Best of The Program | Guest: Robert Cahaly | 1/5/21

43m
Kamala Harris’ story about “fweedom” is oddly similar to one told by Martin Luther King Jr., and some suggest plagiarism. Trafalgar Group chief pollster Robert Cahaly joins with good news about his Georgia polls and what he sees as the biggest issues for voters. Glenn has a poll for you: Which radical leftist proposals will be reality in a year if the Democrats win the Senate?
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Hi, Stu.

Hi.

Oh, it was a great show today.

Hi, it was magical, though.

It was magical.

It was.

We talked about freedom

and this amazing story of Kamala Harris or Kamala Harris, which is pretty much my story of my childhood.

I didn't know.

I didn't realize it was so similar.

Yeah.

Well, a lot of people didn't know hers was like almost a rip-off of Martin Luther King's story.

Almost.

Almost.

Mine, coincidentally, almost exactly her story.

So Martin Luther King stole it from you?

Well, could be, could be.

I don't want to make any accusations like that and spread any fake news.

But we talked mainly today about Georgia and what is coming.

We talked to the

head guy of Trafalgar, which is the, I think, the most accurate in the last five-year pollster in the nation.

And he has got good news and bad news on Virginia.

I'm sorry, on Georgia.

And all of that is discussed and so much more, including the new house rules, all on today's podcast.

You're listening to the best of the Blenbeck program.

But I also, I want to tell you this amazing story that

Kamala Harris has told many times, and

it is so good.

It's worth repeating.

She was doing an interview with Elle Magazine, and

she just,

she said she was in Oakland, California, and she was very, very small, and she was attending a civil rights march.

And she was sitting in her stroller, and she remembers it.

And at one point, her parents were all caught up in the protest and she fell out of the stroller.

And then all of the parents and nobody even noticed that she was gone.

And

strangely, this is the part where I say, and

no one questioned the parents or, you know, sent a Department of Children and Families to their door.

Your baby fell out of a stroller and you just walked on?

It made me an annoying baby.

Yeah.

So

she said in the magazine article, by the time they noticed that little Kamala was gone and doubled back, she was understandably upset.

Kamala says, my mother tells a story about how I was fussing and she's like, baby, what do you want?

What do you need?

Which is exactly what a parent would say to a baby that was all upset.

You know, it wouldn't be like, hey, I'm here.

I'm sorry.

We got you.

You're safe.

No, no, no.

It's like, what do you need?

What do you want?

And little Kamala looked at her and said, freedom.

And it is so, so sweet.

It's just,

just wonderful and so,

it just rings true, doesn't it?

Oh, I mean, I...

You don't have to convince me this story is true.

I believe it immediately.

It just sounds sounds so true.

Now,

there is another story like this

that has been found.

Martin Luther King told this story about

how

during a protest, a young black girl was accosted by a white policeman.

And Martin Luther King said the girl looked at the policeman in the eye and

told him she wanted freedom.

So it's a completely different story.

One was freedom, and this one is freedom.

Yeah, but it's clear it was stolen.

It's clear Martin Luther King stole it from Kamala Harris.

Right?

That's what I was thinking.

That's what I was thinking.

Unbelievable.

Yeah.

How that bastard, that's why we should erase him.

How that bastard would steal from Kamala, which was such a sweet story.

And you know, it happens a lot of times.

It happens.

I remember I was very, very small,

and I was up on the grassy knoll.

It was in a stroller.

And my parents were so excited to see

Jack Kennedy

and his lovely wife that they didn't even notice that the stroller had rolled down the grassy knoll

and hit the back of this big black convertible.

And I was thrown onto the back of this car.

Oh, my goodness.

Yeah, yeah.

And I just remember this pretty nice lady, and she was so pretty.

She was dressed in pink, and she crawled out on the back of that car to grab me, and she pulled me in into the car, and she was holding me, and I said,

you have blood all over your dress.

And she said, dad,

no, it's not blood, it's blood.

And it was such a cute thing.

And she said,

what do you want?

What do you need?

And I said, Fuita.

Oh, that's so sweet.

Yeah.

What a sweet story.

It was, it was, it was really nice.

Kind of like when I remember when FDR

was given the speech, you know, about going to war.

Yeah.

And

my parents were up in the balcony, you know, watching it.

And they didn't, they were just so excited to see FDR.

They didn't notice that I had crawled over the balcony and fallen

down

right onto the floor of the house.

And it's a lot of terrible parents in these stories.

Yeah, well, let's not question the parents.

And so I was, because I was a healthy baby,

I fell down and then I just rolled right to the feet of FDR.

Like a hedgehog?

Kind of like that.

Yeah.

And so I was there at the feet of him and he said, you know, a date which will live.

And I pulled on his pant leg.

I said, mister, mister.

And he looks down at me.

I'll never forget.

He looks down at me and he's like, oh my gosh, this cute little baby is right at my feet.

And he bent down and he picked me up and he said,

what do you want?

I said, a band date.

Because I was bleeding a little bit from the fall.

Sure, because your parents let you fall off a balcony.

And he said, you want what?

And I said, freedom.

And he said, that was so cute.

And that's why we went to war, World War II, because he was going to say a date which will live in the minds of people is a peaceful day.

And instead, a date of infamy.

infamy because I said freedom and he realized that's Japan is against freedom.

Yeah, much better speech

the way he wound up doing it.

Yeah, it was

and I played a role in that.

Thank God you were there.

Yeah.

Because

that really would have been a terrible moment in U.S.

history.

I remember when I was on the moon.

My parents were doing something shopping or something, and my stroller started rolling out the street.

And all of a sudden, I found myself on the moon.

Oh, is that because you had those those balloons they had bought you attached to the stroller?

Yeah, sure.

Just kind of lifted up like you there.

No, I just heard this.

You know, I've heard so many people go through this.

And so I'm there on the moon.

And

one of these guys, I think they're coming to rescue me, but they just happen to be going to the moon at the same time.

And one of them comes down and he's like, you know, one small step.

And I'm like, wheatum.

And he

didn't.

He didn't.

He looked at me and he's like, what's a baby doing on the moon?

Without a spacesuit.

Without a spacesuit.

And I just tugged on his spacesuit and I actually put a hole in it, which freaked him out a little bit.

But I was a baby.

I didn't know what I was doing.

And he says, what are you doing here on the moon?

I said, I want freedom and oxygen.

And he was like, oh, you want dogs.

That's adorable.

It was so cute.

When little babies say oxygen, it's just there's nothing more adorable than that.

Have you considered running for vice president?

Because

I haven't.

I haven't.

You know, I don't like to brag and tell these cute, cute stories about me.

You know?

No.

Because I know because Kaima Harris occasionally will do that.

She'll tell those stories.

It was really cold one Christmas Eve, and my parents weren't paying attention, and I floated away on an iceberg.

And

I was in the river, the Delaware River.

And all of a sudden, this boat comes up and all these guys are in it.

And

I'm trying to get back to Philadelphia and he's going the other way.

And I said,

because I was so cold.

I was like, fue them.

And this guy, you know, in the boat, just picks me up and he's like, you are so cute.

You look at your chewy.

You're chewy.

And I said, I am.

And

it was George Washington.

And they were pressing the Delaware.

Oh, my goodness.

And they were going up.

I don't know what they were going to do, but I said,

and they went, and they beat the Hessians.

Really?

Yeah.

Wow, that was you.

That was me.

Wow.

That was the rallying cry that day.

That's interesting because, you know, Kamala had that story about freedom,

and it was very powerful.

Yeah, very powerful.

And she often tells powerful stories about her childhood, like when she said that Joe Biden was a racist in the debate.

That was also another heartwarming

story.

You're a racist.

I want freedom from Joe Biden.

Right.

Is what she initially was.

And when she said that Joe Biden was a wapist.

Oh, yeah.

Yeah.

A hair-sniffing wapist.

Right.

Yeah.

I remember that.

That story was good too.

Oh, it was so cute.

How does this happen?

I mean, this is just so pathetic.

We have to have these like weird.

I mean, it does,

all appearances are at least that she's basically lifted the story for Martin Luther King, or at least part of it.

What?

Just the good parts?

Yeah, right.

Just the cute parts.

Yeah, Martin Luther King didn't have the story of the parents abandoning their kid during a rally.

It's a great.

My parents are so drunk.

And they're like, well, you have the baby.

I don't have the baby.

I thought you had the baby.

And so they were like, baby, because they couldn't remember my name.

And then I was crying.

And my parents were, what do you want, kid?

What do you want?

And I said, wait a minute.

This is going to turn out being like a St.

Patrick's Day parade.

Is there going to be one of, it's not a, it's not a rally for some heartwarming cause.

Just parents are hammered.

Yeah.

I mean,

how do you lose this baby in the stroller?

You're still pushing the stroller, but the baby falls out.

The article tries to make it out to be.

They didn't have a lot of safety requirements on children's strollers.

Yeah, because parents were a little more responsible.

Right.

Like,

leave it to the media to be like, the problem was the government.

They didn't require any

straps for the kid.

I don't know.

Maybe the parents should be looking at the kid, checking in occasionally.

Mommy, daddy, I fell out.

It's not the way you're supposed to do it.

It's not like a once-a-month check-in when you have a baby.

You're supposed to be adding more.

You're in a crowd.

You're in a crowd of people.

Oh, when you, I mean, you remember this, Glenn, when you have a baby and you're like, you're in a crowded environment,

you're obsessive.

Yeah.

You're like looking, making eye contact with this child constantly to make sure you don't screw it up.

Because in your mind,

when the baby's firstborn, it's just going to stop breathing in the middle of the night, and you're terrified of that.

Later on, you're afraid you're going to leave it on like the top of the car right the car seat.

Like you're constantly obsessed about like, it's just a bizarre idea that just maybe they just kind of let her, you know, roll down the street in the middle of a

political rally.

And what a great microcosm for the way our country is operating right now.

Like, this is the way the left is, right?

Yeah, you know what?

What's more important?

Your baby or your politics.

I guess they made a choice there.

The best of the Glen Bank program.

Chief bolster of the Trafalgar Group,

Robert Cahaley.

He's actually,

he was born in Georgia, raised in South Carolina, and has been doing this really campaigning since he was 10 years old going door to door.

He is one of the guys that has really looked

good

with the polls.

Most accurate national presidential polls of 2020.

Most accurate midterm polls 2018, 2017.

Only pollster to correctly call all Georgia six special election.

Most accurate presidential poll in 2016.

He's got a good record.

We wanted to hear what he is saying,

I think, about Georgia.

Hi, Robert.

How are you doing, sir?

Good, good, good.

Just, I'm hoping that you are going to have some good news,

but I don't think you are

for the GR.

I'm going to have some good news.

Okay.

So, all right.

So

here's what we've got.

We think that the turnout needs to be $1,050,000 for both Republicans to win.

Now, remember, the early voting was 23%

off from the early voting in the fall.

So

at 23% of the general

election day voting, that's only

850,000 roughly turnout.

That's not enough.

So the question is, what's that turnout going to be?

We think it's going to be in the window of between $850,000 today and $1,050,000.

And that gives us a split decision.

With that turnout, we have Leffler at $49.7,

Warnock at $48.4 with 1.9 undecided.

Leffler wins.

We have Osoff at 49.4 and Purdue at 48.5.

Purdue loses.

Okay.

If it goes above one point, if it goes above $1,050,000, Purdue has a chance to win.

But that is trying to get a turnout in the general election that is higher than November.

And I think that's a hill too steep to climb.

What is the ⁇ do you measure the passion

at all from the Democrats and the Republicans?

And tell me about that.

Well, and the passion is best demonstrated by that turnout.

this election is not going to

if either republican loses or both lose they're not going to have lost because a lack of a pat a lack of republican passion they're going to be lost because somebody took republican passion and squeezed the life out of it

uh when this

we had them both winning and widening the gap we started with purdue losing and left for winning and then left for was rising and so was purdue leftra was outside of the margin error and purdue was winning within the margins error.

And then the 23rd of December happened.

And when they came out with the 600 bucks and all the money to the foreign countries, people didn't like it.

Trump, of course, the room, understood, and said, we need to do more.

Warnock and Ossoff

chimed in immediately, backing Trump on the 2000.

Left for said, well, I'll consider it.

I don't think Purdue made a statement at all that night.

And

that's when we saw the five-point drop in the days that came after.

And then Mitch McConnell comes out and says,

we're not going to do this at all.

And so the argument.

Did we lose him?

Oh, man.

Big tech.

After it again.

After it again.

They did not want to hear what he had to say.

That's unbelievable.

That's crazy.

And they don't even control anything yet.

Or do they?

It's interesting.

So he seems to think that Leffler has the better chance of winning.

Now, you know, one

that's way too close for comfort.

No, it's, I mean, look, I think he would tell you, you know, look, these are all right in the margin of error.

We don't know for sure.

It's interesting, though, if you look back at the way these races developed.

The race that Leffler and Warnock were in was a major, one of these like 30 candidate races where Leffler and Warnock were the top two.

So people really didn't do anything to criticize Warnock in that race.

Loffler was running against Collins, another Republican, to try to get to the top of the 30-person pack.

So no one really

took any shots at Warnock at all.

It's been only since that election that people have focused on his record.

Like, for example,

his ex-wife, his wife at the time, is on camera saying that he was

abusive, ran over her foot

intentionally.

You know, said that she's a great actor.

You know, there's been a lot of, not to mention all the stuff in comparison to Jeremiah Wright.

You had a great special on a lot of this a few weeks ago.

It's important that people know this, and maybe that sort of spotlight shining on Warnock for the first time is going to be determinative.

So Robert is back with us.

You dropped out halfway through the conversation, Robert.

But we were talking about

that

what happened with

the stimulus package really changed everything.

Yeah, I mean,

you know, the argument the Republicans have been making for six weeks is you don't want to have Schumer as majority leader.

You don't want all the bad things Democrats are going to do.

And then all of a sudden the Democrats were going, well, you don't have your two grand because of

McConnell, and that's who they plan to vote to keep in there.

So you're never going to get your money if they win.

And that was, and

for him to call the money socialism affected a lot of people.

I mean, I don't know whether you saw the tweet, I put out about 75% of people in Georgia wanted it to be $2,000.

I mean, I said at the time, that's as popular as sweet tea barbecue and college football.

Right.

You don't need to be against that.

Right.

Because when you're giving money to people who are hard working, who you told not to work, who the government said you can't work, they don't like being treated like people who are getting welfare who don't work.

They don't like it.

I couldn't agree with you more.

I wasn't on the air when this happened.

I thought $600 was so insulting.

$2,000, I felt as strongly that that was insulting.

As a small business owner, and

I'm fortunate enough to be doing well, but all of these people that own small businesses like me, I thought, $2,000, what is that that going to do?

$2,000 is nothing if you haven't worked in six months.

It's insulting as well.

This is a different

kind of situation that we're in.

Well, and rarely, I mean, think about how often in the history of politics does the government write a check to the taxpayers before an election.

And if that happens, you want to be on the side of the bigger check.

You know, if less is more, unless you're talking about stimulus.

And the other problem is once people know that it could have been 2,000, I mean, we're talking to the people on the phone who said, yeah, I got my $600.

It just ticks me off, and they didn't say ticks me off that I could have had 2,000.

And so it was an unforced error.

If we lose both of them, that's going to be why.

But it just didn't need to happen.

I think even with their initial missteps, not embracing the 2,000, it's hard to beat them up the last 10 days if people got $2,000 in the bank.

But then they're like, what are you talking about?

Because these people get the money now.

I mean, people have been getting checks in Georgia since last Wednesday.

So it just, it struck the wrong chord.

It reinforced this idea.

I mean, Joe Biden here yesterday saying,

well,

if they go back,

you'll never get 2,000 or anything else.

It gave them a talk.

It was an unforced error.

It gave them a talking point they didn't need.

And

I mean, I feel like the president did everything he could to help fix that.

Unbelievable.

Unbelievable.

Okay, did you say you had good news?

You haven't already passed that, have you?

Well,

winning one is better than losing both.

Yeah, it is.

It is.

I can't imagine.

Have you done any polling yet on

where people think we're going to be in six months if

they really start doing all the things that they say they're going to do?

The Green New Deal,

you know, severe cutbacks with guns.

I mean, have you seen anything or do you have any kind of temperature gauge from America on this?

It's interesting you mention that because the one issue that I have seen glaringly absent in Georgia, and again, I'm here.

I've watched

the local TV.

I've watched all the

listening ads, listen to different kinds of radio.

I have seen so little talk about guns.

I've heard talk about defunding police, but here's the thing.

This is Georgia.

Guns go across, support for guns, goes across socioeconomic and racial lines.

Black people and white people love guns in Georgia.

They do not want you taking their guns.

And why in the world?

That was not a front-and-center issue.

It's interesting.

You saw the president mention that.

But,

I mean, find me an ad that that that was out there where

Bachelor or Purdue were hitting him them own guns the Republicans are just stupid do you have any polling numbers on that on how stupid the Republicans are

well I you know I have a lot of problems with how these campaigns were run

and I feel like I feel like two pretty good candidates I mean, not amazing candidates, but pretty good candidates, didn't get the service they deserved.

There's no way we shouldn't have been taught that

this discussion in Georgia shouldn't have been about

guns because nothing will separate

especially rural Democrats, and there still are a lot in Georgia, away from Democrat nominees then talking about taking away your guns.

And I mean, if it were me, I'd have had Beto all over the T V talking about taking away guns and Biden saying Beto's my man.

Well it does Does Warnock play

in Georgia

or does he I mean, he's so Jeremiah Wright without

Barack Obama backing away from him.

I mean he is he's a radical.

Is he perceived as one?

He is perceived as one, but you have in that race

you know, I compare the Warnock race very much to

Jamie

in South Carolina Harrison who ran against Plinsey

he had the benefit of social desirability bias and Jamie Harrison is 10 times the candidate Ralph Warnock is let me just say that to begin with but it was still South Carolina but it's also like I've compared this more to Florida than anything in the Gillam DeSantis race there was a social desirability bias people saying they were for Gillum who had no intention of voting for him and yet in the Senate race Nelson has got there was no social desirability bias What they said to who they were for.

We've seen the same thing here.

Almost no social desirability in the Osoff

Purdue race and a little bit of social desirability in the Leffler Warnock race.

There is, and so I did, you know, I did some studying on who the voters are who are telling us they're for Loffler and Osoff.

And what I find is they're rural, they're rural

white Democrats,

they are are

suburban moms

who don't like Trump and don't love everything about Lefford, but Warnock scares them.

Scares them about defunding police and, you know, GD America and all that kind of stuff.

And

also, so an appreciable difference with the Hispanic vote.

that Lefford does significantly better.

I mean, like in the 80s in the Hispanic vote versus Warnock.

Wow.

Yep.

All right, Robert.

I mean,

pro-choice pastor is a big thing, and

it does not play well with most of the Hispanic voters we've told.

Thank you so much for

everything.

You know, in the last few years, you've been one guy you can really count on and look at, and I think somebody who's using their noodle a little more and trying to understand voters.

The Trafalgar Group

is where he's the chief pollster.

His name is Robert Cahaley.

You can follow him on his website at the Trafalgar Group.org.

You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck program.

Let me go to Mel in Georgia.

Hello, Mel.

Hi.

Thanks for taking my call.

You bet.

Now,

you're not a resident of Georgia, but you're in Georgia.

That is correct.

I have spent the last, I don't know, eight or ten days down just south of Atlanta, like Peachtree City down that way.

And I'm actually just here to campaign go door to door.

So we've been going door to door.

We've been to hundreds of doors, mostly Republican.

And about half said they had already voted, and about half said they were planning to vote on election day.

I'm very excited about it.

Did you meet any of them that said, I'm not going to vote because you just can't trust that I'm sending a message?

I did.

I only met two,

but it was, and it was really hard not to be confrontational and go, that's the stupidest thing I've ever heard.

Yeah.

But anyways, I mean, basically, they just, they were angry and they said, we're not voting this time.

And I thought, well, of all things, you know, you get what you get.

So

most people were excited.

Most people, you know, strong patriots, they wanted to talk.

They wanted to talk about the election, about the fraud that they feel has happened.

And all of them, deep in prayer.

Like we are just praying for our country.

So it was encouraging in some ways.

And in other ways, you know, it's like when you have a dream and it's a nightmare and you can't move in the dream, you want to scream, but you can't.

That's kind of how most people feel right now.

So I just thought I'd call in and give you that update.

Thank you, Mel.

I appreciate it.

We just talked to the head of the Trafalgar group, which is a pollster and the most accurate in the last four or five years.

And he just said there has to be a massive turnout for the GOP.

The Democrats have a bigger turnout than

they had

before the November election.

So they're going into Election Day with a bigger lead than they had even in the general.

So the Republicans have got to show up.

And the country is at stake.

I want to take Lisa in Wyoming.

Hello, Lisa.

Hello.

Hi.

You want to take the questions that I just gave to Stu?

Will you answer some of these?

Sure.

Okay.

A year from now,

the Democrats have the Senate, the House, and the White House.

Do we have mandatory vaccinations or some sort of a passport system where you

have to carry your papers around or you can't work, you can't go to shows, you can't do air travel.

Yes or no?

Yes.

Okay.

Have we experienced full nationwide lockdowns

a year from now?

Will we have had a nationwide lockdown?

I'm afraid yes.

Okay.

Are we in a depression a year from now?

I'm going to say yes because I think

a lot of people are already there.

Have gun rights been severely curtailed?

Yes.

Do people like me, people like you, have the freedom of speech?

And is the message that we bring every day,

are we able to do that as easily as we're doing it today, a year from now?

I don't believe so.

I'm going to say no because I think the only thing that saved us was President Trump.

Green New Deal?

Yes or no?

Is that in?

They're going to hit us with that.

Yes, I think they're going to try their best.

Do you think that we have 51 plus states?

I'm going to say no, not in a year.

I think it'll take them a little longer to do that.

Are we deep into the global great reset?

Have we gone along with all of that?

Yes.

Does the filibuster in the Senate still exist?

I think so because I think they need to use it as much as anyone else.

I think they're going to depend on that too.

Okay.

Are we in

a civil war where it's not just talk,

it's violence?

The country has broken apart.

I believe,

and being raised in Wyoming,

I believe if they go for the guns, there's going to be a big, there is going to be a civil war.

Yeah.

Okay.

Thank you so much, Lisa.

I appreciate it.

That's the, you know, you said you want, you know, civil war.

No, I,

I don't mean you want the civil war, but I mean, you want me, you're trying to goad me into saying it.

Well, because here's why.

Here's why.

You said, you answered many of these the same as Lisa, not all of them, but many of them.

If these things happen,

what stops a

disenfranchised half of America that has been called all kinds of names,

feel as though they are just being trampled on,

that their country and their constitution is being trampled on, and it no longer is the country that they thought it was, and they're poor.

They have nothing because they were put out of business.

What stops those people from going, I got nothing to lose?

Hopefully realizing they do have something to lose, which is the greatest republic that's ever been on the face of the earth.

And we do face that if we go down those roads.

I mean, I tend to...

They will think that they have already lost that.

No, I know.

I tend to reserve the term civil war for what I think of as civil war, right?

Like the civil war.

Yeah, I don't think it'll be like that.

Do I think we'll see stuff like

we saw this summer?

You know, like in Minneapolis?

I think you will see stuff like that.

I don't know that it's, I don't, I wouldn't call that civil war.

I would call it civil unrest

in a relatively uncomfortable scale.

Okay, I would go for that.

Civil war or civil unrest separate the two.

Yeah, I think civil unrest is, especially when the guns are a big part of this.

But again, it does matter the scale we're talking about, right?

If they come in and let's just say Joe Manchin is like, look, I'll give you a ban on this and some common sense stuff, but I'm not going all that road.

I have no faith in Joe Manchin to hold any lines, by the way.

I just want to make sure we're clear clear on that.

But if he does and he says, okay, well, we want common sense and Susan Collins goes along with it and they get their 53 votes that limit assault weapons or whatever.

Like, I don't, there will be a lot of pushback on that.

There will be a lot of angst, but I don't think that we were going to go into, you know, civil war or massive civil unrest over that.

If you have

the kind of weapons ban that you had in the in the 90s, which we still have, right?

I mean, isn't it true?

No, I mean,

it came and went.

But a lot of states have it.

I mean, tons of states have it already, and we're not seeing civil unrest right.

But if you say there's a mandatory buyback, and you can't own these guns, and

there's no grandfather clause, and

we have to have you on a national registry, and we're going to tax your guns

every year.

And

we're also taxing the ammunition and everything is so expensive that you can't afford them and oh by the way you need this special insurance i will tell you i think that people will scale matters here in a big way i mean you go you go too hard and really try to take away a constitutional right from the american people that's not going to go well that is not going to go well uh you know

people will put up with irritants right if they see like you know i i i put the bump stock thing in here i mean i think that was an unconstitutional thing too uh But people will put up with it.

Are you a ridiculous one?

And a ridiculous one for a million different reasons.

But like, people will put up with it.

I will not be surprised at all to see Joe Biden go down those same roads, though, and use the same types of, well, look, this is really dangerous type of reasoning and ban stuff like that.

And it's going to be hard.

People are going to have to remember

how the Constitution has this country working.

And I, especially with the Second Amendment and

constitutionally guaranteed rights, rights, these things cannot just be signed away.

And Biden will try that.

So if Kamala Harris promised it on day one,

she was in office.

If Joe Biden, God forbid, gets COVID and passes, or

there is any kind of problem with him where he's deemed incompetent and she becomes the president, your worst nightmare.

Your worst nightmare.

That's interesting when you say that because when you said that, I thought immediately, you're totally right, which shows that I actually am pricing in some sort of moderation from Biden.

Yeah.

I don't know if that's the right thing.

As long as he is aware and competent and

somewhat in control, my problem has not been with Joe Biden, except for corruption with the China thing.

It is because he's more of a typical politician.

You know what I mean?

That's odd that you get comfort from that, but in some ways you do.

Well, because

without that, there is no speed bump.

I mean,

look at his running mate.

Look who is supporting.

She will not care.

You think of Biden in some way, he's corrupt.

He's a typical politician.

He is not moderate.

He's very liberal.

Very liberal.

Very liberal.

However, he is a bit of an institutionalist.

Yes.

You know, he does.

You know, he does care about the Souls.

That's why the filibuster I hesitate on, because I think the left wants that so badly.

You get rid of that for the next two years, they can put in all sorts of things that would make it impossible for Republicans to regain power.

But, you know, he's a Senate institutionalist.

Maybe he finds a spy in there.

I don't know.

I mean, I guess I am pricing that in a little bit, which is scary because if you're the same way, I was just criticizing people for pricing in this

speed bump of Joe Manchin.

You can't depend on Joe Biden to hold the line on anything good.

No, no.

He's going to be a terrible, terrible president.

No.

Let me go to Don quickly and take one more.

Don,

will you answer these questions for us?

No.

How are you, Don?

Fabulous.

How are you?

Good.

A year from now, if they take the Senate, the House, and the White House, do we have mandatory vaccinations or some sort of a passport paper thing that

is required for you to work or go to movies or use airplanes?

I think to use airplanes, yes.

I'm not really sure to go to movies or to, and maybe to go from state to state.

Okay.

They've talked about it for concerts already, too, by the way.

Large gatherings like that.

They're already developing it.

Yep.

A year from now, will we have experienced full nationwide lockdown?

No,

I don't believe we will.

Okay.

Will we be in a depression a year from now?

I think, like Stu said, I think the government's going to keep printing money and printing money.

And so we're not going to be in a dispersion until it gets to the end where you can't print anymore because we know you can't.

Lots of money, but nothing our money can buy.

Gun rights.

Have they been severely curtailed in a year?

You know, I think gun rights, they're going to try to severely curtail them, but I don't think the American people are going to allow it.

I just don't.

Okay.

I mean, I don't care about assault-style weapons, but every other weapon.

I don't think the American people are going to stand for it.

Okay.

Free speech and

broadcast.

Are we going to be able to have our voices heard and connect with you as easily as we can right now?

I think we're either going to be able to do that or we're going to be in those camps where they want to retrain your brain not to talk about Trump.

So, so, which is it, yes or no?

You would take that as a no.

I think no.

No.

Okay.

All right.

Green New Deal.

No.

No.

Definitely not.

51 plus states.

No.

No.

But see, my opinion is this.

I don't think in the grand scheme of things that we are going to have a president in the White House who does not consider the Constitution as the rule of the land.

I don't that our creator is going to allow that.

Now, that may sound naive, but that's how I really feel.

Okay.

So you have even more trust in Joe Biden.

Yeah.

Okay.

No.

He said yeah at the wrong time there.

Damn delays.

Okay.

Then great reset would be no.

We're not doing that.

Okay.

Filibuster exists, yes or no?

Nope.

It does not exist.

The filibuster is the way the Democrats will just ram things through.

They'll take away the filibuster, which is the speed bump to stop things.

Right.

If everybody is a Democrat, yeah, it'll be there.

Okay.

And

final question.

Civil war, civil unrest, or fine?

I think it'll be civil unrest.

I think there'll be civil unrest if it's Democrat, Democrat, Democrat.

Okay.

All right.

Thank you very much.

Appreciate it, Don.