
00:29:41.180 Can I ask you really quickly
00:29:42.040 about Dr. Paul,
00:29:43.420 or Senator Paul,
00:29:44.340 Dr. Paul,
00:29:45.560 my own father,
00:29:46.920 by the way,
00:29:47.260 had to go through this.
00:29:48.300 So a lot of us listening,
00:29:49.420 it's very personal
00:29:50.420 and exactly what you're
00:29:51.240 talking about.
00:29:52.980 But why is this happening
00:29:55.080 to so many...
00:29:55.900 This is...
00:29:56.620 We're now at a point
00:29:57.420 where men are being told
00:29:58.640 something like,
00:29:59.260 what, 70% or 80%
00:30:00.660 of them will have
00:30:01.100 some form of prostate cancer.
00:30:02.540 This can't be normal.
00:30:03.440 Do you have any working theory
00:30:05.160 as to what's going on?
00:30:06.140 It actually is kind of normal.
00:30:08.540 They've done a natural study
00:30:10.180 of the natural course
00:30:11.320 of the disease.
00:30:12.640 And when they do autopsies
00:30:14.000 of men in their 70s
00:30:15.360 who die for other reasons,
00:30:16.680 you just die
00:30:17.440 and they take 100 people
00:30:18.600 who died,
00:30:19.080 they look at their prostates.
00:30:20.520 It is like 70% of them
00:30:21.880 have cancer in the prostate
00:30:23.020 but never had any symptoms
00:30:24.800 that didn't spread
00:30:25.500 anywhere in their body
00:30:26.160 and they died
00:30:26.600 from something else.
00:30:27.700 That's why it's
00:30:28.280 a difficult decision.
00:30:29.580 If it were just
00:30:30.580 a breast biopsy
00:30:31.780 or a lumpectomy
00:30:33.440 that they did
00:30:33.980 to the prostate,
00:30:35.100 you didn't have to worry
00:30:35.760 about all the other
00:30:36.360 possible problems,
00:30:37.460 it wouldn't be such
00:30:38.220 a big deal.
00:30:38.940 But since the surgery
00:30:39.740 is a pretty dramatic thing,
00:30:41.280 you obviously don't want
00:30:42.160 to do the surgery
00:30:42.700 on people who don't
00:30:43.500 need to have it.
00:30:44.860 But so 100 years ago,
00:30:46.340 we think as many men
00:30:47.160 were having this issue
00:30:48.180 as today?
00:30:49.280 I'm asking, honestly.
00:30:50.280 I have no idea.
00:30:51.460 Yeah, probably.
00:30:52.360 But 100 years ago,
00:30:53.340 the average life expectancy
00:30:54.620 was 45.
00:30:56.440 And so because we live longer,
00:30:58.440 there's going to be
00:30:58.880 a lot more people with it.
00:31:00.420 But it's even worse than that.
00:31:01.820 They apparently have done
00:31:02.640 autopsy studies
00:31:03.600 of men who die
00:31:04.360 in their 20s
00:31:05.140 and I've seen
00:31:06.180 at least one report
00:31:07.160 saying 8% of men
00:31:08.380 in their 20s
00:31:09.060 already have a form
00:31:09.740 of prostate cancer.
00:31:11.020 So that makes you wonder
00:31:11.940 if it's more hyperplasia
00:31:13.720 or something
00:31:14.740 that's not quite cancer
00:31:16.160 and that maybe
00:31:16.760 our grading system
00:31:18.080 needs to be better refined
00:31:19.860 to figure out
00:31:20.540 when we need to do surgery
00:31:21.660 and when we don't.
00:31:22.880 So it is a complicated subject.
00:31:25.260 I guess I don't fault him
00:31:26.220 for it because look,
00:31:27.240 he's 82
00:31:27.780 and he's had 12 years
00:31:28.940 without having to deal
00:31:29.760 with any of the symptoms
00:31:30.620 of having the surgery.
00:31:31.720 And I don't know.
00:31:34.000 I don't know
00:31:34.380 what would have been better
00:31:35.200 and nobody really,
00:31:37.040 I don't know.
00:31:37.600 There's a lot of ifs,
00:31:38.660 ands, or buts
00:31:39.300 about how to make the decision.
00:31:41.540 The guy that invented
00:31:42.360 the PSA
00:31:43.120 was a test,
00:31:44.900 was a chairman
00:31:46.260 of the department
00:31:46.840 at Stanford
00:31:47.320 for many years
00:31:48.100 and he finally came
00:31:49.460 to the conclusion
00:31:50.000 at the end
00:31:50.520 that PSA
00:31:51.220 is also related
00:31:52.060 to a benign enlargement
00:31:54.220 of the prostate
00:31:55.060 as well as cancer
00:31:56.020 and it's difficult
00:31:57.020 to distinguish
00:31:57.620 because men's prostate
00:31:59.000 gets bigger over time
00:32:00.160 and that's why
00:32:00.540 most older men
00:32:01.600 have trouble
00:32:02.100 with urinary symptoms
00:32:03.000 but it's not all cancer.
00:32:04.420 A lot of it's benign
00:32:05.340 and because the surgery
00:32:07.240 is involved,
00:32:07.680 you've got to decide
00:32:08.140 do I want to do,
00:32:09.100 you know,
00:32:09.280 do I want to watch it?
00:32:10.180 Do I want to do surgery?
00:32:11.400 And it's a difficult decision
00:32:13.160 for a lot of men.
00:32:14.740 Senator Paul,
00:32:15.180 Dr. Paul,
00:32:16.500 wearing both hats today for us.
00:32:17.800 Thank you so much
00:32:18.440 for coming on the show, sir.
00:32:20.060 Thank you.
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00:33:10.160 All right,
00:33:10.680 welcome back
00:33:11.060 into Clay Enbach.
00:33:11.800 We told you about
00:33:12.420 this horrific assassination
00:33:14.100 that occurred last night
00:33:15.940 at the Jewish Museum
00:33:16.720 in Washington, D.C.
00:33:18.040 and a young Jewish couple
00:33:20.760 soon to be engaged
00:33:22.140 gunned down in cold blood
00:33:24.220 and the assassin,
00:33:26.340 the alleged murderer
00:33:27.920 shouting,
00:33:29.620 free,
00:33:29.980 free Palestine.
00:33:31.260 So I think we all know
00:33:32.720 exactly what was going on here.
00:33:33.920 Notice the Trump administration
00:33:34.840 not playing the,
00:33:35.960 we may never know
00:33:36.800 the real motive games
00:33:37.900 at the FBI or anything.
00:33:38.960 We understand
00:33:39.720 why this atrocity
00:33:41.200 was committed.
00:33:42.400 We want to talk
00:33:43.220 to our friend
00:33:43.720 Yael Eckstein now.
00:33:44.880 She's president
00:33:45.680 and CEO
00:33:46.300 of the International Fellowship
00:33:48.120 of Christians and Jews.
00:33:49.420 Yael,
00:33:49.900 the condolences
00:33:50.880 from this audience
00:33:51.760 go out to the families
00:33:53.080 of those killed
00:33:54.820 in this horrible,
00:33:55.940 this horrible act
00:33:57.820 of violence.
00:33:59.420 And also,
00:34:00.400 our solidarity
00:34:01.100 goes out to our brothers
00:34:01.980 and sisters in Israel.
00:34:04.280 My understanding
00:34:05.140 is the Trump administration
00:34:06.000 has immediately reached out
00:34:07.620 and there's already
00:34:08.580 discussions
00:34:10.020 between the two nations
00:34:11.180 to express
00:34:12.160 those condolences.
00:34:14.420 It is so comforting
00:34:16.020 for all of us
00:34:17.000 here in Israel
00:34:17.560 to hear the condolences
00:34:19.060 but even more than that
00:34:20.700 maybe to feel the love
00:34:22.160 and the prayers
00:34:22.860 and the support
00:34:23.700 and the unity.
00:34:25.980 You know,
00:34:26.280 I think what this
00:34:26.920 killing represents
00:34:27.980 is everything
00:34:29.320 that the evil
00:34:30.520 is trying to destroy.
00:34:32.180 It represents
00:34:32.820 America
00:34:33.800 and Israel.
00:34:35.040 It represents Jews
00:34:36.060 and Christians.
00:34:37.380 It represents
00:34:37.940 our shared values
00:34:39.720 of striving for life
00:34:41.140 and brotherhood.
00:34:42.000 They were actually
00:34:42.920 going to get engaged
00:34:43.880 next week in Jerusalem
00:34:45.240 and they were both
00:34:46.060 part of groups
00:34:47.640 that worked on
00:34:48.620 helping Israelis
00:34:49.980 and Arabs
00:34:50.860 to work together
00:34:51.780 in the high-tech sector
00:34:52.880 and find common values.
00:34:55.380 And so,
00:34:55.900 to hear those words
00:34:57.220 of condolences
00:34:57.980 right away,
00:34:59.020 to feel the prayers,
00:35:00.300 to see the support
00:35:02.320 that millions
00:35:03.200 of Americans
00:35:03.860 are showing
00:35:04.620 against this attack
00:35:05.860 is something that
00:35:06.720 what I believe
00:35:07.540 it's the silenced
00:35:08.620 majority
00:35:09.340 that's speaking
00:35:10.220 loud.
00:35:11.120 Yeah,
00:35:11.640 when I was over
00:35:12.620 with you
00:35:13.660 and the IFCJ
00:35:14.860 in Israel,
00:35:15.840 I'm a nerd
00:35:16.960 when it comes
00:35:17.680 to newspapers.
00:35:18.340 I want to read
00:35:19.340 all the newspapers
00:35:20.040 that I can
00:35:20.840 and so the English
00:35:21.780 language newspapers
00:35:22.740 that I was reading,
00:35:24.120 I was kind of amazed
00:35:25.660 how much coverage
00:35:26.980 there was
00:35:27.920 of the college
00:35:29.020 campus protests
00:35:30.220 in Israel
00:35:31.300 and how much
00:35:32.660 that impacted
00:35:33.540 people in Israel
00:35:34.780 to see that,
00:35:36.080 to see the videos
00:35:36.860 and obviously
00:35:37.400 to be reading
00:35:38.200 about it.
00:35:39.040 I don't know
00:35:39.560 that this audience
00:35:40.420 is as aware
00:35:41.540 of that coverage
00:35:43.040 and how it impacts
00:35:44.160 people in Israel
00:35:45.160 when people
00:35:45.860 at the University
00:35:46.420 of Michigan
00:35:46.900 or UCLA
00:35:48.120 or Columbia
00:35:49.020 or whatever school
00:35:49.860 my alma mater,
00:35:50.700 George Washington
00:35:51.280 University,
00:35:52.200 are protesting,
00:35:53.420 but those kids
00:35:54.020 are globalizing
00:35:55.080 the Intifada.
00:35:56.240 That is one of the chants.
00:35:57.320 Free, free Palestine
00:35:58.200 is another one of this chants.
00:36:00.000 Isn't this,
00:36:00.860 in your mind
00:36:01.500 and in the mind
00:36:02.020 of many people
00:36:02.540 in Israel,
00:36:03.240 a natural outgrowth
00:36:04.420 over what those kids
00:36:05.720 were saying
00:36:06.440 on those campuses?
00:36:08.700 Oh, well,
00:36:09.760 100% spot on.
00:36:11.660 This is what it means
00:36:12.780 to globalize the Intifada.
00:36:14.320 I've lived in Israel
00:36:15.260 through Intifadas
00:36:16.020 where there are
00:36:16.540 suicide bombers
00:36:17.480 that are blowing up buses
00:36:18.820 and coffee shops
00:36:19.640 every single day
00:36:20.520 when there are even
00:36:21.580 teenagers who are sent
00:36:22.780 to stab random civilians
00:36:24.380 in Israel.
00:36:25.180 That's what the Intifada is
00:36:26.220 and when you say
00:36:27.080 globalize the Intifada,
00:36:28.620 this is exactly
00:36:29.500 what it looks like
00:36:30.240 on the streets
00:36:30.900 of Washington, D.C.,
00:36:32.140 gunning down
00:36:32.840 to innocent people
00:36:34.120 simply because
00:36:34.960 they represented Israel.
00:36:37.500 And it's so important
00:36:38.920 for you to bring up
00:36:39.660 these college protests
00:36:40.780 because what they represent
00:36:41.900 us here in Israel,
00:36:43.200 I'm the daughter-in-law
00:36:44.700 and granddaughter
00:36:45.580 of two Holocaust survivors.
00:36:47.860 All of my father-in-law
00:36:49.380 and my grandfather's family
00:36:50.740 were killed
00:36:51.280 in the Holocaust
00:36:51.980 and we were raised
00:36:53.420 on these stories
00:36:54.080 of how it started
00:36:55.180 by looking at Jews
00:36:56.480 as different,
00:36:57.320 by suddenly Jews
00:36:58.140 aren't allowed
00:36:58.640 to go and study
00:37:00.140 on certain college campuses.
00:37:01.760 Suddenly they're not allowed
00:37:02.480 to enter certain areas.
00:37:04.120 And so what those
00:37:05.120 college protests represent
00:37:06.680 when we see Jews
00:37:08.120 not able to get
00:37:09.080 into certain public areas
00:37:10.720 of college campuses
00:37:11.740 or to get into buildings
00:37:13.640 on college campuses
00:37:14.800 that they're paying tuition
00:37:15.860 and they should be able
00:37:16.740 to go there
00:37:17.300 but they can't
00:37:18.160 because they're Jewish.
00:37:20.060 This is getting
00:37:20.700 so much coverage
00:37:21.420 in Israel
00:37:21.900 because it's so familiar.
00:37:23.320 This isn't something
00:37:24.500 that's new.
00:37:25.580 Anti-Semitism
00:37:26.280 is the oldest hatred.
00:37:29.380 It's as old
00:37:30.180 as the Jewish people.
00:37:31.180 We saw it with Amalek
00:37:32.700 in the scriptures.
00:37:33.680 We saw it with
00:37:34.240 Wicked Haman.
00:37:35.360 We saw it with the Nazis
00:37:36.440 and today we're seeing it
00:37:37.460 not only with Islamic extremists
00:37:39.820 but people who are educated,
00:37:42.700 we see,
00:37:43.160 who are raised in Chicago.
00:37:44.780 This shooter today
00:37:45.860 is somebody
00:37:46.260 who had an education,
00:37:48.120 who you wouldn't profile
00:37:49.040 as an Islamic extremist
00:37:50.640 from Iraq
00:37:52.060 or Afghanistan
00:37:52.780 or someone else.
00:37:53.660 This is an American
00:37:54.880 who did this.
00:37:55.820 And you see
00:37:56.920 that this hatred
00:37:57.940 is seeping
00:37:59.060 into American culture
00:38:00.820 which for me
00:38:01.780 is the most terrifying.
00:38:02.980 You know,
00:38:03.220 I was just on the border
00:38:04.160 with Syria
00:38:04.820 where the International Fellowship
00:38:06.600 of Christians and Jews
00:38:07.460 provided food
00:38:08.840 and medical aid
00:38:09.860 to Christians
00:38:10.940 being persecuted
00:38:12.000 in Syria.
00:38:13.460 And what I see
00:38:14.300 is that this isn't
00:38:15.120 isolated
00:38:15.940 to the Jewish people.
00:38:17.100 It's not isolated
00:38:18.220 to Israel.
00:38:19.140 It's a hatred
00:38:20.180 against God himself
00:38:21.960 and that's why
00:38:22.740 they're targeting
00:38:23.280 Jews and Christians
00:38:24.920 because actually
00:38:25.840 from what I understand
00:38:27.080 Yaron,
00:38:27.700 one of the victims
00:38:28.420 of the shooting today,
00:38:29.460 he actually identified
00:38:30.360 as a messianic Jew.
00:38:34.900 He was half Christian.
00:38:36.700 This is all of our wars.
00:38:38.840 This is all of our darkness.
00:38:40.140 This is all of our threats.
00:38:41.300 And I think the only answer
00:38:42.820 is to come together
00:38:44.620 in love,
00:38:45.800 to love one another,
00:38:47.120 to help one another,
00:38:48.280 to stand in solidarity
00:38:49.480 against this darkness.
00:38:51.020 It's the only way
00:38:52.660 to stop it.
00:38:53.500 Kyle,
00:38:54.700 we know
00:38:55.880 and we've talked
00:38:56.440 about it here
00:38:56.900 many times on the show
00:38:57.960 that unfortunately
00:38:59.180 the Democrat Party
00:39:01.440 is far too tolerant
00:39:03.920 of the intolerance
00:39:05.760 and the anti-Semitism
00:39:06.880 that exists
00:39:07.860 as a portion.
00:39:09.100 I have Jewish friends
00:39:10.520 who vote Democrat.
00:39:11.540 I understand
00:39:11.940 this is not the entire
00:39:12.820 Democrat Party base,
00:39:15.120 but there is a portion
00:39:16.560 of the Democrat Party
00:39:17.700 that is truly anti-Semitic
00:39:19.880 and the party,
00:39:20.820 I would argue,
00:39:21.220 overall is far too tolerant
00:39:23.340 of that.
00:39:24.580 Do you see that
00:39:25.660 changing at all
00:39:26.940 as things,
00:39:28.000 as incidents like this
00:39:29.200 happen?
00:39:30.240 Do you see
00:39:30.740 Democrat leadership
00:39:31.740 starting to speak
00:39:33.220 with more moral clarity
00:39:34.640 or do you think
00:39:35.500 that they are
00:39:36.180 unfortunately held hostage
00:39:38.020 by the anti-Semitic
00:39:40.160 members in their midst?
00:39:42.740 It was so incredible
00:39:47.060 and comforting
00:39:48.000 to see the President
00:39:49.300 of America,
00:39:50.100 President Trump,
00:39:50.880 immediately call out
00:39:52.640 this attack
00:39:53.360 as anti-Semitism
00:39:54.360 and call it wrong.
00:39:56.580 This is something
00:39:57.840 that should be
00:39:58.820 the basis
00:39:59.500 for anyone.
00:40:00.820 I saw some people
00:40:01.580 from the Senate
00:40:02.820 and from the American
00:40:03.580 government
00:40:04.340 representing America
00:40:06.140 who avoided questions
00:40:07.620 on if this was wrong,
00:40:08.800 if this was bad,
00:40:09.760 if this is anti-Semitic,
00:40:11.260 to have the President
00:40:12.100 of America
00:40:12.780 stand up
00:40:13.480 and quickly
00:40:14.340 denounce what happened
00:40:16.300 and say that he stands
00:40:17.800 with the Jewish community
00:40:19.020 and recognizes
00:40:19.820 that this is anti-Semitism
00:40:21.620 in its most evil form.
00:40:24.960 It's something
00:40:25.760 that's sobering
00:40:26.520 and unfortunately
00:40:27.260 we're not seeing
00:40:28.000 enough of.
00:40:28.860 What's terrifying
00:40:29.560 to me
00:40:30.280 is that we're seeing
00:40:31.020 this hatred
00:40:32.380 against Jews
00:40:34.160 pop up
00:40:35.420 everywhere.
00:40:36.600 You see it
00:40:37.700 on the right,
00:40:38.580 you see it
00:40:39.120 on the left
00:40:40.020 but what's so encouraging
00:40:41.700 to me
00:40:42.480 is that
00:40:43.080 in facing
00:40:44.320 this hatred
00:40:45.560 that no longer
00:40:46.760 disguises itself,
00:40:48.500 no longer
00:40:49.200 pretends
00:40:50.060 to be tolerant,
00:40:51.000 calls out
00:40:51.840 hating Jews,
00:40:53.380 hating Christians.
00:40:55.660 I think that
00:40:56.660 we've seen
00:40:57.160 the silenced
00:40:57.820 majority
00:40:58.480 speak up louder
00:40:59.400 than ever.
00:41:00.540 I see this
00:41:00.980 in my work
00:41:01.380 with the International
00:41:02.240 Fellowship of Christians
00:41:03.340 and Jews.
00:41:03.860 we have more people
00:41:05.760 writing to us,
00:41:07.060 donating,
00:41:07.740 taking an active stand
00:41:09.180 in face
00:41:10.160 of this hatred
00:41:11.240 both on the right
00:41:12.360 and the left
00:41:13.280 to say
00:41:13.920 that doesn't represent me.
00:41:15.960 I stand
00:41:16.740 for these Judeo-Christian values
00:41:18.500 that we need
00:41:19.180 to stand unified with.
00:41:20.600 I stand with God.
00:41:21.900 I stand with God's word.
00:41:23.200 I stand with God's people
00:41:24.500 and if Jews
00:41:27.340 and Christians
00:41:28.160 are separated,
00:41:30.040 if we're able
00:41:30.760 to let hatred
00:41:31.700 and division win,
00:41:32.880 we are both
00:41:34.220 facing the same fate.
00:41:35.680 We're both
00:41:36.220 facing the same darkness
00:41:37.280 and so I think
00:41:38.480 we have to stand up
00:41:39.560 against hatred
00:41:40.660 on the right,
00:41:41.960 on the left
00:41:42.800 and we have to do
00:41:43.560 exactly what
00:41:44.500 President Trump
00:41:45.180 did today
00:41:45.800 which is
00:41:46.660 call evil evil,
00:41:48.240 call darkness darkness
00:41:49.340 and learn
00:41:50.880 from the warning
00:41:51.700 of Isaiah
00:41:52.280 from thousands
00:41:52.880 of years ago
00:41:53.600 when he said
00:41:53.960 at the end of days
00:41:54.800 light will be called dark
00:41:56.060 and good will be called bad
00:41:57.740 and we have to be careful
00:41:58.700 for that.
00:41:59.280 What we saw today
00:42:00.120 from President Trump
00:42:01.040 was him calling
00:42:01.860 bad bad
00:42:02.700 calling darkness
00:42:03.880 darkness
00:42:04.260 and it's something
00:42:04.900 we all have to
00:42:06.240 learn from
00:42:07.360 and not be afraid
00:42:09.000 to say out loud.
00:42:10.600 There are many things
00:42:11.740 that people say
00:42:12.360 about President Trump
00:42:13.200 that are certainly untrue.
00:42:14.780 You're talking to us
00:42:15.580 from Israel right now.
00:42:17.380 Israel,
00:42:18.080 if it were
00:42:18.820 a United State
00:42:20.100 and able to vote
00:42:21.160 in the presidential election
00:42:22.460 would have voted
00:42:24.000 massively
00:42:25.040 for Donald Trump
00:42:26.320 similar to the margins
00:42:28.080 based on the data
00:42:28.980 that I've seen
00:42:29.600 that West Virginia
00:42:30.580 or Wyoming did
00:42:31.960 among the Trumpiest
00:42:33.560 of Trump states.
00:42:35.160 What do people
00:42:35.800 in Israel think
00:42:37.000 when Trump
00:42:37.660 is called Hitler?
00:42:40.360 Well,
00:42:41.000 I think
00:42:41.340 we all know
00:42:43.340 in Israel
00:42:43.960 firsthand
00:42:44.600 what Hitler did.
00:42:45.820 He built
00:42:46.360 concentration camps.
00:42:47.920 He burned
00:42:48.640 bodies
00:42:49.360 in the mass.
00:42:50.320 My daughter
00:42:50.660 just got back
00:42:51.460 from Poland
00:42:52.220 where she was
00:42:52.800 walking through
00:42:53.400 Auschwitz
00:42:54.040 where her grandfather's
00:42:56.360 family were burned,
00:42:57.980 his siblings,
00:42:59.100 his grandparents,
00:43:00.240 six million Jews
00:43:02.200 that were murdered
00:43:02.940 in the Holocaust.
00:43:04.300 For the Holocaust,
00:43:05.380 the global Jewish population
00:43:06.480 was around 26 million Jews.
00:43:09.120 Still today,
00:43:10.540 we haven't reached
00:43:11.580 that number.
00:43:12.460 We still haven't reached
00:43:13.380 the numbers of Jews
00:43:14.460 around the world
00:43:15.480 as there was
00:43:17.500 before the Holocaust.
00:43:18.580 And so,
00:43:19.160 I think to call
00:43:20.100 any democratic leader
00:43:21.980 today
00:43:22.440 that isn't
00:43:23.080 targeting
00:43:23.760 and killing
00:43:24.540 and setting up
00:43:25.260 concentration camps
00:43:26.220 to even use
00:43:27.280 their name
00:43:28.000 in the same sentence
00:43:29.240 as Hitler
00:43:29.880 is not only
00:43:31.320 offensive,
00:43:32.080 it's dangerous
00:43:32.960 because if we don't
00:43:33.900 learn from the mistakes
00:43:35.220 of the past,
00:43:36.380 they are
00:43:36.880 maybe inevitably
00:43:38.680 going to repeat
00:43:39.520 themselves,
00:43:40.180 God forbid.
00:43:41.100 And that's what
00:43:41.660 we're seeing today
00:43:42.680 when people are
00:43:43.620 standing up
00:43:44.880 for Hamas,
00:43:46.220 standing up
00:43:46.900 for terrorists,
00:43:48.120 trying to
00:43:48.680 support the Yemen
00:43:51.440 Houthi terrorists
00:43:52.980 who call
00:43:53.460 death for Israel
00:43:54.520 death for America
00:43:55.620 as their slogan.
00:43:57.600 And you see
00:43:58.180 across America
00:43:59.340 that there are
00:43:59.920 students that are
00:44:00.800 supporting
00:44:01.560 and calling
00:44:02.680 heroes
00:44:03.680 the terrorists
00:44:04.920 that want to
00:44:05.440 destroy them.
00:44:06.320 It's something
00:44:06.840 that we haven't
00:44:07.500 learned from history.
00:44:08.800 And then,
00:44:09.680 God forbid,
00:44:10.200 it could repeat
00:44:11.120 itself.
00:44:11.760 And so,
00:44:12.460 across the Middle East,
00:44:14.100 you know,
00:44:14.440 in Islamic,
00:44:16.380 Muslim countries
00:44:17.240 that are more
00:44:18.660 moderate,
00:44:19.260 like Egypt
00:44:20.300 and Saudi Arabia
00:44:21.400 and Jordan
00:44:22.360 and Morocco,
00:44:23.080 it is illegal
00:44:24.380 to wave
00:44:25.060 a Palestinian flag
00:44:26.440 because that
00:44:27.440 Palestinian flag
00:44:28.240 doesn't represent
00:44:28.840 the Palestinian people.
00:44:30.000 It represents Hamas.
00:44:31.220 It represents
00:44:31.680 the terror body
00:44:32.660 that's leading
00:44:33.220 them right now.
00:44:34.420 And so,
00:44:34.800 across the moderate
00:44:35.840 Muslim world,
00:44:36.760 you're not allowed
00:44:37.240 to have a preacher,
00:44:39.140 an imam,
00:44:40.040 a mosque
00:44:40.880 that's praising
00:44:41.820 Hamas
00:44:42.460 or the Palestinian
00:44:43.180 leadership.
00:44:43.660 You'll literally
00:44:44.320 go to jail.
00:44:45.500 And so,
00:44:45.780 what happened?
00:44:46.600 They all left
00:44:47.820 these moderate
00:44:48.880 Islamic countries
00:44:50.040 and went to America
00:44:50.840 and set up
00:44:51.660 their mosques
00:44:52.220 in America
00:44:52.880 and are doing
00:44:53.540 their rallies
00:44:54.320 with their
00:44:54.700 Palestinian flags
00:44:55.720 praising Hamas
00:44:57.060 in America.
00:44:58.020 And it's not
00:44:58.580 only staying now
00:45:00.000 with the Islamic
00:45:01.240 extremists,
00:45:02.020 it's actually
00:45:02.660 infiltrating
00:45:03.860 into the brains
00:45:05.260 and lives
00:45:06.020 and now you see
00:45:06.540 actions
00:45:07.240 of young Americans.
00:45:09.720 Young Americans
00:45:10.820 that are now
00:45:12.480 standing in solidarity
00:45:13.660 with terrorists.
00:45:15.100 If we don't
00:45:15.860 wake up
00:45:16.640 immediately
00:45:17.440 in the West,
00:45:19.060 that will
00:45:19.960 take over
00:45:20.960 everyone
00:45:21.700 who now thinks
00:45:22.680 that we don't
00:45:24.260 need to give it
00:45:25.200 any attention
00:45:25.760 and we don't
00:45:26.180 need to take a stand.
00:45:27.640 I think this is
00:45:28.380 important as we go
00:45:29.200 away.
00:45:30.800 And thank you
00:45:31.580 for calling in
00:45:32.140 from Israel.
00:45:33.180 There aren't
00:45:33.720 very many countries
00:45:34.580 in the Middle East
00:45:35.360 where a gay
00:45:36.480 or a trans person
00:45:37.720 could live
00:45:38.420 with freedom.
00:45:40.380 Israel is in fact
00:45:41.220 the only one.
00:45:42.360 And so,
00:45:43.040 when you hear
00:45:43.600 people on the left
00:45:44.680 somehow
00:45:45.140 siding
00:45:46.600 with Hamas
00:45:48.460 or the idea
00:45:49.560 of anti-Israel,
00:45:51.900 it really is
00:45:52.800 a cognitive dissonance
00:45:54.040 that's even
00:45:54.560 difficult to comprehend.
00:45:56.060 I really wish
00:45:56.580 people could come
00:45:57.260 visit and see.
00:45:58.860 But Yael,
00:45:59.300 I think that's
00:45:59.780 important and thank
00:46:00.460 you for joining us.
00:46:01.980 Thank you so much
00:46:03.300 and I think it's
00:46:03.980 so important
00:46:04.560 to remember
00:46:05.100 that the
00:46:05.840 Palestinian people
00:46:07.240 are being oppressed
00:46:08.380 and held hostage
00:46:09.380 by Hamas,
00:46:10.420 which is a terror group
00:46:11.380 where women
00:46:11.880 have to wear hijabs.
00:46:13.160 There's no freedom.
00:46:14.540 There's no freedom
00:46:15.200 to vote.
00:46:15.900 There hasn't been
00:46:16.380 elections
00:46:16.980 in over 10 years.
00:46:19.360 There's no right
00:46:20.680 for people
00:46:21.380 to voice
00:46:21.960 any criticism
00:46:22.740 of the government
00:46:23.480 and if they have
00:46:24.580 anything against
00:46:25.620 a person,
00:46:26.400 they could just
00:46:27.020 kill them
00:46:27.960 without any sort
00:46:28.800 of trial
00:46:29.380 or any sort
00:46:31.740 of legal document.
00:46:32.940 And so,
00:46:33.400 when we have
00:46:34.300 terror groups
00:46:35.520 that are ruling
00:46:36.580 the Palestinian people,
00:46:38.640 I think when we
00:46:39.640 say free Gaza,
00:46:41.640 they're missing
00:46:42.160 two words,
00:46:43.060 from Hamas.
00:46:44.580 The sooner
00:46:45.200 this terror group
00:46:46.220 goes,
00:46:46.920 the sooner
00:46:47.240 the Palestinian
00:46:47.900 people will be
00:46:48.520 able to be free.
00:46:49.820 Amen.
00:46:50.540 Thank you,
00:46:51.080 Yael Eckstein
00:46:51.740 from Israel
00:46:52.640 giving us
00:46:53.240 the latest
00:46:53.980 from there
00:46:54.440 and also reacting
00:46:55.220 to the awful
00:46:55.840 event in Washington,
00:46:57.000 D.C.
00:46:57.440 Talk to you again soon.
00:46:59.240 Thank you so much.
00:47:01.300 A week and a half ago,
00:47:02.440 President Trump
00:47:03.260 declared prescription
00:47:04.300 drug prices
00:47:05.080 are going to come down.
00:47:06.180 How will he do it?
00:47:07.120 By entering a deal
00:47:08.060 with pharmaceutical
00:47:08.800 companies wanting
00:47:10.080 to sell prescription
00:47:11.100 medicine that guarantees
00:47:12.520 we'll have low prices
00:47:13.540 in the country
00:47:14.180 like it exists
00:47:15.520 in other countries.
00:47:16.680 That's much needed
00:47:17.700 and it's a smart strategy.
00:47:19.640 It's also another reason
00:47:20.600 why healthcare
00:47:21.160 has been so expensive,
00:47:22.400 especially for those
00:47:23.440 relying on Obamacare.
00:47:25.560 Until we see
00:47:26.360 those lowered prices,
00:47:27.580 you should look
00:47:28.140 for better health
00:47:28.840 insurance options
00:47:29.800 out there.
00:47:30.400 And one of those
00:47:31.560 newer options
00:47:32.360 is called
00:47:32.940 Ease for Everyone.
00:47:34.360 Compared to Obamacare,
00:47:36.100 Ease for Everyone
00:47:36.980 comes with a monthly cost
00:47:38.520 as low as $262.
00:47:40.940 You get access
00:47:41.840 to over 400
00:47:42.760 prescription drugs
00:47:43.840 for free,
00:47:44.540 not just at a lower cost,
00:47:46.020 no cost,
00:47:46.980 zero dollars.
00:47:48.100 And unlike the
00:47:48.880 broken promise
00:47:49.520 of Obamacare,
00:47:50.400 you actually get
00:47:51.120 to keep your doctor
00:47:52.040 plus you get free
00:47:53.780 unlimited virtual
00:47:54.940 primary care.
00:47:56.180 You can have
00:47:57.080 affordable healthcare
00:47:58.060 for as low
00:47:59.000 as $262 a month
00:48:01.700 today.
00:48:02.360 Go online
00:48:03.560 to easeforeveryone.com
00:48:05.740 slash Clay
00:48:06.560 and join today.
00:48:08.260 That's easeforeveryone.com
00:48:10.580 slash Clay.
00:48:12.580 Easeforeveryone.com
00:48:14.160 slash Clay.
00:48:16.820 Welcome back in.
00:48:18.080 Clay Travis,
00:48:18.920 Buck Sexton Show.
00:48:20.060 Appreciate all of you
00:48:20.880 hanging out with us,
00:48:21.640 rolling through the
00:48:22.200 Thursday edition
00:48:22.980 of the program.
00:48:24.140 We're joined now
00:48:25.420 by the Bluegrass State's
00:48:27.200 own Daniel Cameron
00:48:28.400 running for the Senate seat
00:48:30.720 to be vacated by Mitch McConnell
00:48:32.340 next year.
00:48:33.680 And first of all,
00:48:34.840 I'll start with this.
00:48:35.700 We have not talked
00:48:36.640 about it a great deal,
00:48:37.460 but I know the state
00:48:38.200 of Kentucky,
00:48:38.960 along with Missouri,
00:48:40.400 was slammed by tornadoes
00:48:42.680 over the last several days
00:48:45.160 and over the last week.
00:48:46.360 I'm sure that has been
00:48:47.660 a major part of what
00:48:49.060 you have been seeing
00:48:50.500 and talking about
00:48:51.120 in the state.
00:48:51.600 How are people doing
00:48:53.480 so far as you can tell us,
00:48:55.240 Daniel?
00:48:57.480 Well, Clay, Buck,
00:49:00.100 thank you guys
00:49:00.700 for having us on.
00:49:01.480 Yeah, it's, I mean,
00:49:02.200 heartbreaking to see
00:49:03.760 the lives lost
00:49:04.680 in parts of our community,
00:49:08.020 particularly in the Somerset
00:49:10.320 and London community,
00:49:13.280 Pulaski and Laurel County.
00:49:15.260 It was obviously
00:49:16.580 just completely heartbreaking
00:49:18.480 to lose folks
00:49:19.660 and the devastation
00:49:20.580 that occurred.
00:49:21.760 We've been encouraging people
00:49:23.540 to help out
00:49:25.080 the London Police Department.
00:49:26.700 They're collecting goods.
00:49:28.100 I've also encouraged people
00:49:29.860 to go to Samaritan's Purse
00:49:31.240 and American Red Cross.
00:49:33.000 So there are a few
00:49:33.720 different outlets
00:49:34.540 and obviously the community's
00:49:36.460 local churches
00:49:37.460 are really vital
00:49:38.760 to helping rebuild
00:49:40.000 and getting folks
00:49:41.780 back on their feet.
00:49:43.460 But it's going to be
00:49:44.000 a long process.
00:49:44.980 In fact, I'll be down there
00:49:46.080 on Saturday
00:49:47.300 to visit with some folks.
00:49:49.460 But yeah,
00:49:49.880 thanks for bringing that up
00:49:51.560 because I know folks
00:49:53.180 all across the country
00:49:54.760 have been praying
00:49:55.420 for those communities
00:49:57.120 in particular.
00:49:58.020 We had storms
00:49:58.720 all across the state
00:49:59.780 but those communities
00:50:00.660 in particular
00:50:01.320 were hit really hard.
00:50:02.640 So thank you
00:50:03.460 for bringing that up.
00:50:05.080 And yeah,
00:50:05.920 if anybody wants
00:50:06.840 to give to,
00:50:08.860 I mean,
00:50:09.360 again,
00:50:10.060 Samaritan's Purse,
00:50:11.300 American Red Cross,
00:50:12.500 local churches
00:50:13.300 down in those areas,
00:50:14.760 I certainly would be grateful.
00:50:15.720 I know it's early
00:50:17.620 and the election
00:50:20.080 is not until next year.
00:50:21.980 That is the Republican primary
00:50:23.440 to set up
00:50:24.120 who's going to be running
00:50:25.080 to replace Mitch McConnell
00:50:26.380 on that side.
00:50:27.800 But what does the focus
00:50:29.440 seem to be to you
00:50:31.020 so far
00:50:31.660 as you travel
00:50:32.380 the state of Kentucky
00:50:33.360 and hear from people
00:50:34.480 about the issues
00:50:35.160 they care about the most?
00:50:37.740 Yeah, Clay,
00:50:38.180 I mean,
00:50:38.340 I think people want
00:50:39.780 a senator from Kentucky
00:50:41.600 that is going to stand
00:50:43.520 with President Trump
00:50:44.540 and help support
00:50:45.960 an agenda
00:50:46.520 that is about
00:50:47.640 building back up
00:50:50.120 our middle class
00:50:51.320 and the working men
00:50:52.120 and women of this country.
00:50:53.640 President Trump
00:50:54.320 campaigned on that.
00:50:55.520 That's what this
00:50:56.020 big, beautiful bill
00:50:57.020 is about,
00:50:57.640 is making sure
00:50:58.800 that we can
00:50:59.320 lower people's taxes
00:51:00.700 so they have more money
00:51:01.760 in their pockets.
00:51:03.100 This is an administration
00:51:04.820 that is about
00:51:05.580 securing our border,
00:51:07.140 fighting the drug epidemic.
00:51:08.820 It's about
00:51:09.500 creating energy independence
00:51:12.320 in this country.
00:51:13.200 That's a big deal
00:51:13.820 in Kentucky.
00:51:14.340 We are
00:51:14.920 a commonwealth
00:51:16.960 that to the extent
00:51:19.280 we have a competitive
00:51:20.300 advantage,
00:51:20.920 it's about our
00:51:21.800 fossil fuels industry.
00:51:22.820 It's coal and natural gas
00:51:24.040 and having a president
00:51:25.520 in the White House
00:51:26.700 that recognizes
00:51:27.860 that in order to have
00:51:29.160 energy independence,
00:51:30.000 we have to have
00:51:31.000 and prioritize
00:51:31.900 our fossil fuels.
00:51:33.180 That's a big deal.
00:51:34.660 And so
00:51:35.160 Kentuckians want
00:51:36.320 a senator
00:51:36.860 that's going to stand up
00:51:37.700 for their values,
00:51:38.500 fight for the Trump agenda.
00:51:39.960 And I'm going to do that.
00:51:41.380 And I've got a track record
00:51:42.520 of having done that
00:51:43.320 as attorney general.
00:51:44.880 You know,
00:51:45.100 there will be people
00:51:46.460 that jump into this race,
00:51:47.780 but what you will never
00:51:49.000 hear somebody say
00:51:50.120 is that there's going
00:51:51.200 to be somebody
00:51:51.700 that's more conservative
00:51:53.080 and more supportive
00:51:54.140 of the Trump administration
00:51:55.380 than Daniel Cameron
00:51:56.720 because there's not
00:51:57.360 going to be.
00:51:57.900 I've shown it
00:51:58.680 with my record
00:51:59.720 and I'm led by conviction.
00:52:01.880 I mean,
00:52:02.040 right now
00:52:02.520 in my current day job,
00:52:05.000 I'm fighting
00:52:05.600 diversity,
00:52:06.680 equity,
00:52:06.940 inclusion.
00:52:07.400 I'm fighting
00:52:08.100 against ESG
00:52:09.960 because these are convictions.
00:52:11.140 These are core convictions
00:52:11.940 for me.
00:52:12.680 And I want to take
00:52:13.480 that spirit
00:52:14.080 and that energy
00:52:14.860 to the United States Senate
00:52:16.580 and fight on behalf
00:52:17.380 of Kentuckians.
00:52:18.460 And that's why
00:52:19.100 I'm going to win.
00:52:19.780 You're right.
00:52:20.580 We're about
00:52:21.000 a little less than
00:52:21.880 a year away
00:52:22.540 from the May primary,
00:52:24.040 but I'm in a strong position
00:52:25.800 given all the polling
00:52:26.840 right now.
00:52:28.120 I think the most recent poll
00:52:29.800 had me up 30 points
00:52:30.980 to my next closest competitor.
00:52:33.240 We're going to win
00:52:33.960 this primary
00:52:34.500 and we're going to win
00:52:35.060 the general as well.
00:52:36.060 And I want as many people
00:52:37.360 to get on board
00:52:38.000 as they possibly can.
00:52:39.040 I mean,
00:52:39.220 I tell people all the time,
00:52:40.980 go to Cameron for Kentucky.com.
00:52:42.760 Check us out.
00:52:43.640 Certainly would be grateful
00:52:44.880 for the help and support.
00:52:47.640 When you ran against
00:52:49.640 Andy Beshear
00:52:50.560 in the governor's race,
00:52:52.840 it seems like Andy Beshear
00:52:54.460 is going to try to run
00:52:55.900 for president
00:52:56.560 of the United States
00:52:57.700 in 2028.
00:52:59.420 And I know you're running
00:53:00.280 for the Senate,
00:53:01.660 but when you look around
00:53:03.120 at the candidates
00:53:04.700 that the Democrat Party
00:53:05.980 is putting forward,
00:53:06.780 we talk a lot
00:53:07.460 on this program
00:53:08.380 about how young men,
00:53:10.220 black, white, Asian, Hispanic,
00:53:12.080 are breaking away
00:53:13.500 from the Democrat Party.
00:53:15.620 And, you know,
00:53:16.020 I really say men,
00:53:17.480 you know,
00:53:17.740 younger than the age
00:53:18.760 of 45, for instance,
00:53:20.140 certainly 18 to 24 year olds
00:53:21.880 is off the charts.
00:53:22.840 Why do you think that is?
00:53:24.040 And do you see that reflected
00:53:25.480 when you travel around
00:53:26.700 in the state of Kentucky?
00:53:29.640 Absolutely.
00:53:30.340 I mean, you know,
00:53:31.240 that, you know,
00:53:33.040 men in particular
00:53:34.120 want somebody
00:53:35.140 that's not going
00:53:35.900 to demean them,
00:53:37.140 is not going
00:53:37.860 to belittle them,
00:53:38.800 is not going
00:53:39.740 to tell them
00:53:40.420 that they are the problem
00:53:43.160 in every circumstance.
00:53:45.260 And President Trump
00:53:46.060 spoke to men
00:53:47.980 of all races.
00:53:49.200 he spoke to men
00:53:52.060 across this country
00:53:53.200 in a way
00:53:54.120 that, candidly,
00:53:55.180 Republican and Democrat
00:53:56.220 just hadn't done.
00:53:57.600 And I think men
00:53:58.720 have been gravitating
00:54:00.060 to the Republican Party
00:54:01.080 because, again,
00:54:01.600 they're tired
00:54:02.100 of a Democratic Party
00:54:04.300 that belittles them
00:54:05.840 and tells them,
00:54:06.640 again,
00:54:07.060 that they are the issue
00:54:08.740 to every problem
00:54:10.180 in this country.
00:54:11.800 President Trump
00:54:12.640 has been strong
00:54:13.480 in support of,
00:54:14.800 frankly,
00:54:15.680 people of all walks
00:54:16.880 of life.
00:54:17.820 But the reason
00:54:18.560 that men
00:54:19.240 of different races
00:54:20.200 have been coming
00:54:20.860 to the Republican Party
00:54:23.400 is because,
00:54:24.620 again,
00:54:25.200 this is a party
00:54:26.220 that says,
00:54:26.680 hey,
00:54:27.200 it's okay to be a man,
00:54:28.700 it's okay to be strong,
00:54:29.840 it's okay to be a leader,
00:54:31.280 and you don't have
00:54:32.080 to apologize for that.
00:54:33.580 And the Democrats,
00:54:34.440 for whatever reason,
00:54:35.500 have decided
00:54:36.120 to double
00:54:37.280 and triple down
00:54:38.140 on this ideology
00:54:39.900 that tells you
00:54:40.580 it's okay
00:54:41.040 for men to play
00:54:42.060 in women's sports,
00:54:42.780 that we somehow
00:54:44.300 need to be afraid
00:54:46.740 of masculinity.
00:54:48.140 Again,
00:54:48.560 President Trump says,
00:54:49.580 let's disregard that,
00:54:51.580 let's focus on men
00:54:52.740 being leaders,
00:54:53.940 working hard,
00:54:55.000 providing for their families.
00:54:56.860 And I hear that
00:54:57.720 from people
00:54:58.160 all across Kentucky
00:54:59.100 that are tired
00:55:00.260 of a Democratic Party
00:55:01.240 that, you know,
00:55:02.320 candidly has tried
00:55:03.280 to diminish
00:55:04.640 the importance
00:55:05.420 of men in our society.
00:55:07.380 And, you know,
00:55:08.540 again,
00:55:08.860 President Trump
00:55:09.420 has recognized
00:55:10.080 that,
00:55:11.400 has looked for ways
00:55:13.000 to make sure
00:55:14.600 men know
00:55:15.100 that this is a party
00:55:15.960 that supports them
00:55:16.920 and is going
00:55:18.060 to value them.
00:55:19.060 We're talking
00:55:19.740 to Daniel Cameron
00:55:20.460 running for Senate
00:55:21.280 in Kentucky.
00:55:22.380 I don't know
00:55:22.680 if you've seen
00:55:23.100 this news yet,
00:55:23.900 but you played
00:55:24.400 college football
00:55:25.240 at Louisville.
00:55:26.820 There is news now
00:55:28.180 that the top 12 teams
00:55:31.300 are going to make
00:55:32.480 the college football
00:55:33.420 playoff in order.
00:55:34.740 They're going to be
00:55:35.180 seeded that way
00:55:36.040 that has just broken
00:55:36.880 in the last 15
00:55:37.660 or 20 minutes.
00:55:38.500 Do you expect
00:55:40.200 if you go on
00:55:42.200 and I think you will
00:55:43.080 become the next
00:55:44.760 senator from Kentucky,
00:55:46.380 do you expect
00:55:47.180 that your Louisville
00:55:48.080 Cardinal will
00:55:49.240 during your first term
00:55:50.760 in office
00:55:51.600 make the college
00:55:52.820 football playoff?
00:55:53.840 Would that be
00:55:54.260 an expectation
00:55:54.960 in six years?
00:55:57.480 Clay,
00:55:58.000 on the first point,
00:55:58.780 I did play football
00:55:59.660 at UofL,
00:56:00.320 but play is a very
00:56:01.120 generous term.
00:56:02.080 I tell people
00:56:02.560 all the time,
00:56:03.060 I had a front row seat
00:56:04.800 to the best team
00:56:05.580 in the house
00:56:06.100 when I was sitting
00:56:07.200 on the bench.
00:56:08.740 But, hey, man,
00:56:10.280 look, hope springs eternal.
00:56:12.320 I believe in Coach Brom.
00:56:14.780 Look, I believe wholeheartedly
00:56:18.320 that within the first six years,
00:56:20.200 we're going to have
00:56:21.020 a UofL football team
00:56:22.880 that is playing
00:56:23.660 in the playoffs
00:56:25.660 and hopefully competing
00:56:26.860 ultimately for that
00:56:27.740 national championship.
00:56:29.680 That's my hope.
00:56:30.740 And, again,
00:56:32.280 Coach Brom
00:56:33.780 was one of the
00:56:35.200 quarterbacks coaches
00:56:37.040 when I was playing.
00:56:39.060 And they've just,
00:56:39.660 the Broms have a heart
00:56:40.720 for not only
00:56:42.300 the university
00:56:43.220 but for the community.
00:56:44.440 And I know that's
00:56:45.000 on their heart
00:56:45.600 to push
00:56:46.920 and to strive
00:56:47.740 to get us
00:56:48.720 in that national
00:56:49.280 championship game.
00:56:50.100 So I'm hopeful
00:56:50.840 that will happen.
00:56:51.800 I'm hoping it'll happen
00:56:52.940 on the earlier side
00:56:54.120 of my term
00:56:54.700 and not towards the end.
00:56:56.360 You know,
00:56:56.600 our fans,
00:56:57.440 our fans are like
00:56:58.460 Tennessee fans.
00:56:59.280 They're like all fans.
00:57:00.120 They want success
00:57:01.340 immediately.
00:57:02.000 So let's make sure
00:57:02.620 we get them there early
00:57:03.520 as opposed to the latter
00:57:04.480 end of that first term.
00:57:06.180 All right.
00:57:06.480 So last question for you.
00:57:08.020 We just had the Kentucky Derby
00:57:09.220 a couple of weeks ago.
00:57:10.280 Buck and I were up there
00:57:11.260 last year.
00:57:11.940 It was fabulous.
00:57:13.400 Now, I know you're
00:57:14.380 a Louisville guy,
00:57:15.300 but one of the coolest things
00:57:16.660 obviously is the Derby.
00:57:18.100 But also,
00:57:19.100 Keeneland is pretty fabulous.
00:57:21.000 And a lot of UK people
00:57:22.240 tell me that the combo,
00:57:24.880 and I still haven't done it,
00:57:25.980 the combo of Kentucky football
00:57:28.220 and Keeneland race day
00:57:30.180 is one of the best days
00:57:32.240 for a sports fan anywhere.
00:57:34.200 Even as a U of L guy,
00:57:36.180 even as a Louisville guy,
00:57:37.560 would you give them that nod
00:57:38.820 and say Keeneland
00:57:40.120 plus UK football day
00:57:41.640 is pretty tough to beat?
00:57:43.840 That's a hard,
00:57:45.240 that is a hard day to beat
00:57:46.940 regardless of where you are
00:57:48.760 in the country.
00:57:49.420 I mean,
00:57:49.600 there's no better atmosphere
00:57:51.660 than spending a little time
00:57:53.560 at Keeneland
00:57:54.560 and then at the,
00:57:55.640 you know,
00:57:56.840 for UK football game as well.
00:57:59.620 And I'll just say,
00:58:00.740 you know,
00:58:01.420 in that circumstance,
00:58:02.240 not only do you get
00:58:03.040 to tailgate once,
00:58:04.200 but you get to tailgate twice
00:58:05.360 because people tailgate
00:58:06.320 before they go into Keeneland
00:58:08.180 and then you tailgate
00:58:09.060 before you go into
00:58:09.800 the football game.
00:58:11.140 So, yeah,
00:58:11.840 I mean,
00:58:12.040 I don't think you can argue
00:58:14.060 with that position.
00:58:16.440 Look,
00:58:16.940 I'm excited to be
00:58:19.520 in a Commonwealth
00:58:21.680 in a state
00:58:22.480 where we've got candidly
00:58:24.140 like two,
00:58:25.840 two,
00:58:26.940 roughly two programs
00:58:29.380 right now
00:58:29.940 that like are really
00:58:31.260 trying to get their act together.
00:58:32.780 I mean,
00:58:33.000 it makes the whole state better.
00:58:34.160 I mean,
00:58:34.280 you know how rivalries work,
00:58:35.560 man,
00:58:35.760 when,
00:58:35.980 when both teams
00:58:36.720 are playing well
00:58:37.980 or,
00:58:38.460 you know,
00:58:38.700 trying to contend
00:58:39.780 whether it's in the SEC
00:58:40.780 or the ACC,
00:58:43.320 you know,
00:58:43.700 that's a good thing
00:58:44.620 for our state.
00:58:45.360 So I'm,
00:58:45.920 you know,
00:58:47.000 I'm,
00:58:47.480 I'm hopeful
00:58:48.940 that,
00:58:49.440 you know,
00:58:49.600 next time you guys
00:58:50.340 decide to come up
00:58:51.120 for the combo,
00:58:51.680 man.
00:58:51.960 You're going to invite me
00:58:52.840 to tag along with you.
00:58:54.760 We're going to try
00:58:55.460 to do it this fall.
00:58:56.380 I'm looking forward to it.
00:58:57.800 Daniel Cameron,
00:58:58.740 where can people find you
00:58:59.700 if they're interested
00:59:00.320 in following along
00:59:01.200 with the Senate race?
00:59:03.200 Yeah,
00:59:03.700 look,
00:59:04.100 again,
00:59:04.400 I encourage your listeners
00:59:05.320 to go to Cameron
00:59:06.180 for Kentucky dot com.
00:59:08.220 Join us,
00:59:09.180 help us.
00:59:09.860 If you want to give us
00:59:11.060 some financial support,
00:59:12.020 we'd be grateful
00:59:12.580 for that as well.
00:59:13.380 But again,
00:59:13.780 this is for our kids
00:59:14.700 and our grandkids.
00:59:16.080 This is for making sure
00:59:18.040 we have a merit-based
00:59:19.120 opportunity to society
00:59:20.920 as opposed to what
00:59:21.680 we've seen
00:59:22.220 from the DEI bunch.
00:59:24.360 This is about restoring
00:59:25.560 that American dream,
00:59:27.020 helping President Trump
00:59:28.120 push forward
00:59:29.280 on his agenda
00:59:30.280 for the American worker,
00:59:32.320 for the men and women
00:59:32.940 of this commonwealth
00:59:33.780 and country.
00:59:34.780 So I hope you'll join us.
00:59:36.200 Come on
00:59:36.880 and let's go win this thing.
00:59:38.600 Outstanding stuff
00:59:40.900 as always.
00:59:41.700 We appreciate you
00:59:42.400 and we will talk
00:59:43.880 to you again soon.
00:59:44.480 Good luck on the campaign.
00:59:46.520 I appreciate you,
00:59:47.200 brother.
00:59:47.340 God bless you.
00:59:48.360 That's Daniel Cameron.
00:59:49.360 You can check him out
00:59:49.960 as he just laid it out
00:59:51.400 and Buck is going
00:59:53.400 to be back here
00:59:53.960 in a second.
00:59:54.620 I'm going to really
00:59:55.480 let him kind of
00:59:57.220 pour his sorrows out
00:59:58.920 as a longtime
00:59:59.640 New York Knick fan
01:00:01.080 with the collapse
01:00:01.820 that they had
01:00:02.340 in last night's game.
01:00:03.460 But Oklahoma City
01:00:04.580 is rolling right now.
01:00:06.500 Minnesota Timberwolves
01:00:08.080 are in the mix.
01:00:08.820 We got four different teams
01:00:10.180 still live in the NHL
01:00:11.540 and if you're
01:00:12.580 a Major League Baseball fan,
01:00:13.900 pretty much every night
01:00:15.020 you've got a big game
01:00:16.060 to be able to follow.
01:00:17.680 Why not go ahead
01:00:18.280 and get hooked up?
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