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Where Do the Sell-Outs Go?

Where Do the Sell-Outs Go?

Released Tuesday, 7th May 2024
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Where Do the Sell-Outs Go?

Where Do the Sell-Outs Go?

Where Do the Sell-Outs Go?

Where Do the Sell-Outs Go?

Tuesday, 7th May 2024
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Episode Transcript

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0:00

That.

0:14

All right Logan, Everyone at work

0:16

of to what it is. The

0:19

Seventh May Twenty Twenty Four. Two

0:22

Thousand Twenty six I'm haircut or

0:24

this is that they're going to

0:26

podcast for that Tuesday. Welcome to

0:29

add. Action packed as always. so

0:31

much to get to. Don't forget

0:33

about the weekend F and review

0:35

patriarch.com/derek Hundred podcast Derek Hunter that

0:37

locals.com Cebu play viewed in mind

0:39

supporting program. I would be much

0:42

appreciative of that where you get

0:44

extra stuff and all sorts of

0:46

goodies over there will. Return

0:49

than regular. I'm still fighting off the stupid.

0:52

Whatever the hell it is now my sinuses

0:54

are draining my throat. Is it g and

0:56

scratchy because of it? It's.

0:59

Just annoying as hell. So yeah,

1:01

there you go, there's else. Update:

1:04

Kids are doing better so far. hopefully

1:06

that can handle that goes by. The

1:08

wife and I are get in. The.

1:11

The crap now. So. It. Be

1:13

nice if we could just get

1:15

it all together for once, but

1:17

we'll see anyway. Enough about that,

1:19

Let's get started. There's.

1:21

A lot going on and Valais aside

1:24

from the state of my mucous membranes

1:26

so we will not be without are

1:28

lacking. Were wanting for. Things

1:31

to talk about. And I

1:33

want to start off with our

1:36

wonderful President of the United States,

1:38

Joseph Robinette Biden. Good Lord. They.

1:41

Really? Are. Masters. I

1:43

always said there's no polishing a campos

1:45

should turn, just smears. but these democrats

1:47

are given it a go. You gotta

1:49

admire their spirit. You've got to admire

1:52

their spirit and their willingness to just

1:54

look at you straight in the eye.

1:57

and lie just straight up like It's

2:00

not even anywhere close to the truth.

2:02

Okay. Sure. Yeah.

2:04

All right. Yeah. It's raining. It's not you

2:07

spitting in my face. What

2:09

am I talking about? Well, this

2:11

story from NBC news

2:14

headline Biden's general election

2:17

strategy. Less is

2:19

more sub

2:22

headline. The president's aides are seeking to

2:25

tighten his pitch to voters with shorter

2:28

CRISPR speeches. They

2:30

got a lot. They, they have a picture of him

2:33

clutching the podium at the white

2:35

house correspondence association. He looks confused there.

2:38

It seems almost impossible. They'd have to use a

2:40

picture from like 10 years ago in order to

2:42

find a picture of Joe Biden, not confused now

2:44

with not some sort of what's going on. Did

2:47

I just poop my pants? Kind of look on

2:49

his face and the story as

2:52

president Joe Biden ramps up his reelection effort and

2:54

I love it. We're in the middle of the

2:56

reelection campaign and he's just now they're saying, oh,

2:58

he's just ramping it up. He's

3:01

been running forever, but okay. As

3:03

he ramps up his reelection effort, his

3:05

campaign is also scaling back how much

3:08

he says on the

3:10

trail, part of a

3:12

larger news strategy to hone

3:14

a sharper message. He'll

3:16

take into the general election, according to

3:18

Biden aides, a sharper

3:20

message, no fewer words, less is more. He's

3:23

president of the United States. We're totally president of the United

3:25

States all the time, but he can't handle being

3:28

president of the United States most of the time. So we

3:30

get him as president of the United States, just a little

3:32

bit of the time. Problem

3:35

is the people around him

3:38

are the ones who are making the decision and the people

3:40

around him are making the bad decisions all of the time. So,

3:43

you know, what he does some of the time, most of

3:45

the time or whatever with his time is irrelevant. I'm

3:49

not really convinced that he's ever been in

3:51

on the decision-making process to begin with. Now,

3:56

it continues. There's

4:00

more approach aims for quality.

4:03

Over quantity when it comes

4:05

to the President's public appearances.

4:07

Aides said save. Their.

4:10

Spinning it. They can't have him out

4:12

there. He can't do it. He, whatever

4:15

drug they're filling him up with an

4:17

i'm not sure it's adderall, but whatever

4:19

drug it is they're filling him up

4:22

with, he probably can't do that much

4:24

up on a daily basis. He's not

4:26

Hunter after all, so he has to

4:28

be limited. In. What he can

4:31

do. Cause. Even when they

4:33

do put him out there and they do put him on the

4:35

drugs. You've gotta understand.

4:38

If there was a pill to

4:40

temporarily clear some of the fog

4:43

of his dementia, Which.

4:45

There may well be. But.

4:47

Have you given that pill? It clears the floor

4:50

fog of his dementia. Underneath.

4:52

That he still dumb? That's.

4:55

The Problem: Joe Biden has

4:57

not suffered dementia his entire

5:00

political life. He's. Been

5:02

stupid his entire political like the

5:04

debentures. A relatively new addition to

5:06

the bully. a brace that is

5:09

to abide. So.

5:11

Sit there going clear up the dementia s. You have

5:14

to deal with the fact that he's done. Any

5:17

will say something stupid on top of

5:19

he'll he'll say something stupid where he

5:21

thinks he knows retire Uma whereas with

5:23

dementia he just says something crazy new.

5:25

not really sure he's even all their.

5:29

Which. Is worse for democrats? I

5:31

don't know. So they're trying to

5:33

limit as much as humanly possible.

5:35

I can't blame them. Quote: There's.

5:38

A strategic advantage at this point

5:40

in the race to boiling down

5:42

your message to two or three

5:45

most salient, compelling arguments for why

5:47

President Biden should be reelected, said

5:49

Tj. Duclos. the

5:51

biden campaigns senior adviser

5:53

for communications quote that

5:56

will often translate to

5:58

the stump speech be

6:00

whittled down to its

6:02

sharpest, most dynamic form.

6:05

That's what you're seeing." End quote. Now I love it.

6:07

It comes out, hey everybody, vote for

6:09

me! And then they play Hail to the Chief

6:11

and off he goes. Not

6:14

quite that small, but

6:17

pretty much the approach

6:20

has also the

6:22

appearance of a strategy aimed at minimizing

6:25

the potential for Biden to make mistakes

6:28

in a razor-close election of mistakes.

6:30

This is, of course, this

6:32

is NBC News. By the way,

6:34

I have audio I want to play every now of. I

6:39

don't know what the hell they call the shows over the weekend. Michael

6:42

Steele was one of the hosts. It's

6:44

like three hosts, I think.

6:48

And then they had somebody called Quentin

6:50

Folks, who is communications director,

6:52

I think, for the Biden campaign. But

6:56

Michael Steele is one of the hosts. I

6:58

believe Senator Robert Menendez's

7:01

daughter is another one of them. She

7:03

works for NBC News, if

7:05

you were wondering why it was that maybe

7:07

NBC News hadn't been going in so hard

7:09

on Robert Menendez's corruption

7:11

trial and talking about how they'd found

7:13

bars of gold and stacks of cash

7:16

and everything. It's because they employ his

7:18

daughter. You know, incest is

7:21

best inside the media. It's

7:24

all like one big Ilhan Omar

7:26

family reunion. Everybody's

7:29

dating. Everybody's sleeping together. It's all

7:31

for green cards. At least

7:33

that's what they tell themselves. But

7:36

we know the best. We know the truth. But she's

7:40

sitting there, of course, they don't bother

7:42

with that. It's all Republican corruption, Republican

7:45

corruption. And Michael Steele

7:47

is former chair of the RNC. I had

7:49

this thought this morning as I'm putting the

7:51

show together. What

7:54

do the Michael Steele's of the

7:56

world do when Donald

7:58

Trump leaves the Senate? stage. The

8:02

Jonah Goldberg, the Steve Hayes, the

8:04

Bill crystals, the Michael Steeles. Once

8:08

either either Donald Trump wins in

8:10

November and then he's you know

8:13

lame duck president he's can't run

8:15

again or he

8:17

loses and he's just not going to run.

8:19

A two-time losing just not gonna happen so

8:22

it'll be over for him one way or

8:24

another. Not personally I hope he wins I

8:26

think most people listening hope he wins but

8:28

that's beside the point doesn't change

8:30

the fact that he only got one more term

8:34

left in him. Then

8:37

he rides off into the sunset.

8:39

There are so many of what

8:41

used to be thought of as

8:43

conservative leaders who

8:46

lost their damn mind because of Donald Trump.

8:50

That they

8:53

were embraced by the

8:55

left because they were useful idiots but the

8:57

useful part will go away when Donald Trump

8:59

goes away. Then you're just

9:02

left being an idiot. What does an idiot

9:04

like Michael Steele or Bill Crystal or any

9:06

of them do once they

9:08

use lose the useful

9:11

part? I

9:13

don't know. I honestly

9:15

don't know. They won't have

9:18

a purpose at MSNBC and CNN

9:20

anymore. They'll have to find a

9:23

new crop of people or they'll

9:25

just be outraged because they've forsaken

9:27

everything they said they stood for

9:29

they believed in they cared about

9:31

deeply was their driving force. When

9:34

Donald Trump did it then suddenly they didn't care

9:37

for it they didn't like it they were not

9:39

interested in it whatever it was a problem. If

9:42

he's gone they

9:45

can't come back and say well now I care

9:48

about those things again because the guy who was

9:50

doing them that I didn't like and therefore acted

9:52

as though I didn't want them anymore He's

9:56

moved on. So can I come back to the

9:58

party like no, you don't. That's

10:01

not how it works. So

10:03

what do they do? I don't honestly know.

10:07

I. Mean, if they're smart agents, whatever Tv deals

10:09

they have right now, the region is trying

10:11

to lock those suckers down for as long

10:13

term as possible, in the off chance that

10:15

Joe Biden wins in the fall or. Even

10:18

if he does, they're trying. Can we do a ten

10:20

year deal to meet with us? They need to lock

10:22

these people in because they're. They're.

10:25

On the clock as far as their usefulness

10:27

goes, and it's ticking down Anyway, that's neither

10:29

here nor there. We can worry about their

10:31

fate later and mocked him roundly when they

10:33

do that. I want you to listen. And

10:35

Michael Steele is Lizzie. Know Michael Steele is

10:38

morning. Made me think of this. List.

10:41

Now Michael Steele approves. Of

10:43

a guy who is Michael Steele is not

10:46

a complete and total fraud. That's

10:48

of course a Big Gifts but of

10:50

Michael Steele is not a complete and

10:52

total fraud. He is in support of

10:54

a man as President of United States

10:56

who is doing. Pretty. Much

10:59

everything. Michael Steele.

11:02

Both. As candidate in Maryland as

11:04

head of the Rnc, swore up

11:06

and down. He.

11:08

Supported the opposition up the a complete opposite

11:11

of he was a complete opposite and all

11:13

of this. It's

11:16

a very interesting juxtaposition.

11:19

Here. For good old Mikey. But

11:21

then you realize that. He.

11:23

Realized the power of when a big

11:26

fat check when lot of zeros can

11:28

do when you don't really stand for

11:30

anything, you just a booth left. the

11:32

prostitute. Argues over the dollar

11:34

amount. They rarely argue over who

11:36

the john is and that's kind

11:38

of what Michael Steele. Is.

11:41

And what all of these people

11:43

are anyway here is that the

11:45

Can't Pay is Michael Steele and

11:47

Clinton Foxy campaigns for months trying

11:49

to say that I know where your

11:51

seven taxis were doing. The less

11:53

is more shorter speeches thing. They

11:55

don't say anything about dementia but

11:57

you. It's. The clear subtext.

12:00

We. Have new this morning from Nbc

12:02

News that vibe the the campaign is

12:04

looking to shorten. It's features are by

12:06

general exit strategy is of is less

12:09

is more the presents a the city

12:11

the title his fist the voters was

12:13

sort of crisper speeches to be honest

12:15

with you for that I think that's

12:17

a very smart idea I think for

12:20

every one for every one of for

12:22

everyone and I and I really I

12:24

appreciate that approach because it is a

12:26

way for the President to sort of

12:28

hit with clarity six his points. And

12:31

move on and not get lost inside.

12:33

track is give us I'm a bit

12:35

more the of the same setting around

12:37

the faking their in the in and

12:39

find that reimagine a campaign going forward

12:41

with what you just said and this

12:43

idea now of President Biden his his

12:45

grip on a speeches. Up.

12:48

For. Our campaign in quality over quantity are

12:50

we believe that these touches the small things

12:53

that are getting directly to the point about

12:55

what is going on in the think that

12:57

this election are are gonna be easier for

12:59

voters to tap into and sort of also

13:02

go out and say and talk to their

13:04

friends family about what's at stake. Yeah cause

13:06

you know what you're going to Jews would

13:08

ever made as a they watched intently a

13:11

very short speech by a senile old man

13:13

and they. Spend. The rest of

13:15

the week talking their friends about it because. It

13:18

was so riveting with with how he. Desperately.

13:21

Cling on to the podium so as to

13:23

not fall over. Read.

13:25

The teleprompter as best as anybody could

13:28

and then would didn't know which way

13:30

to go to get off the stage

13:32

Cinco last. Never

13:34

go wrong. He got a

13:36

lot michael stuff I like. This is shorter, it's

13:38

crisper, It's this, and using the N

13:41

B C story wasn't. That. Vague

13:43

were nuns is shorter. Crisper

13:46

remarks from Biden are part

13:48

of his campaign's broader strategy

13:50

of having him appear more

13:53

in smaller settings then the

13:55

president's Aids believe that the

13:57

President Aids believe serve him.

14:00

Enlarge traditional rallies with voters.

14:03

This. Again is. Olympic.

14:06

Level turd polishing. Why?

14:10

They can't have him appear at

14:12

large rallies because they can't screen

14:14

the crowd. They can't screen the

14:16

crowd. They're going to be left

14:18

wing, anti semitic mutants out there

14:20

screaming, calling for Death to Israel

14:22

and Save The Palestinians. Calling.

14:25

For Genocide Joe to Go

14:27

X, et cetera, they can't

14:30

afford that. They. Want

14:32

to pretend that those

14:34

people don't exist? Wilde

14:36

dramatically changing. Us.

14:39

Policy and their posture

14:41

and order to appease

14:43

those people. It's really bizarre

14:45

and sad and pathetic. To. Be

14:47

honest with you. They.

14:50

Really Seriously, are they have

14:52

stopped. Weapons

14:54

shipments to Israel. Paused

14:57

as they say for this.

14:59

For this reason and this

15:01

reason only, there is no

15:04

reason whatsoever to have stopped

15:06

the ammunition shipment to Israel,

15:08

except to say that they

15:10

want to. Appease.

15:13

The Dearborn voter actually has

15:15

the the headline us put

15:17

a hold on a and

15:19

ammunition him into Israel. Now

15:22

publicly, what do we? hero? Support

15:24

Israel no matter what. Isis against

15:26

terrorists. And reality. Not

15:29

so much axioms. The Biden administration

15:31

Leslie put a hole and a

15:33

shipment of Us made ammunition to

15:35

Israel to Israeli official so that

15:38

you as feals. It is the

15:40

first time since October seventh Attack

15:42

that the Us has stopped the

15:44

weapons shipment ended for the Israeli

15:46

military. The incident raises serious concerns

15:48

inside the Israeli government and said

15:51

officials scrambling to understand why the

15:53

shipment was held. Officials said the

15:55

Biden at present by disguising sharp

15:57

criticism from young Americans. who

15:59

oppose his support of Israel. Now if you look

16:01

at the numbers, a

16:05

majority of every age of demographic

16:08

supports Israel. It's a

16:10

true story. The latest poll that

16:12

I saw, I believe it was 57% of

16:16

the young people supported

16:18

Israel. That's

16:20

not what they're doing. They're playing

16:22

margin games. They recognize that so

16:24

few young people show up that

16:27

the, you know, it

16:30

doesn't matter if it's a 60-40 break

16:32

on this. They need the

16:36

people they want to show up to show, that they

16:38

need to show up. They need them to show up

16:40

for them no matter what. The rest of them can

16:42

go to hell. When Democrats tell you,

16:45

we want people to vote, we want people, they don't.

16:47

They want to make it as difficult to

16:49

people for people who won't be voting for

16:52

them to vote as humanly possible. And anybody

16:54

else, they want to roll

16:56

out the red carpet and make sure nobody gets

16:58

an ID checked. I'll never forget,

17:00

it actually happens. I saw it

17:02

firsthand in 2006, but it

17:04

happens every year, every

17:07

election year. See, there are overseas

17:10

absentee ballots. And while there are

17:12

some expatriates living

17:14

overseas, working overseas, who vote by mail, and

17:16

it takes a while to get them. There

17:19

are, I saw them, they're probably half

17:21

million to a million across the

17:24

entire country. There are millions and

17:27

hundreds of whatever of military

17:31

overseas deployed

17:33

who are voting

17:37

absentee, the overseas absentee

17:39

military ballot. And

17:42

every single election cycle, Democrats

17:44

employ lawyers to look at

17:46

those things with a

17:48

fine-tooth comb to make sure that every

17:50

T is crossed and every I is

17:52

dotted. If a postmark is missing,

17:54

now the postmark would have come through the United

17:56

States military. If they didn't put it on there,

17:58

it would be then. It didn't get

18:01

over here from Iraq by itself. It

18:03

came through the postal service to the

18:05

military, but maybe it just went

18:07

through the cracks and didn't get stamped.

18:11

They want that thrown out. The signatures

18:13

don't match. They suddenly become very

18:15

strict people when it

18:17

comes to who is voting and how they're

18:19

voting when it comes to overseas military

18:22

ballots. Why is

18:24

that? Well, it's because the military tends

18:26

to vote especially, I mean, not necessarily

18:29

the generals, the generals are politicians. That's

18:31

how you get those stars. That's

18:34

how you get the full bird to become a

18:36

colonel. But

18:38

the enlisted men and

18:40

women of the military are,

18:43

in fact, overwhelmingly conservative. Well,

18:47

aside from all the statistical data, you just

18:49

look at the fact that young liberals are

18:51

out trying to burn down campuses and looting

18:53

libraries of their rare books so that they

18:56

can buy whatever the hell

18:58

it is they buy, more video games or whatever. And

19:01

young people who love this country are joining the

19:03

military. The people who

19:05

love this country tend to vote Republican. The people who

19:07

hate this country tend to vote Democrat. This

19:10

is not rocket science. It's boiling it down to

19:12

a common denominator. Are there nuances? Of course there

19:15

are, but there's no time for nuances and no

19:17

need for nuances here. If

19:21

you look at that, and then if you're

19:23

in a close race, what do you want to

19:25

do if you're a Democrat? You

19:27

want to disqualify as many of

19:29

those votes as humanly possible because

19:33

they're probably not going to go for your

19:35

guy. They're going to break for the other

19:37

guy 75-25. So

19:39

while you don't know what's on the inside

19:41

of the ballot, you might be

19:44

fighting to disqualify one of your Democratic

19:46

voters. The

19:48

odds suggest you're not. And

19:51

so you take the hit and

19:54

you try and disqualify as many

19:57

as humanly possible. All the while you're saying,

19:59

we want everybody. every vote

20:01

should count, every this should

20:03

that, every one of these things,

20:05

no voter ID, nothing. You are

20:07

holding up the strictest of

20:10

possible standards for the

20:13

overseas military ballots. That's because you

20:15

care so deeply about integrity of

20:17

elections or else you wouldn't do

20:19

literally everything else you do. It's

20:23

because you know they're

20:25

not likely not for you. And

20:28

so, yeah spare me all this crap

20:30

about oh we need to empower people,

20:32

we need to do this, or it's

20:34

super powerful. Yeah he's trying to attract

20:36

young voters. No he's trying to attract

20:39

only the young voters that

20:41

he thinks will vote for

20:43

him. They don't give a damn. It's 57% of people 18 to

20:45

35 or whatever

20:50

it was go out and vote at all.

20:53

They want the people who hate

20:56

Israel who sympathize with terrorists.

21:00

Pretty simple. And

21:02

they're afraid that a group of them

21:04

yelling genocide Joe at a rally will

21:06

probably not look very good. And

21:10

that Republicans might take advantage

21:12

of that for campaign ads. And

21:15

so they're limiting this to

21:17

small intimate gatherings of

21:20

heavily vetted people. Now

21:23

there hasn't been a president this

21:25

insulated honestly since Woodrow Wilson. Well

21:28

I Woodrow Wilson, well Woodrow

21:30

Wilson had a stroke in

21:32

his second term. He had

21:35

strokes throughout his life but

21:37

he had a massive stroke in his second term.

21:40

He was not able to communicate. He was

21:43

not able to perform the duties of president

21:45

of the United States for a long stretch

21:47

of time. His top

21:49

aides, his inner circle and his wife

21:53

kept that from the American

21:55

public, kept it from Congress, kept

21:58

it from the vice president. and

22:00

acted on his behalf through rudimentary

22:02

communications as best they could, assuming

22:04

that they could communicate with him

22:07

and that he could understand them.

22:11

They kept him out of the public eye. They really were

22:13

like, is he still alive? And they

22:15

had to hand select reporters who they knew

22:17

would be friendly to come

22:19

in when he was eventually able to

22:21

communicate talking months. Bring

22:25

him in and say, oh no, he's fine. And

22:27

he moved around and they sort of marionettied him.

22:29

They drugged him up and made him move around

22:32

in bed just that he's

22:34

sick. He's recovering, blah, blah, blah. They

22:36

hid it from the public. So

22:39

don't pretend that this

22:41

is something new. Nothing is new

22:43

under the sun. Democrats

22:45

did that then. Democrats are doing this now. Just

22:50

amazing that now the media, well, the media went along

22:52

with it then. Now

22:56

they're sort of ring leading it. That's

22:59

what's terrifying. So

23:01

the president is going into turtle

23:04

formation, bunker, hiding, going

23:06

to get down there and make

23:08

sure that you see less is more, less

23:10

is more. Does absence make the heart grow

23:12

fonder when the

23:15

lack of absence, when the presence

23:18

makes the heart grow nauseous? I

23:21

don't know the answer to that one. I

23:24

suppose we'll find out come November, but it's one

23:26

of the damnedest things. Some

23:29

Biden advisors have been pushing for him to

23:31

go even further in attempts to sharpen his

23:33

public appearances. They've argued for

23:35

the president to replace prepared campaign

23:37

remarks entirely in favor of less

23:39

scripted retail shops and punchier digital

23:42

content where he speaks directly to

23:44

the camera. Don't you

23:46

love that? Retail stops meaning going

23:49

around shaking people's hands. Okay. Going

23:51

to go around, shake people's hands. Hey,

23:53

how's it going? Hey, what you doing?

23:55

Hey, how's this? And

23:57

then what you

23:59

end up with him talking to five

24:01

people in a diner. Of

24:04

course, all of those people would be screened. Did

24:06

you know that recently

24:08

he went to either, well he went

24:11

to both, the Sheets and the Wawa to

24:14

try and show that he's just a

24:16

normal guy too. He's just a normal guy, you

24:18

know, what are you going to do? Normal guys doing normal

24:20

guy things? Where he went

24:22

and, because it was Donald Trump had gone

24:24

to the bodegas and people were chanting four

24:27

more years, let's go

24:29

Brandon, or maybe not that, but the other

24:31

thing. And so the Biden

24:33

campaign thought, well we better have somebody out

24:35

there. We better put him out there. We

24:37

better get him around normal people. And so

24:40

they sent him to a couple of gas

24:42

stations where he

24:44

got distracted by the,

24:46

what do you call it? Shake, the

24:49

shake machine. You can get a chocolate shake, a vanilla shake,

24:56

he wanted a black and white shake. And

24:59

he wandered off script. But

25:02

video was leaked of the rehearsal for

25:04

the president's arrival up to the point

25:06

even where he was tipping the guy.

25:09

Here's the money, here's the box of food

25:11

that you ordered, which by the way, they're

25:14

not, the president of the United States

25:16

is not eating any food that he

25:18

orders in a fast food restaurant. The

25:20

secret service goes there hours before anybody

25:23

gets, when the president is coming,

25:26

they make sure that the food, nobody's tampering with

25:28

the food, they make sure that the food is

25:30

taken care of, they watch it prepared. It's not

25:32

haphazard. He's not going to just pick a donut

25:34

and go, yummy. So

25:38

they were all rehearsed. Here's your tip, here's

25:40

this, here's that. And then he goes, ooh, shakes. It

25:42

just kind of does his weird

25:45

old guy shuffle off to the side. You're like,

25:47

what the hell is going on? They

25:50

want more of that. While

25:52

that was bad enough, that

25:55

tells you how afraid, you know,

25:57

given how bad that was, that tells you how afraid.

26:00

afraid his campaign

26:02

is of him speaking

26:06

for extended periods of time.

26:08

Now they use euphemisms like you wouldn't

26:10

believe. They're shorter, crisper remarks, more intimate

26:12

settings and blah blah blah rather than

26:14

no it is we're gonna insulate him.

26:17

We need to keep people away from

26:19

him. We need to keep him away

26:21

from people. God forbid he comes across

26:23

like a pre-teen girl. He's

26:25

gonna start sniffing her like Hunter

26:27

would if he accidentally spilled cocaine on

26:29

the dog just start shoving his nose

26:32

into her head like no this is

26:34

not right. They're

26:37

terrified of that and then the digital content where

26:39

he speaks directly to the camera. Why? Because it's

26:41

2020 to them. 2020 was the best they could

26:44

do. Joe Biden

26:46

has only gotten worse since 2020 and

26:49

he was senile in 2020. So they ran the

26:52

COVID campaign where he's in the basement. Well

26:55

it worked before. This

26:59

dramatic shift hasn't happened but

27:01

aides say the idea has

27:03

been discussed as the campaign

27:06

tries to find ways to

27:08

reach an unsettled electorate that

27:11

consumes information differently than

27:13

in previous cycles. Discussing

27:16

the idea is also a reflection aides say

27:18

of how much harder it is to get

27:20

and keep voters' attentions. See the code is

27:23

there's a well voters are a bunch of

27:25

idiots. That's what

27:27

Democrats have always thought. We got

27:29

to keep their attention with shiny objects. We need

27:31

new shiny objects. I don't really think that the

27:34

average voter which is I

27:36

think they're in their 40s or 50s pay

27:38

attention to the world they live in their

27:40

lives. They're not spending their time obsessed on

27:42

TikTok. What they're doing here is talking about

27:45

young voters using them as a blanket to

27:47

try and insulate themselves from hiding

27:49

from everybody else. There's no senior

27:51

citizen for example getting the bulk

27:53

of their information from from TikTok

27:55

or Instagram. They

27:58

show up at the highest rates. But

28:01

I love this idea. Well, people

28:04

consume information differently. People

28:08

get their information from any

28:10

manner of platforms. And

28:14

here's the thing. No matter how

28:16

the information comes into being, it

28:19

ends up on all of those platforms. Whether

28:22

or not the campaign releases a video

28:24

directly to one of those platforms or

28:26

all of those platforms, or the president

28:28

or Donald Trump gives a speech somewhere.

28:30

There are people clipping it incessantly,

28:33

including campaign staff, and putting it

28:35

on those platforms. It

28:37

is not,

28:41

it does not need to be created for those

28:43

platforms to make it to those platforms. They know

28:45

this. But

28:48

if they create straight up TikTok, there was one

28:50

video, was it like 48 seconds long? I

28:53

played it a couple of weeks ago. I

28:55

forget even what, it's hard to keep track of what

28:57

Joe Biden is talking about. It was

28:59

like 48 seconds long and there were 12 edits in it. Now

29:04

look, for the sake

29:06

of interesting video, you want to

29:08

go tight to close. But

29:13

each one of these edits was Joe Biden's

29:15

hand was here and then it was someplace

29:17

else. When

29:19

they immediately, when he was continuing in mid-sentence, and you

29:21

go, okay, well that's not switching

29:24

from camera A to camera B. That

29:26

is switching from take five

29:28

to take 17 and cobbling

29:31

together the one take, the

29:33

one complete run-through of

29:35

the best bits from each one of the takes.

29:37

They are completely different takes. You notice, I notice

29:40

these sorts of things all the time in movies

29:42

when somebody is,

29:44

they're about to take a bite of food. And

29:47

then there's a different camera, but it's the same

29:49

scene, it's happening supposedly in real time. But

29:52

then the fork is down and they're drinking or something

29:54

like, whoa, what the hell just happened there? I find

29:56

that disconcerting. When you watch the President of the United

29:58

States, you watch the President of the United States,

30:01

his hand is up at his head and then

30:04

his hand is gone. His hand is at his

30:06

side. His hand is doing a sort of weird

30:08

karate chop thing and then he's scratching his butt

30:10

or whatever. Like whoa how does that happen to

30:12

go? Each one of these is

30:15

a different take and

30:17

they're just cobbling them together as best they

30:19

can. They can't

30:21

do it all just straight head shots

30:23

which they would be able to cover

30:25

it up if they did just like

30:27

he's max headroom and he's sitting there you

30:29

see his face like he's although AI

30:31

Joe Biden might be. Well AI Joe

30:33

Biden would at least include the eye.

30:36

Real life Joe Biden doesn't but

30:40

he you just have a headshot

30:42

and you're sitting there going blah blah blah blah blah

30:44

blah then you then you would lose most of the

30:46

obvious edits. They

30:48

can't do that so they decide

30:50

to hell with it most people probably are in

30:53

his OCD as I am and won't notice the

30:55

fact that he is in

30:57

a different physical position with

31:00

each edit which means a different take. The

31:05

president has in recent weeks

31:07

made notable efforts at brevity

31:10

in both official and campaign events. Now

31:12

I love it in brevity. They tell

31:14

go out there say it and get

31:16

off the stage. Shut your mouth do

31:18

not take any questions. Do not ad

31:21

lib. Do not do anything. Biden's

31:24

remarks this past week on the campus

31:26

protests over his over the war in

31:29

the Gaza Strip were

31:31

just four minutes long. What's

31:34

something I pointed out it's horrible he

31:36

can't focus. His high

31:38

profile speech on abortion rights in

31:40

Florida last week was just 14

31:43

minutes long and his speech at

31:45

the White House Correspondents Association dinner

31:47

last just 10 minutes half

31:49

as long as the year before

31:52

which means his dementia has gotten twice

31:54

as bad. This

31:57

is not you know The

32:01

White House Correspondents' Association If you're

32:03

making the argument, That

32:06

less is more on the campaign trail

32:08

that would help Joe Biden whatever whenever

32:11

it's cetera, et cetera. The.

32:14

White House Correspondents' Association is as friendly a

32:16

venue is. You're going to get. The.

32:19

Odds of anybody stepping up there

32:21

and shouting genocide joe' are pretty

32:23

slim. These are of the cheerleaders

32:25

of the teams. Even if your

32:27

team lost every game last year,

32:29

the cheerleaders still put on a

32:31

brave face and break it. So.

32:35

That. He. Only went

32:37

ten minutes in that friendly of

32:39

an environment. Is.

32:42

Telling is not Less is more

32:44

everywhere. It shouldn't be if you

32:46

believe that he's capable of more.

32:48

The concept of less is more.

32:52

Is about leaving. People.

32:54

Wanting more, leaving an audience wanting more or

32:56

giving them just what they like their it

32:59

is there You go. There, it is. You'd

33:01

been satiated. Instead.

33:05

He can't do. More.

33:08

There's a difference between leaving them

33:11

wanting more because you know when

33:13

to exit. And you've

33:15

given everything you can before the wheels come off

33:17

and you need to roll into the pit crew.

33:21

That's. The problem with your been. Still,

33:24

Nbc News reports the ever it

33:27

appears to be a work in

33:29

progress at an infrastructure event north

33:31

Carolina on Thursday. Biden often deviated

33:33

from the script in the teleprompter

33:36

to add some political flourishes in

33:38

spoke for more than twenty minutes.

33:41

That's. Your love as kind of like

33:43

the sense that like when our kids

33:45

first started to talk and walks. I.

33:48

Take two three steps and then fall on

33:50

their but oh it's amazing look at that.

33:52

and now they're taking longer and longer steps.

33:54

On occasion he get very excited about it.

33:57

Rebel the screen together a semi

33:59

coherence. Oh my goodness, This is

34:01

great. They're making progress. That's the way

34:03

they're talking about the President Venus is.

34:05

We went office teleprompter. Game

34:08

is that the one where he said he used to drive

34:10

a big rig and that was a lie. The.

34:13

Problem: Every time he goes off the

34:15

teleprompter he make stuff up. Usually

34:17

about himself. Current.

34:20

And former Biden officials have

34:23

long noted that the President

34:25

sees value in delivering longer

34:27

speeches, citing his interest in

34:29

communicating comprehensively with Americans on

34:32

policy matters. So.

34:34

Then that really begs the question. Who's

34:36

President of the States? Is The President

34:38

of United States has been forbidden from

34:41

doing something the President of the United

34:43

States wants to do not because while

34:45

the Constitution forbids longer speeches, that because

34:47

his staff are for the love of

34:50

God duty to be talk to volume

34:52

say some stupid that becomes a problem.

34:55

And aides said in the weeks

34:57

ahead Biden will add strategic moments.

35:00

Meaning. When he's lucid, Deliver.

35:03

Some larger issue specific speeches

35:05

aimed at drawing a contrast

35:07

with his Republican opponent former

35:09

President Donald Trump most recently

35:12

gave an economic speech in

35:14

Scranton, Pennsylvania that lasted about

35:16

a half an hour. Now.

35:19

I love how they're doing. He's having some

35:21

good times. bad times and good days and

35:23

bad It's sometimes is there, sometimes sometimes is

35:26

able to speak. For. A whole

35:28

half an hour. Remember

35:30

when Joe Biden was question about

35:32

his age. Money. Say.

35:38

Over. What? Mr. Presence

35:40

and there are fewer and

35:42

fewer. Opportunities to

35:44

just watch you for

35:46

shorter and shorter periods

35:48

of time. We can't

35:51

watch you. Why? Because

35:53

you're receiving. Mentally.

35:55

Physically. And. Then from

35:58

the public in every way you can pass The

36:00

only apply that word including your hairline. by the

36:02

way I mean the plugs. Are. There,

36:04

but. Honestly, the

36:06

visible as good plugs would be

36:08

visible. Beside. The point. Just.

36:11

Want you to be aware of the president

36:13

is going to eventually. Fade.

36:16

Away said it's The Biden campaign

36:18

has not yet built a speech

36:21

writing team, and most of the

36:23

President's public appearances continued to be

36:25

in official settings. Has.

36:28

Nothing to do with his speeches.

36:30

The President of the United States

36:32

has a speech writing team. The

36:34

official quote unquote nature of his

36:36

campaign events is irrelevant. All.

36:39

That means is always going to

36:42

Los Angeles for it official event

36:44

is going to talk about whatever

36:46

high speed rail or train or

36:48

whatever reason it. So.

36:51

We the taxpayer get to foot the

36:53

bill for flying Air Force One and

36:55

all the logistics to go along with

36:57

that out. California. And

37:01

then while there's while I'm here I'll

37:03

do a couple of campaign events are

37:05

taught to friendly audience. Has now do

37:07

some fundraisers, come away with five million

37:09

dollars and we get the press. See

37:11

of hatred is gone to L A

37:13

for the fundraisers. then his campaign would

37:15

have to foot the bill for the

37:17

millions and millions and millions of dollars

37:19

it costs to fly Air Force, one

37:21

of the backup plane and all the

37:23

vehicles and all the personnel and me

37:26

and do all the advance work and

37:28

every it's without to pay for all

37:30

of that to fly. Out there, their

37:32

campaign. We have to pay for all

37:34

that. It was just campaign events since

37:36

he's out there. an official duties, putting

37:38

a ribbon at a Starbucks or whatever,

37:40

is giving some sort of official speech.

37:43

As. President not as a Kansas. It just so

37:45

happens that it could go. the speech could go

37:47

either s Then we get to pick up the

37:49

tab. Bill. Clinton perfected.

37:52

This crap. Of. While we're

37:54

there politics, well our here. We might as

37:56

well raise the money while we're here. We

37:58

might as well camp. campaign, then

38:03

the campaign has to pay for very little

38:06

of the entire trip. It's

38:09

a scam. It's

38:11

a perfectly legal corruption. Mike

38:14

Donilon, one of

38:17

the president's closest advisors who

38:19

earlier this year shifted from

38:21

his West Wing role to

38:23

the campaign, has been regularly

38:25

traveling with Biden as

38:27

his events increasingly take

38:30

a political turn. Here's another

38:32

level of handler. Biden

38:35

aides say they hope to refine a

38:38

more compact stump speech for the president

38:40

to use as the

38:42

pace and intensity of

38:44

the campaign builds later

38:47

this summer. Quote, we're

38:49

evolving in the way that a

38:51

campaign should, one campaign official said.

38:55

The timing for this scaling down the

38:57

president's remarks track with how his campaign

38:59

operated four years ago through though Biden

39:02

campaign events in 2020 were sparse due to the COVID-19

39:07

pandemic. Maybe they're going to bring back the

39:09

circles in the gymnasium. Remember that? They'll

39:12

get like six people at a rally. They'd

39:14

be sitting there calmly with their hands folded,

39:17

watching with their masks on, their snorkels and whatever

39:19

else they put on. And they go, oh, we're

39:21

going to all sit here in this gym and

39:24

you applaud when you're supposed to applaud. Biden's

39:28

remarks shrank to an average of about 15 minutes

39:31

as he gained momentum toward the matchup

39:33

with president Trump in 2020. Now

39:36

things were different then. There was a pandemic.

39:38

A lot of people thought that Joe Biden

39:40

wouldn't be as awful as he turned out

39:42

to be. And so they fell

39:44

for it. There were a lot of people who suffered

39:46

from Trump fatigue or just like enough of this guy.

39:50

We can get the same results with a

39:52

different guy. Well, it turns out maybe you

39:54

can get the same results from

39:56

a different guy, but sure as hell not this guy.

40:00

Any way, shape or form, This

40:02

guy, I'm not really sure that

40:04

less is more. When

40:07

voters seemingly don't want

40:09

any. Will.

40:12

Find out I guess. Back.

40:15

To the front while the president is. Shortening

40:19

what he says inflicting of himself on

40:21

the American public world, Priest and Roman.

40:24

That. Just kind of means that the

40:26

damage. Of. What he is going to

40:28

do. Will. Probably increase and pick

40:31

up the slack. he is running around

40:33

his course, running for reelection and. Walter.

40:36

Mondale's learned the hard way that

40:38

running an idiotic campaign where you

40:41

promise to raise people's taxes. Is.

40:45

A sure fire way to defeat. And

40:48

so no democrat. Has

40:50

run on a desire to raise

40:52

people's taxes since Nineteen Eighty Four.

40:54

That doesn't mean. They

40:57

haven't raised taxes evolve raised taxes.

40:59

They just says they're not going

41:01

to And as a real crazy

41:03

I know it's a fee or

41:05

it's a user. Fear of this.

41:07

Were closing loop or not raising

41:09

taxes were closing loopholes. Anything that

41:11

costs you money, any government action

41:13

costs you money regardless of what

41:16

is called a tax increase. Just

41:18

how it works as that's how the

41:20

government gets its money. It takes it.

41:23

For. New. While

41:27

the Trump tax cuts this is one of

41:29

the things that drives me everybody nuts about

41:31

Washington Dc. And. Politics

41:33

in general and I'll explain why

41:35

it is really quickly. Tax

41:38

breaks A permanent. They're always

41:41

permanent. Tax cuts are always

41:43

temporary. They're always set to

41:45

expire after ten years. Why?

41:49

Very. Simple. The

41:52

Bogus Congressional Budget Office.

41:55

That. Sits around, mates cook. they call it scoring

41:57

may tell you how much a piece of

41:59

legit. Is going with dollar

42:01

amount associated with a piece of

42:04

legislation. They do predictions for ten

42:06

years. And then

42:08

sometimes they'll throw in longer term. Costs.

42:12

A longer of right and twenty years. Thirty

42:14

years in, definitely, depending on the piece of

42:16

legislation. They're. Always

42:19

wrong. They are

42:21

always wrong official government estimates and nineteen

42:23

sixty Five about what the cost of

42:25

Medicare would be. In

42:29

thirty years. Where. Surpassed

42:31

in five. I.

42:35

The this is if you would think that now would be

42:37

enough to like is if you had a business. Where.

42:40

They're like yeah those guys here's a great

42:42

investment can investment person is this is a

42:44

great investment. And. So you put a

42:46

bunch of money in it is just goes belly up. When.

42:49

You go. The next time they call

42:51

it I got a great investment for you. To

42:54

go ahead and I'm not really sure you're the guy

42:56

for that job. You you know you're not the best

42:58

track record. I'm gonna, I'm gonna

43:00

put a little and just in case. By

43:03

not gonna put everything in their like you

43:06

did last time because you really views he

43:08

sucked. And then they

43:10

do it again. And you're not going to

43:12

take their word for the Rational Budget Office

43:14

Likely Economists estimate? That.

43:17

No consequences they have as as as. Few.

43:19

Consequences As like a weatherman getting

43:21

round. The Weatherman actually

43:24

gets it right. More often than

43:26

the Congressional Budget Office, I don't

43:28

actually know anything that the Congressional

43:30

Budget Office actually got right as

43:32

far as cost estimates goes, but

43:34

I'll just reiterate the point against.

43:36

The Medic Medicare making sixty from.

43:40

Cost. In five years what government

43:42

estimates said it would cost and thirty.

43:45

Normal human beings would look at that guy

43:47

who who were saying we need to rethink

43:50

this and cassettes if that casa sam much

43:52

it's only gonna grow. The I

43:54

cause serious problems for that's not the way

43:56

government works. Just. So.

44:00

When it comes to tax policy, tax hikes are

44:02

permanent. They say, well this are bringing a trillion

44:04

dollars over the next ten twenty years. players wouldn't

44:06

bring over forty years, whatever and they all go

44:09

ooh, that's gonna be great. Look at all that

44:11

money and all the good we can do for

44:13

the children And we can do it for the

44:15

children. Tax

44:18

cuts, Democrats and the

44:20

media lie so much about them

44:23

that they cost might cost. Money.

44:27

Earned a cost the government money.

44:30

It's going to cost us. It

44:32

doesn't Actually, it's your money to begin

44:35

with you. Earned it. But.

44:40

They. Claim. That

44:44

it costs the government money. And

44:47

so they end up making the

44:49

argument. That

44:51

these giveaways some how

44:54

they aren't giveaways and

44:56

realistically, they're not. They're

44:58

keeping, you're getting to keep your money. And if

45:00

you, by the way, if you look over. The.

45:04

Years. Every

45:06

time there was a major

45:08

tax cut. There.

45:11

Was an increase in revenue to the federal

45:13

government. If it costs the government money somehow,

45:16

how is it. That.

45:18

The governor at Government ended up

45:20

getting more money. Must look at

45:22

history. Nineteen Eighty Fiscal Year Federal

45:24

revenues, right? Mrs. Just federal revenues

45:27

not expenditures because they spend away

45:29

more Now This is quaint. These

45:31

numbers are play Quaint little time

45:33

in American history. Nineteen Eighty, The

45:35

Federal revenues were five hundred and

45:38

seventeen point One billion dollars. While

45:41

Rain gets elected Fiscal Year:

45:43

Nineteen Eighty One. Federal revenues

45:45

of Five Hundred and Ninety

45:47

Nine point Three billion dollars.

45:51

Physically. or nineteen eighty two which

45:53

is counter you're nineteen eighty one partially

45:55

or at renault it's not it's a

45:57

nine to ninety three or eighty today

46:00

That's when the Reagan tax seats were

46:03

passed and implemented. Revenues

46:05

were up by $18 billion to $617.8 billion. Then

46:10

there was the dip. There was

46:13

the one dip the first year. Now you've got to

46:15

understand there was a recession back

46:17

then as well. Jimmy Carter had really thoroughly

46:19

screwed up the economy.

46:23

Massive inflation, all sorts of measures had to be done to

46:25

bring that under control. So federal revenue

46:27

dipped by $17 billion to $600.6 billion. Then

46:37

weirdly after the

46:39

massive tax cuts from

46:42

Ronald Reagan, a funny thing happened.

46:46

Tax revenue went up by $66 billion in one

46:48

year. 1994

46:51

fiscal year revenues were $666.4 billion. This

46:56

is under the giant giveaway from Ronald Reagan

46:58

to the rich. Now how could you get

47:01

more money from

47:03

people with lower tax rates across

47:06

the board? How is that possible? Why

47:09

because people keeping more of their own

47:11

money allowed them to invest it, to

47:13

spend it, to move it

47:15

around. Money moving in the economy helps

47:17

the economy grow and crazy

47:19

things happened, economic growth. You could

47:21

see why in the Carter administration,

47:23

after the Carter administration, that would

47:25

be wildly confusing to people. But

47:28

a $66 billion increase in

47:31

revenue to the federal government

47:33

the year after the tax

47:35

cuts took place seems insane,

47:37

doesn't it? It's counter to

47:39

everything Democrats tell us is

47:42

humanly possible and yet it

47:44

happened. The weird

47:46

thing is it happened again. The

47:48

next year, fiscal year 1985 revenues were $734 billion, $68 billion more than the

47:56

year before. From

47:59

then on... the government

48:02

revenue increased.

48:06

Now we didn't have tax

48:08

cuts for a while there,

48:11

but then we did under

48:13

George W. Bush, fiscal

48:15

year 2002, the revenue to the federal

48:20

government was 1.85 trillion dollars. You can

48:22

see it's gone up quite a bit. Wow,

48:24

that's weird. Then 2005 at 2.15 trillion

48:27

dollars. How is that possible after

48:32

tax cuts? Because tax cuts

48:34

spur economic growth. Now of course you

48:37

have recessions from time

48:39

to time, but tax cuts

48:41

spur economic growth.

48:46

The numbers become less dramatic because the

48:48

numbers become more dramatic, if that makes

48:50

sense. When you're dealing with billions of

48:52

dollars and hundreds of billions of dollars

48:54

versus trillions of dollars, things

48:57

change pretty dramatically, but it doesn't

48:59

really come, it sounds smaller in

49:02

the numbers. Fiscal year 2017,

49:04

the Trump tax cuts,

49:06

3.32 trillion dollars

49:08

in revenue to the government, and then

49:10

by fiscal year 19, the

49:13

revenue to the government was 3.46 trillion dollars.

49:16

You go, well that doesn't seem like a whole

49:19

hell of a lot because you're

49:21

dealing with trillions of dollars. The number

49:24

did not change there,

49:26

the top number, the 3 trillion, so

49:28

3.46 trillion dollars versus

49:30

3.32 trillion dollars. That's

49:36

140 billion dollars

49:38

in change. When you deal

49:40

with bigger numbers, they seem smaller,

49:42

but they're not. But

49:46

because Republicans are largely spineless, and

49:48

for John McCain in 2017, the

49:50

same thing with George Bush's

49:53

tax cuts, they put the,

49:55

I couldn't possibly vote for this, it'll

49:59

explode the Now these

50:01

people have been around long enough to know

50:03

the lie that tax cuts cost the government

50:05

money. But

50:08

they want to be able to say, I

50:12

put a break on that. I don't really like this.

50:14

I kept some sanity. Whatever

50:16

it is, they want to say. They get to say

50:18

it. So they say, all right, we'll just do

50:20

10 years of tax cuts. So then

50:22

the tax cuts will, quote, cost the government. Whatever those

50:24

10 years of tax cuts are, they don't factor in.

50:27

They don't do what's called dynamic scoring. They don't

50:29

factor in the economic growth that will be spurred

50:31

by Americans being able to keep more of their

50:33

own money. They work in bogus

50:35

numbers. It's part of why they're always wrong in

50:37

their estimates. But they

50:42

say that, and then they say, but then it

50:44

goes away, and then the revenue to the government

50:46

pops up. So they

50:48

say, well, it's revenue neutral, or it's this,

50:50

that, because it reverts back to what it

50:52

was. They are so afraid of the media.

50:54

They are so economically illiterate and stupid that

50:56

they play the left's game rather than simply

50:58

stand on principle and say, look, it's the

51:00

people's money. They should be able to keep

51:02

more of it. Period,

51:05

end of story. And oh, by

51:07

the way, it always led to economic growth. It

51:09

would be a good thing to do. Even JFK

51:11

cut taxes because he knew it led to economic

51:13

growth. Democrats don't like to

51:15

talk about that, just like they don't like

51:18

to talk about his anti-communism stance because they

51:20

want to pretend that he could be the

51:22

nominee today when he couldn't be even

51:24

a nominee for the Senate from

51:26

Massachusetts in the modern Democratic

51:28

Party. So the tax

51:31

cuts from Donald Trump are set to

51:34

expire after next year. That

51:37

means your taxes will go

51:39

up. Now, Joe Biden will tell you he's not

51:41

raising taxes, and he won't raise taxes on anybody

51:44

making less than $400,000 a year. But

51:48

he will stand idly by as

51:50

your taxes increase, as everybody's taxes

51:52

increase because everybody got a tax

51:55

cut under the Trump tax

51:57

cuts. He will stand

51:59

idly by. as those

52:01

tax cuts expire because

52:04

well he doesn't care he's not sincere

52:06

he doesn't mean it he wants to raise taxes

52:08

on everybody this is a convenient way for him

52:10

to do it while keeping his hands clean so

52:13

what does that mean you

52:16

won't hear about it in

52:18

the corporate media in the left-wing

52:20

establishment media because they don't

52:22

want to make him into

52:24

Fritz Mondale who

52:27

ran on I'm gonna raise your taxes they

52:31

want to pretend that he's not

52:33

going to so they'll play him saying I

52:35

want to tax the rich nobody

52:38

making less than four hundred thousand dollars

52:40

a year blah blah blah but what

52:42

would what Joe Biden is swearing you

52:44

will do and he

52:47

is campaigning on without

52:50

specifics you may not know them but

52:53

with the audience being wildly ignorant they just

52:55

hear anybody willing to go see Joe Biden

52:57

is wildly ignorant oh he's gonna

52:59

get rid of those evil Trump tax cuts that benefited

53:01

the rich they're

53:05

screwing themselves they curly

53:07

are why well Fox

53:10

Business to this little report on

53:12

just this very thing and what

53:15

the expiration of

53:17

the Trump tax cuts would mean to

53:19

people believe it or not making less than

53:21

four hundred thousand dollars a year it turns

53:24

out it means a tax

53:27

hike meanwhile the middle

53:29

class bearing the financial brunt of by

53:31

the Nomics and Jackie you have all

53:33

the numbers for us and the numbers

53:35

are not as hopeful as I thought

53:37

they would be the new data showing

53:40

actually that the president's plan to let

53:42

Trump ear attacks cuts expire would raise

53:44

taxes on most Americans so who specifically

53:46

is gonna see the tax increases under

53:48

President Biden we are diving into the

53:50

real math here here are some examples

53:52

of three middle-class Americans and how much

53:55

they make and if they have children

53:57

or not we're gonna start with a single

53:59

filer with two kids making $52,000 a year. Under

54:03

Biden's tax plan, this taxpayer would see a

54:05

$1,474.50 tax increase. Now

54:12

take a look at a single filer, no kids, making

54:15

$75,000 a year. They're

54:18

gonna see an increase of $1,707.75. And

54:23

this one is the one that really gets

54:25

me, a married filer. So you've got a

54:27

couple, three kids, making $200,000 a year. This

54:31

couple is gonna see an increase of $7,449.56 when

54:39

the Trump tax cuts expire. And it's

54:41

a nuance here because actions speak louder

54:43

than words. His words are gonna be,

54:45

I didn't raise taxes on people making

54:47

less than $400,000 a year. That

54:50

is technically true, no new taxes. But when

54:53

you let these tax cuts expire and it

54:55

has this kind of impact on people, think

54:57

about that last example. On top of the

54:59

taxes you pay, on top of the inflationary pressures

55:01

you're feeling, you're gonna sell out another $7,500. Where

55:05

are people gonna get it from? The government

55:07

doesn't care where you get

55:09

it from. You

55:12

work for them. You exist

55:15

for government. That is the philosophy

55:17

of the left. Period,

55:20

end of story. So your taxes are going

55:22

to increase from 1,500 to 7,500

55:24

depending on your economic situation. All

55:29

by the way, well under the $400,000 limit.

55:34

Now part of the reason is the

55:36

child tax credit, the increased child tax

55:39

credit, the Biden administration

55:41

will let expire. They hate

55:43

kids, right? Seemingly. You

55:46

wouldn't Be so pro-abortion if

55:48

you really liked kids. You Also probably would

55:50

acknowledge the one grandkid that you pretend doesn't

55:52

exist. If you actually like, I mean I'm

55:54

talking about more than liking them as far

55:56

as like sniffing them or whatever the hell

55:59

it is. He does with them.

56:01

Ah, you wouldn't You'd get acknowledge the

56:03

kid right issued junkie son by be

56:06

super happy about it. But. At.

56:08

A certain point you have to parent beyond your

56:11

your junkie son. You go. You know what? You

56:13

don't have to be there if you don't want

56:15

to meet the kid but we're not gonna. You're

56:17

gonna ruin a kid's life by not being a

56:19

father figure and a kid's life. but I'd like

56:21

to meet this care to give you my word

56:23

is a bind. But of course his words burdens.

56:27

Is worth about as much as his word is biden. So.

56:31

Yes, tax cuts expiring or

56:33

tax hikes allowed to go

56:35

into place? Is it the

56:37

Biden Administration is counting heavily

56:39

on. People's.

56:43

Not realizing. Because

56:45

he won't happen until after the elections.

56:48

Not realizing the present United States is

56:50

actively campaigning and promising that they were,

56:52

You will Raise Taxes. On.

56:54

You. The. Difference:

56:57

If you see somebody standing

56:59

on train track, oblivious earbuds

57:01

and and the train is

57:03

rolling down the way, Do

57:05

you. Run. Over there and.

57:07

Knock him out, take him off the track. Or.

57:11

Do you just sit there and let them

57:13

get hit by a. If

57:16

you let them get hit by it

57:18

or you culpable. In.

57:20

Any way, shape or form talking like not

57:22

just the last second. oh my goodness, But

57:25

you see it down the way that about

57:27

thirty seconds at some point you could say

57:29

to the bird tap on the shoulder joints,

57:31

tackle them to say a yawning yourself attractive

57:33

trying come you want to get off their

57:36

noses dv don't do anything if you just

57:38

watch. Are

57:41

you culpable? Responsible.

57:43

In any way, shape or form, I would argue that

57:45

you are a little bit. A

57:48

obviously the first responsibility realizing

57:50

that the person standing on

57:52

the tracks oblivious to their

57:54

surroundings. but. If. You

57:56

watch. You.

58:01

Become. Partially responsible.

58:04

For. That if you do nothing sadly clearly

58:06

most people would has break out the phones

58:08

and go wow is this guy doesn't get

58:10

off their am and again a lot more

58:13

Instagram followers. And than the news

58:15

or cut it off right before the guy splinters.

58:18

But. The President is doing that with

58:20

task with can't fix that. He's

58:23

advocating. Without. Advocating

58:25

for it. He doesn't have to

58:27

do anything, and it's part of

58:29

the reason why Republicans are such

58:31

a failure when it comes to

58:33

economics. They don't

58:36

have the intestinal fortitude to

58:38

make tax hikes are tax

58:40

cuts permanent? Because

58:43

they're afraid of the Congressional

58:45

Budget Office, they're afraid of

58:47

what a government agency that

58:49

gets literally every estimate they

58:51

do wrong is going to

58:53

estimate. What? They're going to say.

58:58

Because. Democrats will use it against

59:01

them, which all boils down to.

59:03

Republicans are. God. Awful

59:05

terrible at messaging and if you

59:08

have the best message if you

59:10

have all the facts on your

59:12

side, if you have all the

59:14

reality on your side and everybody

59:16

as popular and with your ideas

59:18

and your ideals and you can't

59:20

message them. You're gonna

59:23

lose. Somebody.

59:25

Somewhere has to be able to

59:27

talk about these things in common

59:29

sense. Basic terms. so basic that

59:32

even Joe Biden can understand them.

59:34

Know I realize that sounds. Absurd.

59:38

The. Guy would probably lose a finger

59:40

trying to tie shoes, which is why

59:42

he wears those orthopedic slip ons. I

59:45

only because you'll fall, but because you'll

59:47

lose a limb or something and of

59:49

choking himself to death. He wouldn't trust

59:51

him with laces, but everybody else. Can

59:56

figure this stuff out. I.

59:58

Would say that the repubs in

1:00:00

don't trust voters enough to. Believe.

1:00:04

That they would get this if he explained

1:00:06

it to them. Bank.

1:00:09

A real problem is I'm not sure the Republicans

1:00:11

get it. Much of that Republicans get. How.

1:00:14

Big of a problem it is.

1:00:17

That you gonna go out the

1:00:19

battlefield of ideals. And.

1:00:21

Fight on them. Gotta have some yourself and

1:00:23

you damn well better be of talk about

1:00:25

them in a way that makes sense to

1:00:27

people weren't paying attention to. can't do that.

1:00:31

Maybe. Don't deserve to win. In

1:00:33

a few minutes and we have left, I

1:00:35

want to get to a couple of things

1:00:38

as quickly as I possibly can. Start with

1:00:40

the Governor Kristi Noem. South

1:00:43

Dakota. she's my daughter Quins favorite politician

1:00:45

because they both like they they only

1:00:47

want to play video games as girls

1:00:49

they only want to play with girl

1:00:52

dolls and make me play with tens

1:00:54

and all that they as they just.

1:00:57

A girl, politicians they're they're at all

1:00:59

excited by and I guess good. I

1:01:02

don't know what it's like to be

1:01:04

a little girl but then they want

1:01:06

to be emulate things. And so Quinn

1:01:08

liked Kristi Noem. Because. Kristi Noem

1:01:10

was on tv said good things about

1:01:12

the wife said good things about her.

1:01:15

And so he likes Kristi Noem. She

1:01:17

wanted Christie known to be president. Who

1:01:20

had might happen in the future? Kristi.

1:01:22

Noem as Vice President is not going to happen

1:01:25

this year. Why? Because she wrote a book. That

1:01:28

is just. I don't know why

1:01:30

any movies to see clearly didn't write

1:01:32

the book said ghostwriter. She.

1:01:35

Wrote about how of or in the

1:01:37

book. Told the story about how she

1:01:39

killed in a fourteen month old. Talked

1:01:41

to tab because it was untrainable. I.

1:01:44

Would argue that you could probably have found a

1:01:46

better thing to do than suit the dog. Found

1:01:48

somebody you may want to take the dog or

1:01:50

whatever their lots of know kill options. He and

1:01:52

his take it behind bars shoot the damned dog.

1:01:55

Lot of people are outraged by. That is part

1:01:57

of the reason why I'm not a big fan

1:01:59

horse racing. And. I own a

1:02:01

naval the animal broke his leg. well geico.

1:02:05

There are plenty of other things you could do.

1:02:07

Still not may be cost effective, but when you.

1:02:10

Look, I'm still waiting for catfish to die.

1:02:13

Okay I get a catfish, one catfish, one

1:02:15

facelift. The last thing in this aquarium I'm

1:02:17

waiting for it to die people. I flush

1:02:19

it does is it had Catholic I took

1:02:21

the responsibility onto. It's a not going to

1:02:23

try and expedite it's demise amount of freedom

1:02:25

to take care of everything amid do whatever

1:02:27

your eyes of. If I'm gonna be upset

1:02:30

do like that a wanted to die but

1:02:32

when it does die and never get another

1:02:34

fish again I'll tell you that but it's

1:02:36

It's just a pain in the but. You.

1:02:39

Take on that responsibility. That's the deal.

1:02:41

As to deal. With my

1:02:43

much they'll go I know I'm an you

1:02:45

Texas sen. Convenient to be or that dogs

1:02:48

will mean till the Double chickens Amerigo Shoot

1:02:50

that. Networks.

1:02:53

Red. Rabbit Something different,

1:02:55

but just inconvenient. Know.

1:02:59

Tells me something about your character. And

1:03:02

I'm probably the stream and the other

1:03:04

direction. But now that whatever, Then

1:03:07

s. Be. A really

1:03:09

sort of made you wonder what else

1:03:11

to put it in the book like

1:03:13

was I can make the tough decisions

1:03:15

to kill a dog that you found

1:03:17

inconvenient like assists and know that's a

1:03:19

permit. Tougher decision is to give away

1:03:21

an animal yaks cared about not to

1:03:23

shoot one you hades orbit sociopathic to

1:03:25

me but whatever. Now it turns out

1:03:27

that in the book is well she

1:03:29

talks about having met and stared down

1:03:31

Kim Jong own. North

1:03:33

Korean dictator. The only problem is. She.

1:03:36

Never met Kim Jong Un. Raises.

1:03:39

The question: How the hell does this make it in the book?

1:03:43

She. hasn't addressed that that simple fact

1:03:45

is in write but said go straight

1:03:47

and somehow ghost writer outer know found

1:03:50

something online probably a me maybe a

1:03:52

story from this babylon be or something

1:03:54

and decided this has to be true

1:03:56

and wrote it up and put in

1:03:58

there and it tells me Kristi Noem

1:04:00

did not read her book very closely, that

1:04:02

it made it into the final product. That

1:04:04

doesn't come out until

1:04:06

Tuesday, so we'll

1:04:09

see if they edited it in time. I don't know.

1:04:11

It'd be kind of tough to do. Next

1:04:13

editions they could, but they probably printed

1:04:16

a lot of editions of

1:04:18

this book, the first edition, assuming it would

1:04:20

sell really well. Not really

1:04:22

sure that's going to work out for them for

1:04:24

the dog reasons. Now there's this one, she was

1:04:27

on CBS, Face the Nation on Sunday.

1:04:31

And it's just a horrible answer. Why not

1:04:35

just admit, look, I dropped the ball, it

1:04:37

was stupid, I didn't work for the ghost

1:04:39

writer, I didn't read this very

1:04:41

closely, it shouldn't be in there, I screwed it up

1:04:44

and we're going to fix it. Sorry about that. Instead,

1:04:48

she does this. Talk about meeting

1:04:50

some world leaders and one specific

1:04:52

one. Quote, I remember when I

1:04:54

met with North Korean dictator Kim

1:04:56

Jong-un, I'm sure he

1:04:58

underestimated me having no clue about

1:05:00

my experience staring down little tyrants.

1:05:02

I've been a children's pastor after

1:05:04

all. Did you

1:05:07

meet Kim Jong-un? Well,

1:05:10

you know, as soon as this was brought to my attention, I certainly

1:05:14

made some changes and looked at this

1:05:16

passage. And I've met

1:05:19

with many, many world leaders, I've traveled

1:05:21

around the world. As soon as

1:05:23

it was brought to my attention, we

1:05:25

went forward and have made some edits. So

1:05:27

I'm glad that this book is being released

1:05:29

in a couple of days and that those

1:05:31

edits will be in place and that people

1:05:33

will have the updated version. So you

1:05:35

did not meet with Kim Jong-un, that's what you're saying?

1:05:40

I've met with many, many world leaders. Many

1:05:42

world leaders, I've traveled around the world. I

1:05:44

think I've talked extensively in this book about

1:05:46

my time serving in Congress, my time as

1:05:49

governor before governor, some of the travels that

1:05:51

I've had. I'm not going

1:05:53

to talk about my specific meetings with world leaders.

1:05:55

I'm just not going to do that. This

1:05:58

anecdote shouldn't have been in the book. and

1:06:00

as soon as it was brought to my attention, I

1:06:02

made sure that that was adjusted. As soon

1:06:04

as it was brought to my attention, it made

1:06:06

it to the final product. At some point, did

1:06:09

you look at the book at all in the

1:06:11

editorial process? I

1:06:13

like Kristi Noem. I have a very

1:06:16

good friend who did work for

1:06:19

Kristi Noem, who says

1:06:21

nice things about Kristi Noem as a

1:06:23

person when you're dealing with her one-on-one,

1:06:25

but this is a horrible answer. Did

1:06:28

you meet Kim Jong-un? I met many world leaders. No,

1:06:31

you didn't. You didn't meet Kim Jong-un. It

1:06:33

should have never been in there. It was brought to my attention. It's

1:06:37

a book you've written about the hard decisions

1:06:39

that you've made in your life to show

1:06:41

your leadership skills. Apparently, one of the hardest

1:06:43

decisions you ever made was picking a ghostwriter

1:06:45

who you never wanted to talk

1:06:47

to again, apparently, or read any rough drafts

1:06:49

of. Not even the final

1:06:52

product of it. I

1:06:54

also blame the editors

1:06:57

of the book, not just the ghostwriter of

1:07:00

the book, because as somebody who's written a

1:07:02

book, I know that they go through everything

1:07:04

and say, all right, you got a source

1:07:06

for this, you got a source for that.

1:07:08

It might be different if you're a governor

1:07:10

and it's semi-biographical, autobiographical, but in general, they

1:07:14

check things. They check

1:07:16

things just to make sure.

1:07:20

I don't think they probably will check every declaration

1:07:22

of having met with somebody now in the future,

1:07:24

but it's just bizarre to me that you don't

1:07:26

have an answer to this. She knew

1:07:28

it was coming. She knew

1:07:30

that this was out there. She'd

1:07:33

say, no, I didn't. It was a screw up. The

1:07:35

ghostwriter I'd contracted with found

1:07:38

something online. She shouldn't have put it in

1:07:40

there. My mistake. I

1:07:42

should have caught it. So sorry about that. But you're

1:07:44

right. No, I didn't meet Kim Jong-un, but she couldn't

1:07:47

do it. She couldn't do it. She didn't do it.

1:07:49

Instead, she did that. Lastly,

1:07:52

the big news today,

1:07:57

Columbia University has canceled its

1:07:59

main The management. Daily

1:08:01

Caller Reports Columbia University announced

1:08:04

on Monday the cancellation of

1:08:06

it's main commencement ceremony following

1:08:08

weeks of anti Israel protests

1:08:11

and encampments on campus. They're.

1:08:14

Afraid that something will happen?

1:08:16

They're afraid of disruption. They're

1:08:18

afraid of every. this. Is

1:08:20

the Terrorists winning. This is

1:08:22

the Terrorists playbook. Columbia University

1:08:24

costs what about seventy thousand

1:08:26

dollars and to wishing per

1:08:29

year? And yet they can't

1:08:31

bring themselves to put security

1:08:33

in place to protect against

1:08:35

some disruptors from a very

1:08:37

small number of people. They.

1:08:39

Already know who they are.

1:08:41

They could clear the clot

1:08:43

again and than ban anybody

1:08:45

there arrested from graduation. Solve.

1:08:48

The problem right away. but. That's

1:08:52

not what they do. Spineless leftists

1:08:54

don't ever do the right thing.

1:08:57

That. Even when every other possible.

1:09:00

Option has been exhausted. Or

1:09:04

I that is enough for today. Appreciate

1:09:07

you listening, download, chair and town friend.

1:09:09

All her stuff paid round accomplish Their

1:09:11

kind of podcasts is where you go

1:09:13

to do more. Ah, hopefully my sinuses

1:09:15

will clear up my throat clam my

1:09:17

voice clear up for it's as a

1:09:19

way one way or another. I'll see

1:09:21

you tomorrow. I have a good one.

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