Best of the Program | Guests: Nick Di Paolo & Todd McMurtry | 10/30/19

43m
Pat Gray plays Al Sharpton’s greatest "hits," and comedian Nick Di Paolo takes on the PC outrage against Michael Che’s transgender joke. But Dave Chappelle has the perfect answer to it all! Covington student Nick Sandmann’s defamation case against the Washington Post has reopened, and head attorney Todd McMurtry gives the details. But while Barack Obama is dismissing "woke" culture, Michelle claims she “can’t make people not afraid of black people.”
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Transcript

Well, hello, podcasters.

Today's a great day to join us today.

We start a little

dark.

Just would you say, Pat?

Just a tad.

I mean, just a tad dark.

Is there any interest in tracking down $7 billion or finding out if,

you know,

our people are in collusion with another government to throw democracy?

And is anybody in the media, do they really understand that democracy does die die in darkness?

Because we know the Washington Post doesn't.

We have a special tonight on this.

We're part two of our Ukraine special.

It's at 8 p.m.

Eastern.

Please join us.

You can watch it on YouTube or Facebook for free.

But we really ask that you would join us and become a member of the Blaze TV.

It's blazetv.com slash Glenn.

Blazetv.com slash Glenn.

Use the promo code Glenn.

You'll save 20 bucks off of

your subscription.

We also have, I mean, speaking of Democracy Dying in the Darkness and the Washington Post, we have Todd McMurtry on.

He's the guy who has just argued the case that reopened the trial for Nick Sandman.

Nick Sandman is the guy, he's the kid that was, you know, there on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial with the Native American, what's his name, so-and-so Phillips, that was beating the drum in his face.

Remember that?

$250 million lawsuit.

It was thrown out by this judge.

Todd McMurtry and his team of lawyers came back to the judge and said, Yeah, I think you were wrong, and here's why.

And that same judge just said, full bore, let's go.

All that and more on today's podcast.

You're listening to

the best of the Blenbeck program.

so i need a little pick-me-up stupid i need a i need something uh i need something like al sharpton did you hear

did you hear al sharpton uh try to tell the story about albagh daddy i i i did you did i did did you enjoy it as much as i did i very much enjoyed it so i thought we would we would let's just because i'd like to get some of the heaviness uh off of the plate um as i prepare for the special tonight

uh but uh

let's just play that again.

Could we please play the

Al-Baghdadi's audio?

President Trump said that because of the killing of Al Baghdad Baghdadi, that the world is a better place.

And

I'll give credit to he and those that were responsible for it.

But we have a lot of work that must still be done in the area of terrorism.

Yeah, right.

In the same area of the world where Al Baghdadi was.

Where Al Bag of Bones

was bagging groceries,

Al was bagging Beyoncé.

And let me ask you, why

was traffic problems email sent to Bag of Bones?

Albagnagni.

Isn't it amazing?

How long have we been talking about Al Baghdaddy?

It's 15, 10 years anyway.

Yeah, yeah.

Surely 10 years.

Now, I am a guy who butchers everybody's name.

Everybody's name.

But eventually you're so happy.

But I am so happy Al Sharpton is out there to defeat that.

Wow.

And you know it's coming, too.

As soon as he comes to the name Al Baghdaddy, no way he's getting that.

No.

No way.

No way.

No way.

No way.

We have a couple of other super, super classics from

a guy who clearly is qualified to be on television to tell you the news.

No question.

Go ahead.

Go ahead.

Place on.

All right.

We must.

Yes.

We must.

They're all jitty about a shutdown.

The tortist in the race.

Then, co-author of Hoobries, you two lead singer bono, Fran Dreischer, Sigonoy Weaver, suspect Jahal Sanaev, Rush Limbaugh, Rush Limbaugh, Rush Limbaugh, the show Rush Lombard host Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sartomaya,

is Mike Muckery yesterday and Tony Antonin

Scalia killed Kadarshian and the Republican candidates for Cairo and Benghazi.

We rank behind

La Vita.

First stop.

Kazakh, Kazakhstan.

To college students in Beijing.

He's getting lunch at Chipola

in Iowa.

Maine is appropriate.

The GOP's tax day giveaway to millionaires.

Why was traffic problems emailed?

The Environmental Protection Agency.

And what sequestration has done.

amazing

that's what he coughed up the furball at the end of the broadcast

this didn't even have this one michael zihabilba michael ziha beelzebo

who is that supposed to be michael ziha beetlejuice

it was uh remember that uh it was michael zihabo it was some terrorist i You know, I've never, I've, I, uh, you can't even understand who he's actually trying to say.

What did he call Kardashian?

Did you hear that?

That was.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I mean, it's just, it's.

The one that really, I love the fact that he couldn't get a Supreme Court justice's name right.

Or Rush Limbaugh.

Rush Limbaugh, who's been around for

40 years.

Wow.

At some point, I remember after he

after

Maya Angelou, who was a good friend of his, when she died, he couldn't get her name correct.

He mangled her name.

Wait, wait, wait.

Here's Kim Kardashian.

All right.

Kim Kardashian and the Republican.

Kim Kardashian.

He loves Kim Kardashian.

And then after,

I think this was after the death of Aretha Franklin.

So in the words of my late friend Aretha Franklin, show some R-E-S-P-I-C-T.

That's a good idea.

Respect.

Let's do that.

It's in the lyric of the song.

No, it's not in the lyric.

It's the hook.

It is the hook of the song.

It's the main point of the song.

Crazy.

The best of the Glen Beck Program.

Hey, it's Glenn, and you're listening to the Glenn Beck program.

If you like what you're hearing on this show, make sure you check out Pat Gray Unleashed.

It's available wherever you download your favorite podcasts.

We go to the one, the only

Nick DiPaulo, comedian, host of the Nick DePaulo Show.

You can find him at nickdip.com.

NickDip.com.

That's where you can see his comedy special.

And I warn you,

it is

battery acid on the PC.

It is,

whoo.

Don't know how you're standing, but God bless you, Nick.

Actually, I'm not.

As you can see, I'm sitting

an exhausting fight.

Right.

Dave.

White, straight male,

it's a lot tougher.

Right.

Dave Chappelle just got the Mark Twain Award, which is our nation's highest honor for comedy, is it not?

I thought it was the Kathy Griffin Award.

No, which was the highest.

Well, no, I don't.

I think that used to be in the last administration.

So he just won this, and here's what he said.

And I can't believe the guy who is standing at the Kennedy Center to be able to get the Mark Twain Award in today's climate is asked about PC, and here's what he says.

Political correctness has its face, its place.

Excuse me.

We all want to live in a polite society.

We just have to kind of work on the levels and come to an agreement of what that actually looks like.

I personally am not afraid of other people's freedom of expression.

I don't use it as a weapon.

It just makes me feel better.

And I'm sorry if I hurt anybody, et cetera, et cetera, yada, yada, yada.

Everything I'm supposed to say.

Okay, so now, let me take you to Saturday Night Live and a clip that aired this.

I know, I know.

A clip that aired this weekend.

Listen to this.

Yeah, at first I thought Kanye was losing his mind, and now I feel like he's fine.

He's just turning into an old white lady.

I mean, he used to be like one of the coolest black dudes on earth.

Now he's showing up to events in sweatpants and orthopedic sneakers, listening to Kenny G and trying to get black people to like Trump.

It's like, how long before this guy changed his name to Kathy?

Now you might think that I'm crazy, but about five years ago, there was a fella named Bruce Jenner, and he moved to Calabasas.

A there's no joke there.

So it's not funny.

It's horribly delivered.

He's in trouble.

Is it because it was on, I don't know, NBC and they're supposed to be so woke, or is it because that's just a bad comedian?

He's not a bad comedian, actually.

Well, bad delivery.

Well,

when you don't ask the now week an update, you have writers.

I don't know if he wrote that himself.

He's delivering somebody else's stuff.

But every time we get near the LGBT or trans,

it's a big deal.

I want that answered.

You know, the Bilderberg Group, is that made up of eight gay guys?

Why is it such an issue?

No, I'm asking.

I'm dead serious.

And if you think it's tough for Dave Chappelle or Michael Shade to do that stuff, try being a 57-year-old white guy.

No, I can't imagine.

I really, I say this with great admiration for your talent.

I mean, I know who you are.

I know who you've written for.

I know your career.

And

for you to be standing is remarkable.

I mean, I honestly feel like I should do you a favor and never talk about you on the air because

bringing attention to you.

I know it's, I

feel bad because I know there's somebody out there going, oh, oh, he's still saying these things, that damn white guy, and he'll go after you.

Yeah, but if you're the, if you're the guy that started saying them first, you do get a little credibility.

Yeah.

I was saying this stuff on Tough Crowd in 2000 and,

you know, making fun of how white guys are portrayed in commercials in 1995.

I was ahead of the curve, but because I look like I'm from Palermo, nobody pays attention to me.

You do look a little like you could be in a mob movie.

Let me just tell you this one.

These gay jokes.

Is that going to bring your son back to me?

So

what is the problem between transsexuals, transgender, and

gay people?

Why do they not get along?

Well, I was in a bathhouse in San Francisco for like two hours last week, and I couldn't figure it out.

I have no idea.

Because they really don't.

I mean, Dave Chappelle even talks about it.

Once the T gets into the car, the L's and the G's, they don't like it.

It's like the Jews and the Palestinians, the Middle East.

It's convoluted.

I read these articles on my show.

I can't make heads a tail.

I should say tails.

Who's upset at who for what?

I think the gays are saying the trannies have given us a bad rep.

Trannies, first of all, that's 1970.

Transgender people are giving us a bad.

I don't know.

I still like women, Glenn.

What can I tell you?

Yeah, I've heard from gay friends who will say this is just, that just goes to, this just goes too far.

Just goes too far.

Well, wait, what does?

I agree if we're talking about, you know, sending them into our libraries and having them.

I don't want anybody that even makes kids think about sex.

I don't want hot women going in and reading to my son.

Just stop it.

Just stop it.

He's got enough on his plate.

Please, just stop it.

However, when it comes to, I don't understand, if you're saying, and I am, everybody should just be who they are.

I don't care.

I don't care.

If that's who you want to be, I don't understand how the gay community could have a problem with that.

Well, I just did a story on like

having drag queens put on shows for

middle student

kids.

I have a problem with that because I have a problem because that is.

That's who the trans are.

That's what they do.

All of them?

They go to middle school.

Every one of them.

I just.

The Quiniak poem said 99.9%.

I didn't know that.

I didn't know that.

Great way to meet kids.

Okay, Gen.

I kid.

Relax, Glenn.

I can see you're turning rhetoric.

No, no, I'm not.

Okay, so let me go to the Democrats.

Yesterday.

Yesterday, they...

I'd hang with a transgender community before I'd hang with the Democrats.

Oh, my gosh,

I would have them all move in with me

before that.

So the Democrats voted on something we're not really even sure what it is, the impeachment resolution, but it really doesn't do anything.

What are your thoughts on what happened yesterday?

But you make a great

point about the process.

I'm watching, like you said, they voted on this thing, but nothing moves forward.

And you wonder why nothing gets done in Washington.

But even I know, I'm not a legal scholar, obviously, but you can't be doing all this behind closed doors.

The Republicans want to see the, I guess there was some testimony, some witnesses yesterday, and Schiff wanted me to let them look at that.

And until I know who the original whistleblower was,

this is all a sham.

sham.

And

you know, Schiff said yesterday, he told the witness, the GOP asked a question, apparently, and Schiff said, don't answer that.

What's he, a lawyer now?

He's representing these.

Yeah, apparently.

Apparently.

I mean, it's amazing what's going on.

And I tell you, that's why people think this is a coup.

If you can't put it out in the open,

it feels like a coup.

Well, they're going to televise it eventually, aren't they?

They said it's going to be on TV before Thanksgiving.

So I don't know what will make me sick of the Detroit Lions offense or Adam Schiff on my TV.

I think I would go for

the Adam Schiff.

I'd go for Adam Schiff.

There's another story out today we haven't had a chance to get to.

Former President Barack Obama derided woke political purists and Twitter activists in a speech given Tuesday at the Obama Foundation summit in Chicago.

This idea of purity and you're never compromised and you're politically woke and all of that stuff, you should get over that quickly.

That's funny coming from a guy who actually is behind the deep state and the guy that spied on Trump while he was running for president.

You can't be more woke than that.

So I don't know, is that ever going to come out, Glenn?

Is Devin Nunez and Gaudi and all these these guys, Lindsey Graham, who talk a big game, are they ever going to do anything?

So, you know what?

They say to me, because I've talked to a few of the people on Capitol Hill, and they have said to me, Glenn, you know,

how do we phrase this?

How do we, we know what's going on, but how do we do this in a soundbite?

Here's how.

Is it against the national interest to have somebody look into the loss of $7 billion of your tax dollars?

Is it in the national interest for the president to ask somebody to look into our governmental corruption?

Are foreign agents directly influencing the 2016 election?

Politicians in the U.S.

colluding with a foreign government to steal from the American Treasury?

Is it in our national interest to have the unlawful use of U.S.

ambassadors, embassy personnel, national intelligence agencies, the State Department in collusion with foreign agencies and NGOs to not only affect the election, but to steal billions of dollars from us.

That's how you phrase this.

Well, all due respect, what scared me most about that statement is you said they came to you and asked you for advice.

No, they didn't.

No, no, no, no.

That's what you said, Glenn.

That's exactly what you said.

I'm getting the words.

Let's America heard.

That's what America heard.

I heard Nixon used to go to Casey Casey to get his geopolitical.

Shut up.

Nick DePaulo from nickdip.com back in just a second.

First.

So

Nick DePaulo is here.

Nick, how many times uh a year are you out on the road

um

that's a great question i would say two times i would say 25.

yeah where are you out recently where where can people see you they can see me uh friday and saturday november 8th and 9th the kansas city comedy club and uh

the following weekend the cortland repertory theater in cortland new york november 15th and november 16th the comedy works saratoga springs

and uh I have to mention this.

I'm finally doing some gigs in my new home state of Georgia,

which is yuck.

Are you at Yuck Yucks or Milk Through Your Nose?

Oh, no, I'm at Skid Marks.

November 22nd, you're way off, Glenn.

This is the historic Ritz Theater.

Oh, wow.

It's Friday, November 22nd.

Saturday, November 23rd, the Tiff Theater in Tifton, Georgia.

And I can't wait.

There'll be a lot of trucker hats and tobacco, hopefully.

Have you ever played The Roxy in?

I'm trying to remember where it is in Pennsylvania.

It's the first, it's the original Roxy theater.

I did a show there once, and they used an ARC spotlight.

I mean, when I say it's the original, it hasn't changed since it was opened.

And they used an ARC spotlight.

And so it was, you know, an arc light.

It was burning carbon to light.

And it was like the surface of the sun hot.

It was like somebody was holding a giant magnifying glass on the sun.

I thought it was going to set me on fire.

That's how all the lights are.

All these plants.

And so I have a line every time.

I use it every time.

I go, hey, easy with the lights.

What am I?

A pot plant?

And that

is.

And then the sensitive, the light guy turns it all the way down so I'm in the dark.

Well, halfway through my show,

it's carbon that's burning.

And so halfway through the show,

you're going to be taxed.

It went out.

It went out.

And then I went, oh, thank God.

And the guy said, just a minute.

He put another one in and lit it back up.

It was crazy.

And the show was much funnier after you got a new lesson.

It was.

I was at the last theater I was at, they wouldn't let me smoke.

And I said, Are you kidding me?

I'm sitting on a broken ladder in the green room with paint buckets around me, a fuse box with wire, and there's literally asbestos dripping in my diet coke.

And the guy goes, you can't smoke in here.

I said,

you guys were shooting porn in this theater like three days ago, but I can't have a cigarette.

There's a new thing going on now, and I just saw this yesterday.

Have you seen the okay boomer stuff?

No, I have not.

Okay, so there's this new, it's a generational war, Nick.

And there's this new

thing going on online and also on products.

It says, okay,

boomer, have a terrible day or whatever.

And it's the uh the millennials the millennials taking on the boomers and everybody's immediately going oh look they're just going there's the end I got to tell you most boomers despise millennials and have no problem saying it out loud it's not like the the millennials are starting this they're just getting into the game Yeah, they finally realized that they can push.

They're such not all of them.

I sort of think they get a bad rep, the millennials, but they are pretty soft.

But they do get a bad rep.

But now I see that 70% of them wouldn't have a problem with socialism in this country.

So now I hate every one of them.

And

I will push back.

I might be 57.

I've had 14 shoulder operations, right?

I will take on

Michael Chee and his.

You know what?

I think that the ones that I meet, and not all of them, but the ones that I have met, I meet a lot of them who are.

Where are you hanging out?

It's creeping me out, Glenn.

I'm not going to say,

at least at this time, and not under oath.

The thing that I see in millennials is that

when you stop talking the usual political bull crap,

they listen and they want to learn.

Not all of them, obviously, but they want to learn.

They've never heard this stuff before.

That is right.

Yeah, nobody's teaching them anything, nobody's teaching them how to even think.

They're just being taught what to think, and they know that's crap.

Some of them do, and uh, but you're right.

Right when they get to pre-K, from pre-K to college, they're being brainwashed with this left-wing horse crap.

So, yeah, some of them do enjoy to hear the truth, but uh, were you

any different, Nick?

Were you different?

I was very different.

Really?

Yeah, I was

transgender.

I was transgender in 1976.

Really?

I was breaking the mold up at the University of Maine.

No,

I must have been different.

I grew up in Boston.

I went to school, University of Maine, and then I've spent the last 25 years in LA and New York, and I have these attitudes like I grew up in Birmingham, Alabama.

So I guess I am.

I got to tell you, though, I'm different.

When I was 30, before I literally sobered up and realized, I don't know anything.

I'm an idiot.

Well,

what were you drinking when you were

that made you so numb to what was going on with the market?

Well, Makers Marketing.

I could do some of that stuff.

I know I was

maker's mark and Jack Daniels.

It was great.

Holy moly.

Yeah, no, it was great.

And you still have a nice head of hair and you're healthy.

I know.

It's unbelievable.

I'm probably dead in 15 minutes, but it was.

Oh, I can tell.

You have a nice pal.

Well, actually, you do look like Dead Kennedy who was circa five years ago.

All right.

I don't think we need to to go there.

Uh, uh, Nick, Nick D'APollo, you can uh find him online at nickdip.com.

Watch his comedy special.

Uh, it is uh, it is very raw and very funny.

Nick Dip, thank you so much, Nick.

Appreciate it.

Glenn, you're the best.

Thank you.

You bet.

NickDip.com.

This is the best of the Glenn Beck program.

Hey, it's Glenn, and if you like what you hear on the program, you should check out Pat Gray Unleashed.

His podcast is available wherever you download your favorite podcast.

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Thanks.

Todd McMurtry is an experienced trial attorney, Harvard-trained mediator.

He's an active member of the Board of Governors for the Kentucky Bar Association.

He's formerly the president of the Northern Kentucky Bar Association, board member of the Northern Kentucky Volunteer Lawyers.

This guy looks to be a guy I wouldn't want to see across for me if I were the Washington Post.

But he is here to tell us exactly what happened on Monday in the Nick Sandman case against the Washington Post.

Todd, welcome to the program.

Glenn, good to be here.

Thank you.

Thank you.

So

why did the judge throw this away, throw this out in the first place in July?

The judge's initial ruling on the case suggested that he said that everything that the Washington Post had published was basically an opinion or not related to Nick Sandman.

And so when there were statements like the students were mocking, he said that's not related to Nick Sandman.

When Nathan Phillips, when the Post reported that Nathan Phillips said I was blocked and they prevented me from retreating, the judge said that that was an opinion.

And so what we did, and my co-counsel in this case is Lynn Wood out of Atlanta.

Lynn and I looked at this and we

said that there was some opportunity here to provide some additional information that might change the judge's thinking.

So we did that.

We provided some some additional video, which showed more fully what happened.

We provided statements about Nathan Phillips being basically a professional protester and a provocateur.

And we said that the Washington Post should not have taken his statements at face value, that he was an unreliable person, and that they negligently republished a false factual narrative.

And

that was persuasive.

The court's order came out

just the other day, and we're off to a conference on December 3rd to push the case ahead.

Well,

how can somebody say that, well, he wasn't talking about Nick Sandman when he became the face of it?

For instance, if I say, you know, the brave protesters in Tiananmen Square, I don't mean just the guy who stood in front of the tank, but he's the guy we all think of.

Now, we didn't see his face.

We don't know his identity, but they've concentrated on his face.

He is the face.

The civil rights movement wasn't only Martin Luther King, but Martin Luther King was the image that we saw all the time.

So

how can this not be defamation of him?

Well,

it is defamation, and the court with regard to some of those statements is going to allow us to proceed.

With regard to the others,

we don't agree with the court's ruling in every aspect.

And that's why the judge struck some of those statements.

So that's an issue we'll have to address later.

I would agree with you.

I think there's good law that says that you're right and I'm right.

But right now, we're just happy to be proceeding with the case.

Does it help, Todd, that the ⁇ well, I don't know about the Washington Post, but other outlets, I know, even after they found out who Phillips was, they dismissed all of that and still tried to make Nick look like the bad kid.

Correct.

It does help with the other cases because the same analysis would apply.

And we went into the other lawsuits and amended those to make them similar to the Washington Post case, which the judge has now not dismissed.

And so we would expect that we'll get the same result.

But we'll see.

And you're right.

I mean, plenty of other news outlets.

I mean, the Washington Post has issued an editor's note on some of their reporting, but CNN and NBC have never retracted.

So we have seen that problem as well.

How confident are you

in this case?

Because this case

could really change reporting, I think, in a good way.

You know, they all had the same access that I had and others had, and they wanted this story to be true, and so they made it true.

How confident are you, and what do you think the ramifications will be if you win?

Well, we're of course confident.

We're all investing an enormous amount of time and effort into this this case, and we wouldn't do that if we didn't feel that we had a legitimate, strong case.

I think that the case, when it's ultimately presented to a jury, is going to be very persuasive even with the limitations that the court has placed on some of our allegations.

And with regard to the effect that this case could have, well, it could protect people like Nicholas Sandman, who are

private figures, from being attacked and ravaged by the media in the way that he was by basically sending out a strong warning that that if you're going to attack minors or private individuals and use them as a tool in a you know in a debate or a culture war an attack on a president whatever it may be that you better think twice so we certainly would hope that we can generate change in the process of bringing these lawsuits what's Nick's life been like since this

well Nick was 16 and a junior in high school when this happened he's now 17 and he's a senior in high school.

I mean, his time at school is going well, but there's no doubt that there have been

many things that have happened to him over the past 10 months or so that have been very negative.

And there's no doubt that when a person like Nick Salmon goes out in public, people know who he is.

Everywhere I've been with him, people know who he is.

And so he's constantly concerned about running into the wrong person out there.

What is his college admittance?

An unfortunate fact.

What is his college admittance going to be like?

What is his life on a college campus in today's world going to be like?

Well, my son's a little bit older than Nick, and he two years ago had a plate of French fries thrown on him for wearing a Make America Great Again hat.

At his college,

I would think that

college life for a person with that reputation is going to be a challenge.

As for college admissions, we don't know.

He's applying.

We'll see how that goes.

Todd, we wish you well.

well.

How are the cases against NBC and CNN and others going?

Those cases are currently pending on motions to dismiss, and we're just in the briefing process of those.

We've substantially completed that, so I think everything's in front of the judge now, and he'll be issuing a ruling that we hope will be favorable for the same reasons that the Washington Post recent ruling was favorable.

Our prayers are with you.

Thank you so much, Todd, and best to the Sandmans.

Appreciate it.

Glenn, thank you so much.

Todd McMurtry, Murtree.

You can follow him or find him at Todd McMurtryLaw.com.

Is it the Sandmans or is it the Sandmen?

Sands.

It's the Sandmans.

Did I say that?

No, I'm just wondering.

You said the Sandmans.

I was thinking

maybe it should be Sandmen.

No, I don't.

I don't think that's the way it works.

Maybe not.

No, I don't think that's the way it works exactly, but thank you for that.

All right.

Thank you for that tip.

Appreciate it.

Happy to help.

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Okay, so I'm going to play a couple of pieces of audio for you from the same day.

Here's former President Obama dismissing the woke culture as politically ineffective.

Listen.

This idea of purity and you're never compromised and you're always politically woke and all that stuff.

You should get over that quickly.

The world is messy.

There are ambiguities.

People who

do really good stuff have flaws.

Like if I tweet or hashtag about how you didn't do something right or used the word wrong verb or

then I can sit back and feel pretty good about myself because man, you see how awoke I was.

I called you out.

You know, that's not

activism.

That's not bringing about change.

Ah.

Oh, really?

Huh.

Coming from him, that's pretty interesting.

Well, he's kind of in the hot seat now because he wasn't pure enough.

Ah, right.

The group of people that he first corralled

realized that he was not a true believer.

So he was betrayed the revolution.

He's only like 80% Marxist.

Yeah.

He had a few tendencies that led him down the wrong road.

Okay, so Obama, talking about activism, says you got to stop with a woke culture because it's politically ineffective.

And then Michelle Obama says this.

I can't make people not afraid of black people.

I don't know what's going on.

I can't explain what's happening in your head.

But maybe if I show up every day as a human, a good human, doing wonderful things, loving my family, loving your kids, taking care of things that I care about, maybe, just maybe, that work will pick away at the scabs of your discrimination.

She's flat out racist.

That's racist.

Well, wait a minute.

What do you mean you can't?

Wait a minute, wait a minute.

I can't make people not afraid of white people.

I don't know what's going on.

I can't explain what's happening in your head, but maybe if I show up every day as a human, a good human, doing good things, loving your kids, well, maybe, just maybe, that will work to pick away at the scabs of your discrimination.

See, I think this works both ways.

It does.

I think it works both ways.

I can't make people not afraid of black people.

Well, yeah, you can.

You can.

You can help.

You can help.

By not attacking all white people, by not saying that all white people are bad, by not saying

and being more like your husband was saying,

but not necessarily doing.

But like your husband said, you know, every time you make a mistake, it doesn't mean you're a bad person.

It just makes you feel better.

But it doesn't make, it doesn't help anything.

It doesn't help anything.

So you use the wrong term.

You don't understand.

If you're wanting to be a good human, you're like, hey, dude, that's cool.

I mean, I understand, but

that word is like 1950.

So, you know, I want to just sorry.

Without any kind of accusation, without anything else, just be cool with

one another.

And the same thing goes with white people towards black people.

But right now, we are in reverse discrimination.

And even that is proof of it because you're saying there is no such thing as reverse discrimination because of the hierarchy.

That doesn't make any sense.

It doesn't make any sense.

If we all are created equal and we're all the same,

then you should two wrongs don't make a right.

But maybe that's

maybe that's just me.

Here is Bloomberg on the Democratic primary field.

Listen to this.

It's just X number of months later, nothing's changed.

You know, I have my reservations about the people running and the way they're campaigning and the promises they're making that they can't fulfill and their unwillingness to really

admit

what is possible and and what isn't, and the inconsistency from day to day and location and the location.

This is not the ways to run a railroad.

This country is in real trouble.

We need somebody to pull people together.

And when they say, I'm not going to talk to somebody from across the aisle, this is our country.

What do you mean you're not going to talk to somebody from across the aisle?

We've got to work together.

And I don't see that.

What a uniter.

What a uniter.

And I love the way he talks about, you know, there's no way to run a railroad.

Last politician that talked about the railroads working was Mussolini, but I digress.

Listen to this.

Here's a reporter talking about how Trump is actually a recruitment agent for ISIS.

Listen to this.

He's a recruiting sergeant for ISIS, Chris, in so many ways.

Tony mentioned the whole oil argument, which has obviously been a narrative for a long time.

He also is someone who is an Islamophobe, which obviously helps groups like ISIS recruit disillusioned, angry young men from across the world, not just from across the Middle East.

He's been featured in ISIS recruiting videos, and his Muslim ban has definitely been a recruiting ad for ISIS.

So in many ways, he helps, quote, unquote, the enemy.

Okay.

Now,

how is it that it is our presence in the Middle East

that is the recruiting arm of ISIS?

Our presence there

makes them want to go fight us.

So here you have a president who just doesn't doesn't just say, I'm going to get out of the Middle East, actually has been shutting things down actively.

And he's the recruiting person.

He's like, get the hell out of there.

I don't want anything to do with it.

That's a really good point.

I mean, how is that possible?

By the way,

a recruiting poster, he's the guy.

People want to join ISIS because we almost wiped all of them out.

Yeah, I want to sign up because the bombs are coming now.

Yeah, and it's not like

they weren't pissed at us before, but now they are.

Now they are.

Now they are because

Trump said some colorful things about the way one of them died.

Oh, I can't take that.

I can't take that.

I cannot take the fact.

Of course, he said that.

Of course, he said that.

And of course, I mean, did anybody really think that Al-Baghdadi was doing that?

Why did President Bush

always call Saddam Hussein Saddam?

The first President Bush.

Yeah, right.

I think that was H.W., wasn't it?

Well,

I think they both did it.

George W.

I know.

George H.W.

did, but I think it was both of them.

It seems to me that that was an insult.

It's an insult.

Saddam Hussein is an insult.

It's Saddam Hussein.

So it wasn't, because I remember people going, he doesn't even know how to pronounce the name.

He did it intentionally.

What do you you think that?

Oh, he was whimpering.

He died like a dog in a tunnel.

Oh, that's

making fun of dogs.

No, he's not.

Oh, my gosh.

Jeez.

He's sowing the seeds of doubt.

And I love the fact that the press was like, well, we went to the Pentagon to find out if there was any footage of that and him crying.

Now the latest is Jimmy Kimmel.

Jimmy Kimmel came out on Monday, and the White House is now asking for an apology.

Well, he just flat-out lied.

Lied, made it up.

Yeah, he said, basically, he said the president was out golfing, and he wasn't even there.

He wasn't even there.

And they didn't tell him because they were afraid that he was going to tweet about it.

No, Jimmy, no, he was there.

He was there.

He actually went as far as to say that those pictures of President Trump watching it, that that was a photo op.

That was a set-up photo taken later.

Wow.

I mean, they didn't say anything about Barack Obama literally, verifiably, going upstairs and playing cards with an intern because he couldn't watch what was going on when they were killing Osama bin Laden.

He would come down from time to time and then he'd be like, oh, I can't watch this.

And so he would go upstairs and play cards.

Yeah,

with his basketball buddy.

Was it basketball buddy?

Yeah.

I knew it was somebody.

It was like, uh-huh.

You went up and played cards.

The troops are on the line, and you're playing cards because you're such a girl.

And I, no offense to 12-year-old girls, because most 12-year-old girls could handle what they were seeing in the situation room.

So I don't mean 12-year-old girls, maybe eight-year-old girls.

Because after all, in that little pink bike and the helmet that he was.

Oh my gosh, he was such an embarrassment.

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