1 00:00:00,680 --> 00:00:03,960 Speaker 1: Like many of you, I am extremely worried about the 2 00:00:03,960 --> 00:00:06,360 Speaker 1: future of the country. We all know that we are 3 00:00:06,400 --> 00:00:10,200 Speaker 1: in perilous times and we have no idea where this 4 00:00:10,240 --> 00:00:12,600 Speaker 1: thing is heading. We know that we're no longer the 5 00:00:12,640 --> 00:00:16,960 Speaker 1: constitutional republic that are founding fathers envisioned. It feels and 6 00:00:17,120 --> 00:00:20,600 Speaker 1: it seems and appears as if we are marching towards authoritarianism. 7 00:00:20,720 --> 00:00:23,159 Speaker 1: We are turning into a Banana republic where they just 8 00:00:23,239 --> 00:00:26,720 Speaker 1: start jailing political opponents. We've seen them go after grandmothers 9 00:00:26,800 --> 00:00:30,520 Speaker 1: for praying and peacefully protesting at abortion clinics to what 10 00:00:30,560 --> 00:00:33,440 Speaker 1: they did to the January six ers. Now President Donald 11 00:00:33,479 --> 00:00:36,880 Speaker 1: Trump could go to jail. So where is this thing heading? 12 00:00:37,200 --> 00:00:39,080 Speaker 1: Where is this country heading? 13 00:00:39,720 --> 00:00:40,199 Speaker 2: I don't know. 14 00:00:40,720 --> 00:00:44,919 Speaker 1: But who better to turn to than former Speaker Nuke Aningrich. 15 00:00:45,280 --> 00:00:48,440 Speaker 1: Not only is he a professor of history or was 16 00:00:48,440 --> 00:00:51,080 Speaker 1: a professor of history, but he's been a major part 17 00:00:51,360 --> 00:00:55,000 Speaker 1: of history as Speaker of the House, as someone who 18 00:00:55,600 --> 00:00:58,200 Speaker 1: was the co author in the architect of the Contract 19 00:00:58,280 --> 00:01:01,160 Speaker 1: with America, who led to our publican victory in the 20 00:01:01,200 --> 00:01:04,840 Speaker 1: nineteen ninety four congressional election. We're going to get his 21 00:01:05,000 --> 00:01:08,520 Speaker 1: take and his analysis on what is the future of America? 22 00:01:09,200 --> 00:01:11,880 Speaker 2: Where is this heading? What does he think? 23 00:01:12,400 --> 00:01:14,640 Speaker 1: Also, make sure to go out and get his new book, 24 00:01:14,880 --> 00:01:18,479 Speaker 1: March the Majority, check out his podcast with iHeart Newts 25 00:01:18,480 --> 00:01:21,679 Speaker 1: World and his website Gainbridge three to sixty dot com. 26 00:01:21,720 --> 00:01:30,759 Speaker 1: Here's new Gingridge speaker Gingridge, It's always a great honor 27 00:01:30,800 --> 00:01:33,200 Speaker 1: to have you on the show. You're just a brilliant man, 28 00:01:33,520 --> 00:01:36,840 Speaker 1: and so I'm just I don't know how much I'm 29 00:01:36,840 --> 00:01:38,640 Speaker 1: going to enjoy hearing what you have to say, because 30 00:01:38,640 --> 00:01:43,200 Speaker 1: it's probably depressing, but I am very interested in hearing 31 00:01:43,200 --> 00:01:46,480 Speaker 1: your analysis about where we are as a country and 32 00:01:46,720 --> 00:01:47,440 Speaker 1: where we're heading. 33 00:01:47,560 --> 00:01:49,800 Speaker 2: So I appreciate you making the time to join the show. 34 00:01:49,840 --> 00:01:52,240 Speaker 3: Sir, Well, I'm glad to do it, and I'm always 35 00:01:52,320 --> 00:01:54,840 Speaker 3: delighted to be with you and have a chance to 36 00:01:54,920 --> 00:01:57,160 Speaker 3: chat with you. And You're right, I don't know it 37 00:01:57,200 --> 00:02:01,240 Speaker 3: needs to be depressing, but it certainly is sobering, and 38 00:02:01,280 --> 00:02:04,640 Speaker 3: we are faced with some very big, very real choices 39 00:02:05,040 --> 00:02:07,200 Speaker 3: for the American people and for our country's future. 40 00:02:07,560 --> 00:02:12,399 Speaker 1: When you saw the guilty on all thirty four felony counts, 41 00:02:12,600 --> 00:02:14,200 Speaker 1: what went through your mind? 42 00:02:14,320 --> 00:02:16,240 Speaker 2: What did you start to think? What did you start 43 00:02:16,240 --> 00:02:16,840 Speaker 2: thinking about? 44 00:02:18,040 --> 00:02:21,720 Speaker 3: Well, I assume all along that would probably happen. You 45 00:02:21,720 --> 00:02:26,400 Speaker 3: have a totally corrupt district attorney rigging a set of 46 00:02:26,440 --> 00:02:30,600 Speaker 3: non crimes in a way which it virtually every lawyer 47 00:02:30,639 --> 00:02:34,239 Speaker 3: agrees will be thrown out. You had a judge who 48 00:02:34,680 --> 00:02:38,160 Speaker 3: clearly hates Trump and whose daughter is making millions of 49 00:02:38,200 --> 00:02:43,200 Speaker 3: dollars out of anti Trump activities. You had a jury 50 00:02:43,200 --> 00:02:45,840 Speaker 3: which was like most jories. I mean, if if the 51 00:02:45,960 --> 00:02:49,000 Speaker 3: judge wants to, he can truly shape a trial, and 52 00:02:49,080 --> 00:02:53,040 Speaker 3: if you watch the judge, he could. He rejected having 53 00:02:53,080 --> 00:02:57,000 Speaker 3: an expert from the Federal Election Commission testify, He cut 54 00:02:57,080 --> 00:03:00,600 Speaker 3: off other witnesses, He got mad at one witness for 55 00:03:00,639 --> 00:03:04,480 Speaker 3: having raised his eyebrows. You know, I mean, you just 56 00:03:04,520 --> 00:03:08,200 Speaker 3: go through item by item, and it's just struck me 57 00:03:08,320 --> 00:03:11,640 Speaker 3: that this was a rigged game. So I wasn't totally shocked. 58 00:03:11,680 --> 00:03:14,280 Speaker 3: I don't think President Trump was shocked that the rig 59 00:03:14,360 --> 00:03:16,120 Speaker 3: game produced a rigged result. 60 00:03:16,240 --> 00:03:19,799 Speaker 2: But that same you know, that's in vain. 61 00:03:21,600 --> 00:03:24,560 Speaker 1: Do you think he can successfully appeal in New York 62 00:03:24,760 --> 00:03:27,080 Speaker 1: given what we just saw in this case. 63 00:03:27,520 --> 00:03:29,680 Speaker 3: Well we don't know. I mean, the New York Appeals 64 00:03:29,800 --> 00:03:32,480 Speaker 3: Court is kind of weird. But he can't. He can't 65 00:03:32,520 --> 00:03:36,360 Speaker 3: successfully appeal quickly enough. I mean, first of all, let 66 00:03:36,400 --> 00:03:39,000 Speaker 3: me just say I think most Americans believe this is 67 00:03:39,040 --> 00:03:43,040 Speaker 3: a political trial, and most Americans have already discounted it. 68 00:03:44,080 --> 00:03:47,120 Speaker 3: There's no evidence that it's had a dramatic effect on 69 00:03:47,160 --> 00:03:50,880 Speaker 3: Trump's support, If anything, has had a dramatic effect on 70 00:03:51,320 --> 00:03:54,200 Speaker 3: people flocking to him and giving him money, and he 71 00:03:54,280 --> 00:03:56,960 Speaker 3: had far and away the best week of his campaign 72 00:03:57,440 --> 00:04:03,440 Speaker 3: in terms of fundraising. Second, I think that it's possible, 73 00:04:04,320 --> 00:04:08,600 Speaker 3: not certain, but possible, that the Supreme Court will intervene 74 00:04:09,080 --> 00:04:13,520 Speaker 3: because it is so blatantly politically wrong. It's such a 75 00:04:13,600 --> 00:04:18,479 Speaker 3: violation both of his President Trump's Eight Amendment rights to 76 00:04:18,560 --> 00:04:21,000 Speaker 3: know and advance what you're being charged with, which they 77 00:04:21,040 --> 00:04:24,880 Speaker 3: never made clear. Even in the conviction, it's not clear 78 00:04:25,360 --> 00:04:28,599 Speaker 3: what they're convicting him of. And at the same time, 79 00:04:29,279 --> 00:04:32,640 Speaker 3: the judge is violating his First Amendment rights to be 80 00:04:32,680 --> 00:04:36,839 Speaker 3: a candidate. And I just did a newsletter at gingrig 81 00:04:36,920 --> 00:04:41,480 Speaker 3: three sixty in which I outline that the people really 82 00:04:41,560 --> 00:04:45,880 Speaker 3: hurt by this judge aren't Donald Trump. They're the American people. 83 00:04:46,440 --> 00:04:49,760 Speaker 3: We have a right as a people to pick the 84 00:04:49,800 --> 00:04:53,279 Speaker 3: president we want, and to have some judge try to 85 00:04:53,400 --> 00:04:56,479 Speaker 3: rig the game to restrict our ability to do that 86 00:04:57,000 --> 00:05:00,599 Speaker 3: is clearly a violation of our constitutional rights as a 87 00:05:00,600 --> 00:05:03,680 Speaker 3: free people. And in that sense, I hope And I 88 00:05:03,760 --> 00:05:09,279 Speaker 3: noticed that Speaker Johnson, who is a constitutional lawyer, made 89 00:05:09,279 --> 00:05:12,919 Speaker 3: a similar point that this really should be taken up 90 00:05:12,960 --> 00:05:16,719 Speaker 3: by the Supreme Court. John You, who's a very famous 91 00:05:17,600 --> 00:05:22,120 Speaker 3: lawyer teaches at Berkeley, said the same thing the other 92 00:05:22,279 --> 00:05:29,360 Speaker 3: night on a television program. And I think that it's 93 00:05:29,360 --> 00:05:32,120 Speaker 3: important on Mark Levins Show, and it's important for us 94 00:05:32,160 --> 00:05:36,320 Speaker 3: to recognize that virtually every attorney who's looked at this 95 00:05:36,440 --> 00:05:39,359 Speaker 3: case thinks it's a phony case. I've said that I 96 00:05:39,400 --> 00:05:42,280 Speaker 3: think that it is a fake conviction, just as it 97 00:05:42,400 --> 00:05:45,960 Speaker 3: is fake news. We now have a fake conviction, and 98 00:05:46,000 --> 00:05:48,599 Speaker 3: that we need to remember that. But it clearly is 99 00:05:48,640 --> 00:05:51,800 Speaker 3: an all out effort by the Biden administration and the 100 00:05:51,839 --> 00:05:55,920 Speaker 3: Democrats to try to find some way to destroy Trump, 101 00:05:56,000 --> 00:05:59,359 Speaker 3: because I think they believe correctly that he is an 102 00:05:59,360 --> 00:06:02,200 Speaker 3: immortal back to their machine, and I think that they 103 00:06:02,279 --> 00:06:06,239 Speaker 3: believe correctly that he may well win and that nothing 104 00:06:06,240 --> 00:06:07,839 Speaker 3: they've done so far has stopped him. 105 00:06:07,920 --> 00:06:13,159 Speaker 1: Do you think that Judge Burshawn will put Donald Trump 106 00:06:13,160 --> 00:06:18,440 Speaker 1: in President Trump in jail? And how does that impact 107 00:06:18,480 --> 00:06:21,000 Speaker 1: the election If he does, oh, I. 108 00:06:20,920 --> 00:06:25,440 Speaker 3: Think would enrage the American people. You know, I mean, 109 00:06:25,600 --> 00:06:28,480 Speaker 3: the New York is a city somebody said the other 110 00:06:28,560 --> 00:06:30,440 Speaker 3: day that Trump would have been better off to have 111 00:06:30,440 --> 00:06:32,440 Speaker 3: gotten on the subway and punched somebody in the face, 112 00:06:32,839 --> 00:06:36,479 Speaker 3: because then the attorney, the district attorney, would never have 113 00:06:36,560 --> 00:06:40,279 Speaker 3: tried it. And I think, you know, this is a 114 00:06:40,320 --> 00:06:43,600 Speaker 3: city which has a huge problem with crime. It's criminal 115 00:06:43,680 --> 00:06:46,839 Speaker 3: justice system doesn't work. They have a no bail system. 116 00:06:47,480 --> 00:06:49,719 Speaker 3: You go down the list, and then you look at 117 00:06:49,760 --> 00:06:53,039 Speaker 3: how they're treating Donald Trump, and it's just clearly political. 118 00:06:53,800 --> 00:06:55,760 Speaker 3: Has nothing to do with the criminal justice system, It 119 00:06:55,760 --> 00:06:57,440 Speaker 3: has nothing to do with the rule of law. This 120 00:06:57,640 --> 00:07:02,320 Speaker 3: is politics. And I think from that standpoint that you know, 121 00:07:02,360 --> 00:07:05,440 Speaker 3: it actually has weakened the Democrats. I mean the number 122 00:07:05,480 --> 00:07:08,920 Speaker 3: of people who've heard from the last ten days who've said, 123 00:07:08,920 --> 00:07:12,920 Speaker 3: you know, I'm not really sure I'm for Trump, but 124 00:07:13,000 --> 00:07:16,080 Speaker 3: I'm sure that what they're doing is so wrong that 125 00:07:16,160 --> 00:07:18,240 Speaker 3: you have to vote for Trump just to send a 126 00:07:18,280 --> 00:07:21,200 Speaker 3: signal that we can't let this country slip into this 127 00:07:21,360 --> 00:07:25,080 Speaker 3: kind of you know, third world dictatorship behavior. And I 128 00:07:25,120 --> 00:07:27,840 Speaker 3: think they both have in that sense. The Democrats and 129 00:07:27,920 --> 00:07:30,840 Speaker 3: the Biden administration have both raised a lot of money 130 00:07:30,840 --> 00:07:35,520 Speaker 3: for Trump and have probably opened up a series of 131 00:07:36,960 --> 00:07:43,480 Speaker 3: situations where, in fact, the average American looks at them 132 00:07:43,480 --> 00:07:46,440 Speaker 3: and says, you know, if they can do this to 133 00:07:46,560 --> 00:07:51,080 Speaker 3: a billionaire former president who is the front runner and 134 00:07:51,120 --> 00:07:53,960 Speaker 3: will be the nominee of his party, what could they 135 00:07:53,960 --> 00:07:57,000 Speaker 3: do to me? And I think it creates a sense 136 00:07:57,000 --> 00:08:00,120 Speaker 3: that if we don't get this thing under control, no 137 00:08:00,200 --> 00:08:02,880 Speaker 3: one will be safe, there will be no rule of law, 138 00:08:03,480 --> 00:08:06,440 Speaker 3: and much of what we've called America will disappear. 139 00:08:07,640 --> 00:08:10,600 Speaker 1: I guess what I'm most fearful about is are we 140 00:08:10,600 --> 00:08:12,720 Speaker 1: already there? No? 141 00:08:12,840 --> 00:08:15,480 Speaker 3: I don't think so. I think I think we're in 142 00:08:15,520 --> 00:08:20,040 Speaker 3: a period where we're at a crossroads. I think four 143 00:08:20,040 --> 00:08:23,360 Speaker 3: more years of Biden than we might get there. They've 144 00:08:23,440 --> 00:08:28,680 Speaker 3: certainly done everything they could to rig the game, to 145 00:08:28,720 --> 00:08:32,840 Speaker 3: open up the border to millions of illegal immigrants, to 146 00:08:32,880 --> 00:08:37,959 Speaker 3: create a bureaucracy which is very far left and tries 147 00:08:38,000 --> 00:08:41,760 Speaker 3: to impose radical values that most Americans don't believe in. 148 00:08:42,559 --> 00:08:44,360 Speaker 3: In that sense, yes, I think that there's been a 149 00:08:44,400 --> 00:08:48,640 Speaker 3: really serious, all out effort. But this is a huge country. 150 00:08:48,679 --> 00:08:51,920 Speaker 3: This is you know, we're three hundred and thirty five 151 00:08:52,040 --> 00:08:56,800 Speaker 3: million people, and I think that the average American still 152 00:08:56,880 --> 00:09:01,360 Speaker 3: has a deep sense of opportunity of a better future 153 00:09:01,720 --> 00:09:05,080 Speaker 3: of freedom, and we don't like being pushed around. And 154 00:09:05,120 --> 00:09:07,760 Speaker 3: I think that we're going to that Joe Biden's going 155 00:09:07,800 --> 00:09:12,760 Speaker 3: to discover this fall that you know, when you have 156 00:09:12,800 --> 00:09:16,040 Speaker 3: a cognitive decline on the scale he has and you 157 00:09:16,200 --> 00:09:20,640 Speaker 3: have the kind of record that he has, I just 158 00:09:20,679 --> 00:09:22,360 Speaker 3: think he's going to have a very very hard time 159 00:09:22,400 --> 00:09:27,360 Speaker 3: getting re elected. And frankly, a Trump presidency this time 160 00:09:27,840 --> 00:09:31,880 Speaker 3: will be dramatically more impactful because he said four years 161 00:09:31,880 --> 00:09:34,400 Speaker 3: to think about what he learned. Remember when he won 162 00:09:34,480 --> 00:09:38,520 Speaker 3: in twenty sixteen, he'd never really been in politics. I 163 00:09:38,520 --> 00:09:42,640 Speaker 3: think he really underestimated how sick the bureaucracy was, how 164 00:09:42,679 --> 00:09:45,079 Speaker 3: hard it would fight him, how difficult it would be 165 00:09:45,120 --> 00:09:47,960 Speaker 3: to get control. And they've now had four years to 166 00:09:48,000 --> 00:09:50,760 Speaker 3: think that through, and I think that he will be 167 00:09:51,559 --> 00:09:55,160 Speaker 3: much more profound in his impact on the system in 168 00:09:55,200 --> 00:09:56,479 Speaker 3: a new term. 169 00:09:56,880 --> 00:10:00,400 Speaker 1: I've always believed in my core that you know, freedom 170 00:10:00,520 --> 00:10:03,360 Speaker 1: was ingrained in the American spirit and us as Americans, 171 00:10:03,400 --> 00:10:06,080 Speaker 1: but then COVID happened, and you know, the government said 172 00:10:06,160 --> 00:10:10,440 Speaker 1: jump and most of Americans said how high. So I 173 00:10:10,480 --> 00:10:15,280 Speaker 1: guess my faith in my fellow Americans has been greatly 174 00:10:15,280 --> 00:10:17,480 Speaker 1: diminished since then, if I'm being perfectly honest. 175 00:10:17,720 --> 00:10:21,960 Speaker 3: Well, but I think gradually over that period people became 176 00:10:22,080 --> 00:10:29,080 Speaker 3: more angry and more resistant. And I think that, in fact, 177 00:10:29,280 --> 00:10:33,320 Speaker 3: the whole experience of government dishonesty, whether you're talking about fauci, 178 00:10:33,800 --> 00:10:36,120 Speaker 3: or you're talking about the public Health service, or you're 179 00:10:36,120 --> 00:10:38,880 Speaker 3: talking about governors who had power go to their head, 180 00:10:39,440 --> 00:10:41,960 Speaker 3: all of that I think taught most Americans a bunch 181 00:10:42,000 --> 00:10:45,960 Speaker 3: of very painful lessons that, you know, tyranny doesn't just 182 00:10:46,000 --> 00:10:49,840 Speaker 3: occur overseas, tyranny can occur right here at home. And 183 00:10:49,920 --> 00:10:52,760 Speaker 3: I think as a result, the country probably today is 184 00:10:53,679 --> 00:10:58,040 Speaker 3: more anti government and more anti left wing than it 185 00:10:58,240 --> 00:11:00,000 Speaker 3: was on January first, two thousand. 186 00:11:01,600 --> 00:11:03,080 Speaker 2: I appreciate hearing you say that. 187 00:11:05,559 --> 00:11:09,120 Speaker 1: You know what, we've seen millions, millions of illegal immigrants 188 00:11:09,400 --> 00:11:11,480 Speaker 1: come here under Joe Biden's watch. 189 00:11:12,120 --> 00:11:13,960 Speaker 2: How does that impact the selection? 190 00:11:15,120 --> 00:11:17,520 Speaker 3: Well, we don't know. I to some extent, they may 191 00:11:17,600 --> 00:11:20,960 Speaker 3: try to vote some of them, you know, they'll certainly 192 00:11:21,000 --> 00:11:24,800 Speaker 3: talk about that, but I don't think that's ultimately going 193 00:11:24,840 --> 00:11:31,600 Speaker 3: to be practical in a large enough number, that's my concern. 194 00:11:31,640 --> 00:11:36,120 Speaker 3: I mean, they passed a rule very early that said 195 00:11:36,520 --> 00:11:40,640 Speaker 3: that cities and counties had to count the illegal immigrants 196 00:11:41,240 --> 00:11:43,880 Speaker 3: that were in their town or their county in order 197 00:11:43,960 --> 00:11:46,959 Speaker 3: to get federal aid based on the numbers. So it 198 00:11:47,040 --> 00:11:51,400 Speaker 3: actually tried to rig the game to make illegal immorants valuable. 199 00:11:51,400 --> 00:11:53,840 Speaker 3: But you know when you read, for example, I saw 200 00:11:53,960 --> 00:11:56,679 Speaker 3: a couple of days ago that one out of every 201 00:11:56,840 --> 00:12:01,120 Speaker 3: five hotel rooms in New York is now occupied by 202 00:12:01,160 --> 00:12:03,640 Speaker 3: the legal immigrant, and you realize that you and I 203 00:12:03,679 --> 00:12:07,640 Speaker 3: are paying for that, So that millions of Americans who 204 00:12:07,640 --> 00:12:10,079 Speaker 3: can't afford to go to New York and can't afford 205 00:12:10,120 --> 00:12:12,720 Speaker 3: to pay for a hotel room are having their tax 206 00:12:12,760 --> 00:12:16,520 Speaker 3: money used to subsidize an the legal immigrant in a 207 00:12:16,559 --> 00:12:20,440 Speaker 3: hotel room in New York. That this's just crazy. And 208 00:12:20,520 --> 00:12:23,320 Speaker 3: I think the average American is not crazy. And I 209 00:12:23,360 --> 00:12:26,840 Speaker 3: think that the reaction to Biden's failure in the border 210 00:12:27,160 --> 00:12:29,160 Speaker 3: will be one of the reasons that he gets defeated 211 00:12:29,200 --> 00:12:31,720 Speaker 3: this fall. And I think the country is ready for 212 00:12:31,800 --> 00:12:35,600 Speaker 3: us to control the border and then to methodically work 213 00:12:35,679 --> 00:12:38,120 Speaker 3: through the people who are here, starting with the ones 214 00:12:38,559 --> 00:12:41,200 Speaker 3: who are criminals. I mean, you don't have to tolerate 215 00:12:41,600 --> 00:12:43,560 Speaker 3: having somebody here in the US who is a criminal 216 00:12:43,600 --> 00:12:47,560 Speaker 3: from Venezuela or Mexico or China or whatever. And I 217 00:12:47,600 --> 00:12:51,080 Speaker 3: think we're going to be sobered once we have a 218 00:12:51,200 --> 00:12:55,320 Speaker 3: pro American process back in place. We're going to be 219 00:12:55,360 --> 00:12:57,280 Speaker 3: sobered by some of the people who are let in 220 00:12:57,800 --> 00:12:59,280 Speaker 3: by Biden's open borders. 221 00:13:00,040 --> 00:13:02,600 Speaker 1: You've got more with speaker Gingrich, But first, since the 222 00:13:02,720 --> 00:13:05,480 Speaker 1: terror taks on October seventh, anti Semitism has been on 223 00:13:05,520 --> 00:13:08,040 Speaker 1: the rise, not just in Israel but here at home, 224 00:13:08,080 --> 00:13:10,360 Speaker 1: in the US and around the world. That's why I've 225 00:13:10,400 --> 00:13:13,360 Speaker 1: partnered with the International Fellowship of Christian and Jews, and 226 00:13:13,400 --> 00:13:16,160 Speaker 1: today I'm coming to you, my audience to ask you 227 00:13:16,240 --> 00:13:19,880 Speaker 1: stand with us and IFCJ to raise your voice, just 228 00:13:19,880 --> 00:13:23,240 Speaker 1: as Oscar Schindler and Corey ten Boom did. This pledge 229 00:13:23,280 --> 00:13:26,320 Speaker 1: is asking Christians to stand with their Jewish brothers and sisters, 230 00:13:26,600 --> 00:13:29,240 Speaker 1: to never be silent, to show the Jewish people that 231 00:13:29,280 --> 00:13:31,800 Speaker 1: they are not alone, that they have God and Christians 232 00:13:31,840 --> 00:13:33,960 Speaker 1: on their side. For the month of June, we are 233 00:13:34,000 --> 00:13:36,840 Speaker 1: asking Christians to sign this pledge, which will be delivered 234 00:13:36,880 --> 00:13:38,880 Speaker 1: to the President of Israel, to show that Christians in 235 00:13:38,920 --> 00:13:41,679 Speaker 1: America are not only standing in solidarity, but they are 236 00:13:41,720 --> 00:13:44,640 Speaker 1: speaking up too. Let's take a stand today with the 237 00:13:44,679 --> 00:13:47,880 Speaker 1: International Fellowship of Christians and Jews to let the Jewish 238 00:13:47,880 --> 00:13:50,560 Speaker 1: people know that they're not alone. To sign the pledge, 239 00:13:50,679 --> 00:13:55,200 Speaker 1: go to SUPPORTIFCJ dot org, support IFCJ dot org to 240 00:13:55,280 --> 00:14:01,360 Speaker 1: take a stand today. I was watching there was a 241 00:14:01,360 --> 00:14:04,200 Speaker 1: clip from CNN and it said on the question of 242 00:14:04,280 --> 00:14:06,360 Speaker 1: would Biden or Trump do a better job on border 243 00:14:06,400 --> 00:14:09,920 Speaker 1: security slash immigration June twenty twenty, Biden was up by 244 00:14:09,920 --> 00:14:13,600 Speaker 1: one point. Now in May twenty twenty four, Trump's up 245 00:14:13,600 --> 00:14:17,360 Speaker 1: twenty seven points on that issue, and I saw I 246 00:14:17,400 --> 00:14:19,920 Speaker 1: think it was an Axios not too long ago had 247 00:14:19,920 --> 00:14:23,600 Speaker 1: to pull where the majority of Americans support mass deportations. 248 00:14:23,600 --> 00:14:28,520 Speaker 1: So Americans have come a long way on this issue, 249 00:14:28,560 --> 00:14:32,480 Speaker 1: from the condemnation that President Trump received on his immigration 250 00:14:32,600 --> 00:14:36,440 Speaker 1: policies to now Americans really standing behind him on it. 251 00:14:36,720 --> 00:14:40,080 Speaker 3: Sure, but part of that, you know. Somebody asked John 252 00:14:40,160 --> 00:14:43,600 Speaker 3: Mayer Kains, the famous economist one time who had changed 253 00:14:43,640 --> 00:14:47,040 Speaker 3: his opinion on something, and they said, you know, you 254 00:14:47,160 --> 00:14:51,840 Speaker 3: changed your opinion? He said, yes, the facts changed. What 255 00:14:51,880 --> 00:14:54,960 Speaker 3: would you have me do? And I think that what 256 00:14:55,080 --> 00:14:58,400 Speaker 3: happened was what seemed to be a distant problem to 257 00:14:58,400 --> 00:15:03,000 Speaker 3: a lot of Americans became their evening news. You know, 258 00:15:03,000 --> 00:15:06,200 Speaker 3: when you have a Venezuelan criminal shooting a New York policeman, 259 00:15:07,160 --> 00:15:09,760 Speaker 3: you know things have gone too wrong. When you have 260 00:15:10,320 --> 00:15:13,840 Speaker 3: a twelve or thirteen year old girl in Virginia raped 261 00:15:13,880 --> 00:15:16,600 Speaker 3: by an illegal immigrant, you know things have gone too wrong. 262 00:15:16,840 --> 00:15:18,920 Speaker 3: When you have a student at the University of Georgia 263 00:15:19,360 --> 00:15:22,080 Speaker 3: killed by an illegal immigrant, you know things have gone 264 00:15:22,120 --> 00:15:24,920 Speaker 3: too long. And so I do think that the country, 265 00:15:25,520 --> 00:15:28,600 Speaker 3: day by day, week by week, has concluded that the 266 00:15:28,600 --> 00:15:31,880 Speaker 3: Biden policy of open borders doesn't work and that it 267 00:15:32,000 --> 00:15:33,760 Speaker 3: actually is dangerous to the country. 268 00:15:34,240 --> 00:15:37,080 Speaker 1: There's a thought process, and I've gone back and forth 269 00:15:37,120 --> 00:15:40,640 Speaker 1: on it from a lot of Republicans that, look, the 270 00:15:40,680 --> 00:15:43,560 Speaker 1: response to what Democrats are doing to Donald Trump is 271 00:15:43,720 --> 00:15:47,040 Speaker 1: Republican ags or you know, Republican district attorneys need to 272 00:15:47,040 --> 00:15:48,920 Speaker 1: start throwing Democrats in jail. 273 00:15:49,800 --> 00:15:52,680 Speaker 2: Meet power with power, you know, that's how you respond 274 00:15:52,760 --> 00:15:56,800 Speaker 2: to terrorists. What do you make of that? Is that 275 00:15:56,880 --> 00:15:58,240 Speaker 2: something Republicans should do. 276 00:15:58,280 --> 00:16:02,480 Speaker 3: I think it would destroy the constitution. I mean, I 277 00:16:02,480 --> 00:16:04,640 Speaker 3: think we ought to. You know, if somebody is guilty, 278 00:16:05,040 --> 00:16:07,560 Speaker 3: then it's legitimate to go after him. If somebody is 279 00:16:07,600 --> 00:16:10,520 Speaker 3: a crook, it's legitimate to lock them up. But I 280 00:16:10,560 --> 00:16:14,720 Speaker 3: don't think we should have our political warfare match up 281 00:16:14,760 --> 00:16:19,720 Speaker 3: against the Democrats' political warfare, because by definition, in a 282 00:16:19,760 --> 00:16:22,720 Speaker 3: country that has a constitution and has the rule of law, 283 00:16:23,200 --> 00:16:27,040 Speaker 3: the very concept of political warfare done in law courts 284 00:16:27,680 --> 00:16:30,880 Speaker 3: is profoundly wrong. And I think that the dangers the 285 00:16:30,880 --> 00:16:34,760 Speaker 3: Democrats have done, and I hope they have not unleashed 286 00:16:34,760 --> 00:16:37,160 Speaker 3: the demons to a point where we can't get it 287 00:16:37,240 --> 00:16:39,880 Speaker 3: back in the bottle. But I can tell you when 288 00:16:39,880 --> 00:16:43,480 Speaker 3: you look at the history of free countries, this kind 289 00:16:43,560 --> 00:16:47,720 Speaker 3: of behavior can break down the entire process of the 290 00:16:47,800 --> 00:16:52,480 Speaker 3: contract which holds us together. The constitution and the rule 291 00:16:52,480 --> 00:16:56,560 Speaker 3: of law are the keys to how three hundred and 292 00:16:56,640 --> 00:17:00,200 Speaker 3: thirty five million people from all over the world are 293 00:17:00,240 --> 00:17:03,320 Speaker 3: able to live together and to work together and have 294 00:17:03,400 --> 00:17:07,280 Speaker 3: a common set of rules where everybody respects each other 295 00:17:07,320 --> 00:17:10,520 Speaker 3: and recognizes that we're all Americans and we're all in 296 00:17:10,520 --> 00:17:13,320 Speaker 3: this together. And I couldn't help but think in my 297 00:17:13,400 --> 00:17:16,679 Speaker 3: own podcast in Newtsworld, I just did a podcast about 298 00:17:17,000 --> 00:17:21,560 Speaker 3: d Day on the landing at Normandy literally eighty years ago, 299 00:17:21,880 --> 00:17:25,840 Speaker 3: and it struck me that, you know, you had Eisenhower 300 00:17:25,960 --> 00:17:28,640 Speaker 3: was a German name, but nobody thought much about that 301 00:17:28,800 --> 00:17:34,840 Speaker 3: he's an American. You had Japanese Americans who volunteered in 302 00:17:34,960 --> 00:17:40,440 Speaker 3: a unit that served in Italy, one of whom got 303 00:17:40,520 --> 00:17:43,320 Speaker 3: severely wounded, lost in arm, ended up as a US senator. 304 00:17:43,840 --> 00:17:47,880 Speaker 3: We had people coming together working together because they saw 305 00:17:47,920 --> 00:17:52,080 Speaker 3: each other as Americans. And I think it's very important 306 00:17:52,280 --> 00:17:56,040 Speaker 3: that we repudiate the lefts effort to divide us. We 307 00:17:56,160 --> 00:18:00,879 Speaker 3: repudiate the new racism, and we repute the kind of 308 00:18:00,920 --> 00:18:05,280 Speaker 3: behavior that Biden and the Democrats have engaged in because 309 00:18:05,920 --> 00:18:09,960 Speaker 3: they undermined the Constitution and they destroyed the very fabric 310 00:18:09,960 --> 00:18:12,879 Speaker 3: of law which has enabled us to live and work together. 311 00:18:13,240 --> 00:18:16,719 Speaker 1: It does seem, though, like there is a higher percentage 312 00:18:16,800 --> 00:18:21,120 Speaker 1: now on the left who would reject the Constitution, who 313 00:18:21,160 --> 00:18:24,840 Speaker 1: have no reverence for it, no regard for it, you know. 314 00:18:25,080 --> 00:18:25,440 Speaker 2: And so. 315 00:18:27,160 --> 00:18:29,719 Speaker 3: I guess that's true, that's absolutely true. And I mean, 316 00:18:29,760 --> 00:18:32,480 Speaker 3: look that level us a different question. Yeah, you have 317 00:18:32,600 --> 00:18:37,919 Speaker 3: had four or five generations now of left wing educators 318 00:18:37,920 --> 00:18:41,600 Speaker 3: who've gradually gone further and further and further. The left 319 00:18:41,680 --> 00:18:47,240 Speaker 3: is almost like watching the cancer fantastasized, and it went 320 00:18:47,280 --> 00:18:49,840 Speaker 3: from being a critique of America to a repudiation of 321 00:18:49,880 --> 00:18:52,840 Speaker 3: America to a hatred for America. And when I see 322 00:18:52,880 --> 00:18:57,399 Speaker 3: people a recent scene in Michigan where people were chanting 323 00:18:57,440 --> 00:19:00,520 Speaker 3: death to America, I want to deport every one of them. 324 00:19:02,240 --> 00:19:06,160 Speaker 3: I just think the whole notion. You know, we ought 325 00:19:06,160 --> 00:19:09,320 Speaker 3: to reaffirm that, yes, you should stand for the flag, 326 00:19:09,400 --> 00:19:11,879 Speaker 3: Yes you should stand for the national anthem, Yes you 327 00:19:11,920 --> 00:19:14,320 Speaker 3: should say the Pledge of Allegiance every morning in school, 328 00:19:15,040 --> 00:19:19,520 Speaker 3: and that if you are not prepared to be supportive 329 00:19:19,600 --> 00:19:21,399 Speaker 3: of the freest country in the history of the world, 330 00:19:21,840 --> 00:19:25,080 Speaker 3: then we should all understand that and recognize that you 331 00:19:25,160 --> 00:19:30,000 Speaker 3: are a danger to us. And I really believe when 332 00:19:30,000 --> 00:19:32,920 Speaker 3: you look at the professors at Harvard or Yale or Princeton, 333 00:19:33,359 --> 00:19:37,560 Speaker 3: or the University of Pennsylvania, Colombia, to some extent, Berkeley 334 00:19:37,880 --> 00:19:41,600 Speaker 3: and Stanford, these are folks who don't have any allegiance 335 00:19:41,640 --> 00:19:45,600 Speaker 3: to America and who frankly have no idea what they're 336 00:19:45,600 --> 00:19:49,679 Speaker 3: playing with. I mean, when I watch, for example, people 337 00:19:49,680 --> 00:19:53,439 Speaker 3: who are gay take a pro Hamas stance, and I 338 00:19:53,480 --> 00:19:56,960 Speaker 3: wonder did they realize that in the world of Hamas 339 00:19:57,000 --> 00:20:01,080 Speaker 3: they'd be killed. When you watch young women who think 340 00:20:01,119 --> 00:20:04,639 Speaker 3: that they're liberated and independent take a position in favor 341 00:20:04,640 --> 00:20:07,120 Speaker 3: of hamask, you kind of wonder if they have any 342 00:20:07,160 --> 00:20:10,000 Speaker 3: idea what it'll be like to live in that kind 343 00:20:10,040 --> 00:20:14,880 Speaker 3: of society and to be totally subjugated. You know, it's 344 00:20:14,880 --> 00:20:19,000 Speaker 3: just it's it's the part of what's happened to us 345 00:20:19,119 --> 00:20:22,840 Speaker 3: is our education system has decayed to a point where 346 00:20:22,880 --> 00:20:26,399 Speaker 3: these people don't know anything, and so what you're getting 347 00:20:26,520 --> 00:20:30,639 Speaker 3: is great passion with no knowledge, and that's very dangerous. 348 00:20:31,200 --> 00:20:34,359 Speaker 1: It almost just seems like they hate anything that is 349 00:20:34,480 --> 00:20:37,879 Speaker 1: righteous or normal or you know, it's like they just 350 00:20:37,920 --> 00:20:39,160 Speaker 1: hate anything that is good. 351 00:20:41,000 --> 00:20:44,280 Speaker 3: Well, it's it's almost like a Greek myth or something. 352 00:20:44,280 --> 00:20:48,399 Speaker 3: I mean, it's almost like if you are whatever normal 353 00:20:48,480 --> 00:20:50,200 Speaker 3: means nowadays, because even the word normal. 354 00:20:50,040 --> 00:20:53,640 Speaker 2: Means I think we're pretty normal, you know, we're biased. 355 00:20:53,359 --> 00:20:57,280 Speaker 3: But no, but the very word normal itself becomes a fight. 356 00:20:57,840 --> 00:21:03,000 Speaker 3: It's almost as though good repudiates evil by the simple 357 00:21:03,040 --> 00:21:08,040 Speaker 3: act of existing. And therefore, if you're a person who 358 00:21:09,040 --> 00:21:14,840 Speaker 3: is patriotic, hard working, tries to make life work, tries 359 00:21:14,880 --> 00:21:20,280 Speaker 3: to help your country succeed, you are a repudiation of 360 00:21:20,320 --> 00:21:24,199 Speaker 3: the radical left who hate America, and so they have 361 00:21:24,240 --> 00:21:28,120 Speaker 3: an obligation to go after you because you are such 362 00:21:28,119 --> 00:21:32,119 Speaker 3: a threat to them. You don't have to do anything 363 00:21:32,320 --> 00:21:35,359 Speaker 3: the act of your existence. This is why if you 364 00:21:35,359 --> 00:21:38,639 Speaker 3: look at that the Hamas position, which is not a 365 00:21:38,680 --> 00:21:42,679 Speaker 3: single Jew will remain just the act of being a 366 00:21:42,800 --> 00:21:48,119 Speaker 3: Jew makes you so devastating to the radical Islamist of 367 00:21:48,160 --> 00:21:50,880 Speaker 3: Hamas that you have to be killed or driven out 368 00:21:51,600 --> 00:21:55,520 Speaker 3: because your very existence is an attack on them. Well, 369 00:21:55,760 --> 00:21:58,440 Speaker 3: those are folks with whom, frankly, there's not much ground 370 00:21:58,480 --> 00:21:59,200 Speaker 3: for compromise. 371 00:21:59,400 --> 00:22:00,800 Speaker 1: I was really well said. It took me a moment 372 00:22:00,840 --> 00:22:02,840 Speaker 1: because I was taking in how you just laid that out. 373 00:22:03,040 --> 00:22:05,679 Speaker 1: I've got a quick commercial break. More speaker Gingrish on 374 00:22:05,680 --> 00:22:12,480 Speaker 1: the other side for President Trump, So you co author 375 00:22:12,560 --> 00:22:17,560 Speaker 1: architect the contract with America. If you were advising President Trump, 376 00:22:17,720 --> 00:22:21,280 Speaker 1: what should he make this election about? What issues does 377 00:22:21,320 --> 00:22:23,679 Speaker 1: he win on this election cycle? What should he do? 378 00:22:24,800 --> 00:22:30,280 Speaker 3: Well? I mean, I think, excuse me, I think, first 379 00:22:30,320 --> 00:22:36,760 Speaker 3: of all, I believe as Abraham Lincoln said that with 380 00:22:36,920 --> 00:22:42,880 Speaker 3: public sentiment, anything is possible. Without public sentiment, nothing is possible. 381 00:22:43,680 --> 00:22:46,359 Speaker 3: I agree with Reagan, who in his farewell address said, 382 00:22:46,920 --> 00:22:49,560 Speaker 3: you know, people say that I won great legislative victories, 383 00:22:49,600 --> 00:22:53,679 Speaker 3: but that isn't true. Every legislative victory I won because you, 384 00:22:54,280 --> 00:22:58,760 Speaker 3: the American people, called and talked to and visited Congressman, 385 00:22:59,160 --> 00:23:02,280 Speaker 3: and you delivered the victories. So I would start with 386 00:23:02,320 --> 00:23:06,119 Speaker 3: the American people. We know that the number one issue 387 00:23:06,160 --> 00:23:08,800 Speaker 3: and the number one point of pain right now is 388 00:23:08,880 --> 00:23:11,320 Speaker 3: the economy. And we know that the hardest part of 389 00:23:11,359 --> 00:23:16,640 Speaker 3: that is what I call Biden inflation, and Biden inflation 390 00:23:17,359 --> 00:23:22,119 Speaker 3: is the result of three years of disastrously bad policies. 391 00:23:22,880 --> 00:23:24,600 Speaker 3: And you feel like I was just listening to someone 392 00:23:24,600 --> 00:23:27,760 Speaker 3: the last night who has a good friend who works hard, 393 00:23:27,840 --> 00:23:30,080 Speaker 3: and his wife works hard. They don't have great jobs, 394 00:23:30,119 --> 00:23:33,440 Speaker 3: but they have adequate jobs. They have four kids, and 395 00:23:33,800 --> 00:23:36,200 Speaker 3: they can no longer afford to buy Jeffy peanut butter. 396 00:23:36,200 --> 00:23:40,400 Speaker 3: They now buy just sort of a general brand because 397 00:23:40,480 --> 00:23:43,720 Speaker 3: Jeffy's too expensive. When you get to be a point 398 00:23:43,720 --> 00:23:47,640 Speaker 3: where you can't afford Jeffy peanut butter, the president has failed. 399 00:23:48,480 --> 00:23:50,760 Speaker 3: And so I think if you look at the inflation 400 00:23:50,960 --> 00:23:53,639 Speaker 3: rate under Trump and the inflation rate under Biden, and 401 00:23:53,680 --> 00:23:57,119 Speaker 3: this is what happened to Jimmy Carter. When people you 402 00:23:57,160 --> 00:23:59,120 Speaker 3: know I don't care how many ads the Democrats run 403 00:23:59,160 --> 00:24:01,919 Speaker 3: this fall. Every time people go to the grocery store, 404 00:24:02,200 --> 00:24:04,199 Speaker 3: they're going to be reminded in the real world, but 405 00:24:04,200 --> 00:24:08,280 Speaker 3: that Biden is a failure. So you start with the economy. Second, 406 00:24:08,359 --> 00:24:10,280 Speaker 3: you have to go to the border, because the border 407 00:24:10,320 --> 00:24:13,760 Speaker 3: is the second biggest issue, and Biden is totally vulnerable 408 00:24:14,240 --> 00:24:18,000 Speaker 3: and the hypocritical bloge of his recent signatures of executive orders. 409 00:24:18,160 --> 00:24:22,399 Speaker 3: I mean, just think about this. If the number of 410 00:24:22,400 --> 00:24:26,760 Speaker 3: illegal immigrants goes above twenty five hundred a day, well, 411 00:24:27,080 --> 00:24:30,879 Speaker 3: in other words, the first million, three hundred thousand a 412 00:24:31,000 --> 00:24:35,159 Speaker 3: year is okay. I mean, these guys are just nuts. 413 00:24:35,920 --> 00:24:37,240 Speaker 3: I mean, if you're going to deal with it, deal 414 00:24:37,280 --> 00:24:38,359 Speaker 3: with it. If you're not going to deal with it, 415 00:24:38,400 --> 00:24:41,000 Speaker 3: don't deal with it. But to think we're so stupid 416 00:24:41,359 --> 00:24:43,600 Speaker 3: that we should think you're being tough because after the 417 00:24:43,600 --> 00:24:46,280 Speaker 3: first couple million, you're going to slow down the rate. 418 00:24:46,840 --> 00:24:49,119 Speaker 3: It just tells you that they're so wrapped up in 419 00:24:49,160 --> 00:24:53,200 Speaker 3: their own ideology they can't deal with reality. I think 420 00:24:53,200 --> 00:24:57,919 Speaker 3: the third thing really is a not so much a 421 00:24:57,960 --> 00:25:01,879 Speaker 3: specific issue as a mood. I believe Americans know the 422 00:25:01,880 --> 00:25:05,320 Speaker 3: world is dangerous. I think they know that having a 423 00:25:06,440 --> 00:25:10,960 Speaker 3: cognitively declining president who half the time is not there 424 00:25:11,320 --> 00:25:14,720 Speaker 3: is dangerous. And I think that they believe at a 425 00:25:14,760 --> 00:25:16,800 Speaker 3: time when you have a war in Ukraine, a war 426 00:25:16,880 --> 00:25:21,920 Speaker 3: in Gaza, you have the Chinese communists menacing Taiwan, that 427 00:25:22,160 --> 00:25:25,480 Speaker 3: you have the Iranians causing trouble all across the Middle East. 428 00:25:26,160 --> 00:25:28,680 Speaker 3: I think the American people want somebody who is strong, 429 00:25:29,600 --> 00:25:32,560 Speaker 3: who will be careful. And if you look at Trump's 430 00:25:32,600 --> 00:25:36,879 Speaker 3: record for four solid years of avoiding wars and of 431 00:25:36,960 --> 00:25:40,400 Speaker 3: trying to bring things down and trying to work our 432 00:25:40,400 --> 00:25:44,240 Speaker 3: way through things while methodically using our power in a 433 00:25:44,280 --> 00:25:49,520 Speaker 3: surgical way, for example, to destroy Isis, it was a 434 00:25:49,560 --> 00:25:53,320 Speaker 3: remarkable performance. And I think you compare that to the 435 00:25:53,440 --> 00:25:56,600 Speaker 3: chaos around the world right now under this team, and 436 00:25:56,640 --> 00:25:59,080 Speaker 3: you realize that Biden really is hopeless, and that his 437 00:25:59,160 --> 00:26:01,479 Speaker 3: team really is home plus, and that it may be 438 00:26:01,520 --> 00:26:05,800 Speaker 3: a matter of survival for us to elect somebody who's 439 00:26:05,840 --> 00:26:09,160 Speaker 3: one hundred percent there mentally, who has the right principles 440 00:26:09,440 --> 00:26:11,120 Speaker 3: and who will actually defend America. 441 00:26:12,240 --> 00:26:14,760 Speaker 1: You know, it is pretty interesting to see Americans now 442 00:26:14,800 --> 00:26:17,920 Speaker 1: having Trump nostalgia and a majority of Americans now looking 443 00:26:17,920 --> 00:26:21,880 Speaker 1: back at his presidency as a positive and more positively 444 00:26:21,920 --> 00:26:24,280 Speaker 1: than the way they view the Bide administration. Right now, 445 00:26:25,080 --> 00:26:27,520 Speaker 1: before we go, will Donald Trump win? 446 00:26:29,520 --> 00:26:33,960 Speaker 3: Probably if the American people turn out and vote, he 447 00:26:34,000 --> 00:26:39,159 Speaker 3: will win. But his greatest strength are people who normally 448 00:26:39,160 --> 00:26:42,840 Speaker 3: don't vote. They're the people you saw the other night 449 00:26:42,920 --> 00:26:47,399 Speaker 3: in Newark at a sports event. They're the everyday folks 450 00:26:47,680 --> 00:26:50,600 Speaker 3: who rally around him, the people who show up at 451 00:26:50,600 --> 00:26:54,879 Speaker 3: his rallies, and so he's got to motivate them to 452 00:26:55,000 --> 00:26:57,320 Speaker 3: actually go vote. If they go vote, he'll win by 453 00:26:57,320 --> 00:26:58,280 Speaker 3: a shocking margin. 454 00:26:58,400 --> 00:27:01,160 Speaker 1: Well, let's pray that they do. As you pointed out, 455 00:27:01,200 --> 00:27:03,320 Speaker 1: I really don't think we can handle another four years. 456 00:27:03,359 --> 00:27:06,040 Speaker 1: I don't think this nation can handle another four years 457 00:27:06,080 --> 00:27:09,880 Speaker 1: of Joe Biden. So praying that Donald Trump wins and 458 00:27:10,160 --> 00:27:14,439 Speaker 1: Republicans can turn this ship around. Speaker new Gingridge, It's 459 00:27:14,440 --> 00:27:16,000 Speaker 1: always an honor to have you on the show. 460 00:27:17,000 --> 00:27:18,760 Speaker 3: So I just want to say how proud I am 461 00:27:18,840 --> 00:27:21,960 Speaker 3: of what you've been doing, and what a delight it 462 00:27:22,040 --> 00:27:24,760 Speaker 3: is for me to have a conversation with you like this. 463 00:27:25,359 --> 00:27:27,960 Speaker 1: Well, that means the absolute world to me, and you 464 00:27:28,000 --> 00:27:30,200 Speaker 1: made me feel better. I've been pretty been pretty down 465 00:27:30,240 --> 00:27:32,960 Speaker 1: about all this, So you did manage to make. 466 00:27:32,880 --> 00:27:37,360 Speaker 2: Me feel you're an American. 467 00:27:37,520 --> 00:27:38,280 Speaker 3: Just keep the faith. 468 00:27:38,880 --> 00:27:43,080 Speaker 2: I needed this speaker Getingridge. Thank you so much. It's 469 00:27:43,080 --> 00:27:46,680 Speaker 2: always an honor. Take care bye those speaker New Gingerridge. 470 00:27:46,680 --> 00:27:49,520 Speaker 1: Appreciate him for taking the time to join the show 471 00:27:49,720 --> 00:27:53,320 Speaker 1: and bring his analysis during this really important time in history. 472 00:27:53,640 --> 00:27:54,640 Speaker 2: Appreciate you guys at. 473 00:27:54,520 --> 00:27:56,679 Speaker 1: Home for listening every Monday and Thursday, but you can 474 00:27:56,720 --> 00:27:58,359 Speaker 1: listen throughout the week. I want to think John Cassio 475 00:27:58,359 --> 00:28:00,720 Speaker 1: and my producer for putting the show together. Until next time,