Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome back to the show, Denas. Thanks for joining us.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Hey, it's great to be back on and thanks for
having me.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
You bet now your stuff is as good as any
HBO or Hollywood docu drama series that I've seen. Where
do you find your actors? I mean, I'm going to
guess you're pretty involved with every step of the process.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Yes, I try to be. I mean my main portfolio
is conceiving the project, developing the general storyline. Obviously, I'm
the narrator of these films, and we have a film
team where about six of us. My wife Debbie is involved,
my friend and partner Bruce Schooley, So each of us
brings kind of a different portfolio of talents. But you're
(00:39):
right that we don't make the standard documentary, which is
typically you know, interview a bunch of people, get some
stock footage, string it together. There you go. No, I
believe that a good documentary film or nonfiction film should
have all the same elements as a really good fiction film.
It needs to have characters, They need to have plot, suspense, narrative, climax,
(01:00):
needs to have a musical score that's emotionally powerful. So
we work hard to put all those elements and make
it a real theatrical movie. And that's why I'm really thrilled.
You know, my last couple of films, because of the
aftermath of COVID, I couldn't release them in the theater
as the normal way. But this one, I'm kind of
back to my old model. Eight hundred and fifty theaters,
multiple showings a day. The film opens off, you know, Friday,
(01:23):
September twenty seven. So this come this weekend and please
go see it in the opening weekend. It'll be First
of all, you'll enjoy it immensely, But second of all,
it puts a lot of oxygen, a lot of fuel
into our tank and helps the movie expand into even
more theaters the following week.
Speaker 1 (01:39):
Well, so you're starting out, you said, eight hundred Dan,
that'll be tomorrow, Friday, twenty seventh. You got really good actors.
I watched the trailer, some really good actors in there.
Let me ask you first question, not really political. Well,
what's the difference between writing a book and writing for theaters?
One easier than the other.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
They're actually completely differ And I'll tell you why. A
book is more like a legal brief. It's a book
is an argument. And so in a book about Trump,
you could say something like you could divide it into
This would be a little too crude, but you could
divide it into like seven reasons to vote for Trump,
with each chapter encapsulating a reason. Well, you can't make
a film like that. Films aren't about arguments like that.
(02:21):
A film is a journey, it's a narrative, it's a story.
And so people often think, well, you just make a
book and then convert it into a film, But the
two mediums are totally different. I would even say that
a book primarily appeals to the head, whereas a good
movie will appeal to the head, but mostly all sort
of the heart.
Speaker 1 (02:40):
Which do you find easier to write?
Speaker 2 (02:43):
Well, the book isn't a way easier to write, and
just in the simple sense that I control the whole process.
It's like riding a horse. You know. Making a film
is a group project and involves so many different elements.
The reason it's hard for a lot of people is
because you need to have elements that often don't go
well together. You need to have do legal work, you
(03:04):
need to raise money, you need to be skillful in
making the film. And even if you do all those things.
Your film will fail if you are not really good
at marketing your film. So often there are creative people
who can't get the money. There are people who have money,
but they're not creative. So you need to put all
the elements together to make the film work.
Speaker 1 (03:23):
Well, there are people that don't want this scene. Do
you have elements that work against you in the marketing? No,
we don't want that. No, you're not coming in our theaters.
Have you faced any of that?
Speaker 2 (03:32):
We face a little bit of that because of really
not because of me, because the theater is like me.
I've done this is my eighth documentary I've made, you know,
probably one hundred million dollars in the theater.
Speaker 1 (03:41):
And that's something people like you and you make the money.
Speaker 2 (03:45):
Yeah, I think that. Remember, the theaters are in the
real estate business. They're not even really in the movie business.
They're filling seats, you know, and so if you do that,
you're their friend. But that all being said, the name
Trump is a little radioactive, particularly in Hollywood, you know,
come of news to you, and so there are sometimes
some roadblocks we face. But I will say this, the
(04:05):
film is a great end run around the censorship and
blocking we get from the media, and so I get
repressed and suppressed on YouTube and on Facebook. But the
cool thing about a film is that you know, that's
a different megaphone, it's a different medium. So by watching
films in the theater, you're supporting conservative voices that are
often shut down or blocked or restricted in other spaces.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
Denis, you have drive. It's amazing all the films you've done,
all the books that you've done. Many out there listening
have drive and have taken leaps of faith. Where in
the world you've sat down with Trump? Where do you
think is drive comes from to not quit, to keep fighting?
And I know Obama through you in jail for a
while you were Peter Rovarro before Republicans in jail was
(04:51):
a thing. They came after you, But boy, they've come
after him like none other. Where do you think that
drive comes from?
Speaker 2 (05:00):
To be honest, it is this guy is in that's
respect unique in the world. And by that I mean
you know, I was facing one criminal charge because of
this technicality, a campaign finance violation. You know whoop dee doo.
So Trump is facing ninety one charges. Now, if any
other Republican was facing two criminal charges. They would have
(05:20):
exited the race, quit the field, never be heard from again.
This guy is the only guy who can storm through
ninety one indictments. He even gets thirty two felony convictions.
No big deal, He's forging ahead. He does his legal ropodope.
He slams the judges even when they have gag orders
on him. And then look at his his completely unnatural
reaction to two assassination attempts. The second one. Trump's reaction
(05:45):
is he's a little annoyed that it's interrupted his golf game.
He was about to make an amazing shot, and so
he was a little upset that they dragged him off
the golf course. And then he posts on social media
zero for two. He's like keeping score. And you all know,
we all know about his reaction to the first assassination attempt.
I don't know anyone alive who hearing shot, not only
(06:06):
hearing shots, but feeling a shot against your ear isn't
going to go straight down to the floor and never
get up. But this guy starts pulling himself up. He's
wrestling with the Secret Service. So this guy, you know,
people talk about Trump's vices, Oh you know, he's a
little egotistical. Oh, he used to be a playboy in
his younger days. And I say, wait a minute. In politics,
(06:27):
the most important virtue is bravery, and Trump has that
like in spades. Cannot think of anyone else as even
in the same category. You have to go back to
like Abraham Lincoln to find that kind of sublime courage.
And yet there are Republicans who think that they're somehow
better than Trump. They're like, I don't really like his character,
and I'm like his character, well, let's compare it to yours.
(06:48):
Do you have anything like the courage that Trump shows.
So the point is this is a film in a
book that does not hesitate from defending Trump, not just
his policies, but also his personality and his character.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
Right, you shoot my ear, I'm gonna belly crawl off
that stage with Secret Service on top of me. It
was just amazing. It's one of those pictures that will
never ever leave our mind. If you're driving, don't do it.
But we can all close our eyes and see that
blue sky, that blonde hair, that red blood, and that
fist up in the air. The new movie from my
(07:23):
guest Dennesta Susa is called vindicating Trump. Denis, let me
ask you in closing here, did the Biden Kamala change
did that effect you're filming at all?
Speaker 3 (07:32):
Not at all.
Speaker 2 (07:33):
Kamala's right in the movie.
Speaker 1 (07:34):
I mean.
Speaker 2 (07:34):
The good thing about this movie is my interview with
Trump comes after the assassination attempt. You get it looks
like the movie was finished like yesterday. Kamala's right in there,
and so the movie has a freshness to it. The website,
if you let me say it, is vindicating Trump dot Com.
The cool thing is you put in your city, You
put in your zip code and boom, all the theaters
around you will pop up. So if you can round
(07:55):
up the family and friends see it this weekend, vindicating
Trump dot com.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
Let you say it. I had it written down to say,
vindicating Trump dot Com. And when I hang up with
you here, I'm gonna play the trailer as well. Denish Uh,
it's God bless you and thank you and I'd put
you on my top ten of Fighters for Justice list
in America. Sir, So thank you very much.
Speaker 2 (08:16):
I really appreciate it. Thank you, you.
Speaker 1 (08:18):
Bet you Danish de SUSA, they're vindicating Trump. Let's go
here that trailer.
Speaker 4 (08:23):
He has to help this country, and if they don't,
the country and the world are in big trouble.
Speaker 5 (08:28):
Someone's got to overturn the tables in the temple Trump
jumping into the presidential race. She's a bit worried of
the apprentice guy.
Speaker 3 (08:40):
You know, the feeling of power.
Speaker 5 (08:42):
Could you handle it? And would at the valor?
Speaker 6 (08:46):
They fear that power? If you didn't do an insurrection,
had you called for one, there would have been one,
and there would be one which you called for one.
Speaker 5 (08:54):
Now I'm not sure I want that power. I want
the power just to make the country better.
Speaker 6 (08:57):
America first, and that's scarce a lot about Donald Trump's caresome.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
Let's look at everything campaign is family.
Speaker 5 (09:04):
Let's get foreign eyes on him. We have one target.
Speaker 3 (09:08):
You know who he is.
Speaker 5 (09:09):
Going after, their companies, their families. That is a dictator.
It's a very dangerous time for a country.
Speaker 7 (09:15):
The goal is to put him in jail because they're
so afraid of his voice. I am your bury him
so deep and legal it'll bankrupt them.
Speaker 5 (09:24):
Broke got him in jail right before the election. That's
hard for being that guy. But isn't that election interference?
It's not interference if we do it. We just want
a free and fair election. Sounds expensive. Ballots ain't cheap.
Speaker 6 (09:37):
Wait wait wait, did you actually say the word buy
the ballots?
Speaker 1 (09:41):
We were able to purchase ten thousand ballots.
Speaker 5 (09:44):
That's terrifying. They cheat in many different ways. That's all
they're good at. Ready to save democracy.
Speaker 1 (09:49):
We need to stop him permanently, and that person will
be risking his life to be.
Speaker 5 (09:55):
Is not the sixties, right.
Speaker 7 (09:58):
Weird?
Speaker 5 (09:59):
It's the you survived and I said, get me.
Speaker 6 (10:02):
A Trump has beaten back every attack against him.
Speaker 4 (10:05):
It's like the damn Tourney.
Speaker 8 (10:07):
We're going to fix our borders, but we're going to
fix our elections.
Speaker 5 (10:11):
We're gonna win my legacy. Syndicating Trump, the best is
yet to come. Only in theaters September twenty seventh.
Speaker 3 (10:18):
This is the treportary show on The Valley's Coward Talk Man.
Speaker 1 (10:23):
I can't wait to see this. The trailer. You know
when you see a trailer and it really just gets
you excited to see it, That's what this is about.
Speaker 6 (10:30):
New movie is going to be called Vindicating Trump. I
have a new book of the same title coming out
around the same time. The trailer for the film is
out today. We've got entertaining recreations that will make you
laugh out loud. We've created all these cool, you know,
war rooms, and so we've got a sort of a
democratic war room. We've got a media war room. We've
(10:52):
also got the innerds, the inside workings of the police
state or of the intelligence agencies.
Speaker 1 (10:57):
Ah, the guys with the light bulb and the cigar
ours and making all the decisions around the world. Well,
this is a decision that is an end of an era,
and I think most of us can't agree. Right, Blue
Light Special, Blue Light Special, the last Kmart in the
US is going to close next month. Now I would
(11:20):
have thought this already happened five years ago or something
ire Right, they've been holding on for dear life. All
good things must come to an end. This is in Bridgehampton,
New York, out on Long Island. It closes October twentieth.
So attention, attention, Kmart shoppers. It's closing the last full
(11:41):
size store in the mainland US. The chain still has
a small convenience store version of itself in Miami. What
would that be like a Kmart convenience store. Let's see,
what do they just got? Icys and gas? Well, I
wonder what that is. They do have stores though still
if you want to go to a Kmart store, you
(12:01):
have to go to Guam or the US Virgin Islands.
They said they're profitable there because they don't have all
the other big box stores that have come in to
challenge them. They Kmart merged with Sears, and when they did,
back in two thousand and five, they had fourteen hundred
stores k Marts and Sears had nine hundred. And now
they were getting down the bankruptcy time and they only
(12:24):
had two hundred and thirty one Seers and one hundred
ninety one k Marts, but those were all doomed and
today is just a handful of Seers and the last
k Mart is gonna be closing. I missed the simpler times, right,
I guess that's what everybody's they age start to do,
look back and reminisce and I you know where you
(12:47):
know we can say the nineteen hundreds, that's what I
that's what I miss man. I love it when you
see the nineteen ninety six movie and they got that
home phone, but it's a handheld with that big long
antenna sticking up. The technology now tells us what decade
that it's in the flip phone. Ah, yeah, you're looking
(13:08):
at six something oh five or whatever. The US Secret
Service agent negligently discharged his weapon and shot himself all
on duty Saturday evening. I'm sure that happens with the
police departments and law enforcement all over the country every weekend. Right,
you would think that somehow somewhere in America. I wonder
(13:30):
if they got stats on that, right. I do know
that concealed carry civilians have a higher safety rate than
off duty police officers. When they're always talking about having
to go after the guns and the carry rights, concealed
carry rights, they have a better safety record. But I
would think that once you reach the level of Secret
(13:51):
Service that on your contract that you sign, you know,
one of those stipulations is if you accidentally shoot yourself
with your own gun, you're gonna go and work in
Polloopski County, Louisiana's a deputy share. If you're not going
to be working for the Secret Service, we are at
the top of the line. We cannot allow that, right. Yeah, Well,
(14:11):
I think we've seen a little change in our views
on what we think of the Secret Service, and so
have our foreign adversaries. It's like everything has just been
either weakened or cheapened. I don't mean prices, uh, Oprah
when she had Kamala Kamala Harrison, Kamala was talking about guns. Right,
(14:33):
She's not to worry about guns. She has the secret
Service that can accidentally shoot themselves with their own weapon.
But at least they got weapons around them, right. I
played to the audio of her on there. Uh you
know she said if somebody breaks into her home, she's
gonna they're gonna be shot.
Speaker 3 (14:49):
Right.
Speaker 1 (14:49):
Oh, my staff, I have to deal with that later.
Like that wasn't a totally pre planned go out softball
from Oprah. And you're gonna put yourself as a centrist
as he Hey, I'm just like any other American out there. Right,
you come in my house, I'm gonna let Doug Imhoff sleep.
I'm gonna get up in my Kmart nightgown and shoot you.
Speaker 3 (15:11):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (15:12):
Right, Kamala, you have armed people around you, constant protection.
Speaker 3 (15:16):
Right.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
That's laughable. That was so laughable. You know, they they
behind their their fences and their walls. They have a
lot of walls. They got gated government buildings all that, right. Yeah,
they they try and take away our ability to defend
ourselves in our house and the people that live in
our houses. But now that's only a privilege only the
(15:40):
elite deserve. The equestrians get the self defense. You pedestrians
down there walking on your feet, we're gonna we're gonna
come into your house and make sure you're doing it legally.
Oh yeah, she said that. I played with the audio
that too when she was the attorney general out here. Right, Yeah,
we'll come into your house, she said, We'll come in
make sure you're you're legally have your weapon, even if
(16:02):
it is And she's all telling Oprah that she's in
favor of the Second Amendment, but then she turns around
and says, yeah, I'm in favor of an assault weapons ban. Well,
I tell you what, Kamala, if Oprah or anybody that
was that's why she stays away from any unscripted because
(16:22):
somebody would have said, oh, really, assault weapons ban? What
is an assault weapon? Describe that because in my mind,
an assault weapon is a military grade weapon that you
pull the trigger and you just keep your finger on
the trigger and it just keeps firing as long as
you have am O and the that's called fully automatic
(16:44):
that's to me is what an assault weapon is. But
when they talk about the eighth, the aks and the
ars and they you know, they say that's assault rifle. No,
it's armorut light. It's the name of the company. Thank
you Bright Bart Hawkins for that. One appreciate that educating
us on that. But as we have gone back and
(17:05):
we looked at what she's talked about that the assault weapons, man,
that means some kind of like, oh it has camouflage on,
Oh it has the scope. Oh it has a bump stock. Oh,
it had any kind of accessory that makes it look
Gi Joe. It's a visual. That's all they're talking about.
Speaker 4 (17:21):
Right.
Speaker 1 (17:22):
If any journalists that she was in front of would
explain that, oh, you want to ban those so called
assault weapons, Kamma, Madam Vice President, Do you understand that
three percent of death by firearms are committed with these
any rifle, Go ahead and put your so called assault
rifles in there. That's three percent. Sixty percent are committed
(17:44):
with handguns, Madam Vice President. Last year more murders were
committed with hands and fist than with rifles. Why are
you making this the issue? Well, let she go into
a word salad speak of her word salads.
Speaker 3 (18:01):
The assisted Trevor Jerry Show, Mondo, Sally's Powers Off, Kamala Harris.
Speaker 9 (18:06):
We just need to move past the failed policies that
we have proven don't work. Yes, we just need to
move past. Agree the failed policies that we have proven
don't work.
Speaker 1 (18:21):
Yep, I can't agree. I don't know. It's like Tim
wall Is saying, can't we go through four more years
of that? Like do they not know that we understand
that it was Kamala Harris that was in the the
side motorcycle car as Joe Biden was riding the motorcycle.
She was over there in the sidecar with her goggles
and scarf around her neck.
Speaker 4 (18:42):
Right.
Speaker 1 (18:44):
Yeah, she did her Uh, I guess we can call
it her first big girl interview. She didn't bring tampon
Tim with her. She walked him by herself. I'm sure
Doug him hooff is off on the side head nodding,
you go get her girl. That's right. And it was
such a middle class background that they use. I don't
know where they found this, maybe in the basement at MSNBC,
but it had like a construction look around it, an
(19:07):
indoor construction site. It was so stupid trying to act
all I don't know construction lady. I guess she was
right here she was talking about this was it during
the interview, But now I know that Trump said, like
instead of second Kings like people would say in church,
(19:27):
first and second Kings, she said two Kings or was
it two James? Was it two Corinthians? Yeah, instead of
second Corinthians. Being a preacher's kid, I know it's second Corinthians.
But at least he didn't say what Kamala said here.
I don't even know what she's saying. Ecclesiastics, Ecclesiastes.
Speaker 4 (19:47):
You know there's a time for patients, and there's a
time for patients. That's not an Ecclesiastics, But swapscript for
a minute, mayor.
Speaker 1 (19:59):
Yeah, ecclesiastics. I say, anyhow have you ever had a
conversation with your significant other, with your child, with anybody
at work, with planning a budget, with a Little League
team trying to sell candy bars to raise money where
anytime you're in the economy, anytime dealings you've had with
(20:20):
anything commercial that you've seen about IRA accounts, anything to
do with money and economy, where anybody's ever used the
word holistic. Maybe if you were opening a crystal occult
bookstore in Berkeley that might be used.
Speaker 4 (20:41):
And assistance to state and local governments around transit dollars
and looking holistically at the connection between that and housing,
and looking holistically at the incentives we in the federal
government can create for local and state governments to actually
engage in planning in a holistic manner that include prioritizing
affordable housing.
Speaker 1 (21:04):
Holistic. Let's let's pick a word. Let's interject at every
seven or eight seconds, and it might make me sound
like what I'm talking about. I have something new and fresh.
I don't have to have policies. I'll just use words
like holistic and innovation and ambition.
Speaker 4 (21:20):
And generate innovation and the ambition of the ideas that
are present and among us.
Speaker 5 (21:29):
But need the fuel to be able to actually achieve
the goal.
Speaker 1 (21:32):
That doesn't mean anything, That means nothing. Listen again, I mean,
what is she like a you know what? She needs
to be? Like a Hallmark card writer? I would I'd
fire from that gig too. I'd be like, now this
is too yucky, this is stupid.
Speaker 4 (21:47):
To generate the innovation and the ambition of the ideas
that are present and among us.
Speaker 5 (21:56):
But need the fuel to be able to actually achieve
the goal.
Speaker 1 (21:59):
Okay, it makes all of sin. Stephanie Role here was
ask there about what would you say to Republicans? You
know that are people that might say these policies. First
of all, she didn't have any policies, but she's assuming
that combalist policies that they aren't for me. Talk to
those Americans listen to this ramble fest. I thought about
(22:19):
editing clips. I just decided to let you get a
good dose of this.
Speaker 5 (22:24):
Madam Vice President.
Speaker 7 (22:25):
You just laid out your economic vision for the future.
But still there are lots of Americans who don't see
themselves in your plans. For those who say these policies
aren't for me, what do you say to them?
Speaker 4 (22:40):
Well, if you are hardworking, if you have the dreams
and the ambition, the aspirations of what I believe you do,
you're in my plan.
Speaker 5 (22:56):
You know, I have to tell you. I really.
Speaker 7 (23:00):
Everything she said.
Speaker 5 (23:01):
We're in her plan? What plan?
Speaker 3 (23:04):
What plan? Love?
Speaker 5 (23:06):
And am so.
Speaker 4 (23:08):
Energized by what I know to be the spirit and
character of the American people.
Speaker 5 (23:12):
We have ambition, we have aspirations.
Speaker 1 (23:15):
We have dreams, dreams.
Speaker 5 (23:17):
We can see what's possible.
Speaker 4 (23:19):
We have an incredible work ethic, but not everyone has
the access to the opportunities that allow them to achieve
those things.
Speaker 1 (23:29):
All right, Can you broach into communism and how we
try and create make everybody the outcome be equal or
equitable for everybody or by ends up at the same place.
Speaker 4 (23:38):
Is that a plan?
Speaker 1 (23:39):
You might have seemed like you were maybe starting to
venture that.
Speaker 4 (23:43):
Way, the access to the opportunities that allow them to
achieve those things.
Speaker 5 (23:48):
But we don't lack for those things.
Speaker 4 (23:50):
But not everyone, you know, gets handed stuff on a
silver platter. And so my vision for the economy, I
call it an opportunity economy, is about making sure that
all Americans, wherever they start, wherever they are, have the
ability to actually achieve those None.
Speaker 9 (24:07):
Of this is a plan.
Speaker 1 (24:09):
This is a fantasy. It's called socialism, communism, that's what
it actually.
Speaker 4 (24:15):
Those dreams and those ambitions, which include from middle class
families just being able to know that their hard work
allows them to get ahead. Right, I think we can't
and we shouldn't aspire to have an economy that just
allows people to get by. People want to do more
than just get by. They want to get ahead, and
I come from the middle class.
Speaker 1 (24:36):
No, you don't come from the middle classes.
Speaker 7 (24:37):
That's the first word that pops into your head when
you hear the name Kamala Harris liar.
Speaker 1 (24:43):
Yeah, you're about to hear her be that liar and
repeat that lie that she did during the debate that
Goldman Sachs that her economic plan is better than President
Trump's plan. Kamala, the Golden Sack CEO said the day
out to the debate that she's lying. MSNBC knew that
they wouldn't call her out on it during this Why
she'll sit down with these kind of conversations. A real
(25:03):
journalist wouldn't let her get away.
Speaker 4 (25:05):
With wenda that includes tariffs to the point that the
average working person will spend twenty percent more on everyday
necessities and an estimated four thousand dollars more a year
on those everyday necessities, to the point that top economists
in our country, from Nobel Laureates to people at Moody's
(25:25):
and Goldman Sachs, I've compared my plan with his and
said my plan would grow the economy, his would.
Speaker 5 (25:32):
Shrink the economy. Some of them have actually.
Speaker 4 (25:35):
Assessed that his plan would increase inflation and invite a
recession by the middle of next year.
Speaker 1 (25:42):
All right, miss middle class. Tomorrow, I'm going to go
into more detail of her whole life and how she
is not middle class, and how it's questionable if she
even worked at for you know, moving around money is
what it was. She claimed that she worked at a McDonald's.
There were only two in that in the time when
she would have been that age where she claimed that
(26:03):
she worked. She didn't even say this till twenty and nineteen,
even though she's written memoirs about her life. Wouldn't you
include your McDonald's hamburger flipping and your memoirs? No, it
only came up in two thousand and nineteen. But here
we are where the world on fire all around us,
and MSNBC focused on this first one.
Speaker 5 (26:21):
Just a fact check because your opponent there as a
little today. Oh there's no such thing as a little job.
Speaker 7 (26:26):
Okay, fair, fair, because your opponent almost every day seems
to be talking about this. So I just want to
ask you yes or no, At any point in your
life have you served to all beef patties, special sauce,
And let us cheese, pick those onions on a sesame seed,
but looking at a McDonald's, yes or no, that's it.
Speaker 5 (26:43):
I have Okay, now the other job, but it was
not a small job like I didn't prie. I mean,
you know, yes.
Speaker 1 (26:53):
Again I was going to edit. But I need you
to soak this in and really listen. Listen. She asked
her about raising corporate taxes and where are you going
to get the where are you going to get the
money if the Republicans say no? She's really confused, and
when should get confused? She just starts rambling, guys, this
is the person that wants the nuclear codes. This is
(27:16):
the person for four years that wants to be in
charge of the destiny of the United States of America.
And listen to this.
Speaker 7 (27:22):
Spanning that child tax credit or you mentioned housing before
getting that extra money for a first home. If you
can't raise corporate taxes, or if GOP takes control of
the Senate, why do you get the money to do that?
Do you still go forward those plans and borrow?
Speaker 4 (27:37):
Well, but we're going to have to raise corporate taxes,
and we're going to have to raise We're going to
have to make sure that the biggest corporations and billionaires
pay their fair share.
Speaker 5 (27:50):
That's just it.
Speaker 4 (27:51):
It's about paying their fair share. I am not mad
at anyone for achieving success.
Speaker 1 (27:57):
The rich people aren't paying their fair share. A good
journal so would have said, Madam Vice President, what percentage
of tax do you think the top one percent pays?
They pay forty five percent of total personal income taxes
that are collected. One percent pays forty five percent. And
you're going to say they're not paying their fair share.
Stop it.
Speaker 5 (28:17):
But everyone should pay their fair share.
Speaker 4 (28:19):
And it is not right that the teachers and the
firefighters that I meet every day across our country are
paying a higher tax than the richest people in our country.
Speaker 7 (28:30):
Bill Gates just said it this week. If he was
in charge of taxes, he would have paid more. But
how do you find that line to make sure corporations
are paying their fair share but they're not leaving our country?
Speaker 5 (28:40):
Well, listen, I work with a lot of CEOs.
Speaker 4 (28:43):
I have spent a lot of time with CEOs, and
I'm going to tell you that the business leaders who
are actually part of the engine of America's economy agree
that people should pay their fair share.
Speaker 5 (28:54):
They also agree that when we look at a plant.
Speaker 4 (28:58):
Such as mine, that is about investment in the middle class,
investing in new industries, investing in bringing down costs, invest
in entrepreneurs like small businesses, that the overall economy is
stronger and everyone benefits.
Speaker 1 (29:12):
Yeah, do you read through everything that she just said?
In case she can, it's that's what the socialist communists.
Do you think of Cuba? They went after the one percent.
See her starting to detegrate those that aren't paying their
fair share. Not starting, They've done it for decades with
the reality. But if we can hear this and see this,
can MSNBC hear this and see this and feel this well.
(29:36):
Right after the interview, Stephanie Rule was interviewed by her
own network about the interview we just heard. Listen to
her say. She didn't answer the questions.
Speaker 5 (29:45):
Here's what's a little tricky.
Speaker 7 (29:47):
She doesn't answer the question around if the GOP is
controlling the Senate, if she can't raise corporate taxes, where
is she going to get the money from, you know,
to expand the child's ax credit and do all the
things she wants to do. And she says, we just
have to do it, and that's great and that's a
campaign promise. But the issue is if it means we're
just going to borrow again, then what we're doing is
(30:08):
we're just never addressing the deficit. And back in the
days when you were a proud Republican, debts and deficits mattered.
Speaker 5 (30:16):
No, they have it.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
In my lifetime, Republican and Democrats have been part of
that debt orgy for decades. But yes, that's right, she's
not thinking of the debt if we just keep borrowing
and borrowing. Jeff Clark, he does investigations, and he's an attorney,
and he's looked into because all of this is its
public knowledge. When you're a DA, when you're attorney general,
(30:40):
right you prosecute what's kamalist prosecution record? This man says
it's all smoking mirrors and something about her pantsuits or something.
Speaker 8 (30:50):
I ran searches on West Law, which I'm particularly expert
at using it's a very large, the largest and most
comprehensive computerized legal research database, and I can't find any
evidence of any cases that she prosecuted. And I searched
for habeas cases where the transcripts might have wound up there.
I also looked for whether she'd argued, appeals can't find anything.
(31:15):
Those tweets have gone viral. Elon Musk has spotted them,
and I challenged her and her campaign weeks ago to
please post up on some kind of you know, logging
website her past trial transcripts so that other lawyers like
me can look at them and see if they show
any signs of an impressive lawyer or if she's you know,
(31:35):
being puffed up and overblown like an empty pantsuit.
Speaker 3 (31:39):
The assist that Trevor Carey show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (31:43):
This was an opinion piece written at the Fresno b
by Orzowski about how Fresno County approved their five point
two billion dollar budget for the year and they did
it before lunch, meaning they did it a few hours
in the morning. They said budget hearing started. I guess
this was last Monday morning. They concluded at eleven oh
(32:05):
two with a unanimous vote. He said, that's ninety two minutes,
ninety two minutes worth of public discourse for a five
point two billion dollars spending plan. He said, the City
of Fresno that their budget hearings are over four days
and they have separate meetings in all of this, and
he said that they just kind of rushed right through.
(32:25):
It didn't give people enough time to post questions to
department heads, and I guess Supervisor Mendesk was stated as
it's kind of just show.
Speaker 5 (32:36):
That we do people aren't regulated.
Speaker 1 (32:38):
Said the county Supervisor's approved a three hundred and forty
five million dollar budget for the sheriff's office with little
discourse sheriffs and known he didn't have to explain why
they need forty new patrol cars valued at two point
eight million, or a new hundred and thirty three thousand
dollars jet vote, no discussion on anything. Did they discuss
approving the money for the needle exchange that the county
(33:00):
still does. Yeah, we helped drug addicts with a free
needle exchange. The State of the County speech yesterday gvwire
dot com reporting that Supervisor Magzig did the speech, but
the intro was brand down at upset dire and Bretta felt, guys, really,
(33:24):
I listen, nobody really cares about the riff. Nobody cares
that you used to be golfing buddies and stop calling
each other names. Really, I mean, I like both men,
I do, but tell us what you're gonna do or
continue to do or you know, how refreshing would it
be if if we heard a politician say, you know what,
I've decided this go around, I'm going to do things
(33:44):
differently because I learned it didn't work, or admit to failure. Right,
be honest, say.
Speaker 5 (33:49):
What you learn.
Speaker 3 (33:50):
Right.
Speaker 1 (33:50):
Pro quarterbacks do it. Guys that have had great high
school careers, great college careers. They go on to the
pros and you hear them say, my first three years,
I was I was doing this, and I moved my
pinky this way and the ball had more control.
Speaker 3 (34:04):
Right.
Speaker 1 (34:05):
There's nothing wrong with admitting that you're adjusting things and
things aren't good right now. I mean, I don't think
DIYer has been good for Fresno. I don't yet. Council
Member Brettefeldt does. We disagreed. We've had a few voiceterious calls.
I still have respect for both men. Brandall he unannounced
(34:28):
everybody last time he was on, but during the commercial
break we got loud with each other. Man. I even
told him to leave get up regarding the lockdown, right,
but we we worked it out. He since recommended a
church that his parents go to and I went to it,
and I really enjoy it. But we don't need this, man,
We don't need headlines about politicians being upset with each other.
(34:51):
The people out here we're tired of it. We are
very much tired of it. Dyer said the comments were
inappropriate put a damper to the event because what Brandal said,
now I'm going to quote him, this is silly season.
We're taking a number of hits. It's been insinuated that
work corrupt. We've been called this week dishonest. So you know,
(35:11):
I'd like to say to those folks that make those
kind of accusations, this is Uh Brandell talking directly. I
guess to Brudefeld that they need to remember the adage
if you live in a glasshouse, you shouldn't throw stones,
right and then also, if you like the biblical version
of that, don't try to remove the splinter the speck
in your brother's eye if you have a log in
your own eye. So they're up there scolding each other
Speaker 3 (35:33):
The assisted Trevor Jerry Show, Mondo Valley's Power Talk