Episode Transcript
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0:00
Politics without the soap
0:02
opera with unfiltered constitutional
0:04
conservative true. The
0:07
conservative Rubio any local
0:09
that fellow. American Patriots and
0:11
didn't need standing at the ready to
0:13
fight in new for every issue that
0:16
matters in the way it matters at
0:18
the time, it manners and it is
0:20
certainly an arduous task to focus on
0:23
every issue, but we try to cover
0:25
as many as possible. Here is your
0:27
podcast: It is Friday the Twenty ninth
0:30
Good Friday for our Christian audience. And
0:32
you know, I think one hundred on
0:34
a day like today, we're going to.
0:37
Borrow. From an old Protestant
0:39
doctrine. Used.
0:42
Back during the times of the reformation,
0:44
but it applies to. All. Systems
0:46
of Governance particularly hours
0:48
today the doctrine of
0:50
lesser magistrate. And.
0:54
Really? The only escape valve
0:56
we have to fighting federal
0:59
tyranny. Are
1:02
the right areas in this country?
1:06
Where. The overwhelming majority or
1:08
strong majority of people.
1:10
Agree. That things are crazy. Working.
1:14
Together with. Their
1:16
local and state governments that have a significant
1:18
amount of power. You.
1:21
Know more so than where the doctrine came from.
1:23
Given. The design of our federalist
1:25
system. To.
1:28
Thwart almost every bad thing that
1:30
we don't like. Get
1:33
it is so bizarre. It's.
1:35
Surreal how we live in a world. Where.
1:38
There is a significant amount, almost half
1:41
the country. That. Doesn't
1:43
just disagree with what's going on
1:45
but recognizes oh my gosh, this
1:47
is crazy. but yet they are
1:49
so uninformed into who have about
1:51
who is participating in this and
1:53
how to get out of it.
1:57
There. Are unaware that there's red. States
1:59
are unaware. That they're super majority
2:01
is being squandered. Strana were of these
2:03
down. The bell primary states led to
2:05
the presidential primary. So
2:09
I want to delve into. You.
2:11
Know through the prism of some the
2:13
big issues. Of integration crime may
2:16
be green energy. We have time said.
2:18
All the things that were leaving on
2:21
the table and a house as we
2:23
head towards the end of the legislative
2:25
sessions. You could deeds
2:27
are success or failure commensurate with
2:29
how much effort we actually putting
2:32
how much of a movement we
2:34
have grown on the ground
2:36
in various states to raise awareness
2:38
that a Republicans are part of
2:41
the problem and beats we have
2:43
another pass. To.
2:46
Dealing with you to party pretty much only in
2:48
the states where we have a Freedom caucus. And
2:51
you'll see it doesn't have to be this way. You.
2:54
Did commensurate. With. What you
2:56
fight for. But.
2:58
First, I do want to start off. At
3:01
a federal level. With.
3:03
One said or i them to
3:05
says says once again demonstrate that
3:07
they're. Making. Red States read
3:09
and focusing peels attention on that is
3:12
really are only pasts I just first
3:14
one to presses. With.
3:17
A little anecdote that I had
3:19
earlier this morning and in it
3:21
really is emblematic. Of
3:23
the frustration I know a lot of you haven't
3:25
this audience? That exists
3:28
among the majority of
3:30
republican voters. At
3:33
the end of the morning prayers we had
3:35
the bible study a come out. And
3:38
a guy that to and him really speak to.
3:40
Comes. Up to ne. Ne
3:43
and yelled people. Do. the
3:45
some time to time wanted to start a
3:47
political had conversations the know what I do
3:49
even if i don't really know who they
3:51
are and is a man the liberals it's
3:54
getting insane crazy or by the day. and
3:58
i look at him and i say again and
4:00
you know really both parties are part of this. It
4:03
kind of gives me a blank look and then I start
4:05
to explain. I said, you know that
4:07
there's a lot we can be doing about this,
4:09
maybe not here in Maryland, but the
4:11
significant swaths of the country where Republicans have
4:13
four to one majorities. Did you know that?
4:16
And they're part of the problem and we, you
4:18
know, I started kind of going through the three
4:20
minute elevator pitch of my
4:22
typical message of
4:25
all the things we're doing. And
4:27
you know, you could tell the light bulb
4:29
is starting to turn on there. Yeah,
4:32
I guess, oh wow, that's interesting. And
4:35
I say, you know, like this is
4:38
true in every state except for Florida. You
4:40
know, remember the guy who ran for president? Yeah, yeah,
4:42
you know. And I
4:46
have this conversation really over and over
4:48
again. And I know
4:50
a lot of you probably find this among
4:52
your family, friends, relatives. I mean, I don't
4:55
associate with liberals. You know,
4:57
just the way it is, I don't really have liberals. I
4:59
mean, among those who are biblical Jews,
5:02
such as myself, I mean, most religious Jews
5:04
are not liberal, obviously. But
5:06
like anyone else, I mean, very
5:08
few people really know what
5:10
is going on in a specific way.
5:13
They know Biden's crazy, the Democrats are off
5:15
the wall, and that's about it. And then
5:17
there's just kind of something called Trump. Take
5:20
it or leave it, that's what we have.
5:22
And boy, you know, Trump better win November. And
5:25
then I'll go back to sleep after that. How
5:28
do we change that? I don't know. I
5:30
don't know how we change that, but change it
5:32
we must. That
5:34
is really the key. It's funny, I
5:37
talk about Deuteronomy 30 a lot, how
5:39
these words are not distanced from you. They're
5:41
not over the sea that you have to
5:43
say, let me get a boat and go
5:46
overseas to grab it, or
5:48
in the heavens that we have to build
5:51
a ladder, a gateway to heaven to
5:53
bring it down. But the laws and the statutes and
5:55
the Torah, doing what's right is
5:57
right here in your mouth. and
6:01
your heart to do it. And
6:05
I've said this all along, while we might
6:07
only have 45% of the country, you know,
6:10
of the voters, but
6:12
we have 100% of,
6:16
I mean, if you add up the territory of
6:18
red counties and states, it's a lot more than
6:20
half, but I'll take half. We have 100% of
6:23
that heft, because if
6:25
we actually awakened our
6:28
people and just inform them of
6:30
what's going on and focus their
6:32
attention on the right things, you
6:34
would 100% control that heft. And
6:36
I would guarantee you, if you
6:39
100% controlled that heft, you would
6:41
staunch a lot of these federal
6:43
policies. Just by virtue
6:45
of the contrast, no one
6:47
wants misery. No
6:49
one wants to live in misery. And if
6:52
you really had a bold contrast, it would be
6:54
very hard. I mean, I've said this all along,
6:56
if we had all the red states were bold
6:58
from day one on COVID, that
7:00
in itself would have not just created
7:02
an escape in half of America, which
7:04
we didn't have ultimately, but it
7:06
would have been a check and a balance. And
7:09
I want to, you know, get to that with immigration.
7:12
It's so easy if they just stood up. But
7:15
we don't have it because Republicans suck. Republicans
7:18
suck because we fall asleep in the primaries,
7:21
we fall asleep in the primaries, we sleep
7:23
through them. Because
7:25
we don't have a movement focusing
7:27
people on the problem. The
7:32
people with possession of
7:35
the ball in red states are
7:38
the ones we need to be blitzing, but
7:40
we don't blitz them. We blitz the people
7:42
on the side that don't really have any
7:44
power. If
7:48
we just more efficiently and
7:50
effectively focused our attention, again,
7:53
on the issues that matter in the way they
7:55
matter, the time they matter, the strategies, the legislation,
7:58
the process, the policies, the
8:01
primaries that matter, we
8:03
would have a different country. Because
8:06
again, yeah, I mean, most of what
8:08
the left is doing is extremely unpopular.
8:10
So if you had a movement
8:13
in place in red states that
8:18
effectively crossed swords with
8:21
these policies that utilized catalyzing
8:25
events and current events
8:27
and certain legislative
8:30
tools and governing
8:33
tools to
8:35
accentuate the issue while also opposing
8:38
it, things would change. Remember,
8:40
I say this all the time. The
8:43
more you do, the more you do, the more you
8:45
achieve. The public views it,
8:47
wow, that's the right thing to do. See, if
8:49
all you do is talk, but then the left
8:51
does, it looks like the
8:53
left is, they're the ones governing, and
8:55
you're the ones just spewing conspiracy theories.
8:59
But if you actually make this the reality,
9:01
no, no, this is what we're doing, seeing
9:04
is believing. People are like, wow, that's
9:06
really going on. And
9:10
one of the things I want to talk about is
9:13
again to demand special sessions on
9:16
the border. You'll never get
9:18
a more winning issue. We'll go through
9:20
some of the news on that and what needs to be done.
9:25
But getting back to federal, getting
9:28
back to federal, you know,
9:31
I started off last year saying
9:34
how the only thing
9:36
that mattered was the budget bill and
9:38
as an adjacent an
9:41
ancillary, some of the must
9:43
pass, you
9:46
know, NDAs, reauthorization
9:48
bills like FISA. And
9:54
the Democrats started talking about even more
9:56
funding for Ukraine. And
9:58
I warned you guys at the time I said. this
10:01
is a rope a dope and this is
10:03
an Overton window shifter what they're doing is
10:05
they're saying oh we might pass a new
10:07
bad bill and I said well wait a
10:10
minute you get that for free once you
10:12
control the house after the 2022 elections
10:15
it should be a given that the
10:17
Republican controlled house is not gonna pass
10:20
new aid for Ukraine the
10:22
question is how much we're gonna roll back
10:24
by holding up there must pass
10:26
bills like budget bills and I
10:28
express concern at the time I said Johnson's
10:32
going to declare victory by
10:34
blocking the Ukraine bill which
10:37
we get for free all the while you
10:39
know ignoring the fact that he betrayed
10:42
us on the budget bills but
10:45
alas I was wrong it's worse than
10:47
that he's not even
10:49
fighting that he is downright
10:52
working overtime
10:56
to pass Ukraine funding
10:58
that is now his
11:00
biggest priority and there's been
11:02
a sudden change this is from Punchbowl News
11:05
speaker Mike Johnson and his leadership team know
11:08
they may need to get creative in
11:10
order to have any hope of getting
11:13
Ukraine aid package to present Biden's desk
11:16
think about that this is
11:18
what their effort is focused on you might
11:20
think oh my gosh we got to think
11:22
of innovative ways to stop by Biden's threatening
11:24
to give green cards to illegals now I
11:27
mean we have to find ways to stop
11:29
it no his
11:32
entire subterfuge plotting
11:34
and scheming is
11:36
how to end run around conservatives
11:39
to get Biden a Ukrainian
11:41
aid bill with with House Republicans largely
11:44
opposed to new aid
11:46
for Kiev especially if new border security
11:48
provisions don't run right alongside it to
11:50
be leaders have been searching for ways
11:53
to sell an aid package to Ukraine
11:55
skeptics a
11:58
centerpiece of that effort is likely to
12:00
be the Rebuilding Economic Prosperity and
12:02
Opportunity for Ukrainian Act. Repo.
12:09
The legislation cleared the Senate Foreign
12:11
Relations Committee nearly unanimously in January.
12:13
It's a key part of Rhino
12:16
Representative Ryan Fitzpatrick's bipartisan slim down,
12:18
slim down foreign aid for a
12:20
security package. It
12:23
gives Biden the authority to confiscate
12:25
frozen Russian assets and use them
12:27
to pay for Ukraine reconstruction efforts.
12:31
So basically what they want to say is, okay, we'll
12:35
make it deficit neutral by freezing
12:37
Russian assets somehow and then that
12:39
will pay for it or they
12:41
have this zero interest loan plan,
12:45
which is Trump's idea. So
12:48
if you notice, you know, Trump never
12:50
fought for us on the budget bill
12:52
because he supported it, but he was
12:54
emphatically against aid to Ukraine. Like that
12:57
was the one issue that we're told
12:59
MAGA is, you know, their top issue.
13:02
But then suddenly we're now
13:04
about four weeks into the
13:06
media openly reporting on Johnson
13:08
now after having said no
13:10
more aid. Now he's warming to it
13:14
and Trump is awfully silent. Again, it's
13:16
more than that because he, like I
13:18
told you, this is a vivid illustration
13:20
of how when Johnson suddenly moves left
13:22
on something, it is never
13:25
ever done without Trump's permission because
13:27
again, Trump controls the party stronger
13:30
than anyone since Abraham Lincoln. So
13:33
again, I must ask, this
13:37
was the issue de jour of
13:40
the right. Okay, this
13:42
this was, I mean, Tucker, okay,
13:45
this is Tucker's top issue. Tucker
13:47
told us this is top issue. I
13:49
have a question for you. How
13:52
come something that rhymes with Tucker hasn't
13:55
four weeks into this hit
13:58
this and said, wait a minute. Why
14:00
is Trump advising Johnson
14:04
to give more aid to
14:07
Ukraine? I don't understand that. I
14:11
mean, not only did he toss our
14:14
leverage on every last thing
14:16
he's doing, but his entire effort now
14:18
is built around a clever, creative way
14:21
to get Ukraine
14:23
aid to Biden's desk, and
14:26
it's open, open source
14:28
for weeks, that Trump
14:30
is giving Johnson a pass to them.
14:33
Has anyone picked up the phone to Trump
14:35
and said, Hey, did you have this conversation
14:37
with Johnson? Is this Lend-Lease
14:39
idea your plan? Why?
14:41
What do we get for that?
14:44
Why are we doing that? I
14:46
mean, it's not like there's one thing if Trump
14:48
came out with a plan, look, I'll agree
14:50
to a Lend-Lease plan if
14:53
you write into statute state authority for deportations,
14:55
which I would argue they need to be
14:57
doing anyway without it, but certainly to get
14:59
around the fear of the courts and whatever.
15:02
All right, so now you're cooking with gas. As
15:04
much as we hate the Ukraine grift, heck,
15:06
we're dead anyway, give them more grift, whatever,
15:09
it's a lost cause, but
15:11
at least we get something for it. I
15:13
can promise you that's not what's happening. It'll
15:15
be some nebulous border provision. You
15:19
see what I'm saying? Everything
15:21
that is within our influence, we
15:24
act like he doesn't exist. Democrats
15:27
cannot get away, even though they
15:29
have the Senate and they have
15:31
the White House and, you know,
15:33
they're very close to the
15:35
majority in the House. But remember,
15:38
when it comes to very
15:40
unpopular issues, there
15:43
is an ironclad rule. You
15:46
need bipartisan buy-in to really
15:48
ultimately get them across. And
15:51
if conservatives use
15:54
their influence over Republicans
15:57
and the power they have, they could check
15:59
most of them. what Biden is
16:01
doing, and certainly, in this case,
16:03
to not gratuitously pass a Ukraine
16:05
bill. And
16:09
of course, where
16:12
do Republicans have the most influence,
16:15
conservative media, conservative organizations, and all
16:17
these turning point USA, where
16:19
do they have the most influence, over Lisa
16:21
Murkowski, over Mitt Romney, over Mitch McConnell? No,
16:24
over Donald Trump. Well, here's
16:26
the good news. Donald Trump himself
16:29
has the most influence over the entirety
16:31
of the party. We
16:34
definitely see that when he speaks up and wants to
16:36
kill a bill, like the Lankford
16:38
bill, remember that, it really helped. That
16:41
was a great illustration. But
16:44
then why aren't we doing it now? Because
16:48
for some reason, reasons
16:50
that only Allah could understand, Trump
16:53
is pushing Ukraine in. I
16:56
can't figure it out. Like, I get it, we
16:58
talked about yesterday he doesn't get Obamacare, and
17:01
he's been on the vaccines, but
17:04
on Ukraine? I
17:06
mean, I'm just speculating here, but this might
17:08
be another example of, again, him
17:10
trying to really kiss up the donors. I
17:13
don't know. I'm just commenting on
17:16
what I see. So
17:19
anyway, just
17:21
before we get to the states, let's
17:23
not forget that Trump is everything at
17:26
a federal level, even before being president,
17:28
because he is the nominee, and he
17:30
is much more than just a typical
17:32
nominee. He is the
17:34
king, the emperor, of both
17:37
the Republican Party and the conservative
17:40
industry. So
17:42
how come those
17:45
communications aren't happening? And
17:47
again, it's worse than just that the
17:49
communication's not happening. That he
17:52
is not speaking out for the good. He
17:54
is downright actively supporting the bad.
17:59
So it is what it is. So then
18:01
we're left to move to the
18:03
States. Now, right
18:06
now, when
18:09
you see all these illegals pouring over
18:11
the border, the
18:13
violent altercations, Texas
18:16
DPS put out a memo, sent a memo
18:18
to CBP this week outlining
18:21
how they're getting more and more
18:23
belligerent. Again, literally
18:26
fits the definition of an invasion, which
18:30
the States need to invoke,
18:32
but they don't. By
18:34
the way, I just want you to think about the imagery of October
18:36
7th in Israel. What's
18:40
happening here with cases like Lake
18:43
and Riley, and let's go through some
18:45
of these cases, it's
18:47
no different than what Hamas did there. The
18:51
Lake and Riley situation is exactly
18:53
what happened with the murder and rape in Israel. It's
18:57
just – it's more gradual. You see the
18:59
belligerents at the border, and then you hear
19:01
about all these cases on the interior. There
19:04
it was more dramatic because they
19:07
invaded and then attacked the people within the
19:09
mild radius of Gaza. This
19:11
is the same thing. It's just more
19:14
subtle. They fan
19:16
out to every part of the country, and
19:22
that's what the Lake and Riley situation is. There's
19:25
just a lag time, but
19:28
this is happening. I
19:30
could spend all day on this, but I'll just give a couple cases.
19:32
We have Brandon Ortiz-Vite, a 25-year-old
19:35
illegal alien from Pueblo, Mexico, was
19:38
charged with attacking and then
19:40
shooting Ruby Garcia in Grand
19:42
Rapids on Friday. We
19:45
have a Venezuelan
19:49
Elvis Hernandez-Pernalet
19:52
was arrested, charged with criminal sexual abuse
19:54
by force-aggravated battery by strangulation and
19:57
robbery. He choked a woman
19:59
into unconsciousness. In
20:01
Chicago, this was at the
20:04
University of Illinois-Chicago
20:06
campus, and then
20:09
sexually assaulted her. And
20:12
then three hours later, he tried to
20:14
do it to another woman, attempted to
20:16
strangle her during a robbery. A
20:19
week prior, the police arrested the
20:21
guy for shoplifting allegations, but
20:24
he was released an hour later. He
20:27
was living in a Chicago migrant
20:29
shelter run by the
20:31
very NGOs that are given hundreds
20:35
of millions in taxpayer funding
20:37
directly from the US and then
20:40
also from the UN, of which a
20:42
third of that comes from the US taxpayer anyway. So
20:47
this is what we're living in. We
20:49
catch these hyenas on lower crimes, let them go,
20:51
and they continue to do their
20:53
thing. Now you might think, okay, this is
20:56
Michigan, this is Chicago, but just
20:58
remember, they're going everywhere. In
21:01
Alabama, on
21:04
Monday, 23-year-old Pablo Mendoza
21:07
was arrested by Enterprise Police. This
21:09
is a town, a small town
21:12
in Coffee County,
21:15
like the southeast part of the state. He
21:17
was charged with rape in the first degree. What
21:21
did he do? He
21:24
raped a 14-year-old physically
21:26
helpless, mentally incapacitated
21:29
girl. Now again, I
21:31
don't know if she was with
21:33
him, part of an illegal alien community or
21:35
an American. They never
21:37
really say, obviously. They're not going to. It's
21:40
a minor. It's a rape victim. But
21:43
it occurred – the arrest was a Monday, but
21:45
it occurred a month prior. The
21:48
sheriff said he was here illegally. Now
21:52
I want you to understand, you look on a map
21:54
there, and those of you from Alabama are obviously familiar,
21:57
this is a rural area. county
22:01
that Trump carried by a net of 53 points
22:06
and yet we have
22:08
scenes pouring over the
22:10
border that are evidently
22:12
there. They're everywhere. It
22:16
might still be subtle in some places but it's
22:18
gonna reach critical mass and you're gonna know it.
22:21
See one thing that
22:23
you should be very afraid of is
22:26
that the typical
22:28
thought now is that you could
22:30
flee the big cities and all this stuff
22:32
that's going on and we're talking about in
22:34
Chicago, New York and live
22:36
in a rural area. And that
22:38
is true as it relates to
22:40
domestic crime. You're generally
22:42
gonna be free from that that's generally endemic
22:44
of the cities. But
22:47
when it comes to the illegal invaders, we've
22:49
talked about this for many years, a lot
22:52
of them do get jobs in
22:54
agriculture, things like that, and
22:56
they settle in rural areas. I
22:58
mean the majority are still in big,
23:01
you know, and sheer numbers are gonna be in
23:03
places like New York and Chicago. But
23:06
it doesn't take many in a
23:08
county of 50,000 people to completely
23:11
destroy its safety and
23:13
culture. Just understand
23:15
that that is happening and that is
23:18
the imperative of states
23:20
and counties to rid themselves of this. I want
23:23
to play a minute clip for you
23:26
from Fox 17 and
23:28
Franklin, Tennessee from Nashville about
23:32
DHS sending a notice that
23:34
600 citizens were looking
23:36
to travel to central Tennessee.
23:38
Take a listen here. The
23:41
city of Franklin received this letter
23:43
from the US Department of Homeland
23:45
Security. In short, it says that
23:47
hundreds of people going through the
23:50
immigration process could end
23:52
up in middle Tennessee cities. Last
23:57
fall, DHS sent this official notice.
24:00
saying nearly 600 quote non-citizens
24:02
were looking to travel to
24:05
these areas highlighted on your
24:07
screen most of them coming
24:09
from Guatemala Venezuela Honduras and
24:11
Mexico. It's very troubling that
24:14
someone can come to this
24:16
country named Nashville or greater
24:18
Nashville at the destination and
24:20
we're not finding out about
24:22
it for months later. US
24:24
Congressman Andy Ogles telling Vox17 News that
24:26
he had a conference call
24:29
with DHS yesterday with a series
24:31
of questions including a request for
24:33
updated numbers how people will be
24:35
tracked and if they have prior
24:37
convictions. They didn't have any
24:39
good answers. The notice says DHS may release
24:42
non-citizens from custody who have been
24:44
fully screened and vetted pending the
24:47
outcome of their immigration process. They'll
24:49
also have check-ins with ICE. Going
24:52
through the process correctly would mean applying for
24:54
some sort of visa
24:56
and so coming across the
24:59
border and wanting to
25:01
be processed and claiming asylum
25:03
is we've clearly. So
25:06
basically they could come in now and
25:10
they could tell CBP I
25:12
want this red county I
25:14
want Central Tennessee. They
25:17
just pick a destination and the
25:19
feds give them papers and they walk right
25:21
in. 600
25:24
and that again that was just one
25:26
tranche from a couple months ago. Congressman
25:31
Andy Ogles was
25:34
questioning DHS on this. He
25:36
found that about this several
25:39
months later. That there was such a
25:42
notice that was sent
25:44
months later to local officials. Oh
25:46
yeah you're gonna have hundreds of people coming with
25:48
papers. And
25:53
this leads me to the
25:56
main point I want to make the doctrine of
25:58
lesser magistrates. There's
26:02
something very effective
26:04
about preemptively saying
26:07
no to something. See, like I say, the
26:09
more something is implemented, the more it gets
26:11
legitimate. See, even if it's totally illegitimate. Wow,
26:14
this is the way it is. Biden gave
26:17
them papers. You can't do anything. But
26:20
if you preempt something, you act first,
26:23
it would be very powerful. There's
26:25
a major action item we need. We
26:29
have de facto amnesty, but Biden is
26:31
now, I mean, it's open source being
26:33
reported. Biden is contemplating
26:35
amnesty de jour. And
26:38
if you think about it from his perspective,
26:40
why not? So
26:42
far, Republicans had demonstrated, like I say
26:44
before, Biden could go in a rut
26:47
political opponent. He could
26:49
bring in a Hamas rape squad and
26:51
Republicans will say we can't have a
26:53
government shutdown. They gave him
26:55
everything he wanted. They lost, they
26:58
sold out their leverage. And generally speaking, the
27:01
red states have not yet demonstrated that they're going
27:03
to check him. So why wouldn't
27:05
he? Everything he's doing is
27:07
illegal. Why not just go for the glory? Why
27:11
not just issue them green cards straight
27:14
up? They're
27:16
claiming they're going to start with people who, you know,
27:18
claim to have been here for at least 10 years. What
27:24
if the red states got
27:26
into session and among other things called
27:29
that shot immediately before
27:32
he does it while he's contemplating?
27:34
See, this was always what was weak about
27:36
Trump. Trump would openly threaten
27:39
and contemplate something. Then the left would
27:41
mobilize and they were very successful. You
27:44
have to do what you really need to do is just do it. So
27:49
and the left usually is good at that. But now they're kind
27:51
of contemplating this. Now is the time
27:53
to get into session and
27:55
say that the red states will
27:57
not recognize that status. There's
28:00
one thing you say, well, you know, you
28:02
have a legal immigration enforcement, but you can't
28:04
get involved in the legal paperwork. That's totally
28:06
by the feds. Yeah, but not if you
28:08
just take illegals and illegally give them green
28:10
cards. That
28:13
we will not recognize them. And
28:16
then that parlays into all the other laws we need
28:18
to pass, which is everything
28:21
leading up to as close to
28:24
and eventually including deporting, but certainly
28:26
dissuading, cutting off all benefits. Including
28:30
education, healthcare, anything,
28:34
and severe, severe, leveraging
28:36
severe prison sentencing
28:39
for those caught illegally
28:41
and making illegal presence of crime to
28:44
at least self-deport and at least just stay in the blue
28:46
states. I'm
28:49
telling you, this needs to be done. We
28:51
will not have a country, and in
28:53
this respect, even
28:56
red states, there's
28:58
too many of them. And
29:03
again, they need to emphatically make the case
29:05
that this is an invasion. They need to
29:07
stare down the courts and they say, you
29:10
cannot get involved. And
29:12
like I told you a couple days ago, that
29:14
does have its effect on Republicans. Just
29:17
to reiterate, again, Compact Clause
29:19
of Article 1, Section 10 says
29:22
a state cannot make war, raise an
29:24
army to conduct war, unless
29:27
it's invaded. So
29:30
meaning, we're not even talking about
29:32
them conducting war. Meaning,
29:36
under the Constitution, the red states – certainly
29:39
Texas, but really all of them – could
29:41
join, get together, send their guards in there,
29:43
and start shooting at people coming over. That
29:46
is absolutely straight out unambiguously in
29:49
the Constitution. You
29:51
all saw those videos of the belligerents.
29:53
They could absolutely do that. We're
29:55
not even talking about that. We're just talking
29:57
about getting them out. See
30:00
what I'm saying? When we're talking about
30:02
invoking the invasion clause to
30:05
make an end round around the erroneous
30:08
judicial edict of federal
30:10
preemption on immigration law,
30:13
I'll do you one better. They
30:16
could conduct war, so
30:18
certainly they could do this by a mile. But
30:22
for those of you who still don't think
30:24
it meets the literal classic definition of invasion,
30:27
let me just tell you, the founders
30:29
were very clear about what they meant.
30:32
It wasn't just a
30:34
formal Mexican army or
30:36
Canadian army or French Canadians coming
30:38
in with the French-Indian war style, coming
30:40
in with an army, an official war.
30:43
They meant imminent danger, which
30:46
is what we're in by a mile. John
30:48
Marshall, everyone knows the
30:51
original judicial supremacist, one
30:53
of the most famous founders from Virginia, framers
30:57
of the Constitution, one
30:59
of the biggest federalists, when
31:03
he is commenting at
31:05
the ratification convention, the Virginia
31:07
ratification convention, on
31:12
the implied power of the
31:16
compact clause, meaning a state
31:18
cannot raise an army, that's
31:20
the federal government, and conduct
31:22
war except for under invasion,
31:26
that this power is when they find it
31:28
necessary. They
31:30
find it necessary. It's not
31:32
subject to the federal courts if
31:35
they believe they are in danger,
31:37
meaning if they left it – and this is
31:39
a point that – I
31:41
forget, I think it was in the Bowie
31:43
case, the Texas Barriers and the River. It
31:46
was a partial dissent by Fifth Circuit
31:49
Judge Jim Ho made this case that
31:51
if it's subject to the federal court
31:53
saying, oh, we believe this is valid,
31:55
then it neutered the whole clause.
31:57
The whole point was That states were
31:59
scared. That they would be at the. Whims,
32:02
Of the Federal government. Remember back then,
32:04
even without a capricious federal government like
32:06
Us today. You. Still had
32:08
the point that. He with
32:11
communities in transportation that then you're
32:13
we have I'm. In
32:15
a bunch of let's a indian tribes. Going.
32:18
As violent attack us. I
32:20
can't wait until you get into session in
32:22
Congress since you know send army over. We
32:24
have to deal with it. That's
32:28
what it was. More.
32:31
So roads the see legislature is
32:34
had power to command and governs
32:36
their melissa before the time says
32:38
it's confusing and has it's still
32:40
on deny a police. To me
32:42
it appears unquestionable. That the
32:44
state government temple forth and Melissa think he
32:47
is constitution so be adopted in the same
32:49
manner as they could have done before It's
32:51
dogs had snowed. You're not losing this power.
32:55
And and in and so is he is.
32:57
Talk about specifically this a clause under Article
33:00
on Sex and Ten. Would.
33:02
Exclude every possibility of Dowd is
33:04
the last part of it. Mean.
33:07
A less part of the combat clause
33:09
quotes unless actually invaded. Or
33:12
in such imminent danger
33:14
is will not admit
33:16
of delay. Okay,
33:23
Imminent danger that the tape delay
33:25
we've been in three years and
33:28
of course there's delay Speakers in
33:30
this case is even worse. A
33:32
solid although get back. In this
33:34
essence, the Federal government is orchestrating
33:36
the invasion literally. While.
33:39
They know you're stuck. The Feds have. No, they don't.
33:42
Is this state seal? It's an
33:44
imminent danger. A
33:47
kid repel. Again,
33:50
I mean scissors. They could have.
33:52
Heavy weapon weaponry and planes. and
33:55
they could bomb the cartels if
33:57
they wanted to. under
34:00
Under this power, it is undeniable. Marshall
34:03
used very strong language. Justice
34:06
Storie, a generation later, the
34:08
most respected commentary on the Constitution,
34:13
a state may be so situated that
34:15
it may become indispensable to possess
34:18
military forces to resist an
34:20
expected invasion or insurrection. The
34:22
danger may be too imminent for delay.
34:25
Under such circumstances, the state will
34:28
have a right to raise troops
34:30
for its own safety, even without
34:32
the consent of Congress. Again,
34:34
imminent danger. It was very
34:37
clear it wasn't like a formal war. The
34:43
problem is the governors haven't even cited
34:45
this and, and statically, and a
34:48
lot of this remember is a PR war. And
34:51
if they would do what I'm doing on this
34:53
show, use their platforms, have
34:56
special sessions, do it in unison. The
34:59
formula for doctrine of lesser magistrates
35:01
under Federalist 46, that
35:03
you start with the big states and then the
35:06
small states, they all get together simultaneously, all the
35:08
respective branches of numerous states
35:11
with the support of the people, popular
35:14
sentiment, done. This
35:17
is so achievable. I
35:20
just want as a talking point for dialectic. No,
35:22
no, I actually believe it's a problem. It needs
35:24
to be solved. And
35:28
then the Biden administration will be stuck. And
35:32
especially if they preemptively
35:35
call his ship on
35:37
the green cards and say they won't recognize them. By
35:41
the way, there is a bill to watch out for Idaho House
35:43
Bill 753. It's
35:46
similar to Texas SB4, but as
35:49
I said before, we need this on the interior,
35:51
not just as a tool if
35:54
you're coming in over the
35:56
border, but if we
35:58
just catch you in Idaho makes
36:01
it a crime and enhances the
36:04
crimes for reentry, leverages
36:08
against, you
36:11
know, leverages self-deportation against criminal
36:13
penalties. So again, we
36:15
don't have a bill yet to actually deport, but
36:18
it leverages severe penalties, so
36:21
it gives you off if you're willing to leave.
36:26
It did pass out of the House State Affairs
36:28
Committee, I was surprised. So
36:31
that's something we really need to push in
36:33
Idaho and every other state. By
36:37
the way, I just saw recently the Florida
36:39
grand jury estimates that Florida
36:41
spends $1.3 billion
36:44
a year on hospital care for
36:46
illegals. One of the bills signed by
36:48
DeSantis last year made it mandatory for
36:50
the relevant department to report on the
36:52
cost. So they have statistics
36:54
on that and the
36:57
Florida grand jury used it to extrapolate the true
36:59
cost would probably be $1.3 billion a year. And
37:04
a lot of that is spent on maternity
37:08
care, which basically
37:11
brings forth anchor babies to hang ourselves. So
37:16
folks, I guarantee you
37:18
if we don't stop this, this is coming to
37:21
a red state near you. It's
37:23
already there. It's not that it's
37:25
coming, it has come and we
37:27
need to fight it. And
37:31
remember, too often we're
37:33
just content with, oh well, it's a
37:35
nice red state. You
37:40
know, it's great. We
37:44
don't have to worry about anything. Ha
37:46
ha ha, look at what the Dems are doing, a blue state. Blue
37:50
states are our early warning
37:52
system that
37:54
you immediately have to buckle down
37:56
in your supposed red states.
38:01
You don't do that, you're screwed.
38:05
So that's immigration. Obviously there's
38:08
crime. Crime is the easiest thing to do at
38:10
the Lesser Magistrate because that actually is within the
38:14
province of local
38:16
power. Very
38:18
few states have tightened their criminal statutes and
38:24
their parole. A
38:27
perfect example of this in a blue
38:29
state early warning system, some of you
38:31
might have seen this article, The Embodiment
38:33
of Criminal Justice Deformed. Illinois Parole Board
38:35
member resigns after a convict stabbed
38:38
his ex-girlfriend's 11-year-old son
38:40
to death as he tried to protect her
38:42
a day after being
38:44
freed from jail. So
38:47
he had one of these namby-pamby leftists
38:50
appointed to the Parole Board by
38:53
Governor Pritzker, let
38:58
out a guy who killed someone the very day he was
39:00
let out. Lee
39:03
Ann Miller was the name of the
39:06
member she resigned. And
39:11
again, you might think this is a blue
39:13
state problem, but I'm just telling you, it's
39:16
more evidently absurd in blue states, but it's
39:18
really happening everywhere. Now,
39:21
obviously, a lot of you are seeing what's going on in New York
39:23
City where there's
39:26
now a trend. I
39:28
mean, can you imagine just two generations
39:30
ago, our grandparents, picturing just
39:33
mobs walking down the street just
39:35
randomly beating people? We
39:37
never had that in civil society. Now
39:40
we have that. But now it's
39:42
ratcheted up a notch that
39:44
they're specifically targeting women. So
39:47
now there's a whole rash of black males,
39:49
and it's exclusively black males, attacking
39:53
white females on
39:56
the streets of Manhattan or other parts of the city.
40:03
33 year old Franz Judy had
40:05
seven priors when
40:08
he was out with little deterrent, randomly
40:11
punched a woman, broke her face and
40:14
jaw, and
40:17
he was apprehended, but
40:21
he was released yet again! Seven
40:24
priors rearrange a woman's
40:26
face out of nowhere. You
40:29
know why? Because he was only charged
40:31
with misdemeanor assault. I've said this a lot
40:33
of times, that this
40:36
whole over-incarceration canard, it's such
40:38
a bull, because
40:40
even at the charging level, we often
40:42
never charge a guy with the severity
40:45
of what he did, and then
40:47
it just goes down from there
40:49
on the indictment level, on
40:52
the plea bargains, ultimately
40:55
on the conviction level, and then the sentencing level.
40:57
It goes down, down, down, down, down. So
41:02
this is something, again,
41:04
it's more egregious in New York, but it's
41:06
something we haven't solved in Red's face. You'll
41:09
often see these cases where a guy just
41:11
like, again, it's not like you
41:13
had kind of a mutual fight or something, just
41:16
a totally innocent person, guy comes
41:18
up and just, you
41:20
know, something, just really,
41:22
really life-altering experience.
41:27
And you'll find, I mean,
41:29
this is unique, it's not even a felony at all, but sometimes
41:32
it'll be second degree, third degree, like, what
41:34
do you mean? Just
41:36
literally break someone's face out
41:39
of nowhere. And
41:43
again, a lot of this has to do with premeditation.
41:46
Too often, the severity of degrees,
41:48
which then triggers the proper sentencing,
41:52
is based off of premeditation, but
41:54
a lot of times it's the vagrants. It's
41:57
not like the CSI, you know, plot.
42:00
You know that that's individualized those people
42:02
usually are targeting people they know the
42:04
people that are ubiquitous threats to anyone
42:07
on the street are often these vagrants
42:09
that Just
42:12
randomly go up to someone and a lot
42:14
of them are charged with things that would
42:16
shock you That from the
42:18
get go barely trigger prison time before
42:21
you even start whittling it down Again
42:25
there's a lot more we can do in
42:28
red states tightening up aggravated assault I
42:31
think two things I mean number one We've
42:33
seen a lot of these videos of
42:35
black hordes just surrounding someone for being
42:37
white and just beating them There's got
42:40
to be an enhancement charge
42:42
for group violence and
42:45
then also for these um just
42:49
unprovoked senseless beating
42:52
when it results in
42:54
bodily harm It's got to be
42:56
got to be much much higher some
42:58
states have better laws But
43:00
these are these are the sort of ideas that we need
43:02
to start thinking of Because
43:04
remember this is a problem in a
43:07
lot of cities in red states The
43:11
problem is the blue states are so
43:14
absurd that yet. It's always gonna be one or
43:16
two levels worse there at that time But
43:18
our early warning system What
43:21
you have today? In
43:23
blue cities, you'll have tomorrow in red cities.
43:26
Well, you had yesterday in blue cities you already have Obviously
43:33
we have the case of the NYPD officer
43:36
Jonathan Diller who was shot during the
43:38
traffic stop in Queens The
43:41
suspect had 21 prior arrests Yes
43:47
Crime is is simple at
43:50
a you know, lower level we should
43:52
be doing immigration Then
43:55
there's also green energy is the third one
43:57
I wanted to talk about You
44:02
know, I said this over and over again. If
44:05
red states would treat the Green
44:07
New Deal the way they originally
44:09
at least treated, not now, Medicaid
44:11
expansion, it would totally upend it.
44:14
Red states have more land. It
44:17
takes land to do carbon
44:19
capture, to do wind and
44:21
solar, and things like that. But
44:25
instead, states like South Carolina and
44:27
Georgia say the governor's
44:30
just grovel. Oh my
44:32
gosh, the job creation, they create tax
44:34
incentives to bring in the EVs. There's
44:38
Georgia HB 206. It's
44:40
essentially a Green New Deal for the state,
44:42
meaning not only is it not blocking the
44:44
federal stuff, it adds new incentives. Majority
44:47
of Republicans voted for it. And
44:52
the Georgia House. Conversely,
44:58
doesn't have to – well, here, let
45:01
me give you another example. This is
45:03
from Wyoming, the Cowboy Daily News. A
45:06
research lab located on the doorstep of the Dry
45:08
Fork Station power plant, about
45:11
10 miles north of Gillette, has
45:13
become the catalyst for boosting coal-burning
45:15
fuel in the future. Well,
45:18
you might think, well, that sounds good. Catalyst
45:21
for burning coal. Well,
45:23
no. A strategic partnership
45:25
between an energy research
45:27
organization associated with the University of
45:29
Wyoming and California's filtration business received
45:31
4.6 million Thursday
45:34
from the U.S. Department of Energy to
45:36
continue cutting-edge work on capturing
45:39
and storing carbon dioxide. So
45:42
in other words, what they're doing now is they're
45:45
establishing a precedent and a premise
45:48
that the only way you could
45:50
have coal or other natural fuels
45:52
is if you do carbon capture.
45:57
And the red states are just gobbling up that
45:59
money. Conversely,
46:01
this is
46:04
in Florida. Florida.
46:09
This is from grist.org. I
46:12
don't know what this is. In
46:15
Florida, the effects of climate change are...well, I'm
46:17
not going to read their journal here. It's
46:20
a left-wing site, but the point is they complain
46:23
that DeSantis is about to sign
46:26
a bill that would ban
46:28
offshore wind energy, relax regulation natural
46:31
gas pipelines, and delete the majority
46:33
of mentions of climate change from
46:35
existing state laws. See,
46:38
the same way we shouldn't
46:40
have grooming, we shouldn't have
46:42
transgender stuff ever appearing anywhere
46:44
in state government or state-controlled
46:46
schools, state-controlled institutions, the
46:49
same needs to apply to global warming. And
46:55
what this bill does, sponsored
46:59
by Representative Bobby Payne, would
47:02
strike eight references to climate
47:05
change in current state laws,
47:07
according to the Tampa Bay Times. It
47:11
would eliminate a green government grant program that
47:13
helps cities and school districts cut their carbon
47:15
emissions, a
47:18
2008 policy stating that Florida is at
47:20
the front lines of climate change that must have
47:22
been under Charlie Christ, and
47:24
can reduce those impacts by cutting emissions
47:27
would be replaced by NUGAL, providing
47:29
an adequate, reliable, and cost-effective supply
47:31
of energy for the state in
47:33
a manner that promotes the health
47:35
and welfare of the public and economic
47:38
growth. That's what we need. So,
47:44
um, there
47:46
you go. That's what leadership looks like.
47:49
In addition
47:52
to Tampa Bay Times reports, Governor
47:56
DeSantis's office quietly helped write a
47:58
bill. to
48:00
curtail wind energy. Email
48:03
records provide to the 10-by-the-time show. A version
48:05
of that bill is now awaiting the census's
48:07
signature, which will ban offshore wind
48:10
turbines in state waters. It also proposes to
48:12
delete the majority of references to climate change.
48:15
This is Senate Bill 1624 House Bill 1645. Even
48:22
though the state has no operational wind
48:24
farms, because Florida generally has slower wind
48:27
speeds, still the ban on offshore turbines
48:29
and state waters puzzled and frustrated opponents
48:32
who pointed to the fact that wind
48:35
energy technology is rapidly improving. The
48:38
bill's sponsor, including Senator Jay Collins,
48:40
said if
48:42
that happens, they'd repeal the ban, meaning
48:45
if the technology gets better. While
48:51
debate over the bill continued in the halls
48:53
of the legislature, the census's office weighed in
48:55
via email. Cody Farrell, Deputy Chief of Staff,
48:58
sent wording related to the
49:00
wind ban multiple times to Collins and
49:02
his staff. And
49:09
they think it's sinister, but this is what leadership looks
49:11
like. This,
49:14
my friends, is what leadership looks
49:16
like. It
49:18
doesn't have to be this way. Everything
49:21
you don't like, inflation, we can do
49:23
currency bills. Talked
49:25
about that. Green
49:28
energy, we could ban green energy
49:30
in red states. Crime
49:33
is easy. Illegal immigration, ban it.
49:36
And we've discussed the messaging and policies
49:38
behind that to push back against the
49:40
courts. The
49:43
indoctrination is obvious. That should be
49:45
a no-brainer. Shouldn't be going
49:47
on in any of these states. But,
49:53
um, we
49:56
still have it going on. And then also, we
49:58
have I
50:00
forget the bill number I don't have in front of
50:03
me, but Steve Friend's bill in Tennessee to
50:06
either prohibit local
50:08
law enforcement from joining JTTS. That's a
50:11
joint terrorism task force where the
50:14
FBI just grabs law
50:17
enforcement unaccountable to the elected sheriff. They
50:19
don't even know what's going on because
50:21
a lot of times they're sworn off
50:23
by security clearances. They can't talk about
50:25
what they're working on even with their
50:28
superiors like the elected sheriff to
50:31
either give the elected sheriff oversight, veto power
50:33
over it. These are just some
50:35
ideas that need
50:37
to be done. Also, you know, Nathan Dom's
50:39
bills. Senator Nathan
50:41
Dom from Oklahoma, he's got Senate Bill
50:44
1199 allows sheriffs to arrest federal officers
50:46
who attempt to confiscate guns. Senate
50:49
Bill 1200 requires federal agents
50:51
and officers to receive permission from the
50:53
county sheriff before operating in their county.
50:57
Senate Bill 1201 expands the sheriff's ability
50:59
to form a posse to
51:01
include prohibiting agents, employees, and officers of the
51:04
federal government from violating constitutional rights of the
51:06
people. By
51:10
the way, he also has the bill we
51:12
talked about on birthright citizenship, 1226, from the
51:14
year 2022. Basically,
51:20
it would require the
51:24
hospitals to
51:28
only give out birth certificates to
51:30
those that could attest to
51:34
the citizenship not being
51:36
here illegally, and the
51:39
state would not grant documents
51:43
to those who are not proven to be here illegally. Folks,
51:49
this is the only solution. I'm
51:53
telling you it could be done. Everything
51:56
except for foreign policy could
51:58
be done. And
52:01
the more they would do it, the
52:03
more it would put the left between
52:06
a rock and a hard place. Because the
52:09
more you accomplish, the more it becomes
52:11
popular. And
52:13
the more electorally they would be on the hook. I'm telling you.
52:16
Except you leverage it in areas
52:18
where you already win big. But
52:21
in order to do that, we need a
52:24
movement that's focused on the legislation,
52:26
focused on the good guys, focused
52:28
on taking out the bad guys, focused on the
52:30
primaries again. Until I'm blue
52:32
in the face. Most
52:35
state legislative primaries have yet to
52:37
occur this year. June,
52:40
July, and August are going to be the busiest
52:42
months. A couple in May,
52:44
but not much. We have time.
52:48
We can mobilize. All
52:52
these policies, I'm telling you,
52:54
hinge upon the history of the state. Hinge
52:57
upon the success
53:03
that we have to building a Freedom Caucus.
53:07
The states that were totally done – I
53:09
haven't talked much about Kentucky. Kentucky,
53:13
we failed to get an anti-DEI bill. DEI
53:15
is kind of consensus, but we couldn't
53:17
even get that passed Kentucky legislature. By
53:21
the way, Kentucky is a really good state,
53:24
theoretically, because it's a rare state
53:26
where you have a Democrat governor, but
53:28
Republicans have three-to-one majorities, and not only
53:30
that, you only need a simple majority
53:32
to override the governor. The
53:35
legislature is very powerful. You could
53:37
essentially govern, not just block the bad things
53:39
of the governor, but pass good things. He
53:41
vetoes, and you don't even have to have
53:43
all the Republicans because you only need a
53:45
simple majority, but you have very strong majorities,
53:47
like 80-20, in the House. So
53:54
you could even afford to lose a number of rhinos. But
53:58
unfortunately, they're all rhinos, except for a few. So,
54:02
states like Indiana, Kentucky, West Virginia,
54:04
we get nothing, because we just
54:06
have horrible Alabama. But
54:09
South Carolina, Wyoming, Idaho, we have Freedom Caucuses,
54:11
we're starting to put points on the board.
54:15
It's commensurate with how much we fight,
54:17
and the stronger the movement we
54:19
have behind an issue, the more we force them
54:21
on. Chloe's Law, the trainee
54:23
stuff, the DEI, it
54:26
looks like in South Carolina we're gonna
54:28
ban DEI. By the way, Adam
54:30
Morgan also introduced the Florida bill on
54:32
squatters, the bill
54:34
that DeSantis just signed on getting
54:37
rid of squatters. It's slowly
54:40
catching fire, frustratingly
54:43
enough that you see what could
54:45
happen if we actually had a
54:47
movement, but we don't, so it's
54:49
very slow. But
54:53
it doesn't have to be this way. But
54:57
getting back to what I started out with, my anecdote
55:00
that I had, and I'm sure a lot of you, when you
55:02
talk to kind of normie conservative
55:04
voters, what
55:06
do I mean by a normie conservative voter? They
55:08
don't listen to this program. They don't know what you
55:10
know. But they
55:12
roughly share our values, and they're very
55:15
upset with what's going on. If
55:19
they only focused on this,
55:22
and they only understood, if
55:24
you live in a red state, getting
55:26
active on these issues and
55:28
primaries is a hundred times
55:31
more important than the
55:34
presidential election. Because aside
55:37
from all the other reasons, at the end of the day,
55:39
I can't be more pro-Trump than Trump is himself.
55:42
He wants to put his
55:44
daughter-in-law, some boob, in charge of
55:47
the RNC who's putting out music
55:51
albums of horrible vocals. I
55:55
can't help that. You know what I
55:57
mean? He's not
55:59
just griffy. the GOP, grifting
56:02
the conservative movement, making bad
56:04
endorsements, endorsing bad policies, Ukraine,
56:06
the vaccines, Bud Light, Bruce
56:10
Jenner. But
56:12
he's grifting his own victory. That's
56:16
the bottom line. I'm
56:19
saying, run a
56:21
competent campaign. So
56:26
that is where all Republican voters
56:28
are putting their energy. Not
56:31
even much energy. Just go out and vote. It's
56:35
stupid. It doesn't
56:37
have to be this way. We could change
56:39
the country tomorrow with the doctrine
56:41
of lesser magistrates. Folks,
56:43
that closes another very
56:45
productive week. I need you to make
56:47
sure we get the normies and
56:50
reach these normies, and that's why we gotta get
56:53
up there on the iTunes charts. Please give
56:55
us a five-star rating with a comment that will help.
56:57
Send this show to every one of your friends and
56:59
relatives. Hope you guys – Christian
57:02
audience has a blessed Easter and
57:04
a terrific weekend. We'll be back
57:06
same time, same place Monday. God
57:08
bless y'all. Who's y'all for? Thank
57:13
you.
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