Best of the Program | Guest: Sen. John Kennedy | 11/13/25

38m
House Democrats released a trove of emails from convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, which Democrats claim implicates Trump. Is this the scandal that will take Trump down, or is this another desperate attempt that will fall flat? Will we ever get the whole truth regarding Epstein? As AI is beginning to take off in music and film production, Glenn talks about the importance of human influence in art. Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) joins to discuss President Trump’s tariff policy and whether or not the Senate should get rid of the filibuster. John also discusses his new book, “How to Test Negative for Stupid: And Why Washington Never Will.”
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Runtime: 38m

Transcript

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Speaker 3 Oh, they've got Trump now. On today's podcast, new emails released from Epstein will lead you to believe that Trump spent time with a victim that's been redacted.

Speaker 3 But none of that is true, including new email and the humanity. What is

Speaker 3 how do we define human beings? What does it mean to be human in the age of AI number one songs on the Billboard charts? And my favorite, Senator john kennedy

Speaker 3 wait until you hear him talk about chuck schumer aoc

Speaker 3 donald trump

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Speaker 4 You're listening to

Speaker 4 the best of the Blenbeck Program.

Speaker 3 Welcome to the Glenbeck Program. I don't know if you saw the number one song on the Billboard music charts.
I want to talk about this in depth tomorrow,

Speaker 3 but it is

Speaker 3 number one on the country music billboard charts. I want you to listen to it.
Go ahead.

Speaker 2 Been beat down,

Speaker 2 but I don't stay low.

Speaker 2 Got mud on my jeans, still ready to go

Speaker 2 Every scar's a story that I survived I've been through hell, but I'm still alive

Speaker 2 They say slow down boy, don't go too fast

Speaker 2 But I ain't never been one to live in the past I keep moving forward, never looking back With a worn out hat and a six-string strap

Speaker 2 You can kick rocks if you don't like how I talk I'm gonna keep on talking and walk my walk. Ain't changing my tone, ain't changing my song.
I was born this way, been loud too long.

Speaker 2 You can hate my style, you can roll your eyes. But I ain't slowing down, I was born to rise.
So, kick them rocks if you don't like how I talk. I'm gonna keep on talking and walking my walk.

Speaker 3 Okay, so the interesting thing about this song is that guy who's singing that was

Speaker 3 has not been talking for a long time. He has not been walking for a long time.
In fact, he was not born long ago. He's not real.
That's AI.

Speaker 3 The number one song on the Billboard Country Music chart is AI.

Speaker 3 AI.

Speaker 3 I have to tell you, some of my favorite music is coming from AI right now.

Speaker 3 And I don't know how to feel about it. You know, we just, it wasn't too long long ago that we thought, oh, well, it's never going to be able to do that.

Speaker 3 It can't, you know, art is the music, art is the window to the soul.

Speaker 3 How is AI, if you look at some of the lyrics of this song,

Speaker 3 I mean, it talks about how he's been dragged through the mud. He's, you know, had to really stand.

Speaker 3 I mean,

Speaker 3 it doesn't know any of that stuff. None of it is real, and yet it is assembling it in a way that is so appealing.
It's number one on the billboard country music chart

Speaker 3 if that and this is what i want to focus tomorrow uh i want to talk to you about college and what are you telling your kids about college um what are you doing what if you're in college what are you doing if you're thinking about college what are you thinking because the whole world is about to change you know i just heard elon musk say that in five years, there's not going to be phones or apps.

Speaker 3 I mean, think, I want you to think about this.

Speaker 3 There won't be phones or apps.

Speaker 3 It will just be some sort of a box or device that you kind of carry around with you. And it's listening,

Speaker 3 it's anticipating, it's AI, it's an agent AI,

Speaker 3 and it will know what you want to hear, what you want, and it will create the music you want to hear. It will create the podcast you want to hear.
It will do all of this stuff for you.

Speaker 3 So we will be even in our own universe even more than we are right now.

Speaker 3 But if

Speaker 3 AI can fake

Speaker 3 being a human

Speaker 3 and sing soulfully while not having a soul,

Speaker 3 what does it mean to be a human?

Speaker 3 I have been asking this question and been saying, Stu, since the 90s,

Speaker 3 I have been saying, we have to have a conversation on what does it mean to be human? What does it mean to be alive?

Speaker 3 Because there's going to come a time when you won't know what it means.

Speaker 3 Are we there yet, Stu? Are we there?

Speaker 6 It's a good question.

Speaker 3 I mean, I think we know.

Speaker 6 what it means to be human, but I think the ways that we have shorthanded that over the years are dissolving, right?

Speaker 6 Like, you know, when you come up with what seems like original thought, we might all be able to acknowledge that something that AI churns out is not an original thought, but

Speaker 6 it certainly seems like it to most. And I think a lot of people won't care.
Like, people won't care if it is made by humans or not, if they like it.

Speaker 6 And they seem to like it. And while there will, I think, be a real pushback by some against this stuff, stuff just like you know I have a bunch of friends who are

Speaker 6 into the horror movie practical effects world where they are like I like going that's why I like to watch horror movies because they use real fake blood or whatever the

Speaker 6 you know it's a weird dedication it's not my thing I don't care you know when I go to a movie if it's CGI and it looks real I don't care but they love the fact that it's that it's being made by you know practical effects and if that's there will always be some interest in that, I think.

Speaker 6 There will always be some interest in watching someone doing something manually that a machine could do easier and some ways better. But like,

Speaker 6 it becomes niche after a while, doesn't it?

Speaker 3 Yeah. Handmade is going to come back into style.
At some point, handmade, human-made will come back into style. But we are going,

Speaker 3 we're going to go through a period where it's going to get really scary because, I mean,

Speaker 3 if a machine can sing soulfully and not have a soul

Speaker 3 what does what does that mean if it can sculpt beauty generate things that can make you cry but it

Speaker 3 how does it know how it doesn't have anything real inside of it if it can imitate genius then what is our genius what what does that mean

Speaker 3 let me start this conversation. We're going to go into this more on tomorrow's program, but let me just start this with

Speaker 3 when you start to ask yourself, what does it mean to be a human?

Speaker 3 A machine can produce, and it can produce and will produce better than you can, but it cannot care. It cannot actually care.
It can calculate, but it cannot love.

Speaker 3 A machine can imitate suffering. It can relate to suffering.
It can sing songs soulfully like it is suffered, but it can can never walk through the valley of suffering.

Speaker 3 It can analyze morality, but it can't

Speaker 3 instinctively choose right and wrong because it's serving a higher power.

Speaker 3 It has no conscience. It has no courage.
It has no soul. It will never put itself between danger and a child.
It will never forgive because it's never really offended. It will never sacrifice.

Speaker 3 It will never bury a friend and carry that little piece of grief with them for the rest of their lives.

Speaker 3 There's something different about humans and it is,

Speaker 3 it's not about what we can do. It is everything about the divine spark.

Speaker 3 Only humans can look at something and say,

Speaker 3 damn it, I know all the odds are against me. All reason goes against this, but I'm going to build it instead.
I'm going to rebuild. Only humans hear the call of from deep within the

Speaker 3 whispering of the spirit or the ancient whispers that machines will never hear saying, live for something greater than yourself. There is something more out there.

Speaker 3 Only humans can take suffering and learn compassion. Only humans can take fear and turn it into courage and bravery.
Only humans can take history and turn it into real wisdom.

Speaker 3 We are making artificial minds, but we are not making artificial life.

Speaker 3 But as these artificial minds begin to get better and better and their tools become better and better, It should not make us smaller. It should make us ask bigger questions.

Speaker 3 Who am I?

Speaker 3 Why am I here?

Speaker 3 What is the purpose of life?

Speaker 3 The questions that man has been asking since the dawn of time.

Speaker 3 What am I willing to endure for the sake of truth? What am I willing to stand up for? What is worth living for? What is worth dying for?

Speaker 3 What is the purpose of the freedom that I have right now? Is there a purpose?

Speaker 3 What's the spark inside of me that no machine will ever be able to copy? No algorithm can simulate. No code can counterfeit.
What makes me unique?

Speaker 3 That answer is going to be found in each of us, in each of our hearts.

Speaker 3 And it's this weird, mysterious furnace where reason meets faith and memory becomes meaning and the divine

Speaker 3 echoes inside of us,

Speaker 3 reminding us that we are individuals, that we are here for a purpose, that we can be forgiven, we can get stronger, we can rebuild, we can forget everything the world is saying and chart our own course.

Speaker 3 That's what makes us humans and machines will not understand that.

Speaker 3 Being human isn't what we can produce because you're going to see it's producing everything.

Speaker 3 It's about what we can choose. We can choose to love.
We can choose to sacrifice. We can choose to tell the truth.
We can choose to stand when the world bows.

Speaker 3 We can choose to create not because we're told to create, not because we make money to create, but because there's something inside us that is so restless until we do create.

Speaker 3 A lot of people don't know that I paint. I'm an artist.

Speaker 3 I don't paint for anybody else. I don't paint to sell my paintings.

Speaker 3 I paint because there's something inside of me that compels me to do it. That is human.
It can reproduce my brushstrokes and make them better. It can borrow our melodies.

Speaker 3 It can echo our stories, but it cannot replace the things that make us human, the ability to forge meaning out of all of the things that we have suffered through.

Speaker 3 the age of machines is rising, and it is going to diminish us

Speaker 3 if we don't figure out who we are and what our purpose is. What is that stirring inside of me? You may not find it, but recognize that stirring inside of you.

Speaker 3 And if it's not, you're already starting to lose your humanity.

Speaker 3 It doesn't have to diminish us, it can refine us,

Speaker 3 it can remind us who we truly are. It can urge us, find that, because I'm coming to replace everything else.

Speaker 3 What makes us us,

Speaker 3 we're human.

Speaker 3 And that itself is a miracle that a machine cannot recreate.

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

Speaker 3 Senator John Kennedy, how good to have you on, sir.

Speaker 7 Glenn, it's good to be with you, man. Thanks for having me.

Speaker 3 I want to talk to you about your new book, which I can't wait.

Speaker 3 But

Speaker 3 let's start with

Speaker 3 the reopening of the government. I think this is one of the dumbest things I've ever seen.
We're only reopening it until January. They're going to do this again.
Are they not?

Speaker 3 Yeah, maybe.

Speaker 7 Maybe they learned a lesson. I mean, here's what happened, Glent.

Speaker 7 What, seven weeks ago, the country was just rocking along, minding its own business. Our budget was about to run out, but we were talking with the Democrats about negotiating a new one.

Speaker 7 And all of a sudden, at the last minute, Senator Schumer came to us and said,

Speaker 7 I'm going to stop negotiating. I'm going to tell my people to vote to shut government down unless you give me $1.5 trillion.

Speaker 7 You gut the One Big Beautiful bill like a fish, and you extend the Obamacare subsidies.

Speaker 7 Well, I mean,

Speaker 7 you know,

Speaker 7 I'd rather have a back alley colonoscopy than vote for something like that. And

Speaker 7 my colleagues felt the same way. So we told Chuck, said, Chuck, short answer is no.
The long answer is hell, though.

Speaker 7 And

Speaker 7 Chuck just, I mean, his demands, Glenn,

Speaker 7 you had to have an Excel spreadsheet to track them. It was so unserious.
And so we just sat there and we didn't give up anything.

Speaker 7 And eventually, he had to go to five or six of his colleagues to get them to bail him out. And that's why we are where we are.

Speaker 3 Was this just about election?

Speaker 3 Was this just about the election? What was this for?

Speaker 7 Oh, it was politics. It has to do with Senator Schumer's politics.

Speaker 7 The Bolshevik wing, the loon wing

Speaker 7 of his party,

Speaker 7 He's scared of them.

Speaker 7 He should be.

Speaker 7 Instead of standing up to them,

Speaker 7 I think his testicles are on back order from China because

Speaker 7 he just wanted them to love him. They don't love him.
They're never going to love him.

Speaker 7 Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez is either going to, if the Democrats take over the House, she's either going to be the new Speaker or she's going to run against Schumer or she's going to run for president.

Speaker 7 And her wing of the party, the Bolshevik wing, is in control. That's what's going on.

Speaker 3 What do you think of John Fetterman?

Speaker 7 I really like John.

Speaker 7 His health has gotten a lot better.

Speaker 7 He's a little bit like me. We don't agree on politics, but he plays outside the pocket.

Speaker 7 He says what he thinks.

Speaker 7 He's very popular in Pennsylvania. Now, he's not popular among the loon wing of his party.
And so he could have problems in a primary, but statewide,

Speaker 7 people find him, as I do, refreshing.

Speaker 3 Let me just tick off a couple of other things here, real quick. Filibuster.

Speaker 3 I just talked to the White House this week, and they're dead serious about getting rid of the filibuster. And I said,

Speaker 3 you know, maybe reform it, maybe go back to the way it was,

Speaker 3 but please let's not get rid of

Speaker 3 the speed bump of the filibuster. And they are convinced that we'll never get anything passed.
And

Speaker 3 the comment was, these people that we're working against are completely unserious.

Speaker 3 They don't want the same kind of America. How do we get anything passed when they are roadblocking absolutely everything? How do you respond to that?

Speaker 7 Well, I talked to the president, I don't know, last week. I mean, he's dug in like a tick.

Speaker 7 I like the filibuster. When I got to the Senate, Glenn, I didn't.
But I finally learned that the role of a senator is really twofold. Of course, it's to advance.

Speaker 7 good ideas, but it's also to kill bad ideas. And we killed a lot of bad ideas with the filibuster

Speaker 7 when Joe Biden was president.

Speaker 7 My preference, and I've been encouraging Senator Foon,

Speaker 7 who I don't think he agrees with me, but we did we passed the one big beautiful bill without a single Democratic vote. And it's a marvelous bill.

Speaker 7 And we did it through reconciliation, about which you know.

Speaker 7 And we can do two more reconciliation bills. And for seven weeks, eight weeks, a couple of months, we've done nothing in the Senate.

Speaker 7 We need to get up off our ice cold, lazy butts and go pass another reconciliation bill that addresses the cost of housing and the cost of health insurance and the cost of living.

Speaker 7 the things that moms and dads are worried about when they lie down to sleep at night and camp.

Speaker 7 But I don't sense that the president's going to give up on it. Right now, I can tell you if

Speaker 7 Boone brought it up for a vote among the Republicans, it wouldn't pass.

Speaker 3 It would not pass. How do you feel about the Supreme Court? Where are they going to come down on these tariffs and the role of the Senate?

Speaker 7 Well, I don't know how they're going to come down. I listened to the oral argument.
I didn't go over there, but I could get it by audio.

Speaker 7 And

Speaker 7 they asked asked the questions I thought they would. The President is arguing that

Speaker 7 he's construing the statute. IEPA is saying this is a foreign policy decision.
And traditionally, the U.S.

Speaker 7 Supreme Court does not interfere with the executive branch when it is addressing foreign policy.

Speaker 7 The questions from the justices, with the exception of a couple, seem to be along the lines of, well, is it really foreign policy? And

Speaker 7 the statute is plain, and it doesn't mention tariffs. But I learned long ago, you never predict what the court's going to do based on oral argument.
They'll fool you.

Speaker 3 What do you think the right thing is?

Speaker 7 You know, I've got real ⁇ I don't know. I've got really mixed feelings about tariffs.

Speaker 7 There's no question the president

Speaker 7 is right that for years and years and years, other countries have taken advantage of America, particularly China.

Speaker 7 We admitted China to the World Trade Organization, I think it was December 9th, 2001. China started cheating December 10th.

Speaker 7 And I like the idea of reining them in through tariffs. If I had my brothers, here's what I would propose.

Speaker 7 I don't think the president would agree with me, but I would go to every one of these countries and say, here's the deal. If you reduce your tariffs to zero,

Speaker 7 America will reduce its tariffs to zero. And then we'll let our companies compete on a level playing field and may the best product at the best price win.
And I think America will win that fight.

Speaker 7 Now, the president, I can tell you, I've talked to him, he doesn't see it that way.

Speaker 3 You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck podcast.

Speaker 6 Hear more of this interview and others with the full show podcast available wherever you get podcasts.

Speaker 2 All right.

Speaker 3 Well, let's dive right into the Epstein-Maxwell emails. My gosh, Stu.

Speaker 3 Why are they trying to cover up that Donald Trump had sex with children?

Speaker 6 I mean, it's as clear as

Speaker 6 day in the the emails.

Speaker 6 You know, he spent hours with one of the victims.

Speaker 6 What else could possibly have occurred in that arrangement? We don't know.

Speaker 3 And

Speaker 3 it's one of the victims, Stu. One of the victims.
One of the victims.

Speaker 6 That's all we know. That's all we know.
One of the victims.

Speaker 3 Let me read what Jeffrey Epstein wrote.

Speaker 3 I want you to realize that the dog who hasn't barked is Trump. Victim,

Speaker 3 redacted. victim spent hours at my house with him he has never once been mentioned police chief etc okay

Speaker 3 new information just released or is it because in 2011 2011 that was released and everybody knew it it's been out floating around here's the change

Speaker 3 In 2011, this is what it read. I want you to realize the dog it hasn't barked is Trump.
Virginia spent hours at my house with him. Why would you redact a name that is already out in the public square?

Speaker 3 It's already out.

Speaker 3 The memo is already out. The email is already out.
It's been out for years.

Speaker 3 Why would you redact that name now? Well, because it makes it all suddenly new and shiny.

Speaker 3 Shiny and new. If you don't know who said it, you see victim and you're like, oh, there's a victim that he was, who was the victim?

Speaker 3 I don't know but when you know it's Virginia you know this is already gone to court

Speaker 3 this is she already testified about this

Speaker 3 he didn't partake in any of this any sex with any of it it's true

Speaker 3 he didn't partake in any sex with us and I'm quoting this is from the testimony But it's not true that he flirted with me. Donald Trump never flirted with me.
Have you ever met him?

Speaker 3 Yes, at Mar-Lago, my dad and him. I wouldn't say they were friends, but my dad knew him and they would talk.

Speaker 3 Have you ever been in Donald Trump or Jeffrey Epstein's presence with one another? No.

Speaker 3 What's the basis of your statement that Donald Trump is a good friend of Jeffrey? Jeffrey's told me that Donald Trump is a good friend of his. He didn't partake in any of the sex with any of it.

Speaker 3 He flirted with me. It's true that he didn't partake in any sex with us, but it's not true that he flirted with me.
So I don't understand that. But she goes on.
Donald Trump never flirted with me.

Speaker 3 Okay.

Speaker 3 So

Speaker 3 what's new about this?

Speaker 3 This is the same girl.

Speaker 3 This is the same person that didn't she work at Mar-a-Lago or she was going to get a job at Mar-a-Lago?

Speaker 6 I believe she did, yeah. I believe she did at one point.

Speaker 3 So we know they know each other. We know they know each other.
We know that at Mar-a-Lago,

Speaker 3 Jeffrey Epstein would come and he was poaching the employees, the girls there, to go work for him. And Donald Trump went to him and said, hey, man, stop it.
Stop poaching people from me.

Speaker 3 That's not cool. Don't do it.

Speaker 3 And then he said, oh, yeah, all right. And then he did it a second time and he's like, you know what? You're out.
I don't want you here anymore. I asked you not to do that and you did it.

Speaker 3 Now, that doesn't mean that he knew anything about the girls or what was happening or anything else.

Speaker 3 And even if it did mean he knew something was happening with the girls, he was saying, Hey, stop it. Don't take any of the

Speaker 3 girls or the women here. Don't do it.

Speaker 3 I don't believe he knew anything about any of this, but

Speaker 3 God only knows, and really, God only knows. This is not new news.

Speaker 3 Donald Trump

Speaker 3 might end up beating

Speaker 3 Bezos as the richest man on the planet when all is said and done. Because, again,

Speaker 3 they're presenting this as new fact, a giant scandal.

Speaker 3 Stu, I don't know if you know this.

Speaker 3 This breaking news is a giant scandal.

Speaker 6 Yeah, I've heard Democratic representatives saying that over the past 24 hours. Like, yeah, we need to investigate this.
We need to,

Speaker 6 this is shocking stuff. It's a massive scandal.
And even ABC News, I heard, push back against this and say, well, what scandal? What are you implying occurred here? We know who the victim was.

Speaker 6 We know the victim. Like,

Speaker 6 why did you even redact that name? And they're like, well, we always redact the name of victims.

Speaker 3 Like, do you really, when they're already out publicly?

Speaker 6 Not to mention, we should point out that this particular victim is not even alive.

Speaker 6 You know, she sadly died. I mean, it's a terrible, terrible story.

Speaker 3 Terrible story.

Speaker 3 Terrible story.

Speaker 6 But yeah, she passed away. You know, she's suicide.
It was at least

Speaker 6 the report, I believe.

Speaker 6 But she has a book, posthumous book coming out.

Speaker 6 But like a terrible, terrible story.

Speaker 6 But like to act as if you have to protect her identity when, number one, she's red.

Speaker 6 Number two, everyone already knows who it was, including the news sources who also have a policy, you would think.

Speaker 6 And ABC News has a policy that they would redact a victim that was in this type of situation. But it's already been out.
We already knew who it was.

Speaker 6 So they redact it to make it look like he's with other people who have not already told us nothing bad occurred.

Speaker 6 You know,

Speaker 6 it is an absolutely awful tactic. And

Speaker 3 at least what we're doing is I think litigation should follow again. I think he should sue them again.
Anyone who is presenting this as new information. ABC did their job.
Congratulations for ABC.

Speaker 3 They did their job. They pointed out this is not new information.

Speaker 3 Why are you releasing this now? And you're redacting a name.

Speaker 3 This email is already out. You're presenting this as a new scandal and you redacted that name.
This is completely dishonest. The news media shouldn't even run with it.

Speaker 3 They shouldn't have even run with it. They should have said, old news, old news.
And if you did run with it, you should handle it the way ABC handled it. Wait a minute.
Why would you redact the name?

Speaker 3 There's nothing new here. What do you mean there's a big scandal? There's no big scandal.
She's already testified against

Speaker 3 exactly the opposite of what you're believing Jeffrey Epstein over the victim. Now, I just want to make sure we understand the Democrats here.
You're taking the word of Epstein over the victim.

Speaker 5 Oh, okay.

Speaker 6 And Epstein doesn't even say that anything occurred.

Speaker 6 It's just it would be something you'd have to jump to a conclusion to accuse Donald Trump of something like this.

Speaker 6 And we know what happened because the victim said nothing. Said it was nothing.
In fact, it wasn't even a flirtation, which, by the way,

Speaker 6 even that, you might think it's creepy. It wouldn't even have been a crime.
But it wasn't even flirtation.

Speaker 6 So

Speaker 6 it's a disgrace in every single way.

Speaker 3 All right. So let me take you here.
Let me take you here.

Speaker 3 If you remember when the shutdown first started,

Speaker 3 what did the Democrats say

Speaker 3 the reason why they did the shutdown? Not them.

Speaker 3 Why Mike Johnson and everybody else wouldn't negotiate?

Speaker 3 Why wouldn't the Republicans negotiate?

Speaker 3 Because the heat was on to release the Epstein files and they didn't want to have to do that. So they shut the government down.
Okay. They wouldn't negotiate.
You didn't hear any of this?

Speaker 6 It's incomprehensible. It doesn't make any any

Speaker 6 sense at all, but that is probably what they said.

Speaker 3 So the government is open. And what does Mike Johnson do yesterday?

Speaker 3 He said the House is going to vote on a bill to release all of the files related to the late financier, convicted child sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein, next week.

Speaker 3 He said on Wednesday that a discharge position to bypass leadership and force a vote on the bill hit the benchmark for needed signatures.

Speaker 3 It's been decided by him to expediate the vote for the bill, which under the current rules rules could have been delayed until at least early December. So

Speaker 3 he says, as soon as that petition hit the needed 218 signatures, I brought it up, unanimous consent. Let's go, release it.
So he's pushing this forward. Good, Mike.
Release all of it. Thank you.

Speaker 3 Get it out. Lance this boil.

Speaker 3 I mean, if anybody thinks that you're ever going to get the truth on this in the first place, it's madness. It's madness.

Speaker 3 Everybody, I mean, so many important people were involved in this, and it was in the hands of the Democrats for the longest time, okay? So they had all of this information.

Speaker 3 You don't think it was all picked through? And if there was anything about Donald Trump, you don't think that would have come up between 2020? and 2024.

Speaker 3 There's nothing in there about Donald Trump. I mean,

Speaker 3 these people are so stupid. This time we got him, boys.
This time we got him. No, you don't.
It's like your wily coyote.

Speaker 3 This time we've got the Roadrunner. No, you're never going to catch him on this.
It doesn't work. There's nothing there.
The guy was the most investigated person in the history of the world.

Speaker 3 And you got nothing.

Speaker 3 Now, it's good to come out. But if you think you're going to catch a bunch of people on the left, you're not going to because they had it you know in their possession.

Speaker 3 You don't think all of the names were taken out, you don't think things were just destroyed if there was anything.

Speaker 3 I believe there was something,

Speaker 3 but I don't believe there's any names in it anymore. You're not going to get the truth on this one, you're just not going to get the truth.
But release everything that we have, everything.

Speaker 3 Oh, by the way, also in the Epstein emails, how come nobody's talking about this one, Stu?

Speaker 3 This one is from Michael Wolf to Jeffrey Epstein, and then Jeffrey Epstein responds. So Michael Wolf writes, what's the thumbnail on Nesbom Foster?

Speaker 3 And Jeffrey Epstein writes back, Nesbom White House Counsel, dot, dot, dot, Hillary doing naughties with Vince.

Speaker 3 Now, Vince Foster killed himself,

Speaker 3 you know, and then he killed himself in the White House and then drug himself across the street to the park.

Speaker 3 I mean, I don't know. The Vince Foster thing is so old.

Speaker 3 But why is nobody talking about that one?

Speaker 3 Why is no one talking about that?

Speaker 3 Also, in the Jeffrey Epstein email bundle, ABC, you don't feel it's necessary to bring that one up?

Speaker 5 Huh?

Speaker 3 Interesting.

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