The Night Cap with Gary Jeff Walker -- 3/4/24 - podcast episode cover

The Night Cap with Gary Jeff Walker -- 3/4/24

Mar 05, 20241 hr 49 min
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Episode description

Gary Jeff serves up the first Night Cap of March with guests like Wildman, Karen Kataline, Scott McKay, Judd Dunning, Tim Rivers and Savannah Maddox

Transcript

Or maybe timing is an issue of talking with her as much as I'd like to. But as a resident of the Bluegrass, she is a member of the House of Representatives in the Commonwealth of Kentucky the sixty first district. She is not my representative, but sometimes I well different, many times I wish

she was. She to me. In the times that we have spoken, and we've met a couple of times, I've never found her to have a personal agenda that wasn't that of the people that she works for and represents in the sixty first district, And you can't say that about a lot of elected politicians in this day and age. For certain, she is intelligent. She has as firm a grasp on the issues that are before the legislature as anyone that I know, and that's why it is always a pleasure to talk to

Savannah Maddox. Good evening, Savannah, how are you. I'm doing well and grateful for the opportunity to be with you this evening. Yeah we are and few between, But the legislative session continues in Frankfort. How much more time have you got left to log up at the capital, Savannah? Before that session is done? It'll be seventeen legislative days, because we're on day forty three today and that will span through the middle part of April. However,

so not a lot of time. Of course, anything that we pass needs to be passed before the veto override periods, because we do have a veto proof supermajority, and anything that Governor Andy basher Vito's we have the ability to override, provided that we pass it before that veto proof period ends. All Right, I got you when I ask you about the important bills or legislation that we should talk about today. First off, you text me back why you're tapping is back? I hope that they didn't get that tech.

They didn't intercept that text, Savannah. So tell me what is this wire tapping legislation you're talking about. Yeah, So we passed the crime Bill,

which was House Bill five earlier this session. And one of the things during the interim that I had really tried to sound the alarm bells about is that originally that legislation had a wire tapping provision in it, which you know, I don't even need to describe the ways in which that can be abused by governments, so forth, so on and you know the fact that our right to privacy is fundamental. But they did remove that from that particular bill.

It's still had several problems with it. That House Bill five that I wasn't able to support it ultimately, but it was an improved version from where it was. But now the wire tapping is back in a standalone bill the same sponsor that had sponsored it before, and again it continues to be a potential

violation of our rights of privacy and a whole host of things. So I'm not certain if they're the way I understand it, they're intending to move it through the process, So I don't know what the timeline looks like on that. And I'm going to do what I did with House Bill five and other legislation in the past and do everything I can to try to oppose it well more and more. Savannah, Sadly, in this country, we were living

in a police state because of the technology that exists of facial recognition. Cameras are everywhere, and now this explain to people why, because the argument it's always on the other side, Well, if I'm not doing anything wrong, I have nothing. If you're not doing anything wrong, you have nothing to worry about. But we're going to catch some really bad ombres, you know, with these these wire tapping measures, and so you should be in favor

of it if you're for safety and security. What's the old adage, those who who give up their liberty for security have neither and yeah, or deserve neither of something along that line, right, what you said first there about you know, the idea that if you're not doing anything wrong, you don't

have anything to worry about. Regime after regime. I won't waste our time today by naming them, but that is at the epicenter of every time that a government goes rogue, and the suspension of civil liberties is you know, ultimately the next step. But there's just one simple little thing, presumption of

innocence. We are to be presumed to be innocent. And I think that the fundamental problem with the growth of the police state that we've seen in surveillance too, that the fundamental problem is that it violates that presumption of innocence, and it can be a violation of privacy as well. You know, they're corresponding constitutional amendments for a lot of the concepts that we're talking about, but we recently voted on a bill to regulate the automated license plate readers. And

you know, this was a big discussion during the interim as well. I spent the entirety of the interim very opposed to this legislation because I want to ban automated license plate readers. I want to ban them outright, you know, I don't think we should be using them. And I tried to file an amendment to that bill. Leadership said that it was a germane. It actually pertained to the subcutaneous injection part of it. They were trying to get

at the subject of microchip in which you know that's an abhorrent thought. Forced microchips. We can all agree that's terrible. But it had this part that said subcutaneous injection. So what do I do. I went in and I tried it again with also immunization mandates, vaccine mandates, because to me, you know, that's that's Germane, right, we're sticking stuff under the skin. We want to protect our bodily autonomy from forced treatment, so forth,

so on. But you know, they said it, what's your main But I say all that to say that was all part of the same privacy bill with the automated license plate readers, and you know, ultimately they did end up putting a lot of very important restraints on that. So that's one of the few instances of me being very pragmatic versus hard nose, because there were reforms in there that were very much needed. And you know, I'm going to take another bite at that apple the first opportunity I get in Kentucky.

Right now, where do we stand on bodily autonomy where it comes to injections, chip implants, vaccine mandates and the like. Where is the law in the Commonwealth right now as we're sitting here talking tonight, Savannah. Yeah, so you we are currently one step forward with microchipping, meaning that that would be disallowed. And so much as that bill has passed out of the House,

it's yet to be taken up in the Senate. But if that legislation don't quote me, I think it was House Bill forty five, I believe. But anyhow, if that passes the Senate, then at least it would be illegal for an employer or you know, a governmental entity, anybody to force you to receive a microchipt. But again, I wanted to extend that to vaccines because I don't think, you know, the citizens should be free to decide for themselves whether to receive a vaccine, and nobody should be able

to force you to do it against your will. But in Kentucky there are currently no additional protections beyond what we have at the federal level, which states that if an employer cannot require you to receive a vaccine if it is a violation of your sincerely held religious beliefs, and there's a whole set of criteria

for you know what that looks like. And you know, I'm not an attorney, so I won't get too deeply into that, but we don't have any additional special protection despite multiple efforts now with regards to the school systems and things of that nature. You know, parents often don't realize that they do have the ability to opt out of those immunizations. But it needs to be on the basis of a religious exemption, because there's not a conscientious objection at

this point. So, you know, it would be good to see additional reforms in that area, because I know that the Kentucky Hospital Association, in Kentucky Medical Association, Kentucky Chamber of Commerce worked very hard to kill the bill that I managed to pass out of the House two years ago on this particular subject, because you know, again, nobody here is anti medicine, anti

science, anti vaccine, any of that stuff. We're just pro citizens being able to decide for themselves without a nanny state government enforcing these types of policies. Well, when we saw during COVID, with all of the mandates that the boy dictator Andy Basheer was trying to lay down, like a restriction on going to church and worshiping God and traveling in the state and all the other things that he tried to pull that were ultimately ruled unconstitutional and illegal, I

would think people just have a very very short memory, Savannah. It seems to me the voters, the voters have a very very small span of attention, and unless they're reminded on a constant basis by people like you and me, they tend to forget the overstepping that was done not so long ago, two three years ago. Absolutely, and whenever we're talking about short memories, obviously, you know, I am hopeful that people will remain vigilant and understanding

and realizing what can happen whenever the government decides that it knows best. That's going to be problem, whether it comes to your health, or your pocketbook or your children's education. You know, I hope that Kentucky and will be paying attention and not forget the fact that we are getting ready to or we're in the process of contemplating school choice legislation, a constitutional amendment in fact.

And I could just tell you there's a good version of that, and there's a bad version of that that would essentially codify a weakened version of school choice that is more regional in nature. It's not for everybody. If we do this, we need to do it right. We need to do it for everybody, and we need to make sure that we get the strongest still possible. Yeah, you say there's something. There's a bill to disallow parents from

homeschooling their children if they don't have a diploma. Again, it is the state saying we are the omniscient, we we're the over and above authority on educating your children, and we're going to take that ability away from you permanently by saying, well, if you didn't go through a state public school and get that piece of paper, then you are not you are not qualified to teach your own children the things that you believe that they should know to get

through life. And I just think that's ridiculous. It is ridiculous. And I have been doing this role that has been entrusted to me for a little while now, and it takes a lot to shock me. I don't get angry at legislation that I see that I disagree with, but this is a bill that whenever I saw it, I could feel the hackles coming up, because essentially, what it says is that you don't have access to your own

children. You have to ask the government for permission to access your own children, and you can only receive it if you have the state's feel of approval. That is not acceptable. No, it's not acceptable at all. And it is again along the line of even Joe Biden saying, you know, for eight hours a day, they're our kids, they're not your kids, and no bs, mister President, They're always the children of the parents,

and the parents have the ultimate responsibility in educating them in the things. And if you don't trust the parents, well, I mean that's tough because it's still ultimately the parents. And you look in any situation, kids that are going to public schools, and they are the public schools are failing them. A part of that failure is also on the part of the parents who aren't supporting you know what, the or maybe just aren't there for their kids.

But you shouldn't be a blanket thing where no one, no one is qualified to teach their own children. No everyone should be given that accord, you know. And again it's a it's a parental rights thing, and it just like you, it makes me sick to my stomach when the state tries to take in and make their children wards of the state instead of the children of

the parents who are sending that kid to school. Absolutely, Kentucky's children do not belong to the government, and you know, parents who better than to

decide what's best for their own children in terms of education than parents. And this is actually the first time that I have spoken publicly about this legislation, simply because whenever I found out about it, I sent a letter to the sponsors and to all members of House leadership outlining my grave concerns and asking them to withdraw this bill, because what right do they have to say that children must be educated by the state, Because you know, and you think,

oh, well, we have private schools. Not every Kentuckian. In fact, you know a pretty good number of Kentuckians that's not accessible to them. They don't have the resources for private Well that's another reason. That's another reason we need school choice, absolutely, But at the end of it all, it is up to the parent to decide what is best for our children. Our children do not belong to the state, and I will do everything in

my power to continue opposing this bill. I've tried to give the sponsors a little bit of time to you know, maybe turn around on that, but it appears that they're not, so you know, we've got to march forward and demand that that bill not moving in. Savannah Maddix, thank you for your time as always. Thank you for keeping up the good fight for people's rights, whether it comes to wire tapping or be able to educate your own children the way you see fit. And I know you will continue doing exactly

that. Thank you so much. Thank you. You got it. It's the nightcap and it continues in moments with Tim Rivers, author of the American Gulag Chronicles. All about January sixth, News, Traffic and Weather, News Radio seven hundred WLW Cincinnati reacting to a major decision with the nine point thirty

report. I'm Sean Galviagher breaking now Ohio stoft leaders reacting to today as intim a Supreme Court ruling that states cannot use an insurrection clause in the fourteenth Amendment to disqualify former President Trump from their primary ballots, and only action by Congress is the way states can do this. The Governor and Lieutenant Governor of Ohio

are both happy with this morning Supreme Court decision on Donald Trump. So this was not an unexpected decision, and I believe it was a unanim's decision. So it tells you that this is not a partisan issue. Tells you that the Supreme Court is saying the voters will decide this. Both Governor DeWine and Lieutenant Governor Houston were here at Reading Junior Senior High School, which received state dollars for career technical education. The Lieutenant governor says, as a former Secretary

of State, it's the right ruling. Let the voters choose who their leaders should be, not the courts. From reading. I'm Matt Reeves News Radio seven hundred w WELABE decision comes on the heels of super Tuesday, where fifteen states will hold primaries. Now the latest traffic and weather together right now, taking a look at the major interstates and highways. No new accidents now the lates forecast from a train heating and cooling weather center on news radio seven hundred

WLW. Tonight, increasing clouds and we'll see an overnight low of fifty five four tomorrow, some midday rain, isolated storms, a high as sixty eight at night, more rain again and a low down to fifty one. From your severe weather station, I'm nine first warning, Chief Meteorologist Steve Rawley, News Radio seven hundred WLW radar showing a clear sky right now, our temperature sixty two degrees. Police in Trenton say a woman was found dead outside of

acant home over the weekend. That woman, believed to be in her fifties, was found on Third Street, with preliminary findings in an autopsy performed by the Butler County Corner showing the woman died after overdosing on one of several illicit substances, with no indication of criminal activity leading to her death. A man set to spend sixty years in prison for assaulting his a strange wife which I

had was stayed off in Covington last year. They say that the suspect showed up to his austranged wife home even after being ordered to stay away from her. That's where he uh, that's where he has said of a punched and choked here while also cutting her with a knife. Pepper stray was later used to take Simpson into custody. Found guilty on burglary, kidnapping, assault, strangulation, and evidence tampering charges. O two pitch and this ball is well

hit. Oh bye and deep to right center field. And this thing's going to get out of here. Whoop and of the party deck out and right center Christian Incarnassi ow Strand ties this game at three with a two run opposite field jolt. Tommy Thrall on the call as and Carnassi on Strand had a three RBI. Afternoon, the Reds beat the Athletics fifteen to eight, and good Year Tyler Stevenson also hitting a home run ELI day of the cruise with

a two run RBI triple. The Reds will be off Tuesday, then face the Brewers in Goodyear Wednesday afternoon, first pitch three ZH five on Fox Sports thirteen sixty college basketball Tuesday night, U SEE will visit Oklahoma with tip off at eight o'clock here on the Big One. Pregame starts just after seven point thirty. Our next update is at ten o'clock. I'm Sean Galviagher, News Radio seven hundred. W WELW. It's time to get a head start on

spring cleaning. Get rid of all the dart and grime this winter brought to your floors. Keep your family healthy, and make your carpet happy again. Here's that happy, as we promised. Our next guest is a man named Tim Rivers. He's a former IT engineer, a Fortune one hundred executive, and he's a writer. Back three years ago in twenty twenty one, after January sixth, he began writing letters of support to the January sixth prisoners,

which make no mistake, are political prisoners. They are not criminal in the truest sense of our laws, certainly, and he was documenting their stories and their messages to supporters and America. Together with Marie Goodwin, who's a January sixth mother and activist, they created j six Patriot News, telling America up to date information about the state and treatment of those patriots and how they could help, And in twenty twenty two he founded the American Gulog Chronicles and began

publishing those letters, art and stories of America's new political prisoners to the public. So once again Part two The Art of Confinement, Part one Letters from Prison, the American Gulog Chronicles writer Letters from Prison author Tim Rivers and actually the authors are multiple, but we'll get into that. Tim. How are you doing this evening and thanks for being on the show. I'm good. Thank you very much for having me on. Yeah, the authors really,

you're right, and the authors are actually the prisoners. Yeah, it's their first person testimonies that are in this book. I just introduced them. What

rhymes are they actually charged with? Some of these people parading, obstricting official business that no one was charged with insurrection, which they're trying to prosecute President Trump on even though he was never charged or convicted or impeached of any kind of insurrection on January sixth, But what are most of these prisoners charged with?

All right? You start with you start with the basic four, which was remaining on restricted grounds after being totally entering a restricted building, after being totally and trespassing, picketing. Those those are the kind of the four basic misdemeanors they'll hit you with. That's what they hit Steve Baker with. Just now those I was going to ask about this. Steve Baker is a Blaze reporter for Blaze TV and he was asked to surrender by the Department of Justice

this past Friday simply for reporting on January sixth. That so what they charged him with. That's that's saying that basic four. And you know he's not the only one. You know, you mentioned Marie Goodwin in your introduction, who's my partner at Jason's Patriot News. That's what her son, Daniel was

there as that day. He was a journalist for Stop eight dot com doing a documentary on that event, and he had to He spent over a year in home confinement with an ankle bracelet, and then they sent him to Bastrap Prison in Texas for two months just to teach him a lesson for walking into the building for less than a minute and walking right back out. So, yeah, these people are definitely political prisoners, but I've changed the way we

talk about them. They're actually they're not really prisoners because prisoners are afforded rights in this country. They have speedy trial, they have right to defense, they have right to a jury of their peers, they have a right to a venue that's fair. And none of these people are getting that. So they're not really prisoners, really, Gary, They're actually hostages to the American

public. Their purpose in being held hostage is to inject fear into people like you and I and the folks who are listening to this, so that you won't call your congressman at two two two two four three one two one and tell them what you think about how bad a job they're doing, or how bad the border is, or why you are destroying the constitution and ignoring the liberty rights and freedoms of Americans. That's what they want. They want you

to be afraid. And that's what January sixth is about. Whether you think it was a setup, whether you think people did anything wrong that day, just really doesn't matter anymore. What matters is looking at your constitution being shredded right in front of your very eyes and not realizing that, hey, folks, they'll do it to them, they'll do it to you, you know. And the thing is that people like you Have you been approached by the

Department of Justice for your work? Has anybody said anything to Tim Rivers? No, they have it. In all fairness, you know, I don't really consider myself any kind of a firebrand. I'm simply an activist who speaks truth and relays truth. I wasn't there on January sixth. I was here. I'm going to retire ee. I was a retired execut to playing golf, kicking around the garden, working on the house, and doing the things you're supposed to a little bit of activism for the Republican Party after I saw

what had happened to the Democratic Party over the last two decades. But in reality, other than a little corner standing with signs and stuff, I wasn't any you know, kind of deep in the middle of this. And for three years now, I feel like I've been waiting in muck and I've seen the the unconscionable actions of bureaucracy has gone wild. That's really about the easiest

way to describe what's happened here. All of the damage is being done to this country other than the Executive Office and the the inadequacy or maybe in action of Congress it's really all been bureaucracies, the d o J, the FBI of the new finn sen by the who don't know that that's financial criminal enforcement network. Those are the guys who've been rifling through your bank account to see if you bought a Maga hat and also went to dig sporting goods were Kim

Kim. This something that most people in this country who hear the drive by news or the mainstream news stories, don't really even know about. Tell me about this financial penalty that they have that they have pushed down. This sounds an awful lot like what Justin Trudeau did with the truckers in Canada, you know, closing their bank accounts just for protesting vaccine mandates back in the day. And a lot of people don't understand that this is going on currently,

do they. I don't think so, even though it has been publicized. You know, there was a big outcry in Congress about this is basically warrantless surveillance on the American public and it's a misuse all of these things. Obviously, it seemed like a very an exclusive misuse overstep of the true purpose and authority of your bureaucracy under the Department of Treasury. The Financial Criminal Enforcement Network

is supposed to be looking for money laundry. They're supposed to be going after cartel, drug lords, terrorists, people who are moving millions of dollars and hiding them. But you know, maybe the bidens. No, actually they don't look into the bidens. But the rest of these that's their purpose in life. And instead instead they're using the bank, their ability to use the banks in as an investigative authority to look through your bank records for things that

they consider antithical to the Biden regime. You bought a Maga hat, you ordered a Trump flag, you went to Dick's Sporting Goods, you like to go to the shooting range, all of it. And maybe you've democrat You've donated to a Republican cause or sent money to Donald Trump, And that's what they're looking for, so they could identify enemies of the state. Man you are. If you guys don't realize you are deeply into nineteen eighty four, I don't know what else we can do to wake you up. And they're

letters, these letters from prison that are in these two books. That's really their purpose. Their purpose is not only to wake you up, but to give you first person testimony of the horror show that this administration would like to turn us into a socialist country and use the Stazi tactics that you see being used on these men and women in their letters at Letters from Prison dot us. You can read some of them for free out there as a tease of

the book. But you'll hear this truth and maybe you'll even get a glimpse of the civic death this administration has in mind for anybody who does you know, disturbs the panorama. It's really scary. In Letters from Prison, the American Gulag chronicles Letters from Prison Part one, you talk about two years of pre trial defendants living in squalid, inexplicably cruel conditions and jails across the country. Can you just give me a free sample of one or two of those

stories and what the conditions are like for these people held on misdemeanors. You know, the letters are some of the letter pretty long, and the ones that really are going to describe the horror shows, they are definitely long. But I can tell you and it's a little bit of a synopsis, and you can read again some of it out there and we'll talk about how you can get the book or how you can easily get to read the book, because it's all about messaging right here. Nobody who works a nice book,

not meaning not anybody took a penny for this. It goes to a nonprofit that cares for these men and women and tries to keep their families intact until we can get them out of jail. So it is a five oh one c. Three. When you buy these books, you're basically getting a tax deductible item, and you're also getting into the fight with us. So do gulog DC Gulog water comes out of the taps, brown and black, black mold blows out of the air conditioning vents and rains down on you on your

blanket. You have to cover yourself with a blanket. This was the original conditions in the Gulag. There is basically a pretty much leftist socialist staff that works these locations. Some of them aren't even American citizens. The food is adulterated, sometimes sprayed with chemicals, served under cooked or overcooked, frozen, and comes some kind of fish patties that just weren't cooked. It's pretty much a peanut butter and jelly kind of day or peanut butter and baloney. Breakfast

is served at three point thirty in the morning. It's inadequate. It's all sugar and proteins. They'll tell you right when you come in you're gonna need diabetes drugs. Everybody goes, what are you talking about, I'm not diabetic, and well, after a month he will be so because you get nothing sugar and carb So they put them on diabetic drugs when they come in.

And then we get to the beatings. Ryan Samsel, who was beaten repeatedly and multiple institutions, lost vision in one eye, traumatic brain injury, multiple concussions. Why hold on, Jim, Why was he beaten because hey, he was a trumper. Yeah, none of these people who have suffered a lot of injury, and you can read about it in the letters at J Sixpatriot News dot com. Go out there, and you know, look for Ryan Samsel's interviews that we've done with them from prison, the letters from him

where he describes what's been happening to him. And we even have pictures. I have some unfortunately horrific pictures that were smuggled out of one of the institutions by a Corrections officer where he was handcuffed to a buck chair. A buck chair, guy, is a constrained stress position chair. There's no back to it. It leans forward. They cut your hands behind you and your legs to the front, so you're in basically a forward prone position. Then he

was beaten until unconscious and left on the floor bleeding out. I've got pictures basically of a huge puddle of blood on the floor next to the chair. And I mean, these stories, guys, we don't have enough time to talk about it. I've been doing this for three years. You need to

read these letters because they are really now pretty much addressed to America. These are messages in a bottle from today's political prisoners who are trying to tell you that they did nothing wrong and they're suffering because they refuse to bend the knee to tyranny and your next I mean, there's just no out about it. Eventually you'll run a bowl of the new Stazzi if you do not bend the

knee. And I think that's the overwhelming message that comes out. Besides over and over they all end with I look forward to receiving more letters from you. God bless you all. And do not forget us. And so you can write to these men and women at the Patriotmail Project dot com. That's how I got involved in this. I wrote one letter, Gary, one letter, and I got back a four page reply from an American war hero

incarcerated in the DC Gulag. That man sits right this minute, three Bronze Stars for valor, a Green Beret, and a ranger, never been arrested in his life. This minute, he sits in a Dallas Fort Worth prison over three years without trial because he will not bend the knee. Wow. Three years no trial, all because he just he won't say I give You're right, Joe Biden's God, I'm nothing and I should I should sit here

as long as you let me. I can't believe it. I did an interview with a man named Tim Hale who was in the DC Gulag for a while. And you may or may not have heard from Tim or heard of him. I know, yeah, I know who Tim is. I know him very well. But he told me. He told me that when he was first incarcerated for being at the Capitol on January sixth, that he was in his roommate was an Antifa person who actually got out pretty pretty quickly.

And what Tim says is that there were all kinds of people embedded in that crowd on January sixth who were causing the problem. They weren't patriots. They weren't they weren't trying to uphold their constitutional rights. They were trying to stir stuff up and get fights started. I mean. And that's the other thing that people need to know that there were a lot of people who may have been undercover FBI or may have been Antifa, that were paid to be there

to actually gin the crowd up even more than they were. And that is something else that is again not publicly talked about at all. It's like the people who were in charge of the prosecution of these January sixth prisoners don't want the American people to know how deep the conspiracy went to try and get Donald Trump's supporters put in jail. No, and it continues. They're still arresting

people right now, Gary. They have not stopped. They're over fourteen hundred people now, I got three hundred and fifty behind bars and they are not stopping. Now. They're going after the grandma who was sitting on the grass at the perimeter. This is really an unconscionable misuse of power. It's all about creating. I mean, if you listened to the recent vitriol that came out of Biden's mouth, oh my gosh, I mean it was on It

was his speech to commemorate January sixth. Trust me, folks, I commemorated in a very different way than he did. He basically, you know, called January sixth patriots the worst thing on the planet. Donald Trump is an insurrections blah blah blah blah blah policeman died. I tried to count the number of lies he shoved into three minutes, and I just lost count. And

this is our this is our executive officer of this country. This is who is in charge of the administrative meat grinder that is turning patriots basically into civic refugees and destroying their families along the way. We could have a whole show about their families, and America sits silent. Well, folks, silence is complicit. So get in the game. Go to Jason's Patriot News dot com. Educate yourself. Look these guys, all these people need help. You

can donate to their gifts and goes. You can donate to the agencies to support them. You can buy these books and that money goes to support them. You got to get in the game or this country is lost. The

American Gulog chronicles letters from prison. The American Goulog chronicles the art of confinement, all these letters from January sixth prisoners who many of them, And as Tim Rivers just described, there's a man who has spent three years in a Dallas Fort Worth prison without a trial, simply because he will not bend to knee to Joe Biden, the Democrats and the Department of Justice and disavow Donald Trump. It is absolutely a disgrace and I'm as fired up as I've been

in a long time. I appreciate it. Tim, thank you very much for your time and good luck with the book, and I hope that people will hear this and purchase this and try and help these January sixth prisoners as much as possible, because it should never have happened in this country. Hey man, Well, God bless you for your work. Let's hope that this country is still here for us after twenty twenty four. Yes, sir, thank you. Jud Dunning. Coming up right after news, which is next

on seven hundred WLW. You from Atlanta har in the news today, some Republicans are turning their backs on Donald Trump. They endorsed him out of fear, but then did nothing else, even as Democrats are suing to remove mister Trump from the ballot. Guess who went all the way to the Supreme Court to keep President Trump on the ballot, Conservative Republican Larry Kidd. No other congressional candidate in the country came to President Trump's defense, only Larry Kidd.

I was really ticked off when Democrats removed President Trump from the ballot in Maine, in Colorado. That's why I was so glad Larry Kidd went to court to stop it. Yeah, it seems like the other guys running for Congress just say they support Trump, But Larry Kidd went to court to help Trump elect the pro Trump Republican to Congress, the one who personally intervened to protect the constant and President Trump. You know, Larry Kidd, the new kid

in town. I'm Larry Kidd, and I approved this message paid for by kid for Congress. You couldn't pick a worse time to sell your home, share your home is worth a small fortune right now. But are you really

going to swap your tour some Nightcap on seven hundred WLW. Why is he yelling at the top of the hour, Because I'm talking over the music, Gary Jeff Walker into our number two tonight on this Monday, March the fourth, twenty twenty four, and the pleasure is all ours talking to our next guest, jud Dunning, who is a brilliant guy, a funny guy, and he is back publishing again with fantastic opinion pieces in places like Newsmax and bullet Point and on and on and on. Jud Dunning, welcome back to

the Nightcap. It's been a while. It's glad to glad to have you on the air again. Well, thank you, buddy. You're one of my favorite pages. And I love your market. You know we're I'm doing business right now over in Cleveland and in Cincinnati, and we just I love door knock in Dublin. I love your great state. Oh fantastic. I wanted to talk to you about this latest piece that you've just published. You can tell me where people can find it too, about the I believe the

LA District Attorney Gascone and how we are not safe in America. If you think that you're in one of those little corners of the country and you're insulated from all of the nonsense and chaos that has been purposely done to our country by open borders and by unenforced laws and turning criminals out on the streets, you need to think again. Jud tell me a little bit about that, if you would. Yeah, I mean, the basic premise on that is

so simple as that. I wrote that word at Crossroads between decline and restoration and post George Floyd bifurcated weaponized dog American justice, and I said that like a sturdy stool, right, our republic is based upon individual safety first, economic prosperity, international security, and an absence of an elite ruling class.

And if you go to the Constitution, the preservation of life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness, that life, our safety, our simple safety, holds absolute primacy as the non negotiable foundation of our brittle contingent contract with our government. And if you look at what's happened with the Sooroscian das across the nation, there's not a crisis of criminals being mistreated in our nation, right, It's not like trans or black issues or you know, any other cultural

race issues, or there's not a crisis. But meanwhile we're in this massive push of decriminalization. Gary It's like, but there's not a crisis that it's going for. It puts on the globalist, culturalist, Marxist, deconstructionist agenda to weak in society. Scarey won't have them rely on government. And a perfect example was here in Los Angeles, which I live half the time.

Now, the crime rate is thirty six for one thousand residents, which has made us the highest crime rates in the nation's and one of the largest cities. So you have a chance one in twenty eight of being a victim of a crime. And if you go to what Gascon just did, this is what's really happening in Biden's administration right since Trump Special Directive twenty point zero seven, it's called misdemeanor case management. He immediately came in, he decriminalized thirteen

major misdemeanors and then he threw out cash bail. I could go through and through and through, and why there's no valid reason rapes have gone from like one seventy one to seventy that's two hundred women a year of being destroyed for life. Murders are up, robberies are up. My neighborhood mar Vista, where I live half the time, half in Texas, he lo irs, I actually do. I live in Texas at the time. Know is it's the it's the highest breakout. I'm three minutes for medicine. It's the highest

burglary area in the in Los Angeles. The deconstruction is crazy. A woman who was out of her mind chased my wife on a hike with a machetti like a month ago. This is life under Biden, this is life under Left. It's a serious issue. And so, no, your family is not safe. And I told you off the record, I won't go into it, but it's come personally into our family. And when politics become personal, that's when you have to rise up. That's when you have to throw

off the chains. And that's what the article is about. Well, jud Jenning, you think that it is permanent. It is an imperative that we reelect Donald Trump in the full. Oh, absolutely, that's the that's the premise. The demand your family's not safe, the demand return law, order and safety under Trump. And really it really comes down to you, and

and and uh, great was a great gentleman on my show. I'm forgetting his name, Horowitz, and he said, hey, the left, the leftist collective deconstructive ideas are aligned, even though they're dis jumped through a sense of evil, like they just cascade because they're so stupid, they're so wrong, they're so unligned that it feels like everything is stacked up against us. Right, but one moral absolutist who drains the swamp, who sets the standard.

It's presidents, parents, teachers, and pastors. Right, we have these lynchpins moral absolution of good old American goodness and living legally is living American and that's of course Trump is the first person that reflects that. And then weaker people below. It's really interesting because if you study what just happened in

Virginia. In Virginia, they just like decriminalize a bunch of the A lot of conservatives have jumped on board, right, and you have these culturalist markists walking in lockstep with their comrades, going, I will deconstruct the safety of my constituents for political gain. And the progressive hard left. There's a lot of people out there that are just jumping in on the Kumbai bandwagon. Criminals are not victims and criminals and Trump seems to see things in black and white.

Well, the first thing that you do when you cross into this country illegally is commit a crime. And you say it is imperative to close the borders and deport all illegals who have entered America in the last four years. Is it logistically possible to deport to find, to round up and get rid of twelve to fourteen million that may be a low number who have come in in the last four years under the open border policy of Joe Biden? Is

it possible? America's one million guaranteed chain migration structure has always been enough, right, I mean, you know, I use the system of this if you go over to it, and you know, who cares what people are? I genuinely if you look at my hiring record, like I've hired every color, nationality, gender, I really don't care. I care about merit, right, But if you put a bunch of catfish pond the trout, it's going to start to change the culture. And that means that the trout

pond never had any value. Well, you know, Americans culture value you're supposed to come over here, contribute and join us, not change us. So hey, I think we can easily throw and by the way, it's it's also corporate, plutocratic slave labor that people are addicted to. It's not that we don't care about these immigrants. We're trying to use them for votes and for cheap labor. And there's a lot of power behind the democratic base

that doesn't give a damn about human life at all. The amount of migrant children that are now missing for sex trafficking is it's like the greatest criminal crime of our history. It's happening at the border. I think we can rally up enough legal people to get everybody who came in legally out. Just send them out, you know what, give them we're giving them money anyway, Give them ten grand and send them pack. You know, seriously, why

don't we just give them money. It's a going away it's a going away present. We're going to give them fifty g's if they stay. I know, the ten seems like a bargain. Give fentanyl dealers and traffickers automatic minimum twenty year prison sentences. Hallelujah, Yes, amen, amen, I mean it's really interesting. There was a Latin crime wave year when I was on

the radio on AM seven ninety. Nobody wants to talk about it, you know, because it's culturally inappropriate to talk about the fact that seventy nine percent of all are violent crime is because Latin criminals who have come across the border. Like, is that racist to just talk to the statistics because it's happening because the legals are coming in without a lynchpin to ill legality. They come

in illegally, so why are they bound to legality? Yeah, so they have to go and you know, the defence and all steff is killing our kids. Man, We've got we've got three hundred and eighty four percent increase in fence and all depths in Los Angeles. I mean, it's no one thousand, excuse me, three hundred and eighty four of a percent of it on the street and we've gone up. It's just why, why is this not the biggest crisis that we have? So two more things I want to

get to. This is from Judd Dunning's Top twenty Conservative Resolutions for twenty twenty four to Restore and Say of America that he put out right before the first of the year outlaw gender transition surgery and puberty blocking medication for all minors nationally. Hell yeah, yeah, I mean listen, just look at the grab a child by the face and for a moment, look at the vulnerability of

their spirit as they travel through adolescents and puberty alone. And then grab a liberal parent by the face and look at their need to virtue signal and connect to complete insanity, and then look at them politicizing their child. Just take

it off the table. Just take it off the table. You know, it's such a confusing just just for the choice being sexuality, between homosexuality and heterosexuality, that journey of weird arousal and family trauma and all the things that happen all of our precious babes in America if they have to arreparable harm with puberty blockers because they're being politicized by carrying parents. You know what. The parents aren't doctors, parents aren't psychologists. They haven't gone to med school for

twelve years and done their internship. They're just politicizing their children. So I think we can make a stand on that they're two genders. It's obvious, and you know what, you want to be trans you want to address up like everyone the conservatives have always been like, hey, then be yourself, but just don't put it on our children. Yeah, I mean for trans people, it's Halloween every day. Support Israel unconditionally renew aggressive sanctions against Iran.

We have been in a state of war with the country of Iran and the Iotolas since nineteen seventy nine. Well, the only thing is we don't act like it. They've always acted like it, and they continue to act like it. And they are the They are the progenitors, and they are the cause between the current conflict with Hamas and Gaza and Israel. Right now, Iran is the enemy. We should never ever stop supporting Israel and anything

else. To add interesting moment like where Biden is reversing on net and Yahoo for the first time. He say he's a friend, but we can no longer support him. Well, what are you gonna do? What are you gonna do? You know, I mean, you really have to walk through the gods that situation. First of all, people forget that it was surrendered and only in the last twenty years, right, it was surrendered to Arabic You know, here's a great idea. Long as we're throwing out sidewinders.

Why doesn't why doesn't Saudi Arabian become the keeper of the area. Then they'll build it into a megopolis and instead of spending money on on weaponry and you know, put and using the people's shields perhaps and being a proxy war with the West and the East. Perhaps it could build up into one of the greatest economic centers in that area right there. There are other ways to get

there. But it could not going to happen. It could be it could be a new divide right next to Israel, the same same amount of capital. But I love that idea. But the bottom line is is there's so much you know, endemic hatred from the forties here through the global brainwashing of a less very you know, a lower education, whole concept, theocratic black and white. You know, it's very very dark stuff. So what's he gonna yes for a move it? So I don't I don't really think a

two states solution on Gaza really should be the way it should go. I mean, I think we just have to figure out some way. Why can't Jordan added backside to the West Bank, you know, why can't they pitch in? Why can't they just double the side. Why can't Jordan give up a little bit of their borders, you know, and and care for the Arabic people. There's other ways to get there, but there's no rational parties at the table. I don't think that you should surrender gods, and that's

my personal opinion. Well, they're not. There's not a Palestinian culture, there's not a Palestinian language. Uh, the term Palestinian didn't even exist. I mean outside of the Roman Empire, who when they took over the Holy Land called it Palestine just to just to tif the Jews off. But I mean it was like the Rockies, right, Palestine was like saying the Rocky

Mountains or the Appalachians. That that's absolutely correct. But on the other war front that we are fighting a proxy war in right now, give Ukraine enough weapons to win their war or broker a quicker piece against Russia. Number one, I do firmly believe that Putin would never have done this if Donald Trump had been in office. Number one. I mean, I mean the two incursions into Ukraine happened under the two Marxist presidential regimes. So Obama and Biden,

and many people say that Obama's actually still pulling the strings. But that's another issue for another night perhaps. So, yeah, the thing with Ukraine, We've decided to support them in this since Russia is our you know, formerly the Soviet Union and the Evil Empire and all of that stuff. So yeah, give Ukraine enough weapons to win their war. What we have done so far has just prolonged the war. Is that correct? Yeah? Yeah, I mean, I actually my opinion is changing over the last few months.

The Budapest memoran, Like, look, we won Vietnam, for right, I mean, your viewers know that we won. There was Vietnam Victory Day. We pulled out poorly. We won in Afghanistan effectively, we pulled out poorly. There is a responsibility to war, and it's a long term responsibility. When we when we had the Ukraine's give up their missiles they're NATO missiles, the budapests and memorandum, right, we promised them that we would take care of them. That is true, that is an American pledge.

But we have such a hyper politicized left right battle over and the left says that they the left likes war when it creates power and a shift, and it creates a Kinesian stimulation to the economy so they can craft off of it. The right hates war, but goes to war when there's a moral imperative.

They're two different, and they flip over it every time Congress slips over the poor countries that we get involved in because we are amazing and constantly wonderful and a great democratic republic, we also to drag them into our polarity and it creates massive risk. This is the unconscious shadow of the American military machine. Right, we'll get involved, but hey, by the way, four

to eight years, we may change our opinion. So that's just the truth of knowing we are reluctant intervention, just having conscious awaredness of our military policy over history. Right, we're generally good, but we can really flip on some of the people we help. That's the risk of letting us get involved. Right. So I think on this situation, there's been so much massive death, I think our focus needs to be on peace, you know,

I mean, if you really understand what remains there. And I think General McGregor's just gone, He's like, man, we said, we have just been prolonging a massive amount of there's been a flight of all the men from the country. Most of the people fighting are coming in from other countries. Now we've got you know, we've decimated the people of it. One of my employees works there by the way, and you know, he's been in

the Ukraine for years, our analyst. He's an amazing guy, Jewish guy, and we hear it from the ground and he's just like, we're just keeping our heads down, trying to work, and meanwhile there's like skirmishes of skirmishes of death, skirmishes of death, and the people just they just want to get they just want safety, They just want to get back to it, but they don't want to be in the middle of our proxy war. So many things that I agree with in this treatise, Judd donning eliminate DEI

and critical race theory from all governmental agencies. It's starting to happen in the private sector. And who was it the state of Florida. I think all universities fired their DEI staff because Ron Dessentis says that has no business in in places of education or you know that the government should support. And we've got reverse all of Biden tax increases, increase oil drilling, I mean, Donald Trump said that in his famous I'll be a dictator Day one, I'll do

two things. We'll drill and and the other thing was we'll close the border which you are taking on here, aggressively prosecute violent street criminals under RICO and domestic terrorism laws, Strengthen the US dollar, release all January sixth protesters who were first time non violent offenders. There are still people sitting in prison who were guilty of misdemeanors being on the grass at the at the grounds, at the Capitol Grounds. There's a grandmother who was just sitting on the grass who

has been in prison for that from January sixth. That that must happen. That must happen. And I'm sorry we're out of time, but I appreciate yours as always, and we'll try not to make it another year before we talk again. Okay. And yeah, if I you just say, Gary, I'm gonna read I'm gonna repost that article that is a good article at judd j U d d d u n n I G jud Dunning Jud Dunning, And you know, I love people to read it because it really is

what we have to look at when we vote this year. And head so thank you for letting me be a part of your patriotic mission. Here a late night Ohio, sir, you are gentleman. Thank you, sir, jud Dunning. On the nightcap, we continue on seven hundred WLW. It's prime time, yes, sir, catch the action as West Millers bear Cats take on Oklahoma sooner. What a thunder Scott. It'll be a wild night of Big twelve play. Thanks and the Cats are looking to deliver. Oh

foh. Get the call live from the plains of Oklahoma tomorrow night at seven thirty on seven hundred WLW and on seven hundred wlw's live stream on the Free I'm Hard Radio. Ad you from Atlantic in the news today, some Republicans are turning their back. He's been a conservative columnist for The American Spectator. He's been a regular calumnist there at the American Spectator since twenty twelve. He just got back from a weekend with American Spectator folks, which he may or

may not want to talk about. It sounds fun. And he's also been covering well LSU sports in particular since nineteen ninety seven, when he started publishing Purple and Gold from his hometown there in Baton, Rouge Louisiana. Scott McKay, welcome to the night capin how are you my friend? Hey, thanks for having me appreciate it. So let's ask, as a lifelong LSU fan, are you kind of deflated now that Pistol Pete is not the old time

leading scorer in college basketball? No, because I don't think that those two records are the same. Well, certain, I mean, give Caitlin Clark credit that she's you know, I mean, she's broke a women's record like a long time ago, I think, but that's not the same as the men's record. No, it's certainly not, especially in an era when Pistol Pete didn't have the three point shot to rely on, which he would exactly but you know, had they only played three years too, well, you

know what the back then, they'll let you play as a freshman. It's it's easy when your dad's the head coach and you've got the green light the second you come into the gym. Scott, let's be honest. Well yeah, well, and this is a bit before my time, but I'm been made aware that Pistol Pete was the very definition of a one man team.

Oh yeah, there's a reason why as good as he was lash, you didn't win Diddley Pooh when he was when he was there, no was you know, he had a couple of guys that could get rebounds and that was pretty much. Yet, So when you're a shooter, you need rebounders, you know. Yeah, well yeah, you also need a point guard and you need you know, you need a second score that you could you can

play off of. He didn't have any of that. It was it was pistol Pete and it was you know, a team full of scrubs other than him for the most part. So how did before we get into this latest book, which we're going to talk about extensively, of course, that's why you're on the program, how did you get into covering LSU sports in nineteen ninety seven when you started Purple and Gold. Oh, it was just, you know, a friend of mine and I had this idea that you know,

we'd start a publication. There was a there was somebody already in that space, and like their subscribers were really you know, unhappy with with the quality of what they were doing, and we figured we could do better, and you know, we did purplely go for like eight years until the Internet essentially ate our subscriber base. But it was, you know, it was a creative success. I mean, I guess it was something of a financial

success if you can keep a publication going for eight years. But ultimately I got to the point where I was like, this isn't making any money, and I'd really need to, you know, I'd like to make some and so, you know, I ended up we ended up closing the doors and had a few corporate sales jobs here and there. Uh, that you know was We're fine. And I you know, but I'm more a writer than a salesman. And the what I've noticed is those are two entirely different skill

sets. Yeah, well you know what, let's let's get to work. And you being a salesman for this book that you're bro, Well, I'll see what I can do. Racism, racism, revenge and ruin. It's all Obama by Scott McKay. Is this out? And you know what, Scott, from the beginning of the Biden presidency, legitimate as it may not be, Uh, people have been asking he's obviously not in charge. Who's

in charge? And the simple, the simple answer to me has always been Barack Obama because he not only carried through, but doubled down on many of Obama's initiatives in the eight years that that Barry was in the White House. And I just you know, for the for the fact that people are still asking, I don't think he's really in charge of it, Well dummy, I mean it seems pretty obvious to me and obviously to you that it's all about Team Obama, and that the fact that they refuse to lose and they'd

rather escalate and double down than lose again. So go ahead, Yeah,

that's exactly right. Well, you know, the thing of it is, I think with what's going on at the border, Uh, this has become you know, it's it's like in a much clearer relief now than it used to be because it's so obvious that not only is Biden not in charge of this border policy, but whoever is in charge is not all that invested in Joe Biden's political future, right, Like they have allowed his brand to settle as the illegal immigrant president, which is something that was would have been kind

of off brand for Biden. You know, like back in the nineties, Biden was one of the key players in bringing about that crime bill. You know that locked up all these people. Joe Biden has never been particularly solicitous of people who don't look like him, which is another way of saying Joe Biden, it's about as racist a politician as you're going to find in America

today. And so like he's he is a very odd choice as somebody who would throw the gates of the border wide open and let ten million illegals in.

And so you know, it's clearly somebody else, but it's also it's clearly somebody who has a longer strategic view of a policy like this, namely that you're going to change the demographics of the country and more more than just that you're going to like bring these people in in immediately, give them a you know, EBT check card, right, and allow them to plug into the welfare system, and then you know, give them a court date for

their asylum claims. That's eight years into the future, right, and so which means, you know, like the big thing, and I wrote something about this last week with the American Spectator, is uh, you know, you'd say, wow, you're bringing all these illegals and you can't assimilate you know, people in such large numbers and The counter to that is, oh, no, they're assimilating them. They're assimilating them into welfare culture. You're

assimilating these people into the welfare underclass, which is easy. All you have to do is give them free stuff from the government, because you know, people lose very quickly. They lose their you know, personal uh initiative and uh motive, ambitions and dreams. Yeah. They I mean, it's really easy to get incentivized to sit in a front stoop all day when your basic needs are taken care of and you can't really do anything else, right,

and so you know, maybe they get amnesty down the road. You know, maybe they can vote unofficially, you know, if they get a voter ID card of somebody who died last year or something and they can harvest those votes. Or maybe they just wait twenty years when these people have kids who

are citizens and you know, turn eighteen and vote. And so the twenty thirty six election cycle or the twenty forty election cycle or whatever it might be, turns out to be something that or twenty forty four turns out to be something that the Republicans aren't competitive because you have all of these Otherwise unassimilated, you know, second generation Americans or you know, illegals who've then gotten amnesty at some point and turned into Democrat voters, you know, sitting on the

plantation, and you know, like, that's something that really smacks of a Barack Obama, who if you only talk about this, really almost ad nauseum in racism, revenge, in ruin all of the ways that he insidiously changed America using like every lever he could. This entire thing is so much of an Obama op it's not even funny. And Joe Biden was the guy who, you know, ran on the notion that he was sort of a moderate centrist, old school Democrat who was going to bring the country back to normalcy.

I mean, you know, the other thing about that is that's a bait and switch operation, which is pretty similar to the bait and switch operation that Obama ran in eight calling himself a racial healer before he set the country on fire again and again and again on race. I'm laughing not because it's

funny, because it's so true. And you pointed out in a recent interview with Tucker Carlson, who was wonderful, by the way, in two thousand no matter where he has a platform that in two thousand and seven, prior to Obama's presidency, race relations in America were at a zenith. Blacks and

whites got along better than ever before. And then you know, everything seemed to fall apart with Barack Obama. And you say that's purposeful, it's a divide that has to happen for Marxists and globalists to take over an otherwise conservative

country. Well, there's no question about it. And I mean, you can go back, and I don't want to, like, I don't want to drag us too far down the rabbit hole and get into the entire you know, cultural Marxist Frankfurt School critical race theory paradigm, because what like, once you understand all that, uh, it will first of all, it'll it'll infuriate you at a metaphysical level and and and therefore radicalize you and make

you not like your government very much. But Barack Obama is a hardcore follower of that strain of communism. You know, was mentored in it from a

from a young age. And you know so, but this was hidden from the American public back in two thousand and eight by the legacy corporate media, and uh, when he got in office, if you'll remember, I mean the New Black Panthers were standing outside of a polling precinct and I guess it was South Philadelphia, Philadelphia, ye with nightsticks, threatening old white ladies who wanted to come vote that you know, hey, the black man's in charge and you don't get it, you know, you don't get to have a

say anymore, or this kind of thing. And it was like the most egregious case of voter intimidation since the klu Klux Klan in the fifties and sixties. And so the Justice Department's going to prosecute these guys, and Eric Holder steps in when Obama's inaugurated in January of nine and he shuts that prosecution down. That was a major, major tell of what was about to happen.

Then a few months later, you had this incident at Harvard where this guy Skip Gates, who most people know because he's gone on to do a lot of PBS series and all these other things. He's a black professor at Harvard who's flying back from somewhere and I guess his key doesn't work in his lock the front door of his house, and so he and the uber driver are trying to beat down the door so he can get in, and a Copp

rolls up, because of course the Copp rolls up. It's almost like a scene from a Steve Martin movie, right, And rather than this thing kind of being sort of laughed off, is sort of a comedy of eras type of thing. Obama, you know, is in a press conference and and you know, goes off of well the police acted stupidly because you know,

the cop comes like what you know, what are you doing? And Gates is all mad, so he pops off at the cop and he ends up getting brought in for I guess it was disorderly conduct or something, you know. And I mean it wasn't it wasn't a big thing. But Obama made this into a massive racial deal, and it was like a real like in your face thing to the American people, you are not getting the racial healer

you thought you were gonna get. And then from there it was the Eric Garner's of the world, and the tamir Rices and the Trayvon Martin's, and the Olton Sterlings and the Michael Browns. Every chance Obama got that he could monetize one of these police incidents across the country and turn it into you know, a little racial cauldron that he could set on set a blaze. He hit it every time, and that led all the way up to George Floyd,

which was how they they really drop the hammer on this stuff. Well, I mean, it would have been the same effect if if you know, if Reverend Jesse Jackson or Al Sharpton had ever become president. Obama was just doing the same things that they've been doing their entire careers. You talk about monetizing supposed racial slights and injustice into you know, building them up and

tearing the country down at the same time. I would I would, I mean, I would agree with you on the pure race issue, But what I would say is that with Obama it's deeper because like neither Al nor Jesse are particularly deep thinkers. Those guys are just opportunists. Yeah right, I mean they got like Jesse figured out the scam, which is you get idiots in red T shirts to go pick it outside of some you know, headquarters, and they will come out bearing gifts, right like like this is how

it works. You can extort these guys. But like I don't think Jesse Jackson could quote you from you know, Herbert Marcusa or Saul Alinsky or Michael Harrington or any of those kind of guys. Like I don't think Jesse's really all that you know up on the academic side of this, whereas Obama is. Obama understood like going all the way back to like the you know, the setup of critical theory as a way to destroy Western civilization. Like Obama

could give you a treatise on that. He taught critical race theory at the University of Chicago Law School, Okay, like he taught it when he was an adjunct professor over there. He taught that stuff. So like Obama understands this and is committed to it in a way that Alan Jesse you know, can maybe parrot the words, but at the end the day, those guys are kind of like entrepreneurs, right, Obama's different. Obama's like much much deeper, much smarter, uh, you know, much more insidious than than

Aler Jesse. The fact where it comes to race relations is the same, I'll grant you that, but it's you know, what do you do with that effect when she've had it? Is where Obama is way more dangerous. Well, it's amazing. Scott McKay is our guest. The book is Racism, Revenge, and ruin. It's all Obama. Uh. Obama was going to be the racial healer when he was campaign. Joe Biden was going to be the adult in the room and unify the country. And they did exactly

the opposite. Donald Trump, by contrast, fulfilled every campaign promise he made. He didn't he didn't go against type like they did. They did exactly the opposite of what they promised. When when Donald Trump was on the campaign truck, he promised to address China and the infair trade. He promised to address the border, which of course he attempted to do at every turn during his presidency. All the things that Donald Trump talked about doing, he actually

attempted to do. These other two that we're talking about, Joe Biden and Barack Obama did exactly the opposite of what they campaigned on. Yeah, that's correct. I know this isn't really so much a critique of Trumps as maybe it's an advertisement for what you might get if there is a second Trump term.

Yeah. I don't think Donald Trump had the faintest clue how bad things were when he started running for president, Like, I don't think he understood the scope of the job that he would have to take on if he was going to be you know, effective in making America great again. Like he didn't understand how corrupt the deep state was, the intelligence agencies and you know,

the bureaucracy of the federal government. He didn't get it. He certainly gets it now, doesn't he. Scott, Oh, yeah, yeah, I mean like that, like he got a four year graduate level course on

you know, hopeless politics. But I mean like, if Trump had understood this stuff more, he would have Absolutely he couldn't have beaten him in twenty twenty because as soon as COVID popped, for example, Trump would have known that Anthony Fauci funded the gain of function research at the Woven Institute of Virology, and he would have fired Fauci, probably had him arrested, rather than let Fauci and Burks you know, take it, take this thing and politicize

it to beat him in November, that wouldn't have been on the table. I'm out of time. Unfortunately, racism, revenge and ruin. It's all Obama. The author, Scott McKay, and he's been our guest tonight. Thank you so much, brother, I got to run se soon, all right. It with you from Atlanta for Monday, March fourth, twenty twenty four, Gary, Jeff Walker back for our last hour and we open up with the Man, the Myth, the legend mine. I've met him before,

so I don't know if he's a myth. Some people will consider him legendary, and unless he's transitioned recently, he's still a man. So I think at least two of those things may qualify wild Man Walker on the nightcap once again, How you doing, wild Man? I'm doing great, Jerry. Gary. And in case the words of David Ritter used to be, we called him Garmento. Yeah, a WBN. He always look at me and say, wild Man, you're a legend in your own mind. Well,

yeah, I've been accused of that my self. Wild Man. Yeah, it's kind of like a professional I don't know, one of those things that happens. But anyway, you had a big weekend. You were texting me over the weekend a picture of a large crowd at a basketball game, and I thought maybe you'd made it to Iowa yesterday for for Caitlin Clark's record setting day and the Hawkeye's victory over the Suckeyes. But no, you were actually at Rupp Arena in Lexington. Tell me about your trip this weekend.

Well, I've got a buddy of mine that sells cattle down in Lexington, and he's a good friend with a coach cow so he can usually get me tickets. So I asked him earlier in the season, how about tickets for the UK Arkansas game? And he said, I got you covered. So I went down here with my two friends, Ronnie and Lisa Bradford, and we watched the game. It was a great game. The crowd was into it. I mean we had numerous league changes. I mean one time Kentucky

was up by ten and then Arkansas was up by ten. There were numerous technical fouls. There was some great shot blocking by the I can't I don't know the guy's name on Kentucky. He's I don't know if he's Russian or something, but he had he came down and really played. He had a good He had a really good game towards Dan making his free throws. He was six for seven from the line. He finished the double figures. I think Kentucky had six or seven guys in double figures in that game. But

it was a great game, back and forth. People got their money's worth. In the last three minutes of the game, it really got intense because it was getting close. But in Kentucky prevailed. They needed that win and uh and the best thing about it was the tickets were free. If it's free, it's for me. Well yeah, well, if you were there, I figured you weren't. You weren't going on your own dime. But this is this is also the reason whild Man I never talk about professional tennis

because I can't remember any of the Russian names. You're talking about. Zavanimir Ivisk, that's who you're talking about. That's him, that's sim Yes, yes, all right, yes boy. He had some key He had some key blocks in that game. I mean early had some key blocks, had some big rebounds. This is a very talented UK basketball team, but it's also very flawed in that they don't play like a team a lot of the time. And Caliperry has had this issue with a lot of very talented squads.

I mean, he obviously knows how to recruit the talent, and you know, famous for a lot of one and done seasons with like the best talent in all of America on one roster. Yeah, and he's got the best. A lot of people say it's the best starting ten, not starting five, starting ten in the country on this current Kentucky basketball team. But yet Arkansas, who comes to the game fourteen and fourteen overall, gives the Wildcats all they can handle. Well, I think you any rabid Kentucky fan

that follows that team will tell you the same thing you just said. They have the talent. They defensively, they tend to go to sleep a lot, or they get up, you know, they get a lead and they kind of like, you know, sit on it for some reason instead of putting them away. But they're kids. They're still kids, and hopefully it'll come together if they stay in another year that they don't run off and you know and go somewhere else and try to play pro basketball. But the kids.

People gotta remember their kids, and they're still learning. They're still learning. He's got a young team, but they can't score man, Oh boy, they can score wild Man. Of all the men's college basketball teams you see play this year, I don't know how much you've watched, but I know you're an observer. Who do you think is the most complete team? Is that Yukon is a Purdue. Who's the krem de la creme in men's college basketball? Well, I think it's Jukon without a doubt. I think

it's Jukon without a doubt. Yeah, because we're a lost what one game, one game, two games? But anytime they've been challenged after one of their losses, they've just gone out and blown out everybody. And I'm not surprised about Yukon. They've been a basketball powerhouse for years. Oh no, no question about it, no question about it. Sadly, we won't see

any of that kind of dominance from emanating from Cincinnati. And the Dayton Flyers actually lost another tough game, and so maybe that was an ugly loss looking at the score. Yes, some of the some of the hopefulness around the Flyers maybe fading as we get to the madness of March and tournament time.

Let's switch gears and go to the women's game where yesterday, uh and and probably you want to talk about pure pressure games that with all of the attention that Caitlin Clark is getting this season and was on her in that game yesterday with a chance to break Pete Merrivich's all time scoring record in NCAA basketball men's or women's and she didn't have the best game, but she still came out with thirty points and more than breaking thirty five points and more than broke the

record. And the thing that I notice most about her is her humility, her humbleness in the wake of the greatness she has displayed on the court, not just this season, but the last couple of seasons. And now she's going on to the WNBA to see if she can make it at that level, which because of COVID, she still had another year. She could have come back to Iowa City and played, but she has decided that she wants to be tried by that jury of her peers. And you know, I

think she'll do well. But you saw what Ohio State did yesterday in trying to really bully her and beat her up in the lane and to limit her scoring ability. They didn't want to be the ones that she scored the record amount of points against, obviously, but even they couldn't stop that. And her court vision and her ability to see her teammates at all times. I mean, she's also the career assist leader I think on that Iowa squad.

So you know that's something pistol Pete Merovitch could never claim because he didn't pass the ball to anybody compared to that. Well, that strategy by Ohio State obviously backfire, you know, trying to worry about cutting her, you know, not that nurse score because she I don't. They had a number of girls in double figures, so that you know she did was passed the ball off because she's not afraid to pass the ball. This is such a great

story for women's basketball. Do you liked women's basketball? I mean, the girl grew up in De Boine, Iowa, she went to you know, she went to Iowa. You know, she set all these records and now she's going to leave and go to the w NBA with the Indie Fury, who have the number one pick. And I'm going to ask you right now, have you called and got season tickets yet to see your girl? Caitlin? No? No, but but I'll I'll keep my subscription to ESPN.

I'm sure I'll be able to lost some games there. I tell you what, you know, what best part of the game was yesterday The entire game as Iowa beat the Ohio State U guys, I loved it, ninety three to eighty three. I mean, Ohio State was the you know, the league champs whooped j when Iowa whipped their butt. They really did. I love it. Anytime Ohio State loses in anything, it's a great day for me. It's a great day for me. Well, you know, and

I've got some friends who graduated from OSU. But yeah, in your face, guys, the suck eyes lost again. Uh. You know what's interesting about that game, too, wild man, is that Ohio State beat Iowa when Iowa was the second ranked team in the country back in January. Right, So, now Ohio State's the second ranked team in the country and the winners of the Big Ten championship in Iowa treats them to a little home cooking as their number six, so they could be just opposed again as far as

ranking goes. I think you could you could you keep? Yeah, well you keep you keep taking subtle shots at the late pistol. Pete Maravich, I'm just gonna tell you this, Okay, Pete Maravich could not play as a freshman. Caitlin Clark got to play as a fresh I know, okay, they didn't have the three point line, and the ball is smaller. Okay, the ball is smaller. Pistol Pete Maravich. Had he played as a freshman, come on, Gary, he'd had six thousand points. Well,

they had six thousand points. You know it, wild man. It's easy to do that when your dad's the head coach and you've got the green light the moment you come out of the locker room. They had winning seasons there at LSU. Go back and look, wild man. They were forty nine and thirty five during his career. Okay, that's a winning rader. They did not go to the NCAA tournament. They did not win any tournament. There was nobody else on that team except for Pete Maravich, and and

he shot like it, so shut up. He should scored the points. He still be time leader. Nobody would have known. You're right, No, no three point shot only three years eligible. Yes, but his dad was the head coach, and Pete had the green light. This second press had had given his son the green light anytime he was on the court. But Pistol Pete, I've seen some things on Facebook recently. Here in the last two months of some Pete Maravich moves and passing. This guy was a

wizard passing the ball. Unbelievable. He was tailor made for the Harlem Globetrotters, except he was white. The guy could do The guy could do anything with a basketball, and no one will ever take that away from the late Pete Maravitch. And you're right, I don't think there would have been any chance that Caitlin Clark or anyone else would come close to scoring the amount of points that Pete Marrovitch could have scored if he'd played a full four seasons at

LSU for his father. Good, I'm glad you said that. And pistol Pete signed for the wild Man back in the day Cincinnati Gardens. Oh, really was he playing for? It? Was he playing for New Orleans at the time? Or when? Where? It was? Alanahawks? Atlanta Hawks? That's right, the Atlanta Hawks. Now, didn't he play it in the ABA for for a minute or two? I don't. I don't think he did. I don't think he did. He came right out of the NBA, out of the college to the Atlanta Hawks. Okay, all right?

He played for the Celtics. I know he played for the I remember him playing for that. See, I'm old enough to have watched Pistol Pete play basketball, and I knew what he could do as far as ball handling skills and dribbling and the whole thing, the spinning the ball on your finger for you know, five hours or whatever it was. Yeah, No, there's nothing to detract from the greatness of his basketball abilities. It's I ran into Caitlin Clark, and if I ran into Caitlin Clark right now, I'd

ask her to sign something for me. Yes, I will, Oh heck, yeah, she's my Iowa girl, you know that. And as far as the arguments about who's the goat, wow, here here, here's my thing about the goat. Wild Man Tom Brady used to be the goat in the NFL. And I say used to be because when you say greatest of all time, you're talking about up to that point. You're not talking about

into the future. And that's what people need to remember about the term the goat the greatest of all time, because there eventually will be someone who is greater than you, and they will have built their performances on the back of what you did so. Again, your your greatness is not diminished in that regard. People always look for these superlatives when it comes to sports, or music or anything else. And I think greatest of all time is a fluid

kind of term depending on which era you're living in. What do you think about that? I agree with you there, Yes, I agree with you there. But then you can also make Okay, let's us get down to brass tacks and who's the greatest baseball player? Just go to say greatest baseball player Bruce, I mean, he saved the game. Look at his numbers. Say the greatest football player of all time. I would argue it's Jim

Brown. I would argue it's Jim Brown. You you would get a new argument from me on the Jim Brown the greatest football player in his era. I don't know that Jim Brown would would actually translate into today's game in the National Football League. I'm not sure how when you get the now, when you get to basketball and you're going to ask Michael Jordan, Michael Jordan to sell you right now, it's hard to it's hard to make comparisons because of

the eras. That's right. This goat stuff can drive you crazy. It really can't. But hey Day has on everything and she deserves all the occulades. She really does. But in any way, just for you people who keep on throwing the term goat around and who's who's the goat? Who's not the goat? It it is subjective to the era in which that player played.

And why do you know who the greatest reds? And I know who the greatest goat is with the Cincinnati Red We're gonna say, Pete Rose, You're damn right, no being up being Rose in this down never ever. I mean, you named your son after him, for god, that's right, I did. Hey, he turned thirty three yesterday. Pedi is thirty three, pet A thirty three. Yeah you know what that means. It means I am really old and so are you. That's right. Okay,

there was one on the right. We're on the right side of the grass, my friend. One more thing you wanted to cover and I forget what it was now, wild man. So it was the Philadelphia Phillies. Oh yeah, I wanted the touch base with you last week, but we didn't have that much time. The Philadelpha Phillies doing away with Dollar Dog Night. They do like that three times a year, and they're doing it over safety concerns. Safety concerns. How can a dog or a bun cause harm to

somebody? I don't care if they throw a hundred of them on the field. Are in this, I'll get a hot dog or a bun calls harm to somebody. Well, I mean it's not like, uh, you know, Bob Huggins, is it Xavier and the students are throwing sex toys at him? That those could hurt, those could hurt. But you know, a hot dog, you're random, hot dog probably is not going to cause any kind of grievous injury. Uh, even though it may be shaped similarly.

But no, I don't get that at all. It sounds to me like they just don't want to lose money on dollar dogs because of Bidenomics making everything so damned expensive. That's what it sounds like to me. It sounds like it sounds like an easy way out for them to guard their bottom line. Wild man. Yeah, so we're gonna do the two for one dollar dogs. You know, later on a couple of times in the season,

Oh, the lines were too long and the aisles were crowded. Oh come on, man, you know that's that's that's that lame, and it's great publicity. It's great publicity. You know, what do you expect out of Philly fans? I thought it was great. I think it was just dumb. Well, I'll tell you what else you can expect out of Philly fans. They do throw things, they're they're notorious for throwing things. But I don't know of any player that's ever had his eye put out by a by

a tube of meat tossed aleaner that was tossed from the upper deck. I don't think that's going to cause, you know, any kind of great bodily harm to anybody on the field. But you know, for a bun or the bun, right, well, what's what's a wiener without a bun? That's right, But a wiener is only good with stadium mustard, stadium mustard, not that, not that yellow mustard. Stadium mustard is the best. A wiener without a bun. As you and you were locked in your bathroom

when you were twelve. Uh, that's a wiener without a bun, wild man. Uh, we need to go there. Well I already did, so it's too late, all right, Listen, it's always good to talk to you. I'm glad you got your free tickets to watch UK play against Arkansas. This way, when you get your tickets to see the Indie Fury, get on the phone and get it. Can I have like a fifteen game package? Hey? You know what, guy, I want? I want to follow the wild Man Guide to going to sports events. If you

do, you know anybody there? Can I get some freebies? Somebody that works up in Indiana that might be able to might be able to pull it off? Yeah, all right, thank you. I got a connection now to the Pacers. Yeah. Yeah, he is the wild Man and he was a guilt down. All right, Dennis, Thank you. In wild Man Walker in the Nightcap, Karen Catialen coming up after the news break of seven hundred Wlwright, which players will come? Which players will go? All

right? Here he seems to look at the free agent frenzy brought to you by plumb tight plumbing, heating, cooling, and dreams, and sent it out of asphalt. No, here's moegger. Jonah Williams was the only offensive lineman left on last year's team from the Super Bowl season three years ago. In twenty twenty three, proved to be his last in the Bengals uniform. If Williams departs in free agency, the Bengals will need a new starting right

tackle. Interior options will be considered, and this year's class of tackles and the draft is deep, but they're all seems to be a good chance that the Bengals will address the position and free agency, especially given how active they've been in signing offensive linemen from other teams in each of the last two offseasons. For more on the free agent frenzy, keep it here on the seven hundred w l Jawa, the home of the best Bengals cover. All right,

to introduce our next guest. She is just wonderful, the light of my life. That's not my wife. How about that. Let's put it that way as far as females go in my circle. She is a fantastic radio host and commentator, pundit and just a wonderful person too. Her name is Karen Kataline and she is back on the Night Cap KK. Good evening. Well, hey guy, Jeff, and you unduli rhymed yourself. Yeah, occasionally right in my life, not my wife. I went, wow, the light of my life, that is not my wife. Yeah,

because CHRISTA two point zero is number one all the time. Absolutely, So let's talk about the big news story, not that it was going to be a big news story when we expected this results. I don't know if we were expected unanimity. But the Supreme Court today, of course doing the constitutional thing and saying, yes, of course Donald Trump can be on the ballot

in every state. And that was their answer to Colorado and also their answer to Illinois and Maine who both had tried to be so democratic that they were going to take a candidate off the ballot that people would like to vote for. Nine nothing. The decision today no dissent on the Supreme Court on that

issue. And again most people expected this, right, yeah they did, but not enough people question how people in the United States of America could even think about about taking a former president who is the single most obvious threat to everything that the left and the Democrats who are controlled by the radical left stand for, with well over eighty million much more people in support, the fact that they even are thinking about it shows you that they're the ones that are

the threats to democracy, as they are the ones. We're not going to get into the little side argument about yeah, we're a republic, not a democracy. But you know, there's this old thing andsty everything they say the opposite is true. If they accuse you of being a threat of democracy, then they are. And I wish, I hope that Republicans are not going to say, oh, thank you, thank you, thank you dearly for allowing us to keep our former president formidable candidate on the ballot, who has

surmounted every attempt to shred him. Is he immortal? Is he a god? Heck now, but he's enormously formidable simply because he doesn't let them, he doesn't back down, and they can't stand it. But to use tactics like that is to illustrate that they have no regard for the basic fundamental principles and spirit of the Constitution and on what this republic was founded upon, which

is dissent, individual freedom, liberty, equal justice under the law. Who in their right mind thinks that they can justify shutting down for his speech, shutting down free elections and then saying, oh, by the way, you're

the one that's the threat to democracy. It's a It is amazing. And of course this sprang from your old home state of Colorado, which you love dearly, but had to had to escape from because of this kind of nonsense that's percolating inside what used to be not only a beautiful state but also somewhat of a red state, if there are such things anymore. But then,

of course it's sprung up in Maine and Illinois. But Colorado was the genesis an unelected state Supreme Court just unilaterally saying, oh, Donald Trump's off the battle off the ballot because he committed insurrection. Well, you know what, here's the thing. It was just because they didn't like him. But they used a misinterpretation of the Bill of Rights in the Amendments to actually do this. And Donald Trump's not been charged with insurrection, nor has he been convicted,

not in it. There's no case watched him. I'm sorry, I'm getting all excited here, but it was a public event. We watched him say, march peacefully and patriotically, and I mean, you know, and then they made a show trial of it for a year because they wanted to I'm sorry, I interrupted you, and they wanted to disqualify any of their enemies. And I just got through on a radio program in which I chill in talking about that very thing that there were many people who actually were taken

off the ballot in smaller races because they attended. And this is insurrection. This is exactly what they do. They accuse their opponents of exactly what they do. It is insurrection to to fraudulently remove people from the ballot for engaging in their constitutional rights to to petition their governments for redress and grievances. They didn't commit any crime, they weren't violent in any way, but because they attended a protest. If that were true, you'd have to disqualify anybody who

burnt down a Wendy's. And I forget where Atlanta. This is nonsense, and it is a vendetta. I'm about what's next, right, exactly what's next? The thing is January sixth. Prisoners that are still elating trial in

many cases three years after January sixth of twenty twenty one. I just had on the program earlier, Tim Rivers, who has written the American Gulag Chronicles about just that these American citizens that have been denied due process, denied their rights to redress grievance with the government, the right to freedom of assembly, the right to freedom of speech. You know that They just they forced the Department of Justice Friday for Scott Baker or Steve Baker, who was a reporter

for the Blaze, to turn himself in for reporting on January sixth. They do not want people to know the injustice that's being done in this country in the name of democracy. It's terrifying what we're watching. And I often use the term the arsonists are in charge of the fire brigade, and that's what's so disturbing that they are charged with the responsibility of continuing to persecute their political enemies while there's no accountability for them to do likewise. And that's what equal

justice is all about, don't it. You know, to try to put some bright light on it, and it's it's a celebration in a sense, but if we have to celebrate upholding just the most obvious parts of the Constitution, right or in victual and when you look at how brilliant our founders were that they went out of their way to protect the very rights, every single one of them that are now under attacked by people who are globalists and communists

who the only thing really stands in their way is America as it was founded. That's what stands in their way. So what do they do. They

go after the very Bill of Rights on which this country was founded. If you look at it, every single one of them are under attack, well, you know, in the Second Amendment, under attack on a regular basis by people who want to infringe on an American citizen's right to own and bear firearms and whether that's ammunition or a magazine or what they call assault weapons because

they just look scary. You're right, and you look at all of the Bill of Rights, and they are being constantly attacked by the left, by communists, by Marxists who don't like our system, and they don't want us to enjoy the freedoms given to us by God that were enumerated that the government's supposed to protect. Well exactly, and think about it, the things that they are doing in the country make it more necessary to stand up for those

rights than ever before. What I mean by that is that there are still top places in the country where they're wanting to defund the police so much so that crime is out of hand. We have a completely porous border. We have innocent citizens getting attacked and murdered and assaulted. So the cities and America is never has never been more dangerous. So what is the government's answer for America has never been more dangerous? Will disarmed the victim, of course,

no doubt. So I wanted to ask you another question, Karen Kataline our guests, and she's spouting off on the nightcap. Thank God, God bless

her for that. So I'm trying to figure out because the next big legal hurdle before the Supreme Court, as it relates to forty five President Donald Trump former President Donald Trump, is the immunity case, which most legal scholars think he is going to lose in front of the Supreme Court, talking about a president is not above the law president, And there's a clear distinction because on January sixth of twenty twenty one, if they want to charge him with the

inciting the riot that they say was an insurrection number one, he was still act president. He was still in office. So and the argument that Donald Trump is making that I think has some merit is if a president is not immune from stuff like political crimes when he's in office, then there's no way that the president could ever be an effective chief executive office here of this country. But Jonathan Turley who's a brilliant mind. Legally of people like Trey Gowdy

is saying they're sure that he's going to lose. And this arguments begin next month before the Supreme Court and they should have a decision by mid to late June at the end of their term, which is driving Jack Smith crazy because he won't get to try and convict Donald Trump before the election at that point. But anyway, what exactly is he claiming immunity from because I can't see that he committed any crime. Yeah, he's got a lot of attorneys.

I got a little bit caught up in the Willison Wade show of last week, and I'm surely no lawyer or legal scholar, but you know that whole case of last week went to the credibility of the prosecutors. Well, and the same thing is here instead of playing defense. I mean, I'm not going to give advice to the lawyers, but you know, you could look at every single one of these cases and ask yourself, has this ever happened in the history of the country. We have had presidents that made actual mistakes,

and they have to manufacture mistakes for Donald Trump. And there are people who bought into this vicious, bloodthirsty hatred of Donald Trump, who you know, for whom it was successful. So yeah, I have the same questions

you do about immunity. I don't understand. What I do understand is that one of the lawyers for I don't know if it was Donald Trump himself or for Donald Trump's associate who also got called into court on this other case in Georgia, everywhere, New York, Georgia, everywhere, that lawyer had to

argue on a minute point. That's the way. It's so maddening to watch these trials and hearings because any person, fair minded person would look at this and say, why do we have to jump through a million hoops to prove what seems obvious? Right, you're charging somebody, You're trying to disqualify someone, to go back to this from the ballot, who has been convicted of no crime and who was a former president, which shouldn't matter, and completely

qualifies for the only things the Constitution ever said. He has to be over thirty five and whatever else to be able to do that and do it formally, institutionally to disqualify somebody. You know, when we we've for years we allowed card carrying communists on the ballot. Now we have hidden secret communists on the ballot. And so that's what is madening, is that they probably to

answer your question in a way long way around the barn. Is that their lawyers have to argue such narrow points in order to get the case thrown out. And this is part of lawfare. This is a weaponized tactic to handstring a president in an election year, to bank to smear him, to destroy him and his family in an election year. If you can't call that election interference, I don't know what you It's the exact definition of election interference,

Karen. And here's the other part of this. Why did Merrick Garland and his Department of Justice wait two years or almost three years before sitting Jack Smith, his little bulldog on Donald Trump and going after these charges. Why did he because he wanted to find out if Donald Trump was going to actually be able to run again. He wanted to find out if Donald Trump was willing to run again to save this country before he filed these charges and sent his

attack dog on on Donald on presidential Trump. That but how effective would it be for political propaganda to do it two years prior to the electioneer. Everything that these propagandas do are according to timing. Sure timing is everything. So of course they're doing in an election year. So and they think they'll get

away with it. Who knows what will happen. But I maintain that just because crooks do not get away with what they want, or they back off what they want, just like in Colorado they tried to tax people's pets and they had to rewrite the law because they forgot goldfish right. And then they back down. I mean, they have a supermajority in Colorado, so they back down, and people say, oh see they came to their senses. Just because they back down doesn't mean they changed their minds. That's what I

wish people would understand. The fact that they would do such a thing tells you almost everything you need to know about them. That is their motive, That is their plan to destroy anybody who gets in their way. And this is heartbreaking for a country that has celebrated descent, honest, fair disagreement and differences both ethnically and intellectually of opinions and every other thing. It's it's heartbreaking,

Garry, Jeff, That's all I can jo. Well, you know, what and my only sav is my ability to talk with you about it, so at least I know I'm not the only one. Karen Cattil many others to the other. Karen Katalen spouting off on the nightcap once again, my dear, thank you so much, and we got to go all right, thank you, you got it. We wrap up this nightcap next on seven hundred WLW Reds Fans twenty twenty four. Single game tickets are on sale now

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