The Trans•Parency Podcast Show
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The Trans•Parency Podcast Show
2024 Election Night Coverage & Results | Donald Trump vs Kamala Harris
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Thank you, thank you so, thank you, so no-transcript.
Speaker 3:Hi everybody, thank you for joining us tonight. Election Nights Watch Live. If you're on Twitter, I mean X, if you're on Twitter, I mean X. Feel free to interact with us through the thread, the chat, and if you're on YouTube, you can join us on live chat. Let us know who do you vote for, who do you want to see winning for this elections? And we're also on facebook live. So we have. We are currently on three different platforms. Okay, how are you doing, thomas?
Speaker 5:I'm doing good. How are you doing today?
Speaker 3:I'm doing great. It's actually uh, we finally got here. So a lot of things has been going on since we were live on our Friday nights and I think we kind of left off around the first actually not the first the debate right Between Kamala and Trump, and ever since that, a lot of things have happened, right? Yeah, a lot of things have happened, right, yeah, a lot of things have happened. A very interesting rollercoaster ride.
Speaker 3:Yes, and actually the Trump assassin, the first one. It's actually only three months ago. It seems like way long time, right, but it's actually only three months, a little bit over three months ago only. Because so many things are moving so super fast, right.
Speaker 5:It just keeps on rolling. So much has happened in such a short time. It's almost like where do you start? Where do you even look? Yes, yeah, this is like some. Somebody should definitely write this down and do a mini series.
Speaker 3:I'm sure, I'm sure.
Speaker 5:The last six months.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I'm sure the writer from Netflix is somebody's probably making a drama drama series already. Um yeah, it's based on real world events making a drama series already. You can't even get the name right.
Speaker 5:You say it's based on real-world events.
Speaker 3:Yes, talk about Netflix. As we know, left or right, they all have their endorsed people who endorse them, and I noticed that on the left side, a lot of celebrities endorse them, and I noticed that on the left side, a lot of celebrities endorsements. What are your thoughts on that?
Speaker 5:Celebrity endorsements are. To me, they're just entertainment. Yeah, I mean. Yes, celebrities are in people's face all the time. They're always on the TV, they're always in the media, they're always in the media, they're always in the news. Something's happening. You're on the big screen People, we're used to seeing them. But when it comes to endorsements for me it's one of those. It's nice to see who you like and what your opinion is. I'm great. I'll listen to that all day. But when you come like I endorse, I'm like whoa, whoa, whoa, slow down there. Buck Rogers, you know, like endorsement is a whole other thing, you know, because we're talking about politicians who make policy and all that. I don't want to see him endorsed by heads of economic departments and major institutions that deal with these things that they're talking about. I want to see those people do endorsements. Yeah, I mean, I love Tom Cruise's movies. I don't really care who he endorses, though.
Speaker 3:Yeah, see, like the first person that really came out to endorse Kamala Harris is Taylor Swift. It's, you know, very odd.
Speaker 5:And then after that it's like Beyonce, J, Beyonce, JLo and I don't know who else a lot of entertainers coming out the woodwork to support and I'm just, at the same time, I'm like, not concerned, didn't sway, my vote didn't have any effect on my opinion, and that's not just and that's not. I'm not. I'm not trying to diss any of these entertainers. I'm not trying to disrespect them, it's just. My point is this I'm looking at somebody who's going to be dealing with policy that's going to affect my direct life. Right, I have no concern about an entertainer's opinion. As far as you want to talk about the policies, great, I'll debate you on the policies. I'll talk about it with you. I'm not concerned about that. Yeah, because they affect your life too. But if I'm looking for an endorsement, I want to see who is the head of Microsoft endorsing.
Speaker 1:Who's Bill?
Speaker 5:Gates endorsing? Who is Rumsfeld endorsing? I want to see who those people are endorsing.
Speaker 3:Yeah, so if you talk about Bill Gates and Microsoft, on the other hand, elon Musk endorsed Trump and that kind of made a major change. We also did a watch party when he was interviewed Trump. Remember that we did that one as well.
Speaker 5:Yeah it's hard to sometimes just hard to take Elon seriously. You know, I take Elon Musk seriously when he's talking about SpaceX, tesla, science or how he had to deal with the SEC. I take him seriously when it comes to all those things. Yes, when he's endorsing Trump, I'm like oh man comes to all those things. When he's endorsing Trump, I'm like oh man, you give your buddy a shout out, all right, cool, not a problem, I respect that.
Speaker 3:That's not how.
Speaker 5:He did because, look at this, he did that one interview with Trump and had a massive amount of people watching it right Breaking record yes. Why didn't he do another one?
Speaker 3:I think he I'm not sure if he asked Kamala Harris to do another one with him, kamala Harris to do another one with him, but after that Trump went to a different podcast show, including PBD, and then Joe Rogan just last week, and then, you know, joe Rogan also asked Kamala Harris to come on to do an episode, but of course Kamala Harris declined because she couldn't really do an interview. I don't know if you've seen any interview of hers.
Speaker 5:No, no. If there was any personality or personality she should have done an interview with. If I'd been honest, I would have been like if Joe Rogan calls don't say no, whether you vomit or you do good, make sure you're ready. Don't say no, I'm not saying don't say no, because he's too big for you to deny or you can't ignore him. You're saying that that's an opportunity. Yes, you should not pass up.
Speaker 3:Yeah, they were playing. They're kind of playing. How do you say, oh, would you like to come in to do two hours? No, One hour, no, and they want Joe Rogan to fly out to them and actually donald trump fly out to joe rogan, texas, to do it, and then, and then for three hours, three and a half hours, and then donald trump went back to michigan to do a, I believe, a rally of some sort. Yeah, so he's like non-stop yeah, I'm like you'reigning.
Speaker 5:What the heck are you doing?
Speaker 1:Why are you?
Speaker 5:sitting on your butt. Like I said those, I put it this way Kamala Harris had a really, really good. She was already on first place. This was like baseball. If you're talking about baseball, you're getting up to bat, you're going for the presidency. Kamala Harris was already on first and second. She was already on either first or second. You know what I'm saying. She was on first because she was the VP in office at the time. She was on second because now she's running. She didn't have to beat out the rest of the Democratic Party to get the nomination that's right she's already on second base.
Speaker 5:You know I'm like no, no, no, no. You know I don't know what these people don't have they. I don't know what these people don't have, don't have the it's hard to say something because it's going to look like I'm really trying to slam her. I'm not trying to slam her, I'm not trying to disrespect her. She dropped the ball. At this point I'm like boy. I can trust you.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I think you know, because the last four, this past four years almost, we have Joe Biden, but we all know that he has health condition and you know the question is who's running the country? And now Joe Biden stepped down and then now they automatically have. Kamala Harris to replace him, place him and you know we are. People are saying, including myself, think so that someone else is running the country behind the scene and and that's someone else, we call it the machine yeah, you're absolutely right.
Speaker 5:And for a fact, that's another thing. How many layups are you gonna, how many layups are you going to break before you wake up? We know Joe Biden's not running the country because he couldn't make the debate Does that mean you're doing it.
Speaker 5:So here you are at least six months doing the job. At least six months doing the job. You know, six months doing the job and you got to run a campaign at the same time. You've already got that right there Six months worth of experience and you're running for second term as president. You're doing it. You're the vice president, you're filling in for the president, running for president's office in the campaign. If you can't recognize the interviews you should take, how am I supposed to trust you to recognize other world leaders you should definitely have a sit down with and ones you can trust. Oh my God.
Speaker 3:Just think about that. Just think about that, just put on a long walk. We'll really just jump. Just put on a long walk.
Speaker 5:You have the brain cells together to rub and know, okay, I can talk to this guy on the phone about this. I need to meet this guy in person about this. How can you expect me to believe you that you can even expect me to believe you that you can even do the basics of the job? I mean, I know you're not going to be doing it all by yourself, but damn it if you can't recognize the interviews you should have that you can't pass up right.
Speaker 3:So I think they are trying to protect her, because we all know you can't pass up Right. So, I think they are trying to protect her because we all know she can't really answer questions, because every time somebody asks her a question she cannot answer directly. She will say I'm from the middle class, Because she's not leading her team to properly prepare her to field the questions. She's a vice president.
Speaker 5:But one thing she should know is when the lights come on that camera, you better be ready to answer the question regardless. You know you do not have time. You know what I'm saying. Yes, yes you need to control that.
Speaker 3:So this is very scary. You know, like I mentioned, just Putin alone will kill her If she's reaction responding is so slow and you know it's not very intelligent in a sense, right from the very first time she got up in front of the microphone running for president.
Speaker 5:I said it on her lap. I said it every time we talked about it she got the ball she should have been ready on the issues from day one, not floating around peace, love and happiness. This hope is going to work all out, you know like, yeah, yes, you get time for that. Yeah, this is the presidency we're talking about. Yeah, you know, if you're a vice president, you're pretty much along for the ride.
Speaker 3:Go ahead.
Speaker 5:If you're the vice president, you're pretty much just along for the ride. You just got to know when to smile, when to thumbs up, when to not. Go, sit in the corner and don't say nothing stupid. Go, take care of that, because you're my VP. And then come back and let me know what happened.
Speaker 2:But when you're going for president.
Speaker 5:you gotta be. It's just been majorly disappointing, Majorly disappointing.
Speaker 3:So when you talk about VP, what do you feel about the current VP Candidate, jd Vann? Tim Watts?
Speaker 5:You know what I wish, if I could have Put it together.
Speaker 3:Mm-hmm.
Speaker 5:Walsh is a guy I would have told Trump. That's who you pick, that's who you tap for your VP, because that guy can keep you out of trouble. He's going to cover your back. He's got you. As long as you don't let yourself get ahead of yourself, that guy's got you. You've got a solid campaign with him.
Speaker 3:Okay, man, if I'm really him. Mm-hmm.
Speaker 5:I put it like this, I fully expect to see a ridiculous scandal.
Speaker 3:Uh-huh.
Speaker 5:You know, during a term, I fully expect to see a ridiculous scandal.
Speaker 3:How so Just curious. How so Mm curious how?
Speaker 5:so Hmm.
Speaker 3:I say okay. So you say you expect to see a scandal in the midterm. Is that what you're saying, vance?
Speaker 5:is not ready to be a vice president.
Speaker 2:He's not ready for an office at that level.
Speaker 5:He should have really put in at least six more years as a senator or a congressman. To be honest, my thing he should have really put in six more years, at the very least six more years as a senator or a congressman. He's not ready. He is not ready to be vice president.
Speaker 3:Okay, all right. So just want to remind everyone if you are on YouTube, you can join us in the chat live chat or if you're on Facebook, you can also make a comment. We will see it on our screen, and so far there's a few One that says it's awesome seeing Trump leading the electrical votes and popular vote, and then there's another one. If you are Black and vote Trump, then you're. You know that. I don't think you know it's too. This comment is a little racial, but I don't think't think it doesn't matter which color. Myself, I'm Asian. I vote for Trump. Trump is not. Or Kamala is just for Black people we don't want to put it that way, right? Or Trump is only for white people. That's the separation that the elites want us to get at each other, which is not a good thing, right, do you agree?
Speaker 5:Yeah, that's one of the areas I think Trump failed to really show where he's above that whole narrative. He, in my opinion, is like as a businessman, I get it, you know, I get your lifestyle, I get your point of view. But as a politician, as a president, I'm like you can't discount any of those groups. They may not, they're not, we're not over 50% of the population, not only separately, but they make up enough of the population that they could swing the vote against you. You have to run a campaign that includes Blacks, latinos, asians, arabs. You have to run a campaign that includes all of that and then not forget about them during your term.
Speaker 3:Yes, I do see, to be honest with you this time, compared to, let's say, 2016 or 2020, honest with you this time, compared to, let's say, 2016 or 2020, I do see more variety of people supporting trump. I see an asian lady, you know, coming out, shout, do some shout outs, and I just see a lot of black men supporting trump, especially after that's. I think there think there's a little speech from Obama and that kind of pissed off some young black people that he's kind of like lecturing kind of tone. Have you seen that?
Speaker 5:Yeah, well, you know that part. I would tell them don't hate on Obama too much, because you got to remember, Obama won it because he was the at the time. He was the best option the Democratic Party had and he was a good speaker. He was just the first, his first speech on his campaign. Everybody realized, ooh, he's going to take it because he is great, but at the same time, when it comes to policy and making policy and setting things up, he's not the one that does that by himself. The president doesn't make the policy. He sets a tone where he believes the country should go. Congress and the Senate make all those policies and if the party isn't supporting the president properly, you get a lot of mess. Yeah, we did get some turds out of Obama's presidency, you know, but he wasn't the one that made those policies.
Speaker 1:He had to support them because his party was.
Speaker 5:It was his party doing that. And then, when we come around to now, democratic Party has dropped the ball, because they should have been paying attention to that. These, these people speaking out and saying we're going to support Trump. It's like you are so disenfranchised and disillusioned as to what the people really want. You're going to fail because you're not addressing what they want. You're not addressing the issue and you know people see these things. They're listening to you talk. You may think they're not, but they are listening to you talk. You may think they're not, but they are listening to you talk and they believe in Trump, not because he's a white guy, not because he's got questionable male morals on touching people. They look at him and believe him because he's a businessman, he knows how shit works and he ain't trying to dance and sing you a song. You ask him a question, he answers it.
Speaker 3:Yes, you a song. You ask him a question, he answers it. Yes, I believe there's a, I believe it's an interview or some commentary saying Trump is a straight shooter Like you answer you ask a question, he answer and he answer very, very straightforward. Know, it's not like a filter or political corrects in a sense. So so that kind of make everybody nervous, you know, especially people in the professional politic, politicians, because they usually have yeah they usually have to like you said, dance around and make it sound good. You know what I mean.
Speaker 5:Yeah, I mean, we've lived 20 years of watching politicians, lawyers, cops all kinds of people over and over and over and over again dance around answers for questions. You see it everywhere and you're going to suddenly act like nobody recognizes it because it's the presidential debate or nominee. Come on, you know I'm like, hmm, yes, it's just disappointing.
Speaker 3:So I think, because the way Donald Trump, you know, is very straight out, very non-filtered, it's kind of like I feel like, oh, that's somebody I know, that's like my friend, you know what I mean. So it's very close to people.
Speaker 5:You're absolutely right, he's done exactly what every president before him has tried to do to one degree or another Connect with the voter.
Speaker 3:Yes, all Trump has managed to connect with the voters. Kamala Harris has only managed to connect with the voters.
Speaker 5:Kamala Harris only managed to connect with certain types of voters and unfortunately, they're a very small minority.
Speaker 3:Yes, talk about connecting the voters. As I mentioned to you before the show, trump went to McDonald's and worked there for a day, because Kamala Harris claimed herself when she was younger, she worked at a McDonald's before, but nobody can even find a picture or record. The only one they found is an AI-made fake photo of Kamala Harris working at Madonna. So that's that's pretty pretty.
Speaker 5:Yeah, they would have had a record of her working there eventually, you know to some degree. It had been listed somewhere, but it's like nowhere to be found. I would never, I would never, ever mention that I worked somewhere. I never worked. I think she just tried to be. I would never, I would never, ever mention that I work somewhere. I never work.
Speaker 3:I think she just tried to be like what I just said be close to people, but she tried it way over too hard. It doesn't look natural at all yeah, she pulled a Hillary alright, so we're gonna take five minute break and I'm just gonna play this live from PBD podcast. We have different live to share, you know, between our talks, so this one is from PBD podcast. They're having an election night live, so we'll be back in five minutes.
Speaker 5:Is that Candice?
Speaker 7:Hang on, be back in five. Five minutes is that candace? Hang on reporting Israel, no matter how horrific what they?
Speaker 4:did. Dominic, what's your position on this?
Speaker 4:Very, very simple he is talented. He is talented. He has this something he is a leader. That is why, when he says he's going to end this war, russian-ukrainian war, russian aggression, to be frank and to be very specific, he has ability, he has a talent to do so. Because if he's able to take Jews, muslims, non-believers, gays I mentioned I'm gay, not stupid, that was a group of gays supporting Trump If he can bring all these different, so much different groups, he can end up all these wars. He will do what has to be done about Iran, I do believe.
Speaker 4:Do you remember famous quote? Do you remember when one of the top terrorists was killed? He went out and he said he died like a dog. He was very straight about it. No one, really the free world, did not expect president of the United States, even president, to come out and say, ladies and gentlemen, this older man lost his life. No, he says he died like a dog. That's what he says and I love it Because they treat I mean those terrorists. They treat us like non-humans, non-believers, non-humans. Let's kill them all. So he died like a dog.
Speaker 4:And I love this quote because he's very straight. That was argument against him, that the language he uses is not diplomatic, that he tweets mean tweets, that the way he speaks is not for the president. He's the president of the people. He doesn't have to do that. I mean the amount of money he owns. He says that many times I would be somewhere on the beautiful sunny island not Epstein Island, but on some island and I don't have to do that. So I would answer and I would describe it as a talent.
Speaker 4:And she has this primitive laugh, this laughter is just irritating everyone. And he's coming. He's coming, he's getting into the room and you feel this stigma, you feel the man, you feel the guy who's not afraid. And now, in 2024, we need someone who is not afraid and talented.
Speaker 7:Okay, I want to come to Candice, but before I do, there's a guy that wants to say hello to everybody. Rob, if you're ready, bring him on. Some of you guys may recognize this guy. Let me know if you recognize him or not. Rob, if you're ready, if it's in the Zoom, let the man in. He's in a cage. He wants to be free. Do we have him on? I think Joe calls this man a national treasure. Rob, if you have him on, just show his face. The moment his face shows up, there he is.
Speaker 4:Alex, Yo man. Alex, you're the man Poland loves you.
Speaker 7:Alex, how you doing what's happening, how you feeling about tonight.
Speaker 8:I'm watching the second.
Speaker 2:American revolution take place peacefully, Even if they steal this there's no reversing it.
Speaker 8:It's explosive on the street, it's everywhere. All the liberals that are good people are joining us. There's a global realignment. Populist anti-globalists are being elected everywhere. Every broadcast has been fighting tyranny for so long like yours is just exploding. The corporate old media has been dead for a while Now. They're just recognizing it and we've got you and Tucker Carlson and Elon Musk and all of the cool, smart, hardworking, beautiful people who have erased color and creed. This is a magic moment. Despite the wall of fraud and the illegals voting and all the vote flipping and all the scams, all the king's horses, all the king's men couldn't steal the election again. That's what it looks like. I'm very optimistic right now, but regardless, the global awakening is unstoppable. That which doesn't kill you only makes you stronger. So, no matter what happens tonight, america is back, baby.
Speaker 3:Okay, we're back, baby. Okay. So what he just said, you know, when I went to vote in California I don't know, Thomas, if you know this Now it's illegal to check id for voting. So when I went to vote, they own they. They don't ask for id, they just ask for your mailing address. That's just so odd to me.
Speaker 2:I know right.
Speaker 3:This is I don't know. This is a basic. I mean, if they're not checking the IDs, then what's the point? We check ID for drinking. We check ID for buying the cigarettes, or even the I think weed too right. Yeah, that's one of those things. Or even the I think we too right.
Speaker 5:Yeah, that's one of those things. It's like there's a lot of things. I'm like there's a lot of things I believe that should be changed, and then more things most things I think need to be adjusted. There's some things I do think need to be change. One is like when you start messing with voting laws, it's like this is the most basic tenet of being an American citizen. Always said the same way being an American citizen the right to vote, not just anybody, because when you make it, we don't ID anybody can vote. Now you're saying we don't ID anybody can vote. Now you're saying we don't care who you are, you can come vote in America.
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 5:No, no. This isn't your country, this isn't your home.
Speaker 3:Yeah, and those people coming here it's none of their business either, right? Why they have to give a right to vote. That doesn't make sense. No country in this world is doing that. If I go to, let's say, korea, if I go to Korea and want to vote, I don't think they're going to let me, they're going to put me in jail.
Speaker 5:They're going to treat you like you're stupid. They're like what they do, just like that. They laugh what.
Speaker 3:Are you kidding me, are you nuts?
Speaker 5:You're a funny comedian. When are?
Speaker 3:you doing your show, I'm going to come and watch. That's crazy.
Speaker 5:But they would never let you vote Ew.
Speaker 3:I know, okay. So another one I think is very, very nonsense is about trans community, because Kamala is very, you know, advocate for trans community and then out of the blue she said she would support transgender surgery. If anyone who's in prison you know, in jail prison they get free surgeries.
Speaker 5:No, dude, that should happen.
Speaker 3:Okay, that made me thinking. Okay, so what about the trans people outside of the prison? Can they get it for free? Why only people in the prison get it for free? Oh, that's a good answer.
Speaker 5:Because, there's like this many people in prison and it's like this many people in the country.
Speaker 3:Yeah, exactly so. And another thing is like this is like promoting crime. You know, like people, can, you know, just making out a joke, so I can basically say I'm going to go commit a crime to be put in the jail so I can get the free surgery right. Does that make sense?
Speaker 5:I wouldn't go that far, I know, but that's what I'm saying. It's very non-fans. I can't say that because I can see some young kids doing it, just because of that.
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 5:And I'm like it's. It's banana, I guess it's because I'm older now, so I look I've had enough experiences. So I look I've had enough experiences. I've seen enough things that I can say like, ooh man, they're just stringing you along, sitting on your back, sitting on your back, whipping the hell out of you, dangling that carrot in your, dangling that carrot in your face and telling you somebody else with the switch yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 3:It just doesn't make sense and overall, you know, we've been talking about this throughout this last couple months. Like you just said, trans people is a very minority, not even less than 1%, and they want to bring it to this stage and it's just a distraction. It's not going to help our economy. It's not going to help our economy, it's not going to help our inflation, it's not going to end the war, the two or three wars going on right now.
Speaker 5:It's the boogeyman that's throwing your face.
Speaker 3:Exactly, people buy to it. That's another problem.
Speaker 5:It's the perfect boogeyman that's throwing your see, it's the perfect boogeyman to throw in your face. Why? Because, as soon as everything is done, I ain't got to say nothing about the trans community ever again, except for we're working with leadership, which I would be like. Really, what leadership? Trans community leadership who is that you're talking about? Community that have never had leadership Ever. They have no organization, never had leadership. That's like when they say, oh, we're working with leadership, when they talk about the so-called Black issues in America, oh, we're working with leadership. I'm like who? Who are you working with?
Speaker 3:Because I don't know anybody with leadership.
Speaker 5:I'm like who? Who are you working with? Yeah, because I don't know anybody you know. So it's the boogeyman they're throwing in your face to make you scared so that you jump on the bandwagon and you're toeing the line doing it.
Speaker 3:Yes, and talk about boogeyman. A lot of people also saying that Diddy's. You know, you heard about Diddy right?
Speaker 5:Diddy, diddy.
Speaker 3:The reason I bring this up. Okay, we have two major lists that people are waiting for One epstein epstein less and one is diddy less. I've been thinking in my own list yeah, exactly that's what I was gonna say. You're talking about it's the same list I'm thinking in my head who's gonna be repeat on the list? And then people are worried that if Trump gets elected, the list will come out. You don't want it right, so that's why.
Speaker 5:You ain't going to see that list. You might see a parcel off that list, you might see a few names pop off that list, but you ain't going to see the list. No, no, no, no.
Speaker 3:They're probably going to just announce the major player. You know they're probably going to just announce the major player. You know they don't need to talk about the next door, bob.
Speaker 5:They'll announce somebody that they can, anybody they can crush, they'll announce that. But you ain't going to see anything else off the list Because you know, look at it, Diddy was on the list. Look how long it took them to roll up on Diddy. After they had the list, they went through that list over and over and over and over until they figured out okay, who can we press under the thumb for all of this? And Diddy didn't take the proper precautions.
Speaker 3:Well, there's an alleged okay, Jamie Foxx was sick months ago and people are saying that because he was drugged by the party, the Diddy party, and then Jamie Foxx turned over to FBI and report all the you know, all the party, all the ditty's doing. That's what happened. So I don't know.
Speaker 5:That's just what I heard they've known about ditty since they've known about fsteam. The thing is eric's fighting to keep their name from popping up on that list and coming out, and here's.
Speaker 3:The thing is like a lot of people like oh, who's on this?
Speaker 5:People are only thinking about entertainers and politicians that might be on that list and I'm like no, no, no, no, no. Those are not the names you need to be concerned about on that list. You need to be concerned about the most wealthy families and movers and shakers that are on that list. That's what you need to be concerned about, because the politicians will disappear tomorrow.
Speaker 3:The 2-2 bill is probably on those two lists.
Speaker 5:There's a lot of people 2-2 bills there's a lot of people two, two bills. Yeah. There's a lot of people that are on that list that you don't even want to mention to you. In a shady bar, oh guess who I heard was on the list. You're like smashing over the head with a bottle real quick. You keep my name out your mouth because I don't even want people to know. You was trying to talk to me about who was on that list. Diddy was just an easy mark and Diddy didn't take proper precautions.
Speaker 3:Like you said, boogeyman distractions yeah.
Speaker 5:Diddy is like. You know they'll pick him down for it, but they won't directly Associate him Hardcore with the list. You know you'll probably see about three or four More people go down for it over the next, you know, four years.
Speaker 1:But, you know, yes, nah, but you know.
Speaker 5:Yes.
Speaker 3:Nah.
Speaker 5:Okay, you know, and that's why a lot of people say like I put it to you, diddy didn't take proper precautions.
Speaker 3:Yeah, and also a lot of, like we were talking about those celebrity endorsements. A lot of those celebrity who endorse is also on those lesses. I say lesses, yes.
Speaker 5:Yeah, you know what the sad part is. I guarantee you half of them didn't even know what the fuck was going on. They just got invited to a really fancy rich party on a private island. They don't even know why I have to. They don't even know about the stuff going on in the back room.
Speaker 3:Yeah, well, Epstein is on the island, Diddy is, I heard it's under the tunnel, oh yeah.
Speaker 5:There's tons of people associated, especially when Epstein first came out. There was a lot of a lot of bankers and financiers associated with Epstein, with all the whole deal, and whatever I forget the lady's name is is number one right hand.
Speaker 3:Yes. I forgot her name.
Speaker 5:Yeah, maybe, somebody in the chat can tell us yeah, ain't gonna happen, you ain't gonna see that happen and we'll be like you mention my name and see what happens. That's what they say. Mention my name and see what happens probably still good. Yeah, no, it's a shame, you know.
Speaker 5:I like the music his company put out, but at the same time, you know he's had a lot of controversy anyway. You know he's been associated with a lot of controversy I mean not 24-7, but a lot of like whodunit controversy. And you're just like man. No, no, you can't be doing like that. You know, I understand it's a whole other game when you get up to a certain level, but this is just ridiculous. Diddy is going to be vilified in the Black community and put down.
Speaker 3:In what Put down Put down In what Put down. Put down, wow yeah.
Speaker 5:Well.
Speaker 3:I think there's a lot of secrecy. There's a lot of secrecy, there's a lot of, you know, pedophiles, sex trafficking, human trafficking, you know just. Can you believe our sitting president? You know, I know you believe our sitting president. You know, I know nobody want to pay attention to him anymore, but he just came out two days ago, I don't know what, like a conference, and then basically said you use the word garbage and also use the word asses on national television. He said all those Trump supporters are, you know, they need some spank their asses.
Speaker 5:That's kind of weird to say huh you look at him and you're just a mad old man.
Speaker 3:Yeah, who in the hell would say? I don't even think Donald Trump, like he's very mouthy, he's not going to ever use ass on a television show or even podcast.
Speaker 5:Yeah right, Just be glad you got your name in the history books. Be glad you got your name in the history books. That's what you wanted. Take it and run. Be glad you got your name in history books. That's what you wanted.
Speaker 3:Take it and run.
Speaker 5:Well, his legacy is not going to turn out well, he would not be the first American president in history to have a foolish or poor know there's what? At least two dozen presidents. People don't even mention that. You wouldn't even know unless you looked at a list of who's president when you know.
Speaker 3:Yes, alright. So let's take another break, and this time this time I'm going to share Benny Benny show. He's also he's another very popular channel political channel on YouTube. So we'll be right back in five minutes.
Speaker 5:The Benny show.
Speaker 3:Yes, Benny show.
Speaker 9:Can't stop looking at it. It's too beautiful. Can we call Pennsylvania for Trump? Yet it's over. It's over, it's over. Oh, this is beautiful. Look at this Barron Trump voting for his father. Look at that Barron Trump voting for his dad. What a beautiful photo. Look at this young man. They're going to need to make a taller voting booth for Barron.
Speaker 9:Melania Trump. Posting Melania Trump, the official Melania Trump account, with three million subs posting first time voting for his dad. Oh, oh, it's beautiful. They're breaking the needle. Look at it. Look at the needle. It's crossing the 300 electoral vote mark. They're breaking the needle. Look at it. Look at the needle. It's crossing the 300 electoral vote mark. They're breaking the needle. We have full Trump domination right now 88% likely chance. The needle is broken. It's all. The needle is broken. Holy smokes.
Speaker 9:New York time has now projected Donald Trump to win the popular vote. Kamala campaign is no longer giving any comments. You remember these smug a-holes at the Kamala campaign? You have anybody in your neighborhood with a Kamala sign that says Kamala, obviously no longer giving comment. You shut up the cackle. That alone makes that alone Makes Donald Trump a great icon. Oh, look at us. There we go in the feed inception.
Speaker 9:Okay, president Trump now expected to win the popular vote. Ladies and gentlemen, tell Kamala, I want her to know it was me. It's too good. It's too good. The final revenge no tweet from Kamala Harris HQ. In four hours, bernie Moreno winning in the Senate so exciting for us.
Speaker 9:Okay, boys, I've asked for a couple of videos. Let's go ahead and lock and load. We've been teasing a lot of this stuff I want because Pennsylvania has not been called yet, because Pennsylvania still looks like this okay, 71% in A hundred and fifty thousand vote margin for Donald Trump. Pennsylvania has not been called yet. I want to show you what absolute, chilling, blood-curdling panic looks like on MSNBC as they talk through the dominance of President Trump's performance in Pennsylvania. Ladies and gentlemen, this is MSNBC all but admitting. All but admitting that it's over, as I can report to you. I can report to you that the Secret Service has now moved massive security vehicles to Mar-a-Lago. It's happening, it's happening, it's happening. The Secret Service has now moved a full presidential detail to Mar-a-Lago. They know, they know the internals are already there. Elon Musk just tweeted game set, match. Elon Musk just said Pennsylvania's won. We're finished here, ladies and gentlemen. We haven't called it yet, so we're going to stay locked in. Stay locked in, but here's what they're saying on MSNBC this is doom for them.
Speaker 2:Let's go Another in here in Berks County, again with one of the larger Hispanic populations in Pennsylvania. Here's Trump with just about basically the vote here, winning it by 13. Look at that. Four years ago he won it by eight. This is exactly what the Trump campaign said it was going to do in a place like Burke County. It was going to take that and it was going to make it double digits. They've made it double digits in Burke County. We check in on Luzerne County and again we've been talking about this one as that same day vote comes in. This is Wilkes-Barre. This is Hazleton, another county with a substantial Hispanic population, one of the highest in Pennsylvania. Now Trump has hit his 2020 number there and he's got a long way to go here. All that vote that's still to come in we expect to be election day vote the pattern, the trend is pretty clear here. So again you're seeing Trump in good position in one of those big counties, densely populated counties in northeast Pennsylvania.
Speaker 2:Take a look down here at Cumberland County. We talked about this one a little while ago. This was a big hope for Democrats in Pennsylvania. Coming into tonight, again, 95 percent means basically it's all in Cumberland County. Again, 2020 looked like this. It's basically the same. It's a fraction of a point different, but that's a win for the Trump campaign because in the context look at this it was an 18 point race. Trump won here by 18 points in 2016. Democrats made a huge jump. This was one of their biggest in the state in 2020, bringing it down to 10. They wanted to keep this going. Tonight they didn't. Trump was able to stop the losses in Cumberland County. So again, that's something that encourages that his campaign exactly wanted to see. Right there, we're starting to get Erie County Again. This would be the vote by mail in Erie County. The story we've been talking about elsewhere now is going to play out in Erie. This is the bellwether. It's one of the two that switched sides to Biden in 2020.
Speaker 2:The name of the game in the final two-thirds of the vote is can Trump catch Harris with the election day vote? Just checking in on Philadelphia, we're up to two-thirds of the vote now in Philadelphia and again, this is just Philadelphia, the city, and again I think this is becoming a bit of a theme we're seeing in multiple states now the Hispanic vote. Why did Trump make some progress? It was small, but it was there in Philadelphia in 2020. It was because he improved with Hispanic voters in Hispanic areas of the city with two thirds of the vote in Philadelphia. Now it's 7721.
Speaker 2:Well, that looks terrible. But compare that to 2020 and look at that. Trump is running three and a half points better in Philadelphia than he did in 2020. Harris now four points off the Biden number. There is more mail to come, more vote by mail to come in Philadelphia. That will be a boost to Harris. But there's also more same day vote to come and you can see Trump is running above his 2020 levels there. Vote to come and you can see Trump is running above his 2020 levels there. So where this lands, the Trump campaign's goal in Philadelphia is basically get that Biden number under 80 percent. So far, they're on course to do that. There's the wild card of the mail there. That adds a lot of volatility to this. But again, you're starting to, as these counties fill in, you're starting to see some patterns, and patterns you're not just seeing in one state, you're seeing them in multiple states right now.
Speaker 9:Trump has dominantly, dominantly rolled through the Keystone State like one of those massive fracking vehicles, pulling votes out of communities, Inspiring, surviving an assassination attempt, giving hope To the state where our Very independence was ratified Independence Hall. And now, ladies and gentlemen, at the precipice of the new American revolution, we sit, the new American revolution. Here we are, we are watching. 74% in Pennsylvania. This is it. This is the ballgame Donald Trump's, at 246, 270 to win. He has 50 million votes. Kamala Harris has 45 million votes. What? Okay, let's go.
Speaker 3:Okay, so it looks like Trump is winning the popular vote across the board.
Speaker 5:Yeah it's. I don't even think this is going to wind up being close.
Speaker 3:It's a landslide, you think?
Speaker 5:I wouldn't say a landslide, because we got one, two, three, four, five, six, seven swing states.
Speaker 3:Okay.
Speaker 5:And.
Speaker 3:I'm still counting.
Speaker 5:Only North Carolina, only North Carolina, only North Carolina is rogered up so far Out of all the small states.
Speaker 3:How about Pennsylvania? Did you, what did they?
Speaker 5:That guy, justin. He said it, but Pennsylvania hasn't finalized anything enough for reporting yet.
Speaker 3:Yeah, because that would be.
Speaker 5:At least not as far as the Associated Press can tell.
Speaker 3:I think everyone is saying that once Pennsylvania comes out, then we'll be dead, we will be finished. Well, see, here's another thing, we will be finished, well see here's another thing Right now.
Speaker 5:Trump's almost 50% across the board and the majority in six out of the seven swing states, with the exception of Arizona. No five out of the seven swing states with the exception of Arizona. He's 49 in Arizona and we're not getting results on Nevada yet, or New Mexico. New Mexico is not a swing state, nevada, arizona.
Speaker 5:Georgia, georgia, north Carolina is the only one that's posted saying Trump's got the electoral vote for it. Pennsylvania, michigan and Wisconsin haven't rogered up the electoral vote not yet, so I'm not going off popular votes. What I'm looking at is vote tally information. Okay, popular vote's nice, but it would be a whole different presidential campaign if popular votes was what won you the presidency.
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 5:Yes, the minute they. That's why they haven't gotten rid of the electoral college.
Speaker 3:Yeah, the minute they get rid of that it's a whole nother story. Yeah, earlier during the day I was kind of checking in on you know, like traditional media news outlet, and I only watched for three minutes. I cannot take it anymore. They are so biased. They are reporting, you know. Of course they are more into Kamala Harris and saying Trump is losing.
Speaker 5:It's so hard to even sit there and just listen to anything you're saying, because you're right. You can tell exactly who that media outlet is supporting, why just what they're putting out. No, it's terrible. It never used to be. I wouldn't say it never used to be like that, but I remember when I was a kid the media used to be hard on every politician.
Speaker 3:Yes, yeah, so not right now. I can tell it's turning around like, like the all the other channel that we're sharing today tonight, like these are independent podcasters, independent media outlets want to bring up, is um twitter x because um, elon musk bought it and then they turned to be a very open, free of speech uh platform because uh, remember we were talking about censorship a couple months ago about google, and then joe rogan's podcast, that interview trump. That episode was I don't know how many millions of you right now, but then nobody can find it under the search bar on YouTube and it's like very popular show, millions of views, and it's not even shown as a trending video. That's just, you know, that's really bad.
Speaker 5:You know you're actually right and it's not. I'm not. That's really bad, yeah, and you know you're absolutely right and it's not. I'm not going to say it's not right. What I'm going to say is this you should be very scared. You should be not only very scared, you should be outrightly incensed, and I don't care which party you support, you should be insanely pissed off and incensed and you should be screaming to your congressman and your senator with just vitriol hate mail for this, for these actions, because you let them do it now.
Speaker 5:It'll never come back. I mean, it's so many in so many institutions. In so many ways it's just outright okay now to mislead people.
Speaker 3:Yes, mislead, and then you know also misinformation and try to hide the truth. You know so and after Elon Musk took over the platform, it's become very open and this is actually a good thing because it influenced other platform to be followed. You know, otherwise they're going to lose the attractions. You know, I think TikTok has been putting in the front line because right now I have all platforms.
Speaker 5:They'll follow to a certain degree, but they're still going to do like TikTok.
Speaker 3:Yeah, because I've.
Speaker 5:They're still going to do the same thing they were doing before.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I remember we were talking about Olympic a couple months ago and then the most banned or ticked down, or you're not following the community guideline. It's all from TikTok, most of them.
Speaker 5:Yeah, yes, like I said, everybody cries about policy censorship. And I'm like, yes, it's like I said, you know, everybody cries about policy and censorship. And I'm like, hey, you made it okay to mislead people online. It's going to come back and bite you and that's what. I'm just going to laugh. I will laugh at everybody's face. Everybody's face, because these politicians don't understand. There are people that understand the internet way better than you. If there's one thing you should have protected and made sure it had high standards, it's the fucking internet. But you didn't. So guess what? It's going to be used against them too, just like it's getting used against everybody else. I get ads and stuff on the internet all the time. My phone half the time. I don't even answer my phone anymore If you don't pop up with the name of your business clearly displayed or the name of somebody I don't even bother because it only comes up as spam risk.
Speaker 5:I used to answer the calls.
Speaker 5:It was either somebody trying to sell me something, somebody trying to get me to join some group, somebody trying to. They just want money. I can help you do this. Why are you calling me no? You see all these ads like, oh, you need this and this tool and app to drive business. You drive more customers to your business and I'm like no, no, no. I would recommend people not listen to any of that and don't do it. You know research, the traditional methods and how it's done. Don't rely on robo stuff because you've got to roll a cold call in random numbers, more people that roger up and they say oh, mcdonald's, it's just going to drive your image negatively Hard. Yeah, did you drive me? It's just going to drive your image negatively hard did you get any.
Speaker 3:Did you get any politic text messages? I did everybody did.
Speaker 1:I got political text messages.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah, I'm thinking how did they get my number?
Speaker 5:Yeah.
Speaker 3:I say, I was thinking, how did they get my number? Yeah, yeah. Our personal information is in a dark web they call it.
Speaker 5:They did the same thing. Everybody else is doing that cold calls you and sends you texts out of the blue and comes up on your phone and spams.
Speaker 3:They bought your information online yeah, people are selling it too yeah, they bought your information online.
Speaker 5:Personally, I'm like you know what. I feel like I should get 5% of that. So I'll be okay, because I know you're doing a lot of people. I feel like I should get like 5% of that. Yeah, I'll be okay, because I know you're doing a lot of people. I feel like I get like 2% of that.
Speaker 1:Hmm.
Speaker 5:You know every time you sell my name on this I get 2% of that cut.
Speaker 3:Hey, I think, well, I think it's going to eventually become like that, when you know when we're talking about copyrights or data sharing.
Speaker 5:Yeah, because you're selling me Right but I don't get a cut of that.
Speaker 3:Yeah, and last time we talked about what we call crypto technology, the, the like. Let's say, if an author is um writing a book, you know especially textbook. If you, if you finish the class, you don't need a book textbook anymore. Usually you resell it to the second person, right? And then the?
Speaker 5:author. It's been that way for generations upon generations. You know what? That's what all college kids is Done with your college textbook Sell it back to the bookstore. You will get what you paid for, but you get a few bucks.
Speaker 3:Yeah, but the thing is, the person who wrote it only get one time of residuals.
Speaker 4:Yep.
Speaker 3:So the new technology with NFT, nft can be able to track that and keep getting the residual to the second hand, third hand, fourth hand, so on and so forth. Yeah, that's what I heard.
Speaker 5:Yeah they have it. But then you got people like Spotify. They do that and you get it cut eventually. But you're getting like what, a 0.4% cut, I don't know, off of your I'm not music, right, you're talking about songs. I'm not into music either, but I know that's been a big issue that a lot of people have started pulling away from those platforms. It's because a lot of people who put out good music that pulls in stuff they've pulled away because those contracts are just trash.
Speaker 3:Yeah, so NFT will hopefully be more mainstream and will fix all those copyrights and be able to leverage on more and more residuals for those creators. All right, we're going to take another short break and this is going to show a clip with Tucker Collison and we will just come back with our final thoughts and see where this goes. Okay, I will be back in five minutes, thank you, thank you.
Speaker 6:Thank you, thank you, you know, and come up with a lower number for the senate. But, like you know, they're going to spend 200 million against tim sheehy in montana, like chuck schumer at 200. You know what 200 million is in montana a, a state of a million people with a cheap media market. Like that's billions. If you were spending it in a bigger state, it's insane. I'd love to see the presidential race here's 300 million a piece run it like a business, do it efficiently, come up with, make sure people actually know, because when you have unlimited funds it's sort of like Ukraine, right, when you have unlimited funds, why would you ever get to the table? Why would you ever know work? Why would you ever like do something smart? You know I I'd love to see something like that inherited money.
Speaker 10:It's why they're all drug addicts right, yeah, it's, it's.
Speaker 6:It's disgusting, and you know when I think of the money that's blown on these things, and then you know the the special interests than this, and then everyone gets like, man, it'd be nice to cut some of that out and just be able to do what Americans actually want, not what the guy that bought you for the last two years while you're running a presidential, you know actually wants you to do. And so, yeah, I guess it's why they also hate Trump is he hasn't been bought.
Speaker 6:We definitely he doesn't care you know, you know when he goes to fundraisers.
Speaker 6:I see them yell at these guys that are big donors. They're like you, I mean I I won't even mention names, you, you'll know them because I'm I'm sure you actually loathe uh, some of these people, because I know I do. But I mean I saw a couple times where, you know, they just sort of went really anti-trump and then try to come back around. He doesn't even open the door, just just talks to them like you would a petulant child and I'm just like, well, you know there's 25 million dollars out the window, but, man, it was worth listening to that because I just watched that about an hour ago.
Speaker 10:I don't know if you're in the room with your dad, but there are all these big donors in the other room right there and, um, he was joking with one of his very famous, one of the richest people in the world and he starts making fun of him. Yeah, like like ridiculous, like I don't think anyone has spoken to this billionaire that way ever, and it was.
Speaker 6:You know, it was joking around, but this example that I'm talking about, like, was not at all joking around and it didn't matter. You see, this guy that's, you know, for 12, 15, 20 billion dollars, just like, walk away with his tail between his legs. Now he doesn't give you the money which you need to combat some of the stuff, but, like, I was like you know what we probably could have deployed that capital, but, man, that was worth it, like that was. That was the best 25 million I've ever seen, just burned. I love that sit with lighter fluid and set it ablaze. It was sort of like.
Speaker 6:So, yeah, I man, it was interesting, like last night, just, you know, being in michigan at two o'clock in the morning watching an entire stadium still energized and invigorated, and just being like sort of, you know, I think we win, I think we do great, like, whatever it is. But it was like man, that was sort of an end of an era. Like trump on the campaign trail, I know, uh, I don't think we'll ever, I don't think we'll ever see that again. There's, you know, there's not enough personality in politics. Uh, there's not enough sort of.
Speaker 10:It's so overwhelming. I mean that you can. I met all these people who've been to. You know, I've been to 40 trump rallies and it's like why? And the answer is because they're so fun.
Speaker 6:Yeah, no, I mean there are. There are people that have been to over a hundred, that I've met and I'm like I'm not sure like I've been to a hundred. Like you know my theory on that. When they're like, you know, I'm not the guy looking for credit, I'm not the guy like trying no, you're not it true, I'm not the guy trying to be in the selfie. You know, like you know politics, there's all these people like well, why are you here? Like you could actually do something if you were out of like, in all fairness, like you're adding, if Trump's in the room, like virtually no one else adds any value.
Speaker 10:Right, I've been there.
Speaker 6:He'll be fine, he doesn't need your help, he doesn't need your like sage advice of bullshit. You know, of bullshit, uh, you know. But you know you still see a lot of that where they're just there to be in the background, to be seen there, and I'm like, so I'm the opposite, like yesterday, you know I did want to do the last day. Uh, yesterday was the only day in the entire cycle that I've spent with my father, like I just was it fun, it was great. But I I'm kind of like my dad that way. I rather have the mic also. So it's like you know, I'm sitting there at the end of four rallies. It's, you know, 5 30 in the morning and I'm like exhausted and you know what it's like.
Speaker 6:You know very well, you get up on the stage when we did our great event up in jacksonville and there's like 17 000 people there and I'm like you get done. It's like, okay, it's bedtime. It's like, yeah, I'm not going to sleep for hours like I'm just, I know you absorb some of that energy.
Speaker 10:when the crowd gives you that, you absorb that energy.
Speaker 6:I'm looking at my dad and I'm like, honestly, I'm always impressed with him, whether it's getting shot in the face and coming back defiant, but his overall energy it's like it's 6 am. He's been going since 6 am, 24 hours. He's had thousands of people that he's been entertaining. It's not like a Kamala Harris speech speech which is like seven minutes off a prompter. I mean you can have a 45 minute speech in the prompter but he's up there for you know, 120 minutes.
Speaker 6:It's like I'm like for the love of god, like word. We did the first rally in north carolina. We got there relatively on time and like by the time we got done we're like, well, we're already two hours behind schedule. I'm like I'm not gonna get to sleep tonight and I'm going to be on TV and radio all morning. So I pulled an all-nighter. But the guy's 78, pulls an all-nighter, is doing TV all day, doesn't go to sleep at all, and I'm like I don't even know that I don't have that at 46.
Speaker 10:I'm like tonight he was in there. I don't know You're probably working, but he was in there. But he was in there and the returns are coming up at the first, you know, the first tranche, at seven, all his biggest donors standing around and he's doing this like play by play in front of everybody just for like 40 minutes and it's hilarious and he remembers everyone and he remembers when they got on board, especially especially the guys that got on early.
Speaker 6:But it it, the recall, uh, you know, it is actually amazing. You know, like when they start doing the like, the most offensive stuff I see is like when they're like, well, trump's in the later stages of dementia and Alzheimer's, I'm like you're the same people that told you that Joe Biden is alive and well, I'm like, uh, yeah, I don't. You know it's been a weekend at Bernie's for four years, but you know he really, you know he gets it and so yeah.
Speaker 10:no, he's not in the later stages of dementia. No, I think it's fair to say. You don't have to like him, but he's not suffering from dementia.
Speaker 6:Yeah, well, you combine, but you combine just the full weight and force of the mainstream media. You know a trillion dollar industry. You combine that. You add in you know big tech. You add in you know three to one outspin and it's like it's hard. Like you add in you know three to one outspin and it's like it's hard. Like I feel like if I was a leftist, like we'd win elections by like ninety nine, point nine to like point oh one, and the point oh one is like people who just filled in the wrong circle, or something like that.
Speaker 10:Like it's actually hard to believe we can even be competitive. But that's how insane the Democrat Party is today. I got to be right at the top of the list.
Speaker 6:Oh, a couple of those. I want to juxtapose them to 2016. Martha Raddatz, the very unbiased moderator of the Hillary Clinton debate. She's there in tears on TV. I'm like you think she's really unbiased, you think there's even a little bit, and you look at the way they've analyzed the coverage, like a little bit. And you look at the way they've analyzed the coverage, you know 93% negative against Trump, like 276% positive for Kamala Harris. I'm like like she hasn't even given you guys your policies. Like it'd be one thing if like hey, you excuse, just overall, you know lack of charisma. But like she wouldn't even tell them their policies, it's fine. It's fine Like we'll figure out the policies on january 20th we're all self-respect it.
Speaker 6:It's brutal, right like it's it again it's.
Speaker 10:It's hard to believe that you can even have a close. All this is just there's something about her, it's just yeah. When I was a kid, I was a magazine writer and I went down to florida interviewed jeb bush on his education policies. He was like an idiot, but I was required to think he was impressive. And nicole devonish she was that then called was the little gatekeeper. I remember thinking this woman's really stupid and really kind of nasty and self-important. And then the next thing I wake up and she's got a show on msnbc and she's like the most dishonest, weepiest, just like sanctimonious. Don't you think that her like melting down on MSNBC will make all of it worth it? A hundred?
Speaker 6:percent. Like you know, even you know 50 hours of congressional testimony for treason. Like you know, like I, they're like why'd you work so hard on this? I was like, well cause, I don't want to end up in the gulags next. I mean you and I would have fun if they put us next to each other.
Speaker 6:It'd be fun. Yeah, They'd probably separate us, but it's insane. But no, it's interesting With the media, with politics in general. I came from the business world. You don't just get lucky in business. You can get lucky once. But the guys that have 40-year careers, they're impressive people, Politics, media they're actually incredibly unimpressive and it's sort of amazing no-transcript heroic. I don't ask for much, but I was like I'm all in on things, just like.
Speaker 10:That story will never be written, but that was one of the great moments in any politics I've ever seen, and I've seen a lot of politics you definitely exerted.
Speaker 6:I exerted 10 000 of my political capital. I may get like I may get a favor from my father in like 2076. You know I used it all, but you know it was, it was great. After the debate, cause I and it actually worked out.
Speaker 10:He turned out to be amazing.
Speaker 6:Listen, if I go all in, it's usually like I feel really strong. I don't. I don't go all in. Often there's not a lot of things. I'm sort of indifferent, Like I'll work around some of the bad stuff, Right, this was one that was like it was really important. I mean like, but there have been like no hiccups.
Speaker 6:Well you know, honestly, it's sort of interesting. I've had like a lot of these like sort of Republican donor class people come up to me, which is really stupid of them, by the way. But they're like you know, Don, like I was MFing you for like three weeks about that decision because I really wanted X, Y, Z, and then, like you really shouldn't tell me that you were doing that behind my back.
Speaker 6:You know like I appreciate the candor now, but I'm like, you know that's like, I don't know Like. I'm going to remember that Like it's like, but they're like, but you were right. And then you know, and the only one that mattered, I wanted my father to be happy, but you know it was after I'm just turning off my phone, turning off my phone, and it was like I had like 12 missed calls from my dad.
Speaker 8:I'm like oh boy.
Speaker 6:That's usually not great and he just gets on the phone he goes. You know, don, I did that for you, don, but that was a 10. And that, like a huge win in Trump world is like a six. So when he was like that was a 10, that's as close to a 10 as you're gonna get, I was like, okay, we did, we got it.
Speaker 6:But you know he was watching him even that first week as the narrative they were trying to crush this guy. They would have tried to crush anyone. I understand that, but you know they're trying to crush him and I just watched him on the sunday shows. Do three in a row just absolutely dismantle the narrative, because our problem on our side is like everyone's. So they want to be loved by these people who literally hate their guts. Oh yeah, uh, you know we joke about the gulags, but they would gladly put any one of us in if they could just snap their fingers and make it happen. And you know it was he was watching that where jd didn't just take their.
Speaker 6:You know january 6th was an interaction. Okay, it was an interaction, but you know it wasn't like it. No, this is ridiculous, what are you talking about? And just absolutely crushed these people and it's because no one's ever pushed back. I know it's not that they're smart. It's like people want to get invited back on the show so they concede so much ground. So you're starting a negotiation with already less than you're even hoping to get and it's like, well, why would you do that? And it's like, well, like, why would?
Speaker 3:you do that, and he's been one of the first people to really break the mold on that and just sort of you know not, not just accept the narrative.
Speaker 5:OK, thomas, so what do you have for us? Any updates on the polls? As far as the updates go right now, it Trump is still crushing it by like 4 million votes. 4.1 million votes.
Speaker 3:Is this like across the board, across all states?
Speaker 5:Overall comparison, trump's crushing it by 4.1 million votes. Paris has got. A long way to go and, as the other states are counting up the tallies and producing their records, he's still dominating.
Speaker 3:Is it too early to call?
Speaker 5:No.
Speaker 3:Huh.
Speaker 5:No, no, no, Too early to call. I don't know, it's hard to say about the swing states Because, because I can't see the overall Balance between the two Votes, okay, like.
Speaker 3:I'm looking at.
Speaker 9:Georgia right now.
Speaker 3:It's a 2% vote, so that's a couple hundred thousand Votes.
Speaker 5:Okay, like I'm looking at Georgia right now, it's a 2% vote.
Speaker 3:So that's a couple hundred thousand votes. Yeah, because I saw a post earlier during the day. It's from CBS and it's stating that it might look like whoever is winning, but the vote is still counting, so we won't be able to know until tomorrow or a couple of days later. That don't make sense because you know, you and I know like with today's technology that's not going to add up because, remember, back in the Obama era, we are able to know on the same day, right? Remember that.
Speaker 5:Yeah, yeah, they should have all the votes done by tomorrow morning at the latest. I hope so.
Speaker 3:The.
Speaker 5:Thing with that is the swing. I hope so. See, the thing with that is the swing states are really close as far as how the votes are going, and I say really close because we're talking about a difference of a couple hundred thousand.
Speaker 3:But that also means. How many? Did they announce? Any swing states that finished counting yet, or they are still counting.
Speaker 5:Only North Carolina has Tallyed up as as being One way or the other. North Carolina is 90% into their reporting process. They've got three, one, two, three, four, so they've got five counties. No, seven counties left worth of tallying to do in North Carolina. But at the same time it's already said he's already won the electoral vote because he's already passed the number of votes he needed to win the electoral vote for that state Got it. That's why it's that way. As far as the other swing states, they haven't passed that number of electoral votes needed to win.
Speaker 3:All right, any states on the West Coast. Do they announce anything on the West?
Speaker 5:Coast. Nevada and Arizona Are on the west coast and Nevada is not saying nothing. No one is getting any information out of Nevada so far, one way or the other, but Arizona is. I don't even know why Arizona is only at 50%, because it's 9 o'clock at night 50% of what Counting. Yes, They've only got 50% reported on the rates.
Speaker 3:It's 9 o'clock at night. We got three people in the whole state trying to count.
Speaker 8:Well they are. I don't know what's there.
Speaker 2:Are they two hours or three hours behind us.
Speaker 3:Like faster than California Mountain time. Central time.
Speaker 5:I think they're like same time zone as we are, but I mean even still.
Speaker 3:Okay.
Speaker 5:Oh, not Nevada. New Mexico, did I say Nevada? Nevada hasn't reported anything. Mexico oh shit, I forgot to put time. New Mexico.
Speaker 3:Renew Mexico New.
Speaker 5:Mexico. They're pretty cool State flag. They're on two different time zones. In New Mexico, oh wow, the line crosses through it Tuesday, November 5th 2024. So they're an hour ahead at most in New Mexico.
Speaker 3:I see, okay, so they should, they should. They closed the poll An hour before us, yeah.
Speaker 2:The.
Speaker 3:The voting. You know the voting place closed at 7pm.
Speaker 5:Yeah, so you know you know the voting place closed at 7 pm. Yeah, so you know. They're trying to get those last couple hundred boxes counted up, and it's three of them One to count, one to move the boxes over and one to take the box away.
Speaker 5:Yeah, Okay well, yes, yes, yeah. Okay, well, yes, yes, yes. Throwing it in piles yeah, but no, they should be so much further Like. Georgia is at 93% reporting. North Carolina is still reporting, but, like I said, it's already won the electoral vote. Pennsylvania is still reporting. They're at 83%. Hasn't won the electoral vote yet. Hasn't been reported to have won it yet. Wisconsin's at 75%.
Speaker 3:Michigan to have won it yet Wisconsin's is 75%.
Speaker 5:Michigan is at 44%.
Speaker 3:Okay.
Speaker 5:Huh, they probably got the two people that were helping Arizona. They got sent over to Michigan.
Speaker 1:I know right With 2024 technology right.
Speaker 5:You know. And then that's another thing. As citizens we always got to remember the states do. The federal government has a lot of authority, but at the same time, you got to remember the states have a great deal of authority themselves. There's a lot of things that the federal government can mandate and demand and blah, blah, blah back and forth. But the states, you know, they have a lot of authority.
Speaker 5:A lot of people think it's like you know, like governors and mayors. No, no, no, no, no. You're the governor of a state. You've got a lot of pull, you've got a lot of pull. The only reason your congressman and senators got pull is because they argue with the congressmen and senators from other states about how to make stuff go as far as federally is concerned. The governor runs your state, end of story. The governor runs your state.
Speaker 5:Say mayors of cities, they can't go against. They can't be like nah, la is not doing that. We're not feeling it Up here in Pasadena. We can't be like. The mayor of Pasadena can't be like yeah, we're not quite kind Up here in Pasadena. The mayor of Pasadena can't be like we're not quite feeling that mandate there, governor. The governor's like shut up. You know what the governor's like wait a minute, you're not even a full-time mayor. We have a mayor in Pasadena, but it's not a full-time mayor. We don't have a full-time mayor. The city's not big enough, the revenue's not enough to even have that. There's no mayor. The same way you have a mayor in Los Angeles, we don't have that you have it in Long Beach.
Speaker 5:Who's the mayor in Long Beach? You're the mayor. Who's the mayor in Long Beach?
Speaker 3:That's a good question. I don't recall his name, oops.
Speaker 5:You got a keyboard right there.
Speaker 3:Yeah, but you know it's going to get stuck, anyways. So I want to do yeah, let's do some final thoughts.
Speaker 1:So I'll start.
Speaker 3:So you know, no matter who wins in this election, we should be stay calm, stay peaceful. Stay calm, stay peaceful, because at the end of the day, you know, this is an election and we all do our part. So we just have to see the outcome and, hopefully, whoever's in charge, don't play games, because I did hear, you know, somebody said maybe, when it comes to January, we're just not going to certify Trump. If he actually wins the election, then that's going to create trouble, you know that's going to create yeah.
Speaker 5:That's one thing I definitely hope we don't have to go through again. That was I don't have to go through again. That was. I don't care what anybody says that was. In my opinion that was totally embarrassing, childish and very small of Trump to go on that campaign. You know it was rigged. It was rigged campaign. I'm like you know what. If you wanted to go that route, the first thing you should have been was go get the freaking evidence.
Speaker 5:You know, call for an investigation, get the evidence, then bring it out. Don't turn it into a circus. You know, and I mean there's been a lot of I say he's had quite a few missteps, but they nobody's perfect. You know a lot of a lot of leaders have had missteps and bounce backs and and lefts and rights. But, um, you know to turn to turn the event that you're, you know to turn to turn the event that you're competing in into a circus because you don't like the outcome it's.
Speaker 1:It says way more about you as a leader than it does about the event.
Speaker 5:Yeah, if you felt that strongly, you should have did it the right way.
Speaker 3:Yes. So, like I mentioned, everybody should stay calm and we already did our part in voting and all that. So let's just wait and see the results and I want to thank you everybody who's watching joining us tonight. And I do read a lot of comments on the side. Some are really good and some are very nasty, but it's okay because we're open. You know, we are very open to all comments and all different type of free of speech, right? So thank you, thomas, for joining us and I guess we will continue our life next week.
Speaker 5:Yes, we will, and my apologies, victor Gordo, that's the mayor of Pasadena. What I should? No, I didn't know, my apologies, victor Gordo is the mayor of Pasadena. Okay, so nobody in town can be like how?
Speaker 1:you don't know.
Speaker 5:How? You don't know I got it. I got it to make the record right. All right, everyone.
Speaker 3:Thank you for joining us.
Speaker 5:We appreciate your time and your energy and I appreciate you having me on Shelby on your show Of course, it's always a pleasure same here.
Speaker 3:have a good night everyone good night everyone bye, bye.