1 00:00:00,120 --> 00:00:02,679 Speaker 1: The following is a meeting of my Nuts Inner Circle 2 00:00:02,759 --> 00:00:05,880 Speaker 1: membership club, or I answered your questions about the election. 3 00:00:06,559 --> 00:00:09,800 Speaker 1: To join my inner circle, go to nuts inner circle 4 00:00:09,920 --> 00:00:24,520 Speaker 1: dot com. This may be the most confusing Inner circle 5 00:00:25,000 --> 00:00:27,920 Speaker 1: gathering we've head so far, and that's because I have 6 00:00:28,040 --> 00:00:32,280 Speaker 1: never seen such an amazing mess. If you follow our podcast, 7 00:00:32,760 --> 00:00:36,320 Speaker 1: We've just begun a series that I'm calling The Honest 8 00:00:36,400 --> 00:00:41,400 Speaker 1: Election Chronicles. Yesterday we interviewed three people from Nevada, where 9 00:00:41,440 --> 00:00:46,000 Speaker 1: I am totally convinced that the Democratic legislature and the 10 00:00:46,040 --> 00:00:50,320 Speaker 1: Democratic governor conspired in the spring to steal the state 11 00:00:51,040 --> 00:00:54,760 Speaker 1: and did so by passing laws which make corruption legal. 12 00:00:55,200 --> 00:00:58,520 Speaker 1: And I think it's going to require federal involvement to 13 00:00:58,720 --> 00:01:01,520 Speaker 1: protect the rights, just as did during the age of segregation, 14 00:01:02,000 --> 00:01:06,279 Speaker 1: when local states adopted laws that blocked African Americans from voting. 15 00:01:06,680 --> 00:01:10,000 Speaker 1: Right now, the Democrats in Nevative decided to steal the 16 00:01:10,080 --> 00:01:12,880 Speaker 1: state with no regard for the rust of the United 17 00:01:12,880 --> 00:01:17,480 Speaker 1: States or those citizens or Independents and Republican who don't agree. 18 00:01:17,920 --> 00:01:23,000 Speaker 1: There are an estimated six hundred thousand votes that no 19 00:01:23,200 --> 00:01:27,399 Speaker 1: Republican the scene, and under the current state law that 20 00:01:27,440 --> 00:01:32,080 Speaker 1: they adopted the spring, there's no provision for them to 21 00:01:32,120 --> 00:01:34,720 Speaker 1: ever be able to get there or what. So clearly 22 00:01:34,840 --> 00:01:37,880 Speaker 1: that can't stand. You could not have an entire state 23 00:01:38,280 --> 00:01:41,920 Speaker 1: in a presidential election or a senator House election, any 24 00:01:41,959 --> 00:01:45,600 Speaker 1: federal election taken off the board by the local corrupt 25 00:01:45,640 --> 00:01:49,720 Speaker 1: political machine. The second example, we just did two interviews 26 00:01:50,000 --> 00:01:52,480 Speaker 1: with people in Georgia. I've spent a lot of time 27 00:01:52,480 --> 00:01:55,040 Speaker 1: in Georgia, as you know, I was the congressman from 28 00:01:55,080 --> 00:01:58,440 Speaker 1: there for twenty years. My daughter, Jackie Cushman, still lives there. 29 00:01:58,800 --> 00:02:01,800 Speaker 1: We have an enormous number of friends there. I believe 30 00:02:01,920 --> 00:02:07,560 Speaker 1: that the margin by which Biden is Kanada state is 31 00:02:07,600 --> 00:02:12,639 Speaker 1: about three times as many votes that were absentee ballots 32 00:02:12,960 --> 00:02:16,440 Speaker 1: that should not have been counted as his margin. So 33 00:02:16,480 --> 00:02:18,760 Speaker 1: I think that's the second area. And that then, of 34 00:02:18,800 --> 00:02:22,800 Speaker 1: course bleeds over into two US center races. And I 35 00:02:22,840 --> 00:02:26,680 Speaker 1: believe if we don't fix George's election law, that the 36 00:02:26,720 --> 00:02:29,240 Speaker 1: two center races will be stolen. You'll end up no 37 00:02:29,280 --> 00:02:32,240 Speaker 1: matter how good the Republican campaign is, no matter how 38 00:02:32,280 --> 00:02:36,400 Speaker 1: good the advertising is, on election night, magically enough votes 39 00:02:36,400 --> 00:02:39,360 Speaker 1: will show up to elect the two Democrats, no matter 40 00:02:39,360 --> 00:02:42,600 Speaker 1: how unpopular they are. So I think Georgia becomes the 41 00:02:42,680 --> 00:02:47,200 Speaker 1: second example. Ronald McDaniel, the Republican National Committee Chair who 42 00:02:47,360 --> 00:02:52,160 Speaker 1: used to be the Michigan State Republican chair, said last night, 43 00:02:52,200 --> 00:02:54,960 Speaker 1: and I talked to about it today, that in Detroit, 44 00:02:55,320 --> 00:03:00,600 Speaker 1: seventy two percent of the precincts could not validate their 45 00:03:00,680 --> 00:03:04,360 Speaker 1: records until magically at the very end everything got fixed 46 00:03:04,440 --> 00:03:07,480 Speaker 1: late at night. And she said, now, in twenty eighteen 47 00:03:07,480 --> 00:03:11,079 Speaker 1: it was eighty percent of the precincts in Detroit. They say, 48 00:03:11,120 --> 00:03:14,440 Speaker 1: for example, oh, we sent out a hundred absentee ballots, 49 00:03:14,760 --> 00:03:17,560 Speaker 1: oh and look, two hundred came in and there's no 50 00:03:17,600 --> 00:03:20,359 Speaker 1: effort to try to figure out what's going wrong there. 51 00:03:20,639 --> 00:03:24,360 Speaker 1: So just taking that alone in the largest city in 52 00:03:24,520 --> 00:03:27,639 Speaker 1: Michigan would be enough to assume they were talking about 53 00:03:27,639 --> 00:03:31,720 Speaker 1: a pretty large scale corruption. On top of that, I 54 00:03:31,760 --> 00:03:34,960 Speaker 1: think we have to look at what's happening in Pennsylvania, 55 00:03:35,320 --> 00:03:38,720 Speaker 1: where Philadelphia may be the most corrupt city in the country. 56 00:03:39,000 --> 00:03:42,800 Speaker 1: And then finally it Wisconsin, where the Wisconsin Election Commission 57 00:03:43,160 --> 00:03:48,040 Speaker 1: just totally ignored two court orders, and I think there's 58 00:03:48,080 --> 00:03:51,280 Speaker 1: some evidence that as many as two hundred thousand votes 59 00:03:51,800 --> 00:03:55,400 Speaker 1: may have been involved in things that there Wisconsin election 60 00:03:55,400 --> 00:03:59,040 Speaker 1: Commission did that aren't legal or appropriate. So you look 61 00:03:59,040 --> 00:04:02,240 Speaker 1: around all this, and it comes on top of the 62 00:04:02,280 --> 00:04:06,520 Speaker 1: fact that, for example, Zuckerberg, the founder Facebook, has given 63 00:04:06,560 --> 00:04:10,960 Speaker 1: away four hundred million dollars per turnout and his foundation 64 00:04:11,080 --> 00:04:14,760 Speaker 1: happened to only give it to counties that Hillary Clinton kerry, 65 00:04:15,320 --> 00:04:21,320 Speaker 1: so he was disproportionately engaged in helping turnout using foundation money, 66 00:04:21,320 --> 00:04:24,440 Speaker 1: not political money. Foundation money. He happened to be in 67 00:04:24,440 --> 00:04:27,039 Speaker 1: favor of turnout only where they're going to be voters 68 00:04:27,080 --> 00:04:30,240 Speaker 1: who favored Biden and not voters who favored Trump, and 69 00:04:30,480 --> 00:04:33,880 Speaker 1: he's back already in Georgia putting in more millions of 70 00:04:33,920 --> 00:04:38,720 Speaker 1: dollars into turnout. Then you have the internet companies, which 71 00:04:38,720 --> 00:04:44,680 Speaker 1: have been routinely censoring conservatives, censoring people who questioned the elections. 72 00:04:45,120 --> 00:04:48,000 Speaker 1: Then you have the news media, which has sustained its 73 00:04:48,120 --> 00:04:52,880 Speaker 1: ninety three percent anti Trump attitude, and which has routinely 74 00:04:52,960 --> 00:04:57,479 Speaker 1: refused to cover all the different examples that in a 75 00:04:57,600 --> 00:05:01,760 Speaker 1: normal year, with this many things normally going wrong, you'd 76 00:05:01,800 --> 00:05:04,080 Speaker 1: have a very different tone in the news media. But 77 00:05:04,200 --> 00:05:07,240 Speaker 1: they are so desperate to defeat Trump that just as 78 00:05:07,240 --> 00:05:09,680 Speaker 1: they don't want to cover Hunter Biden, who, by the way, 79 00:05:09,960 --> 00:05:14,360 Speaker 1: I had a Senator Committee report come out yesterday saying 80 00:05:14,360 --> 00:05:17,160 Speaker 1: that he was doing things in China, he was doing 81 00:05:17,200 --> 00:05:20,160 Speaker 1: things in Russia, and that Joe Biden knew it, which 82 00:05:20,200 --> 00:05:22,560 Speaker 1: would have been page one. It would have been one 83 00:05:22,560 --> 00:05:25,880 Speaker 1: of the Trump family. But because of their desperation to 84 00:05:25,920 --> 00:05:29,840 Speaker 1: protect Biden, they managed to smother as much negative news 85 00:05:29,880 --> 00:05:34,360 Speaker 1: as they can, and you have these interestingly diverse data points. 86 00:05:34,880 --> 00:05:38,520 Speaker 1: The Republicans in the House did very well the Democrats, 87 00:05:38,880 --> 00:05:41,800 Speaker 1: and most of the left wing analysts thought that the 88 00:05:41,839 --> 00:05:45,120 Speaker 1: Democrats would pick up fifteen seats. I think the Republicans 89 00:05:45,160 --> 00:05:47,560 Speaker 1: are going to pick up at least ten and maybe more, 90 00:05:48,120 --> 00:05:50,400 Speaker 1: and they may end up with a five or six 91 00:05:50,480 --> 00:05:53,479 Speaker 1: seat margin for the Democrats, which will make it very 92 00:05:53,520 --> 00:05:57,680 Speaker 1: hard for Pelosia. Uniting series done. When Bill Cunton won 93 00:05:58,160 --> 00:06:01,680 Speaker 1: two years later, we picked up fifty four seats and 94 00:06:01,880 --> 00:06:05,440 Speaker 1: one control for the first time since nineteen fifty four 95 00:06:05,720 --> 00:06:10,080 Speaker 1: for seven forty years. Then when Obama won two years 96 00:06:10,160 --> 00:06:14,360 Speaker 1: later with John Bayner's leadership, we picked up sixty three seats, 97 00:06:15,360 --> 00:06:17,760 Speaker 1: and I raised the question, you know, I don't know 98 00:06:17,800 --> 00:06:20,800 Speaker 1: whether Biden will be bad enough that we get sixty 99 00:06:20,800 --> 00:06:25,400 Speaker 1: seats or fifty seats, but you're almost guaranteed historically that 100 00:06:25,960 --> 00:06:29,159 Speaker 1: Kevin McCarthy is going to be the next Speaker and 101 00:06:29,240 --> 00:06:34,280 Speaker 1: we'll be sworn in in January of two twenty three. 102 00:06:34,440 --> 00:06:39,240 Speaker 1: This is compounded by the fact that we are confronted 103 00:06:39,640 --> 00:06:43,640 Speaker 1: with big Republican gains in the state legislature around the country, 104 00:06:43,760 --> 00:06:46,720 Speaker 1: and we have picked up a governorship, great election for 105 00:06:46,800 --> 00:06:49,800 Speaker 1: the House, great election for the state legislature. Is a 106 00:06:49,920 --> 00:06:52,440 Speaker 1: very tough year in terms of how many Republicans and 107 00:06:52,480 --> 00:06:55,440 Speaker 1: how many Democrats were up. But we win the two 108 00:06:55,440 --> 00:06:58,440 Speaker 1: Georgia seats, will be in good shape with a fifty 109 00:06:58,440 --> 00:07:02,040 Speaker 1: two to forty eight Republican argent, and Miss McConnell will 110 00:07:02,080 --> 00:07:04,880 Speaker 1: remain the majority leader. That's going to be an updo fight. 111 00:07:04,920 --> 00:07:06,960 Speaker 1: And I'll come back to that. If you look at 112 00:07:06,960 --> 00:07:11,720 Speaker 1: the referendums, almost every referendum in almost every state, and 113 00:07:11,760 --> 00:07:16,080 Speaker 1: unless it related to legalizing marijuana, almost every referendum the 114 00:07:16,160 --> 00:07:21,480 Speaker 1: Conservatives won and Liberals lost, including in California. So they're 115 00:07:21,600 --> 00:07:25,280 Speaker 1: underlying patterns building that actually look very good for us. 116 00:07:25,680 --> 00:07:29,080 Speaker 1: And of course President Trump got more votes than any 117 00:07:29,080 --> 00:07:32,000 Speaker 1: president in history, and more votes than able to accept Biden. 118 00:07:32,400 --> 00:07:35,800 Speaker 1: So it's not exactly like he was unpopular, and one 119 00:07:35,840 --> 00:07:38,560 Speaker 1: has to wonder how many of Biden's votes are actually 120 00:07:38,760 --> 00:07:41,200 Speaker 1: not real, and I think that's part of what these 121 00:07:41,240 --> 00:07:44,600 Speaker 1: five contested states are all about. Let me also say 122 00:07:44,640 --> 00:07:49,440 Speaker 1: that I think the initial indications from the Biden appointments 123 00:07:49,480 --> 00:07:52,040 Speaker 1: are it's going to be a very left wing administration. 124 00:07:52,560 --> 00:07:56,280 Speaker 1: They've appointed somebody to the transition team of Treasury who 125 00:07:56,440 --> 00:08:02,520 Speaker 1: is passionately in favor of reparations for African Americans, and 126 00:08:02,600 --> 00:08:05,400 Speaker 1: we spend billions and billions of dollars setting up what 127 00:08:05,440 --> 00:08:09,200 Speaker 1: I think is an impossible system. They have appointed as 128 00:08:09,240 --> 00:08:12,960 Speaker 1: a deputy chief of Staff somebody who had worked to 129 00:08:13,320 --> 00:08:17,200 Speaker 1: confiscate guns or have compulsory purchase of guns so you 130 00:08:17,320 --> 00:08:19,200 Speaker 1: have to sell it to the government and you wouldn't 131 00:08:19,200 --> 00:08:23,200 Speaker 1: be allowed donor. They have other people actively engaged with 132 00:08:23,240 --> 00:08:29,560 Speaker 1: them who have very radical ideas, including eliminating any federal 133 00:08:29,600 --> 00:08:33,520 Speaker 1: aid to any school that has a religious belief and 134 00:08:33,559 --> 00:08:37,520 Speaker 1: in fact even disaccrediting it on the grounds that religious 135 00:08:37,520 --> 00:08:41,400 Speaker 1: beliefs are anathetical to the gay and lesbian movement, which 136 00:08:41,400 --> 00:08:44,920 Speaker 1: is the primary group who are pushing that. It's going 137 00:08:44,960 --> 00:08:46,800 Speaker 1: to be a very interesting time to watch and see 138 00:08:46,840 --> 00:08:50,199 Speaker 1: what happens. I spend I don't know, four or five 139 00:08:50,320 --> 00:08:52,840 Speaker 1: six hours a day just trying to catch up with 140 00:08:52,920 --> 00:08:56,520 Speaker 1: the news because I'm looking for hints. I'm looking for 141 00:08:57,440 --> 00:09:00,840 Speaker 1: indicators of where we're going and what's happening. I've said 142 00:09:00,880 --> 00:09:04,000 Speaker 1: publicly I don't think the president should concede, yet I 143 00:09:04,040 --> 00:09:06,839 Speaker 1: think every day that goes by, we're learning more about 144 00:09:06,920 --> 00:09:10,240 Speaker 1: what went wrong. And I think it's very important. When 145 00:09:10,280 --> 00:09:12,520 Speaker 1: I say one's wrong, I don't mean the campaign, I 146 00:09:12,600 --> 00:09:15,920 Speaker 1: mean the election, and I think it's very important that 147 00:09:16,080 --> 00:09:18,280 Speaker 1: we learn all of this. I'm considering doing a book 148 00:09:18,760 --> 00:09:22,360 Speaker 1: on the reforms we need to have honest elections, because 149 00:09:22,760 --> 00:09:26,160 Speaker 1: if we don't have honest elections, we're in desperate trouble. 150 00:09:26,960 --> 00:09:30,640 Speaker 1: You're right to hire and fire the people to whom 151 00:09:30,679 --> 00:09:33,760 Speaker 1: you loan power is central to our whole system, is 152 00:09:33,840 --> 00:09:36,720 Speaker 1: central to what I mean by freedom. And if we're 153 00:09:36,720 --> 00:09:38,439 Speaker 1: going to go back to a period where the Tammany 154 00:09:38,480 --> 00:09:43,199 Speaker 1: hall tide machines where they dominate, then your freedom is 155 00:09:43,240 --> 00:09:47,240 Speaker 1: basically gone and you now are at the mercy of 156 00:09:47,320 --> 00:09:50,640 Speaker 1: corrupt politicians. So I think this is a very big deal. 157 00:09:51,040 --> 00:09:52,920 Speaker 1: I am not at all comfortable with where we are 158 00:09:53,000 --> 00:09:55,520 Speaker 1: right now. But I think that it's the topic we're 159 00:09:55,520 --> 00:09:58,920 Speaker 1: going to continue to explore and we'll continue to report 160 00:09:58,960 --> 00:10:01,199 Speaker 1: to you about it, and of course you go from 161 00:10:01,200 --> 00:10:05,880 Speaker 1: there to the economy, to international relations, to China, to 162 00:10:06,240 --> 00:10:10,000 Speaker 1: technological and scientific advances. We're entering a trade where they'll 163 00:10:10,040 --> 00:10:12,600 Speaker 1: be lots and launch to talk, a lot, a lot 164 00:10:12,600 --> 00:10:15,520 Speaker 1: to look at, and it's not going to slow down. 165 00:10:15,559 --> 00:10:18,800 Speaker 1: If anything, we may actually see more changes in the 166 00:10:18,800 --> 00:10:21,880 Speaker 1: next four years from all the different factors around the world. 167 00:10:31,440 --> 00:10:33,840 Speaker 1: This week on Outline with Giano Caldwell, I talked to 168 00:10:33,880 --> 00:10:36,520 Speaker 1: a man who's had a profound influence on my life, 169 00:10:36,520 --> 00:10:39,120 Speaker 1: and I'm talking about my pastor from back home, doctor 170 00:10:39,120 --> 00:10:41,760 Speaker 1: Bill Winston, who was the founder and senior pastor of 171 00:10:41,880 --> 00:10:45,120 Speaker 1: Living Where Christian Center, a nondenominational Christian church with more 172 00:10:45,160 --> 00:10:48,959 Speaker 1: than twenty thousand members located near Chicago. He is also 173 00:10:49,080 --> 00:10:52,520 Speaker 1: an author, an entrepreneur, educator, and a veteran who has 174 00:10:52,559 --> 00:10:55,560 Speaker 1: the most amazing and inspiring stories that you'll ever hear. 175 00:10:55,720 --> 00:10:58,360 Speaker 1: Listen to Outline with Giano Caldwell every Monday on the 176 00:10:58,360 --> 00:11:14,200 Speaker 1: iHeartRadio app Apple Pie Castle wherever you get your podcast. Debbie, 177 00:11:14,480 --> 00:11:16,600 Speaker 1: I know you have a whole bunch of questions that 178 00:11:16,679 --> 00:11:19,280 Speaker 1: have already come in. I thought we'd start there and 179 00:11:19,360 --> 00:11:21,560 Speaker 1: then it will go and just open the mics and 180 00:11:21,679 --> 00:11:23,960 Speaker 1: let people ask questions. But do you have some that 181 00:11:24,120 --> 00:11:27,480 Speaker 1: I've already even sent in? Oh yeah, the large outpouring 182 00:11:27,720 --> 00:11:31,120 Speaker 1: that we saw this last week from members that are 183 00:11:31,120 --> 00:11:35,280 Speaker 1: expressing their anger, their frustration, and their desire to get involved. 184 00:11:35,640 --> 00:11:39,080 Speaker 1: So a nise from Nevada summed it up beautifully. She said, 185 00:11:39,200 --> 00:11:42,559 Speaker 1: I'm feeling powerless. Why is it that the Republicans let 186 00:11:42,559 --> 00:11:45,520 Speaker 1: the Democrats get away with so much? Is there nothing 187 00:11:45,679 --> 00:11:48,480 Speaker 1: we can do? What can we do to get involved 188 00:11:48,559 --> 00:11:51,000 Speaker 1: or make a difference. Well, I think, first of all, 189 00:11:51,040 --> 00:11:53,880 Speaker 1: you can get involved in the politics of Nevada. I 190 00:11:53,920 --> 00:11:56,600 Speaker 1: got involved actively in nineteen sixty in Georgia when I 191 00:11:56,720 --> 00:12:00,400 Speaker 1: was a junior in high school and there was no 192 00:12:00,440 --> 00:12:05,880 Speaker 1: Georgia Republican Party. Today we have every statewide office, plus 193 00:12:05,920 --> 00:12:08,680 Speaker 1: the majority of the House members, plus control of both 194 00:12:08,720 --> 00:12:11,480 Speaker 1: the House and Center, so over time you can have 195 00:12:11,520 --> 00:12:15,679 Speaker 1: a huge impact. Ultimately, the Nevada Democratic Party is a 196 00:12:15,679 --> 00:12:20,040 Speaker 1: creature of the unions in Las Vegas. I think ultimately 197 00:12:20,480 --> 00:12:23,000 Speaker 1: they can't in the end run the state very well, 198 00:12:23,280 --> 00:12:25,240 Speaker 1: and I would encourage you to get involved in your 199 00:12:25,600 --> 00:12:28,839 Speaker 1: local party and get involved in helping candids, maybe run 200 00:12:28,880 --> 00:12:32,080 Speaker 1: yourself if you're willing to. That's how you change this. 201 00:12:32,280 --> 00:12:35,600 Speaker 1: It's a hard business, but it's a pretty straightforward business 202 00:12:35,920 --> 00:12:39,120 Speaker 1: and everybody can come and play. This is one a 203 00:12:39,160 --> 00:12:40,840 Speaker 1: lot of people wrote in and you may not know 204 00:12:40,880 --> 00:12:43,360 Speaker 1: the answer to it, but it was overarching their second 205 00:12:43,400 --> 00:12:47,680 Speaker 1: most popular one. The news is so conflicting regarding a 206 00:12:47,760 --> 00:12:51,040 Speaker 1: Trump strategy to win. Do you still see that there's 207 00:12:51,040 --> 00:12:54,640 Speaker 1: a way to do so and what would that be? Well? 208 00:12:54,679 --> 00:13:03,400 Speaker 1: I think there's two key factors here. I personally believe Nevada, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, 209 00:13:03,400 --> 00:13:06,400 Speaker 1: and Georgia are all in play. I think it's uphill, 210 00:13:06,480 --> 00:13:10,680 Speaker 1: partially because of the Court's reluctance. But remember in four 211 00:13:10,679 --> 00:13:15,679 Speaker 1: of those five states, in Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Georgia, 212 00:13:15,880 --> 00:13:19,080 Speaker 1: you have a Republican majority in both the House and 213 00:13:19,120 --> 00:13:24,079 Speaker 1: the Senate. And in a recent judgment involving the Wisconsin case, 214 00:13:24,600 --> 00:13:29,000 Speaker 1: we had a justice who wrote very clearly that the 215 00:13:29,040 --> 00:13:34,479 Speaker 1: Constitution gives the power over federal elections to the state legislature, 216 00:13:34,880 --> 00:13:37,800 Speaker 1: not the governor, not the courts, not the Secretary of state. 217 00:13:38,400 --> 00:13:43,080 Speaker 1: I've been advocating publicly that the Georgia legislature should reconvene itself, 218 00:13:43,120 --> 00:13:45,320 Speaker 1: even if the governor doesn't call them, you just call 219 00:13:45,440 --> 00:13:50,280 Speaker 1: themselves in and they should establish an overview to insist 220 00:13:50,320 --> 00:13:54,920 Speaker 1: on a complete vote count. Is the legislature technically which 221 00:13:55,400 --> 00:13:59,760 Speaker 1: appoints the electors, and I think in these four states 222 00:14:00,040 --> 00:14:02,520 Speaker 1: have a majority of Republican they are to say flatly 223 00:14:02,960 --> 00:14:06,720 Speaker 1: they are not going to appoint any electors until they 224 00:14:06,760 --> 00:14:10,040 Speaker 1: are convinced that there's been an honest and complete recount 225 00:14:10,480 --> 00:14:13,199 Speaker 1: in which every single ballot has been checked and we're 226 00:14:13,280 --> 00:14:17,400 Speaker 1: sure that every legal voter has voted, but no illegal voters. 227 00:14:17,720 --> 00:14:20,320 Speaker 1: At the same time, I think the federal government has 228 00:14:20,360 --> 00:14:23,480 Speaker 1: to get involved in Nevada because there you have a 229 00:14:23,520 --> 00:14:28,440 Speaker 1: state which has literally legalized corruption, and I think it's intolerable, 230 00:14:28,720 --> 00:14:30,920 Speaker 1: and I think we have a clear right, but also 231 00:14:30,960 --> 00:14:34,320 Speaker 1: would be legitimate for a governor of another state to 232 00:14:34,480 --> 00:14:37,320 Speaker 1: sue the state of Nevada on the grounds that their 233 00:14:37,440 --> 00:14:43,200 Speaker 1: illegitimate election weakens and delutes the effectiveness of the governor state, 234 00:14:43,600 --> 00:14:45,520 Speaker 1: and that would go straight to the Supreme Court at 235 00:14:45,560 --> 00:14:48,440 Speaker 1: one states is another who goes straight to the Supreme Court. 236 00:14:48,680 --> 00:14:51,560 Speaker 1: But I get a sense Justice Alito is very angry, 237 00:14:52,040 --> 00:14:55,640 Speaker 1: has given speeches publicly about how angry he is and 238 00:14:55,760 --> 00:14:58,960 Speaker 1: how much he thinks that the local politicians have ignored 239 00:14:59,000 --> 00:15:02,280 Speaker 1: the Court and nord the law. I think that just 240 00:15:02,400 --> 00:15:07,680 Speaker 1: as Kavanaugh wrote this very strong footnote in Wisconsin saying unequivocally, 241 00:15:07,720 --> 00:15:10,400 Speaker 1: if you read the Constitution, it says it is the 242 00:15:10,480 --> 00:15:15,120 Speaker 1: state legislatures, not the governors, not the courts, not the 243 00:15:15,160 --> 00:15:19,640 Speaker 1: sect or estate. I believe that it's very likely that 244 00:15:19,920 --> 00:15:24,520 Speaker 1: Gorsich and Barrett would agree with them, because, as original constructionists, 245 00:15:24,720 --> 00:15:28,720 Speaker 1: just put out your constitution and read that section. It 246 00:15:28,760 --> 00:15:32,880 Speaker 1: is so clear that it is impossible to argue anything else. Now. 247 00:15:32,920 --> 00:15:36,200 Speaker 1: It also has a very interesting twist, which I don't 248 00:15:36,200 --> 00:15:39,720 Speaker 1: think they'll go to, but it would certainly cause massive confusion. 249 00:15:40,280 --> 00:15:44,640 Speaker 1: The constitution actually says the election will occur on one day. 250 00:15:45,520 --> 00:15:49,120 Speaker 1: The constitution actually doesn't have any provision for mail in ballots, 251 00:15:49,240 --> 00:15:53,800 Speaker 1: or any provision or forty five day long elections. It 252 00:15:53,920 --> 00:15:58,120 Speaker 1: says the legislatures show held the election on one day, 253 00:15:58,160 --> 00:16:00,560 Speaker 1: and as originalists to be fast in to see what 254 00:16:00,560 --> 00:16:02,440 Speaker 1: they would do if they got a case like that. 255 00:16:02,760 --> 00:16:06,280 Speaker 1: I would also point out that I think Justice Thomas 256 00:16:06,440 --> 00:16:08,880 Speaker 1: would be very instant in this kind of case. So 257 00:16:09,240 --> 00:16:13,400 Speaker 1: I suspect you could get a potential five to four 258 00:16:13,520 --> 00:16:16,840 Speaker 1: vote or six to three vote in favor of the 259 00:16:16,920 --> 00:16:21,080 Speaker 1: state legislatures having their constitutional duty. But then the legislatures 260 00:16:21,320 --> 00:16:24,640 Speaker 1: who've all gotten slow and soft and this isn't their 261 00:16:24,720 --> 00:16:27,440 Speaker 1: kind of business. They've got to learn what their power 262 00:16:27,600 --> 00:16:29,960 Speaker 1: is and what their responsibility is, and they've got to 263 00:16:30,000 --> 00:16:31,760 Speaker 1: step up to the plate and do it. So I 264 00:16:31,760 --> 00:16:36,680 Speaker 1: would send anybody who's listening to us in Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin, 265 00:16:36,760 --> 00:16:40,520 Speaker 1: or Pennsylvania calling your state legislators and ask them to 266 00:16:40,560 --> 00:16:43,520 Speaker 1: set up a system to supervise all of this and 267 00:16:43,600 --> 00:16:46,680 Speaker 1: to make sure that they are totally satisfied that the 268 00:16:46,720 --> 00:16:50,479 Speaker 1: election was honest before they agree to send in any electors. 269 00:16:51,520 --> 00:16:55,920 Speaker 1: Mister Jordan asks, is the information regarding the dominion software 270 00:16:56,040 --> 00:16:59,640 Speaker 1: that Sidney Powell's been talking about sufficient for Trump to 271 00:16:59,680 --> 00:17:02,840 Speaker 1: six seed by January twentieth? And do you know if 272 00:17:02,840 --> 00:17:06,399 Speaker 1: it's true? Have we seen evidence? I respect Sidney Powell. 273 00:17:06,840 --> 00:17:09,960 Speaker 1: She wrote a remarkable book called License to Lie, which 274 00:17:10,000 --> 00:17:14,400 Speaker 1: was about the Justice Department's mistreatment of people. She's done 275 00:17:14,400 --> 00:17:18,160 Speaker 1: a very very good job for General Flynt and sometimes 276 00:17:18,200 --> 00:17:21,280 Speaker 1: I've interacted with Sydney. She's very professional and very very smart. 277 00:17:21,880 --> 00:17:24,280 Speaker 1: But I do think there's a point where you got 278 00:17:24,359 --> 00:17:27,960 Speaker 1: to show what you got, and I wish that if 279 00:17:27,960 --> 00:17:30,000 Speaker 1: she does have this evidence, I wish she'd bring it up. 280 00:17:30,600 --> 00:17:34,600 Speaker 1: We have a project underway at Kinglistreet sixty. We're candidly 281 00:17:34,880 --> 00:17:39,639 Speaker 1: we're trying to understand the stuff, but it is very murky. 282 00:17:39,720 --> 00:17:41,879 Speaker 1: I will tell you this though. One of the election 283 00:17:42,000 --> 00:17:44,560 Speaker 1: reforms I'm going to recommend, if I do end up 284 00:17:44,560 --> 00:17:46,919 Speaker 1: writing a book on election law, there's going to be 285 00:17:47,520 --> 00:17:51,320 Speaker 1: that you not have any firm which takes your votes 286 00:17:51,320 --> 00:17:56,440 Speaker 1: outside the United States. Apparently the votes are going through Barcelona, 287 00:17:56,480 --> 00:18:00,320 Speaker 1: Spain too frank for Germany to be counted. There are 288 00:18:00,320 --> 00:18:02,320 Speaker 1: several of these companies, but the one that had the 289 00:18:02,359 --> 00:18:05,399 Speaker 1: most states, who was doing all the vote county outside 290 00:18:05,400 --> 00:18:08,439 Speaker 1: the United States. And in this aryan age, if you 291 00:18:08,520 --> 00:18:11,919 Speaker 1: ask me, do I trust any system which is on 292 00:18:11,960 --> 00:18:15,199 Speaker 1: the Internet. My answers no, I don't mind a computer 293 00:18:15,280 --> 00:18:18,520 Speaker 1: that's isolated and off the Internet, but if it's on 294 00:18:18,560 --> 00:18:20,879 Speaker 1: the Internet, it is subject to hacking. And if you 295 00:18:20,920 --> 00:18:24,399 Speaker 1: look at the quality of Russian and Chinese hackers, or 296 00:18:24,480 --> 00:18:27,080 Speaker 1: for that matter, the quality of the best American hackers. 297 00:18:27,480 --> 00:18:30,960 Speaker 1: The idea that these things are safe, I think is lunacy. 298 00:18:31,200 --> 00:18:34,560 Speaker 1: I'm not saying that they necessarily be used to steal 299 00:18:34,600 --> 00:18:37,680 Speaker 1: the election for Biden. I'm just saying that the basic 300 00:18:37,800 --> 00:18:41,040 Speaker 1: construct of the system is profoundly wrong, which is why, 301 00:18:41,119 --> 00:18:44,800 Speaker 1: for example, the state of Texas turned down buying the 302 00:18:44,840 --> 00:18:50,280 Speaker 1: Dominum equipment. Eleanor wants your opinion on a Breitbart article where, 303 00:18:50,359 --> 00:18:53,960 Speaker 1: in an interview with Stacy Abrams by Jake Tapper, she 304 00:18:54,160 --> 00:18:57,840 Speaker 1: believes the Democrats can absolutely fill both Senate seats in 305 00:18:57,880 --> 00:19:02,320 Speaker 1: the runoff in January. What's your pa on that. I 306 00:19:02,359 --> 00:19:05,760 Speaker 1: think she may be right. I take very seriously the 307 00:19:05,880 --> 00:19:08,240 Speaker 1: danger that we could lose those two seats and you 308 00:19:08,280 --> 00:19:11,880 Speaker 1: could have Senator Schumer as majority leader, which would lead 309 00:19:11,880 --> 00:19:16,320 Speaker 1: to gun confiscation. It would lead to tax increases, it 310 00:19:16,400 --> 00:19:18,800 Speaker 1: would lead to the District of Columbia getting two US 311 00:19:18,880 --> 00:19:21,639 Speaker 1: Senators just go down the list. It would lead probably 312 00:19:21,640 --> 00:19:25,200 Speaker 1: to packing the court. That would certainly lead to efforts, 313 00:19:25,240 --> 00:19:30,159 Speaker 1: I think, to dramatically roll back our liberties. So I 314 00:19:30,280 --> 00:19:32,919 Speaker 1: take very seriously how big a deal this is. I 315 00:19:33,040 --> 00:19:36,040 Speaker 1: hope by January fifth, though we've gotten the message out 316 00:19:36,080 --> 00:19:38,520 Speaker 1: and that they're back up and running, but I'm very 317 00:19:38,560 --> 00:19:42,600 Speaker 1: concerned about the two Senate seats in Georgia. Leon from 318 00:19:42,640 --> 00:19:46,800 Speaker 1: Virginia is a retired US Naval intelligence officer who worked 319 00:19:46,800 --> 00:19:50,240 Speaker 1: for the Naval Investigative Services in DC. His job was 320 00:19:50,280 --> 00:19:54,840 Speaker 1: to run special background investigations for individuals seeking very high 321 00:19:54,880 --> 00:20:00,280 Speaker 1: security clearances. His question is, the president has to the 322 00:20:00,400 --> 00:20:05,240 Speaker 1: above top secret level of clearances. So given Vice President 323 00:20:05,320 --> 00:20:09,160 Speaker 1: Biden's dealings with the Ukraine and communist China, how could 324 00:20:09,160 --> 00:20:14,080 Speaker 1: he ever be granted this clearance? Well, the president didn't 325 00:20:14,119 --> 00:20:18,639 Speaker 1: granted clearance. The president is clearance. The objective fact is 326 00:20:18,680 --> 00:20:22,440 Speaker 1: that the American people select somebody to be president, whether 327 00:20:22,480 --> 00:20:25,879 Speaker 1: it's Donald Trump or Bill Clinton or George W. Bush 328 00:20:25,960 --> 00:20:29,960 Speaker 1: or Barack Obama or Joe Biden. The act of selecting 329 00:20:30,000 --> 00:20:34,000 Speaker 1: them gives them access to all of America's secrets. By definition, 330 00:20:34,600 --> 00:20:38,640 Speaker 1: the presidence the person who creates the security system. He's 331 00:20:38,680 --> 00:20:41,360 Speaker 1: not the person who subordinate to it. And it has 332 00:20:41,400 --> 00:20:43,679 Speaker 1: to be that way. The fact is, if in the 333 00:20:43,800 --> 00:20:45,840 Speaker 1: end we lose all these and if in the end 334 00:20:45,920 --> 00:20:50,119 Speaker 1: Joe Biden becomes president, he is president, and that means 335 00:20:50,160 --> 00:20:52,720 Speaker 1: that he will have all of the prerogaties in power 336 00:20:52,840 --> 00:20:57,359 Speaker 1: the presidency. Roy and Joan from Virginia have a suggestion. 337 00:20:57,760 --> 00:21:01,320 Speaker 1: With the vaccine on the nation's doorstep, why isn't its 338 00:21:01,480 --> 00:21:05,480 Speaker 1: arrival widely labeled as the Trump vaccine. He's behind the 339 00:21:05,480 --> 00:21:08,359 Speaker 1: true success and it needs to be labeled before the 340 00:21:08,440 --> 00:21:12,199 Speaker 1: incoming administration takes all the credit for it. Well, if 341 00:21:12,240 --> 00:21:13,879 Speaker 1: we lived in a world it was fair, it probably 342 00:21:13,840 --> 00:21:16,240 Speaker 1: wouldn't be called the Trump vaccine. But I somehow don't 343 00:21:16,240 --> 00:21:20,840 Speaker 1: see NBC News uttering the Trump vaccine, although I will 344 00:21:20,880 --> 00:21:25,919 Speaker 1: confess CNN yesterday gave President Trump credit for it and 345 00:21:26,000 --> 00:21:28,679 Speaker 1: said that this was his great achievement and that he 346 00:21:28,800 --> 00:21:32,560 Speaker 1: deserved recognition for it. Was a mildly shocking moment in 347 00:21:32,600 --> 00:21:53,320 Speaker 1: the history of CNN. Okay, Witty, let's go over to 348 00:21:53,359 --> 00:21:56,199 Speaker 1: you and let's take some questions from people who are 349 00:21:56,280 --> 00:22:01,520 Speaker 1: here alive with us today. I know. My question is, 350 00:22:01,960 --> 00:22:05,720 Speaker 1: if all the states choose to certify their votes, can 351 00:22:05,800 --> 00:22:08,760 Speaker 1: President Trump still contest this election and take it to 352 00:22:08,800 --> 00:22:10,800 Speaker 1: the Supreme Court or is it a done deal at 353 00:22:10,800 --> 00:22:15,400 Speaker 1: that point? No? Certification actually is the step before most 354 00:22:15,480 --> 00:22:18,600 Speaker 1: lawsuits that doesn't preclude him from having all of his 355 00:22:18,720 --> 00:22:22,159 Speaker 1: legal rights. And the key dates are the fourteenth of December, 356 00:22:22,600 --> 00:22:25,639 Speaker 1: when the electors first meet, and then the ballast that 357 00:22:25,720 --> 00:22:29,640 Speaker 1: they cast. I think it's on the sixth of January, 358 00:22:29,720 --> 00:22:32,920 Speaker 1: and those are the key dates. And so I think 359 00:22:33,000 --> 00:22:36,440 Speaker 1: after the sixth unless no one's gotten two hundred and 360 00:22:36,520 --> 00:22:39,520 Speaker 1: seventy electoral votes, at which point it goes to the 361 00:22:39,560 --> 00:22:44,639 Speaker 1: House and Senate and they make a decision. Good morning. 362 00:22:44,920 --> 00:22:48,480 Speaker 1: My question is not one that involves the urgency of 363 00:22:48,520 --> 00:22:53,000 Speaker 1: the election. But I have long thought that one of 364 00:22:53,040 --> 00:22:57,240 Speaker 1: the keys to making our republic better is to have 365 00:22:57,480 --> 00:22:59,240 Speaker 1: term limits, and I know that was part of the 366 00:22:59,280 --> 00:23:04,120 Speaker 1: contract with America. And my questions are, do you agree 367 00:23:04,400 --> 00:23:07,199 Speaker 1: and do you think that will happen in the relatively 368 00:23:07,280 --> 00:23:11,520 Speaker 1: near future. I think I could live with, say, twelve 369 00:23:11,600 --> 00:23:14,360 Speaker 1: year term limits. I think that you'd have more turnover, 370 00:23:14,480 --> 00:23:17,720 Speaker 1: you'd have more new blood coming in. I would oppose 371 00:23:17,800 --> 00:23:21,080 Speaker 1: anything shorter than twelve years, because, frankly, it takes a 372 00:23:21,080 --> 00:23:25,000 Speaker 1: while to learn the legislative process. It's really a complicated business. 373 00:23:25,840 --> 00:23:27,960 Speaker 1: In an ideal way, the right kind of term limits 374 00:23:28,000 --> 00:23:30,600 Speaker 1: the next election, and if somebody's a bad member, you 375 00:23:30,600 --> 00:23:32,840 Speaker 1: ought to go ahead and beat them. It's very hard 376 00:23:32,840 --> 00:23:37,280 Speaker 1: to imagine getting the Congress to voluntarily set term limits 377 00:23:37,280 --> 00:23:40,720 Speaker 1: for itself, but in the various state legislatures that has happened, 378 00:23:41,040 --> 00:23:45,119 Speaker 1: So it's conceivable, but I think it's uphill. Thank you 379 00:23:45,119 --> 00:23:48,560 Speaker 1: for thinking that question. Is there any cohesive plan at 380 00:23:48,560 --> 00:23:51,639 Speaker 1: the level of gop r NC to set up a 381 00:23:51,720 --> 00:23:57,720 Speaker 1: national strategy toween elections given the way these elections happen lately, Well, 382 00:23:57,760 --> 00:24:00,520 Speaker 1: that's a good question. I would say. Actually, they had 383 00:24:00,560 --> 00:24:03,560 Speaker 1: a pretty good strategy on the House side. They knew 384 00:24:04,000 --> 00:24:07,680 Speaker 1: that they wanted to recruit very broadly. They had largest 385 00:24:07,840 --> 00:24:11,560 Speaker 1: victories for minority groups and for women in the history 386 00:24:11,560 --> 00:24:14,600 Speaker 1: of the House Republican Party. They went out and really 387 00:24:14,640 --> 00:24:19,040 Speaker 1: recruited hard to get really good candidates, and they had 388 00:24:19,040 --> 00:24:24,600 Speaker 1: a strategy really of taking on Pelosi and pitying the 389 00:24:24,800 --> 00:24:28,440 Speaker 1: local Democrat against Pelosi and a way which seemed to 390 00:24:28,480 --> 00:24:32,080 Speaker 1: work pretty well. I think that president had a strategy 391 00:24:32,080 --> 00:24:37,000 Speaker 1: which came close to emphasize the economy on one hand, 392 00:24:37,480 --> 00:24:40,679 Speaker 1: to emphasize things like the breakthroughs of the vaccines, and 393 00:24:40,720 --> 00:24:44,880 Speaker 1: then to emphasize how radical Kamala Harris was and how 394 00:24:45,400 --> 00:24:51,399 Speaker 1: inevitably radical Biden would be. He relatively followed that probably 395 00:24:51,440 --> 00:24:54,960 Speaker 1: did a little more attacking Biden person than I would 396 00:24:54,960 --> 00:24:58,000 Speaker 1: have recommended, because it actually I think weakened the case. 397 00:24:58,680 --> 00:25:01,919 Speaker 1: The challenge of Biden was not that he was inadequate. 398 00:25:01,960 --> 00:25:04,280 Speaker 1: The challenge was, in the end he was going to 399 00:25:04,320 --> 00:25:06,919 Speaker 1: represent a very left wing government, which is what I 400 00:25:06,960 --> 00:25:11,480 Speaker 1: think we'll see in the next couple of months. They're 401 00:25:11,520 --> 00:25:15,600 Speaker 1: not concerned that the media has just decided that this 402 00:25:15,640 --> 00:25:20,000 Speaker 1: election is over and that there's nothing that can be done, 403 00:25:20,680 --> 00:25:24,199 Speaker 1: so that if something big does happen, it will be 404 00:25:24,240 --> 00:25:27,800 Speaker 1: pushed back and not accepted by the general population. What's 405 00:25:27,840 --> 00:25:31,399 Speaker 1: your feelings about that. I think that's a very wise 406 00:25:32,359 --> 00:25:35,160 Speaker 1: and very sophisticated approach. I agree with you. I think 407 00:25:35,800 --> 00:25:40,359 Speaker 1: the media was desperate to defeat Trump. The first chance 408 00:25:40,400 --> 00:25:43,520 Speaker 1: they got to say something, they called it very early, 409 00:25:43,880 --> 00:25:46,560 Speaker 1: and people need to remember not a single state has 410 00:25:46,600 --> 00:25:49,719 Speaker 1: been certified yet. What you have as a coronation by 411 00:25:49,760 --> 00:25:52,840 Speaker 1: the news media who hate Trump and who would have 412 00:25:52,840 --> 00:25:56,040 Speaker 1: preferred anybody I think to Trump, And of course they 413 00:25:56,040 --> 00:25:58,280 Speaker 1: want to create an environment in which people say, well, 414 00:25:58,320 --> 00:26:00,199 Speaker 1: why are you still counting goats? Well, the end or 415 00:26:00,280 --> 00:26:02,679 Speaker 1: is as going to the Trump. We owe it to 416 00:26:02,720 --> 00:26:06,040 Speaker 1: the American people to find out how many examples of 417 00:26:06,040 --> 00:26:10,040 Speaker 1: corruption and dishonesty are embedded in the system, and it 418 00:26:10,040 --> 00:26:13,440 Speaker 1: would actually, I think, be a disservice to America if 419 00:26:13,480 --> 00:26:17,280 Speaker 1: Trump conceded too early and didn't insist them completing the 420 00:26:17,359 --> 00:26:20,520 Speaker 1: vote counts in the appeals process. Every day I learn 421 00:26:20,600 --> 00:26:23,960 Speaker 1: new examples of how the corruption occurs and what the 422 00:26:24,000 --> 00:26:26,560 Speaker 1: bad guys are doing. And that's only going to happen 423 00:26:26,920 --> 00:26:30,200 Speaker 1: if we continue to keep the heat on. Now here's 424 00:26:30,240 --> 00:26:34,440 Speaker 1: my question. What percentage of Senate Republicans are confused about 425 00:26:34,480 --> 00:26:37,760 Speaker 1: the idea that the base has expectations to support President 426 00:26:37,800 --> 00:26:40,280 Speaker 1: Trump and we will remain the leader of the party 427 00:26:40,320 --> 00:26:43,040 Speaker 1: after this election no matter what. It seems like a 428 00:26:43,040 --> 00:26:45,040 Speaker 1: lot of them think he's going to go away and 429 00:26:45,080 --> 00:26:48,159 Speaker 1: they can have business as usual. Love to get your thoughts. 430 00:26:49,160 --> 00:26:52,320 Speaker 1: I think overwhelmingly they think that he will be a 431 00:26:52,359 --> 00:26:55,840 Speaker 1: dominating figure again. You know, four years is a long time. 432 00:26:56,520 --> 00:26:58,439 Speaker 1: If he wants to run again, he would be very, 433 00:26:58,560 --> 00:27:01,639 Speaker 1: very formidable. I also look around and decide, you know, 434 00:27:01,720 --> 00:27:03,640 Speaker 1: it's been a lot of fun, but it's not how 435 00:27:03,640 --> 00:27:05,679 Speaker 1: he wants to spend the rest of his life. I 436 00:27:05,800 --> 00:27:09,040 Speaker 1: think that the values and the policies he stands for 437 00:27:09,840 --> 00:27:13,440 Speaker 1: will bear the test of time, and I think probably 438 00:27:14,280 --> 00:27:17,000 Speaker 1: seventy or eighty percent of the party will be broadly 439 00:27:17,040 --> 00:27:20,120 Speaker 1: in favor of a Trump vision of the world. But 440 00:27:20,480 --> 00:27:23,240 Speaker 1: I don't think you should assume automatically that he would 441 00:27:23,240 --> 00:27:26,480 Speaker 1: win the nomination, nor should you assume automatically that you'd run. 442 00:27:26,880 --> 00:27:29,240 Speaker 1: So there's plenty of time and space there for other 443 00:27:29,280 --> 00:27:31,800 Speaker 1: people to come out and do a good job. And 444 00:27:31,840 --> 00:27:33,880 Speaker 1: frankly it's good for the party. But if you can 445 00:27:33,920 --> 00:27:36,479 Speaker 1: get twenty or thirty candidates who think they may want 446 00:27:36,480 --> 00:27:38,600 Speaker 1: to run for president and get all of them working 447 00:27:38,600 --> 00:27:42,280 Speaker 1: in two twenty two to elect House and Senate candidates, 448 00:27:42,560 --> 00:27:44,879 Speaker 1: you have a lot of energy out there helping the 449 00:27:44,920 --> 00:27:47,920 Speaker 1: Republican Party, and for lots of people having a chance 450 00:27:48,240 --> 00:27:52,120 Speaker 1: go try it, give speeches, raise money, and get better known. 451 00:27:52,560 --> 00:27:57,800 Speaker 1: Creates a much healthier party. You have many choices. If 452 00:27:57,800 --> 00:28:00,280 Speaker 1: you find this useful, feel free to say them on 453 00:28:00,359 --> 00:28:02,960 Speaker 1: to your friends and to encourage your friends to join 454 00:28:03,400 --> 00:28:05,800 Speaker 1: and be part of your circle. It's a program I 455 00:28:05,840 --> 00:28:08,159 Speaker 1: really like, and as you can see today, PRECI had 456 00:28:08,200 --> 00:28:10,919 Speaker 1: a lot of different people, a lot of ideas, and 457 00:28:11,119 --> 00:28:13,720 Speaker 1: we're going to continue developing itself. Thank you all, very 458 00:28:13,800 --> 00:28:20,800 Speaker 1: very mution have a wonderful thankgiving. Thank you to my guests, 459 00:28:20,880 --> 00:28:23,840 Speaker 1: the founding members of my Inner Circle club. You can 460 00:28:23,920 --> 00:28:25,960 Speaker 1: become a member of the Inner Circle by going to 461 00:28:26,080 --> 00:28:29,480 Speaker 1: NewsCenter Circle dot com or by visiting our show page 462 00:28:29,760 --> 00:28:33,639 Speaker 1: at newsworld dot com. News World is produced by Gamers 463 00:28:33,600 --> 00:28:38,040 Speaker 1: three sixty and Iheartmedi. I'm new gag Rich. This is 464 00:28:38,200 --> 00:28:38,720 Speaker 1: Newsworld