This momentum of like, wow, Trump just keeps knocking out so much stuff so fast. It's like, you know, your entire wish list of what you want from an entire president's term is like happening in three weeks and it keeps going. And then on the other side of the coin, it's like, OK, so what's the other side doing? And it really might be just like.
permanently foreclosing. Like they really, it could be a wrap on the Democrat party. But what it said about the Democratic party is far more significant in the, both the short and the long term of American politics. These guys have a rudderless ship. We finally beat Medicare.
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Ladies and gentlemen, your attention please. Just to catch him strays over here. You're in for a hell of a show. Keep the faith, hold the line, and own the libs. It's time for our main...
Good Thursday to you. I think the question is, is this the end of the Democrat Party? It is a question we have not grappled with since Ronald Reagan took 49 states back in 1984. But it is a question that feels very pertinent this week with the events of the State of the Union and everything thereafter. Fellas, Josh Holmes, comfortably smug, John Ashbrook.
Michael Duncan on assignment today, but boys, we got a lot to say. That is actually a serious question you have to ask after seeing that. So, I mean...
You know, we'd had such a long discussion for a bunch of episodes about how this momentum of like, wow, Trump just keeps knocking out so much stuff so fast. It's like, you know, your entire wish list of what you want from an entire president's term is like happening in three weeks and it keeps going. And then on the other side of the coin, it's like, OK, so what's the other side doing? And it really might be just like.
foreclosing. Like, they really, it could be a wrap on the Democrat Party. The end of the Democrat Party and the dawn of the golden age of our country. It's not a coincidence. It's not a coincidence. Very, very.
Very well said. No question about it. The voice encapsulating it as always. We've got a very big show. We've got Senator Tommy Tuberville, old coach, is in the program today. And we're going to be recapping the events of the week, obviously the State of the Union, the reaction of the State of the Union, and then some takeaways. Like, look, we've done this for a living, and we've done it in some places where you can see telltale signs of what Democrats are going through.
that the media wants to cover up. They don't want to tell you the story of the big fractures and the big problems that are happening and their further cleavage away from the center of this country, which of course signals the end of a nationally popular political party. Now, I'm not saying it's done today, but there are signs. Yeah, yeah. There are signs that it's not going well. So we're going to get to all of that.
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Six weeks ago, I stood beneath the dome of this Capitol and proclaimed the dawn of the golden age of America. From that moment on, it has been nothing but swift and unrelenting action to usher in the greatest and most successful era in the history of our country.
We have accomplished more in 43 days than most administrations accomplished in four years or eight years. And we are just getting started. So, I mean, look, a couple of takeaways. One, the golden age. That's something that is now entirely synthesized with the Trump administration, the message of what they're trying to accomplish here in these four years. And you have remarkable results.
unity on the Republican side. I mean, that you could hear just in the reaction of how excited people are about it. That says something. We've seen a lot of these things over the years. When you have people jumping to their seats and ready to go right off the jump, it says something on the other side. He's talking about how great the country is going to be and everybody's like,
deadpanning it. Right, right. And then you get Al Green out of the gate with his cane, shaking it at Trump, acting like a complete lunatic. And I've talked to people who were inside the room that night, sitting there listening to the president and
And they said the Democrats were so disruptive out of the gate, it was actually kind of hard to hear what Trump was saying in that room. And as you pointed out, it's a very small room. I mean, people are much closer together in there than we are sitting here at this desk. And so imagine a scenario where it's hard to hear Trump
And then also think about the discipline and the force that it takes to be President Trump and just continue to deliver. He must have really been enjoying himself last night. Oh, no question. And you've seen over the last couple of weeks, you know, Zelensky in the Oval, and then you saw the governor of Maine. I mean, anytime there's an audience where President Trump is controlling the pace of play and somebody tries to come at him, it doesn't end well.
And it didn't end well for Democrats at all. Look, I want to take you under the hood because some of the things that we have done over the years can give you some indication of what Democrats are going through here. I remember Johnny and I were in leadership communications positions during probably the leanest era of my lifetime in Republican politics.
where you had, what, 40 seats in the Senate, huge minorities in the House. Right after Obama won. And the president with a 75% approval rating. And there was a real question of how to handle that. And you had a Republican Party that immediately looked at the agenda list of what President Obama wanted to do, and it was like an allergy. And they knew immediately we were in deep trouble.
And everybody was very, very angry, angry at losses. What they saw is incompetence on the campaign front. I mean, there's a reason that this was a new leadership team that we were working for. I mean, there was a whole bunch of things that people were really mad about.
And the whole goal was to ensure that the party knew how to not self-destruct. Because at some point you were going to get an opportunity to talk about something because you knew that they would overreach with numbers like that. And the enthusiasm the Democrats had at that time, they were going to overreach. But you had to make sure that you didn't self-destruct beforehand.
So that by the time they got there, you'd already blown yourself up. You'd wasted all your political capital. Nobody took you seriously. You'd just sort of done all of the things that everybody who expects a party that's no longer nationally competitive to do. And so we would have conference meetings with all the membership of the conference. Sit down and talk about how to act during that speech, that particular speech.
And there were a couple of rules. One is you applaud the president of the United States. Anytime they talk about how America is great, you applaud it. It doesn't matter. It's the president of the United States. It's not the president of the Republican Party or the Democratic Party. It's the president of the United States. When they have sympathetic voices of issues that you can all agree on are issues—
but you have very different ways of going about trying to solve them, you applaud those people. These are victims of circumstance that you may have a different way of approaching the problem, but the person themselves is an American. These are the people who put you in office. You stand up and you applaud, and you make sure that everybody knows that
you never have indifference to the plight that Americans are feeling, whether or not they're invited there by the President of the United States or not. And then you just try to be respectful. And I think we had a whole bunch of meetings on that, and
For the most part, there was one issue at one of these things that we did where Joe Wilson, now it sounds so quaint, a representative from South Carolina said, you lie. Which ruled. Which ruled. I loved it. But hilariously, like small ball, the American media went absolutely nuts about it and tried to make him like this just pariah as a result. But I would, you know, there was what?
300, 200-something other members that didn't... They just did exactly what they needed to do because they knew along the line at some point we were going to get to something. Turned out to be Obamacare. And when we got to Obamacare, the powder was dry. They didn't see the Republican Party as a party that was just sort of this feckless...
uncaring, unserious party. It was somebody who was making real arguments against a government takeover of healthcare and throwing people off their plans and the chaos that all of that created. And that sort of began the Republican revolution of 2010 that ultimately ended in 2014 with massive Republican majorities in the House and the Senate. That's how we went about doing that.
Now, I have no doubt that Akeem Jeffries and Chuck Schumer have somewhere in their head, let's not embarrass ourselves tonight. But you have to wonder about whether they have any grip on their conference whatsoever. The first thing they did is put a video together that had the same script that
Where like 25 different members said the same script in a video that had all the authenticity of a pickpocket. Right, but they said the word shit out of the gate. So that means it's authentic. Oh, yeah. So that's authentic. That means they're representing what people think. So I have this kind of like synthesizing. As I was listening to Holmes, I hope everyone listened to that very carefully.
because there was so much wisdom in that. And you can see a reflection and almost a contrast between what he just described of where Republicans were at when we were told that Republicans are in the wilderness, you know, a regional party after Obama's 08 victory, the wisdom in what he just described of the approach that Republicans took, as opposed to what you're seeing right now from the Democrats. And a couple of things. First, you'd mentioned that
Republicans were told, rightfully so, that if you hear something's good for America, you may have a different approach to tackle an issue or the circumstances that this individual faces. You cheer for it, which is the right thing to do. We didn't see that from the Democrats. Not once. And there's a very specific reason why. Because their party has been so captured by a very far left radical fringe, so captured by it.
that they have painted themselves into a corner they can't get out of. When inherently they are told, they tell, the left tells Americans that America is like a fallen country. It's an inherently racist, irredeemable country. They can't just cheer for America because they've been taught and have been teaching that inherently America is a bad thing to begin with. That's right. Which is why you saw they were unable to do that. Secondly...
When you describe this video that they put out ahead of time of them all being like, you know, oh, they said shit, so it's going to be authentic. And they're all like robots reading the same line, completely inauthentic. The problem is Democrats see their problem as a communications problem, as they always do. Totally. When it's inherently an ideological problem. When you see over 75% of Americans agreeing on all these issues, like they could not cheer for Trump.
men being removed from women's sports, which is an 80-20 issue. You see the polling out there. It's the most popular action that Trump has taken in his presidency. It polls the best and not a single Democrat. It's even worse. They have...
They had a young girl who suffered brain damage as a result of an injury from a man playing women's sports, and they couldn't cheer for her. They couldn't cheer for her. They couldn't cheer for her. Her existence in the chamber was something that they couldn't cheer for. That's what I'm talking about. And then, again, and they're wearing pink, though, because they see it as a calm strategy. We support women. Our calm strategy is to wear pink, not...
cheer or support this legislation that actually protects and helps women yeah you're so true but then but then you look to their leadership and and you know i heard hakeem jeffries ahead of time basically trying to tell people you have to act cool you have to do your thing and i thought okay well here's one guy who is maybe knows how to read and understands history but he is leading a
group of people who all think they're the main character. And so it wasn't just people in pink. There were people in black. There were people wearing other things. Everybody's doing their own deal. They had bingo signs. Like auction paddles. You've got AOC. You've got Ilhan Omar. All of them think that they're the main character and that their storyline is the only plot that matters for America. And they couldn't be more wrong. They're so out of touch.
and it was on full display last night. I'm so glad it was exposed, and I'm so glad that the president didn't just stop and...
and like not address it. Yep. Yeah. And he did it in a very smooth way. Like whenever he got to a point in his speech that it really applied to them, he turned right to them, looked right at them and he pointed at them. And it was just masterful. The guy is a showman. Early on, just the last thing for him to be like, I could, I could give something that every American agrees with and these Democrats still won't cheer it kind of
Calling out early what we were going to see and the Dems how they were going to behave for the entire night. That was a smart play. Totally. So if we're going to put a fine point on the top segment of this, it is the president did a great job. It was a great speech. It was a well-written speech. The guests were fabulous. He delivered it perfectly. It was funny. We're going to get into all of that.
But what it said about the Democratic Party is far more significant in both the short and the long term of American politics. These guys have a rudderless ship to the extent that Hakeem Jeffries understood that.
what the assignment was, he could not get his party to do it. To the extent that Chuck Schumer understands how politics under the dome works, he could not get his party to do it. And what that tells you is, you know, Wolf, our producer brought up,
It's like watching a college campus protest where everybody sort of shows up because they're like part of the left. And somebody starts screaming about the environment and shut down the Keystone pipeline. And then somebody else is like, yeah, we don't like the Jews either. And you're like, you're like, what? Insanity. You're like, what? Where did that come from?
But that's so true. That's today's Democratic Party. And then just in case you needed just a little bit extra to tip you away from the nonsense that they're selling, you get something like clip one. Hey, Spaghetts, throw it up there. Just listen to some of the appalling waste.
We have already identified... I love this. $22 billion from HHS to provide free housing and cars for illegal aliens. $45 million for diversity, equity, and inclusion scholarships in Burma. $40 million to improve the social and economic inclusion of sedentary migrants. Nobody knows what that is. LAUGHTER
$8 million to promote LGBTQI plus in the African nation of Lesotho, which nobody has ever heard of.
I could watch it a thousand times. The comedic timing is fantastic. And also the power of that, because every single person in America watching it has the exact same thought. Whenever he says any of these, they get the absurdity of how their tax money has been just lit on fire. And then when he says to Lesoto, I myself was like,
I don't know where the hell this is. And I'm pretty good at geography. And he says, wherever the hell that is. And it's like every single person watching this, except for an angry leftist, is 100% on the page with him. And you see that in the polling afterwards. You know what's funny? The DC types on Twitter in real time during the speech being like, oh, I've been there. Oh, I know where that is. Oh, I know where that is. I can't remember who did it. Someone tweeted, they're like, right now there's like a CNN producer running around trying to find a Lesotho restaurant to talk to the owner and be like,
Is Donald Trump attacking you? So good in the contrast of you've got a Democratic Party that's outside of the restaurant and everything, all, you know, protesting all this stuff makes no sense. Many amazing points during this speech. We're going to get to a lot more that we find particularly interesting as we go forward, including the media reaction and everything we're going to get to right after this.
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All right. So, well, coming into the speech, you knew that a main piece of this for President Trump would be border security. Since he's come down the golden escalator, it has been his one issue. We live for four years of an administration telling us nothing they can do.
Right. Nothing they can do. It's this amorphous piece of legislation that they've negotiated that they can't get through and they can't do anything about. Never mind the previous four years he'd fixed the problem. And then the guy shows up six weeks before. And the day before this speech, they released numbers saying it's the lowest number of border crossings that we've had in this country in like 40 years. So it's like a capstone accomplishment. He's been on the job all six weeks. He's going to talk about all this stuff. Let's play clip two.
Since taking office, my administration has launched the most sweeping border and immigration crackdown in American history. And we quickly achieved the lowest numbers of illegal border crossings ever recorded. Thank you. Wow.
The media and our friends in the Democrat Party kept saying we needed new legislation. We must have legislation to secure the border. But it turned out that all we really needed was a new president. So strong. That is so strong. He's so strong. He looked right at him. Yeah, he did. He looked right at him. I mean, so that's the thing that Ashbrook and I were on Waters yesterday.
In the minutes leading into the speech, which is an awesome opportunity sandwiched in between Kid Rock and Danica Patrick. Yeah. We love that. That's a hell of a lineup. I love that. Waters, you're the man for doing that. He really is. But one of the things we talked about was if you've been in that chamber...
What's so striking about it the first time you go in during a State of the Union is how small it is. On TV, it looks like it's a stadium. It kind of looks like a sports arena type thing where it's just filled with the rafters and there's upper decks or whatever. When you go in there, everyone's so close. It's so tight.
And so for him to deliver that as he's just eye staring. Yeah. I mean, we're talking 10 feet to the people he's talking to. I mean, that's a big deal. Yeah. That's a big deal. And it also, I think, says a lot about the Democrats and their inability to keep decorum. Mm hmm.
Because it really if you have if you're in a place where you've got like, you know, a couple hundred people, it's like being in a movie theater and deciding you need to like, oh, don't go in there. You know, like some sometimes you just have to have some manners when you're in public. And they had none. And there was a president United States addressing for the first time in his second term, the United States Congress. They couldn't do it despite being 10 feet away from him.
You know, it's just... It's because they think that everything is about them. Yeah. And not them as a party. Yeah.
them as like a person. Like AOC is somehow the most important person in this world. And if we only paid more attention to her, America would be better. Like that, it's the kind of narcissistic lunacy that only the left can produce. And it was on full display. No question about it. There was a bunch of other moments, one of them that I found
completely hilarious for two reasons, and we'll get into right after we play the clip. Clip three, please. With no end in sight, the United States has sent hundreds of billions of dollars to support Ukraine's defense with no security. Do you want to keep it going for another five years? Yeah, yeah. You would say Pocahontas says yes. So a couple of things happened here.
One, the Pocahontas thing is hilarious. It's obviously. Right? And then that's what you get with Trump. You're going to get a broadside if you come at him. As the governor of Maine found out, as Zelensky found out, you're going to get – if you want to try to embarrass him, it's not going to work. Right. But I thought the most impactful part of not just this but many moments in that speech –
were what Democrats were doing to applaud, right? He just laid out the framework. The framework of this was you've got a four-year war where you've lost hundreds of thousands of people. We have supported the Ukrainians without any sort of endgame whatsoever, none articulated, sending arms to...
having the American taxpayers on the hook with never an articulated strategy for security by the Biden administration whatsoever. And they're clapping and they're clapping and they're clapping. And he says, you want it to go on another five years? And they keep clapping and they keep clapping and they keep clapping. After the context has already been laid out, that this has been going on four years and hundreds of thousands of people have been killed, $300 billion have been spent. So it sounds like if you're in the chamber, you're Pocahontas,
You're like, yeah, I'm just in opposition to his view of Ukraine. To your average American who's watching that, the framework is not lost. No. The framework is somehow that lady thinks it's a good idea to continue funding a war forever that has killed hundreds of thousands of people with the American taxpayer on the hook for it without any real strategy to end this thing. Mm-hmm.
that's what they're clapping for. Make no mistake. Like you can say all the insiders, all the reporters, all the people who do these things every single day where they're just like, oh, it's a disagreement with how he's, how he handled Zelensky on Friday. Right. And they can say that that's not what the American people saw. That's not what they saw. That moment completely encapsulated his argument, President Trump's argument, his approach to this foreign policy of,
He doesn't support a forever war with no end in sight, with endless loss of life. And then he has a foil in that moment who makes it apparent that the Democrat position is the exact opposite. They will literally clap an endless war with an endless cost of life and of treasure that
They support that. How do you get your opponents to set up like this? It's his greatest gift. It's unbelievable. It's his greatest gift. It's time tested. Every single time he makes his political opponents absolutely ridiculous. They just can't. Look, it's a nuanced topic. There are things that are extremely complicated about Ukraine. At no point did he say it's not worth it.
Trying to save Ukraine. At no point did he say, here's a winner and who's a loser. Or I'm taking one side. He just framed it up. Right. About here's what the issue. And there was one side who's more than happy to clap like a fucking circus seal. Right. Over an absolutely ridiculous proposition. Right. There's no human alive.
that would clap for that. Incredible how he gets them. I mean, what we saw last night, obviously he was funny and he had these little master strokes just like that and he was unique. This is leadership. His speech was declarative. He was very bold. And the whole thing, Holmes...
Reminded me of something you always say about presidential campaigns. You cannot win a presidential campaign if you're running some other person's playbook. You cannot go down in history as one of the greatest leaders who's ever been on top of this country by running somebody else's playbook.
Remember all of these Republican primaries in 08 and 12 and 16. The question is, who's the most like Reagan? And somebody, a governor from some state would raise his hand and be like, well, I'm the most like Reagan because blah, blah, blah. And then the other person would say, no, no, I'm more like Reagan. This is new. This is leadership that's appropriate for this generation. It's needed for this time in American history. And he is exactly what we wanted. That's why people voted for it. This is what...
Excuse me. This is exactly what our country needs at this moment. Yeah. I mean, what's so and so like taking the same framework where you get your opponents to either clap for the indefensible or sit on their hands for the universally praised. Yeah. Is what he did in that moment. And that's why this is not this isn't Tuesday night's news.
This is going to carry on for a bit. Yes. And he put a finer point on that with some of the guests. This is the one that stuck out the most to us, obviously, in clip four. Since that time, DJ and his dad have been on a quest to make...
His dream come true and DJ has been sworn in as an honorary law enforcement officer actually a number of times. The police love him. The police departments love him. And tonight, DJ, we're going to do you the biggest honor of them all. I am asking our new Secret Service Director, Sean Curran, to officially make you an agent of the United States Secret Service.
So, I mean, good God. First of all, this is a young man whose life has been threatened by cancer. That has obviously had an untold impact on his family. And the only thing he ever wanted to be was a law enforcement officer. Something that a lot of people have got a lot of sympathy for, just aside from the fact that he's been stricken with his childhood malady.
He just made his dream come true. Right. The kids there. I mean, he's hugging a secret service agent. You have one side of the aisle that is erupting in applause because of the moment that that kid's having. Because President Trump made that moment happen for him. The other side is sitting there. They're not doing anything.
It's an absence of... This isn't partisanship. It's an absence of humanity. It is. It's like, what's wrong? That's an actual defect as a person. It is. A deep emotional and psychological defect. If you cannot give a round of... To this child right here, if you can't applaud for that, if you can't applaud for that moment...
What's wrong with you? What are you doing? And this is like I come back to myself in 2009 when we're sitting with a bunch of United States senators and we say, I know we're in a tough economic time. There's going to be a factory worker in this audience who has had a rough time. And it is because of the policies of this federal government. And the president's going to talk about ways we need to change that because of that person. You cannot.
be the person who's just sitting on your hands. You got to look at the humanity of that situation and understand that whether or not you agree with the president's prescription for solving it, you can definitely agree with the problem. You definitely have to understand the problem. And this wasn't even that complicated. This is just a kid with cancer who wants to be a cop. And they couldn't figure that out. They couldn't. I mean, you want to talk about a rudderless...
morally bankrupt party. This is what that looks like. That's why this could be the end of the damn crap party. This is not like a hyperbolic clickbait kind of idea. When you see that, that's a deep fundamental issue. A deep, deep fundamental. He's broken their brains so much they
They would rather hate one man than love 330 million Americans. That's it. Dude, that's it right there. That is just – it's something. Well, it turns out the American people have a perspective on that. Graphic one, if you don't mind. Well, shit. Noted conservative outlet CBS News.
finds that 76% of the American people approve of that speech. I can understand it, and I've seen some polls that dig deeper into the specifics of it. Time after time after time, he's coming up roses on this thing. And Democrats, man, they just lost their way. I'll tell you, it wasn't just Democrats. It was also several writers at The Washington Post and The New York Times because while Americans approved of this at 76%,
There's a Washington Post headline that says, quote, we're doomed. Nine columnists on Trump's address to Congress in The New York Times. Quote, it was 90 plus minutes of bad moments. Nine opinion writers on Trump's address. It's incredible. Think about that. So out of touch. It's just unbelievable. We've got a full menu of media react to all of this and what we think it means right after this.
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Tell Republican senators stop Dick Durbin's government takeover of your credit card before it's too late. Learn more at www.guardyourcard.com. So never missing a moment, the media has decided to be clown themselves once again. And you've got a little tease from Ashbrook about the opinion writers, the Washington Post and the New York Times, which, um,
I don't know what country they're living in or what planet they're on, but they have a take that I honestly don't even know how you can get to. I was told that the Washington Post opinion writers would be writing about freedom. Economic freedom. Right, exactly. Apparently the guy who owns the joint doesn't have say over what it is that they do. Maybe it starts in April. Yeah, maybe that's right. Maybe there's an April one. Yeah.
There's a Q1 deadline for finding their senses. Well, if you ever want to go anywhere and have a good time for yourself or just see the worst humans on Earth, flip on over to MSNBC and we've got plenty for you. They'll deliver. Clip five, please. Spaghetts.
And I let myself feel joy about DJ and I hope he's alive for another, you know, 95 years, right? And I hope he lives the life he wants to live. He wants to be a cop. He knows what he wants to do. And maybe when you have childhood cancer that crystallizes for you. And I hope he has a long life as a law enforcement officer. But I hope he never has to defend the United States Capitol against Donald Trump supporters. And if he does...
I hope he isn't one of the six who loses his life to suicide. And I hope he isn't one who has to testify against the people who carried out acts of seditious conspiracy and then live to see Donald Trump pardon those people. What?
You know, first of all, I don't know if you guys noticed within the clip. I let myself feel joy for DJ. Well, she's, she's, yeah, she let herself feel joy. And like, she started in and then they, they do the wide shot. That's what I was going to say. Can we play that on like a mute? When you see, when you see Saki. Yeah. And pause it on, who was that? Steel? Steel and Saki. Right. So these, these people like make a living out of saying absolutely reprehensible things.
But, like, you know, Maddow's like, where is this going? Look at her face. She's like, where is this going? And all of a sudden the pivot happens right here. And then all of a sudden she goes to a wider shot. Hold that. Hold that. Stop that right there. Oh, man. Anytime Jen Psaki is like, oh, shit, I'm going to hate being on this panel right now.
And then you see Steele just staring straight down at the ground. Like, imagine what it would take to get those people uncomfortable. They're like, there's no way she says, I hope the child with cancer doesn't commit suicide. Like, what? Why are you thinking about a poor kid with cancer killing himself? Like...
What level? Like, this is beyond Trump's arrangement. This is like severe mental health crisis right here. He went through several make-a-wish type situations that were all very uplifting. One more that he could add next time around is a reverse make-a-wish where he says, MSNBC in the gallery behind me, very dishonest.
Tonight, I am revoking their press pass to everything at the White House. It would have had a huge applause. Yeah, it would have. Yeah, because not to be outdone, Matto was like, I can see that. I'll see that. We'll raise you one clip six.
For the record, and this is disgusting, the president made a spectacle out of praising a young man who thus far survived pediatric cancer. As if the president had something to do with that. This was in the midst of him praising Doge. Doge cuts, among other things, have cut off funding for ongoing research into pediatric cancer. I mean...
It's just not true. These people are so dishonest. It is so bad. It's so dishonest. And it wasn't about anything other than a young man fulfilling his dream on the biggest stage America can provide. A moment that everyone should just have pure joy in and Rachel Manow finds disgusting. Partisanship is a hell of a drug, guys.
It's a hard, I mean, you know, they say heroin's tough, you know, and I've heard a lot about the opioid epidemic. I'm not sure that it beats partisanship. There is nothing that ruins a human mind worse than that. So I lost a family member to childhood cancer, to leukemia. And if you can't have the baseline humanity-
I mean, as a person, let alone someone who's on TV and knows you have, I mean, daily their audience gets smaller and smaller, but anyone listening, to have any kind of a take like that, like what's wrong with these people? What's wrong with you? Yeah.
So that's just a couple of highlights and lowlights from what we saw. But we highlighted all this stuff, not because we're like the, you know, the first to market on what was Tuesday night's speech, but because these are the things that we think are going to have a lasting impact. And if you're talking about the news of the week that was this week, the first week of March 2025, these are the things.
Make no mistake. There is a fundamental change at this point where Democrats are not a serious party. And you can try to mask that through the media. You can try to pretend that nine columnists saw it differently. You can talk about a Zelensky meeting on Friday that you thought lacked decorum. Or you can talk about trade policy or tariffs or what have you. It will not change.
ever compete with 60 plus million people watching their behavior and how they handled these stories it just won't no it just won't so i know you've got a lot of favorite lines from the speech we only just like scratched the surface this sucker was two hours yeah and by the way i didn't want it to end no i felt i felt it's the first one in a long time where i've been like what else do we got when it felt like he was wrapping up i checked the clock and i was like no way it's
11? Yeah. It really flew. The fastest 20 minutes of my life. I did too. So there's a lot of favorite lines. Our question of the day to all of you is what's your favorite line of the speech? Maybe it's a policy. Maybe it's something that we have a lot in there too that we didn't discuss today. But your favorite stuff.
Get to all those. You got to like and subscribe on the YouTube in order to do it. When you do, we'll read them next week and we'll get to all that. We will also get to your comments from Tuesday's episode right after this.
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All right. So you recall that on Tuesday, we did a little preview of the State of the Union where we thought the president would do what he did. Basically, it was talk about the accomplishments of the first six weeks, essentially, of this administration. And we had a top five list. And we asked you to add to it. To do that, we always start with a voice. OK. First comment comes from Nanku.
And Nanku writes, any one of those top five wins could easily be number one. And there are other great things that he's done, like opening up the drilling, attempting to stop the woke agenda in public schools. Good luck with that one. And getting out of the climate agreements like Paris. But I think Trump's greatest overall accomplishment has been psychological. Hmm.
He has always been about the art of the deal, but now he has convinced us that the art of the possible when it comes to government. That's great. All our lives we heard you can't fight City Hall and we saw corruption, at least some of it, but knew we ultimately couldn't do anything about it. For the first time, we are seeing real change.
and at breathtaking speed. God bless President Trump for giving us true hope and optimism about our government. That's Nancy from Orange County, California. What a well-put comment, Nancy. That's absolutely right. Well, that's duffel. Yeah, we've said, we've commented on that kind of thing. Our listeners, man. Yeah. Yeah, that's good. Man, you smart lady. Smart lady there in Orange County. Sorry you have to live in California, but Orange County, if you've got to live somewhere, it's as good as it gets. Yeah, might as well.
All right, comment two, Smoke. This one comes from Suzanne Farrell. Suzanne writes, the hostages he's gotten released, not just the ones in the Middle East, but the men from Russia. And the six Rick Grinnell got released from Venezuela. I had no idea they were down there and that there are at least six more down there. That's another thing is how quickly...
He's accomplished this. And the example of like the gentleman from Russia that he freed, right? Yeah, Mark Fogle. And then you compare that to, what was the name of the basketball player lady that Biden- Brittany Griner. Brittany Griner that Biden traded the merchant of death, the world's number one illegal arms dealer, who's, as the Wall Street Journal reported last week, back in business and selling weapons to like Hamas. Yes!
Jesus. I mean, it's just they're so bad. They're so thank God we have changed administrations because it is it shows you what was said here in these last two comments. What's possible? Bingo. Right. Comment three is from Linda Landcott. Land taught. Great, great comment here. I truly believe that one of his greatest accomplishments has been the change in attitude within the United States.
He's brought hope to us all. We're willing to suffer through a little pain that might come from implementing these policies in the short run to gain a long run tremendously by the implementation of the fantastic directional policies. He and his crew are legendary. Every day is like watching the Avengers. I'm riveted. Yeah, man. I mean, it looks so far so good. Linda, I mean, you're right. So far so good. It's been really fun to watch. All right. I want you to know, fellas, that I did not.
procure this particular so this is the home segment i didn't do it i didn't do it but the new york post reported and we have a dutiful journalistic imperative shall we say to bring this kind of news to the american people they need to know about this kind of thing someone has painted a giant penis on the roof of an elementary school and authorities are scrambling to cover it up
I want to put graphic two up for our YouTube viewers. There it is. There it is. It is gigantic. And that in and of itself is absolutely hilarious. The writing in this story simply must be fully discussed. I mean, it's the New York Post article.
doing what the New York Post does best. It's just so good it deserves a moment. So the Germans are involved in yet another battle of the bulge. It begins. Authorities are attempting to cover up a giant penis that was erected on top of a school in Berlin. The doppelwanger has reportedly been painted atop a Free Waldorf school in Kreuzberg district back in 2022.
That's right, a 65-foot-long Titanic tally lacquer. Wait, it was painted three years ago? Yeah, wait, you'll get to how hilarious that is.
The Titanic tallywhacker is so big that it's visible on Google Maps. That's the thing. So if you're like a parent trying to get directions to your kid's school, that's popping up. They're like, hey, do you guys have any idea where the school play is at? And you're like, yeah, I think it's in this general vicinity. You're like, oh, it's the one with the giant dick on the top. Yeah, that's the one. Whether this magnum opus...
was the work of street artists or students. Oh, come on, man. Dongatello, perhaps. This guy was like really accurate. The kids who painted this are in high school now. And they're legends in their neighborhood. Dongatello. Everybody's talking about it. It's yet unclear. Dongatello. The doppelwanger.
has reportedly been painted atop the Free Waldorf School since 2022. However, authorities have attempted to paint over the edges in a half-baked attempt to try to cut the schlong story short. Alas, the shape of the sex organ remains discernible on the roof of the Waldorf School, which specializes in education developed in the 1900s by Austrian social reformer Rudolf Steiner. So, like...
What's happened here is that somebody painted this thing and then they let it, like no one knew it was there for a couple years. And then when they found out it was there, they were like, oh man, we got to paint over this, obviously. And then they painted over it, but the sun had sort of bleached it in. So there's nothing they can do. The school is just a permanent prick.
This is also, like, so symbolic of what has become of Germany. Like, this country, like...
For so long, after the Berlin Wall came down, you saw it went through a period of becoming this great industrial giant, and they were able to accomplish things and build things. And now they've become so weak. They can't accomplish anything. Their government is like crime is skyrocketing in Germany. They can't get anything done. Like President Trump pointed out in his speech to Congress yesterday,
They spend more money buying oil from Russia than they're sending to Ukraine. Talk about an ass backwards country. And then they can't even paint over this thing. They can't even get the dick off the schools.
Anyway, that's worth highlighting for many reasons, not the least of which is inspired writing. Yeah. Congratulations to the New York Post on that one. New York Post. You and all your editors. Fantastic. You know, it's the kind of story that if you turn into your editor at the New York Post, he's like, son, you've come to the right place. You've clearly hired the right person. Totally. Okay. So with all that, we have to get on to our distinguished guest, fellas. Senator Tommy Tuberville, the coach.
Well, sometimes when you're talking common sense and, you know, what's happening around, you want to bring an old ball coach in for something like that. Here's a guy who is a good friend of the program. You've been here a few times, but it turns out you're like a policymaker and stuff. I mean, it's all kinds of different stuff you got going on. Senator Tommy Tuberville, how are you, sir? I'm doing good. Thanks for having me on. Hey, you guys come a long way.
It's a difference. You've got a sign behind you now. That means you've made it. I know. We've tried to improve the aesthetic a little bit. We've got important people coming in here. So, look, our view, this is a pretty seminal week in a lot of different ways. I thought the president did a nice job in the State of the Union, State of the Union, which we still call it.
thought Democrats beclowned themselves in a way that couldn't actually, like we couldn't, it's hard to actually put in words how bad their reaction to all of it was. You were in the chamber. What were your thoughts? Well, we knew it was coming. They've acted like clowns since I've been up here for four years. I mean, my God, what Joe Biden and the Democrats did to this country just spent $7 trillion that we shouldn't have spent. That's the reason we're in such a bind right now.
But, you know, I would always sit around and think, you know, what win has –
have they had since I've been here? I said, this is miserable. And they haven't, they didn't have a win. Not one good thing for the American people. Now they won for themselves because what they want is power. It's all they want. They pushing this climate hoax and all this nonsense, but it's amazing. They can like create an industry and fund it. LBGTQ, whatever all that stuff is. I mean, they, all they do is try to create a voting base and,
And it's, you know, I had my bill on the floor for the third time on Monday. Yeah. No biological men or boys playing against women. Now, President Trump did an executive order, but we have to make it law to make it last forever. Yeah. Mm hmm.
They voted against it. Every damn one of them voted against it. And you look at them, I know you've got a daughter. I know you've got granddaughters. Why in the world would you vote against this? It blows my mind. It's a 90-10 issue. I don't understand why every single one of them is on the 10% side. And they don't either. The problem is, you know, if you're the leader of the Senate, and if I'm the leader of that bunch, and after I'd put up with this for decades,
and just saw President Trump run him out of the stadium, you know, November the 5th, I'd say, you know, let's look at the two or three issues we've got to get off our plate here. Such a good one. We've been saying this forever. You'd think that there would be a moment where they would say, maybe we headed in the wrong direction on something. And they knew we were going to get 53 votes in the Senate from the Republicans. I just said, listen, here's the deal. Those of you that are up for election in two years,
I want you to vote for this. Let's get it off the plate. You might not believe in it or really want to do it, but I'm tired of hearing about it and they're going to use it against us every day
Not one of them voted for it. And that just shows you they have zero leadership over there. They have no game plan. All they want to do is try to trick people into thinking that they're for them, and they are just the opposite. I mean, they're Marxists. They're not Americans. They don't believe in a constitutional republic. They don't believe in anything that helps their American people. They want to control the American people, and it ain't working. Well, that's what became so apparent to us last night in some of the stories that President Trump
highlighted, which, you know, you look at the young woman who was injured, obviously the volleyball player by a man who spiked a ball on her face, she had brain injuries as a result of that. And you think just a basic humanity, you see that situation, but
You'd applaud her survivor mentality. You would applaud what she's gone through and understand this is a problem. And you would just show some basic humanity in the moment, not a single one of them. They hate Donald Trump so much because of what he stands for. They're not going to give an ounce of sympathy for anything. They refuse to do it. And it's costing them every day. I don't think...
Surely there's one or two of them over there, I think, all the time. Are they smart enough to understand they're running in front of a bus here and they're going to get run over and they're going to get up again and they're going to turn around and come back and they're going to get run over again? It makes no sense. I'm a four-year politician and every day it just amazes me, the stupidity of people. It's hard to understand, but
We got the ball in our court. They had it for four years. Now we're playing offense, and they're getting ready to get their tails beat. Shoes on the other foot, for sure. I mean, you spent a lot of time in college athletics. You've seen how this has sort of affected the entire landscape, obviously why you authored the bill and why you've talked about this just about every day that I can remember. Yeah.
You know, the executive order goes a long way. We do need to make this into law. I mean, do you think the NCAA sort of did a little reorganization on it? At least they addressed it for the first time. About that much. Yeah. About that much. They don't want to make a decision on anything, guys. Right. That's the reason we're in trouble with this NIL. Yeah, right. We can get into that. I want to get into that in a minute. But you're right. I mean, they don't want to make a decision on any of this stuff.
And so all of this just kind of gets pushed on further down the road where it's, that's a political issue for somebody else to sort of figure out. Meanwhile, you've got girls continuing to struggle competing against men. I got that story last night. We'll beat the record of some race by five hours. I mean, what are we doing? Weightlifting. He could have gone through a whole list of them. Yeah. And it's, it's, it's obscene. That's what it is. And it's unfair and it's, and it's unsafe. The little girl that got hit, uh,
Y'all did probably see that. Yeah. You know, she gets hit in the head with a guy who just spikes the ball and drilled her. Down she goes. She's struggled ever since mentally, you know, with her brain injury. And...
They don't care. Not one of them stood up when she was introduced. I don't care if you believe in it or not, but here's a young lady that has been struggling for over a year just trying to make it in life. You think they care? No, it's about them. It's all about the Democrats. And I would, I'd love to be able to say, you know, hey, at least half of them stood up or whatever. No one. No.
not one, because I guess they were given orders to sit in your seat, look at your phone, hold up your signs, your stupid signs, and let's just play stupid again for another couple hours and let people know that we're going to continue on this clown show. And some of them were pretty rowdy out of the gate. I talked to one of your colleagues who was sitting there, and he said it was almost hard to hear what the president was saying with those guys shouting on the other side, because the room's
a lot smaller than people think. You know, everybody watching this show, they don't really have a concept of how tight that is. And everybody's kind of on top of each other. So if somebody's yelling, it's hard to hear. But they were really interrupting him early. They got the one Al Green or whatever his name is. With the cane? Yeah, with the cane. And that was all orchestrated. You know, he sat in a place right in the middle and he called him a liar. And, you know, you're cutting Social Security and all these things. Which is hilarious. I mean, like, where do you even come up with it?
with it. It's like literally made up out of whole cloth. You and your colleagues have to be sitting there like, man, I like to think we're doing some things that are right, but they're killing themselves. In four years, they overspent $7 trillion. Yeah.
Guys, we are dead broke. Our country's in so much trouble. And our only chance was to get somebody like Trump and Elon doing what they're doing. We had, I mean, if we'd have got another Republican that would just
OK, just been a normal president. It'd be over. Yeah. Even a Republican Democrat would have been a disaster. But somebody that said, oh, go in there. I want to make sure I get elected in four more years. And, you know, you know, true politician. Yeah, this required radical change. But Trump says, hey, this is it. Yeah. It's either get it done now or.
it'll burn to the ground and we'll have to build it back. You know, not one democracy has ever made it 250 years, and we make it 250 a year from July the 4th. That'll be a great time. I like our chances with this guy at the helm. Yeah. But I'm not sure I would if it went the other way. Well, how many people would make a decision, that's going to hurt you and it's going to hurt everybody,
It's going to hurt farmers. It's going to hurt small businesses. These tariffs are going to hurt for a while, but it's got to be done. I mean, we got to have a little bit of pain before we can start working it back. And it's like cutting workers and doing the things that we need to do to build a business back. We are way over bloated with employees. This town, oh, my God. Yeah, D.C. I mean, you know, nobody was working, number one, but we had just –
of workers that they had put into place just to get votes. At the end of the day, that's what it was about. Yeah, they create industries and then they fund them. And it's just one. We've always joked every Democratic administration looks like the previous one because they're all the same people. And none of them leave. They just go work for some paper shuffling think tank down the road funded by George Soros and sit there for a while. That's on both sides now. Democrats are bad, but we
We've got Republicans that they stay up for a while and then they decide they're going to go make some money and they get in the lobbying business because they know they have friends back and they call whoever and say, listen, I need you to meet with this group. That's all lobbyists do. They just get you a seat at the table with somebody that might have some pull. But things have to change in fundraising.
I mean, it's way out of control. Pax. Yeah. You know, the money that you raise and how you spend it. And again, I'm involved in that. Yeah. I mean, you have to go out and raise money. Yeah. And it costs a lot of money. Yeah. There was a race. Well, Herschel Walker's race was $300 million. That's wild, right? For a position that pays $174,000. Yeah. Yeah. We're a little bit bass-ackwards here. Yeah.
No question about it. I want to get back to the college stuff for a minute because I know you've been in conversations for a long time about nil and about college athletics and this new iteration of transfer portals and nil windows and all that. And there's been a lot of talk on Capitol Hill about, you know, do you do something about that? Is the federal government...
in position to set down some guidelines what does that look like I know you've had some points of view on that yeah Joe Manchin and I did a bill for two years and it wasn't ours we sat down with presidents and ADs NCAA players and
We worked it out. It was a pretty good bill. Unfortunately, Chuck Schumer had the floor because they were in charge. And unless we put unionization in it, it was a no-go. Is that right? Oh, yeah. That was really it? It was just unionizing the players or nothing? Yeah. That's what they're all about. Yeah, they cared a lot. What is that? I didn't realize that. Cared a lot about the athlete. That's about voters. That's about voters. Yeah.
And so can you imagine 18-year-olds unionizing? First of all, we've gotten away from the education. There's no education to this anymore. It's all about players making money. And let me say this. I coached a long time, and I don't mind players making money. I really don't, but I think all of them should make some. Some quarterbacks are making $7 million, and the center's making $25,000. It's a little off. Isn't it balanced? It's balanced.
They want us to do something. I've spent hours with Saban and all the guys that I stayed in the business with forever.
We can't help. We can't. I mean, there's no way we can really help. That's the reason we had the NCAA. And the problem with NCAA is they can't control football. It seems like it. Yeah, they don't make any money off of it, number one. They make all their money off basketball tournament. The conferences are really driving that. And so you heard a while ago, President Trump did the executive order on women's sports, right? Well, they make a ruling that...
kind of pacified our president, but didn't me because I read between the lines. And if you read it, players, biological men and biological boys, can be on the team, can practice, can shower, can dress with women. They can't compete. Oh, I didn't miss. I missed that. Yeah, I did. So.
What is it they're doing? Why do they do that? They don't want lawsuits. And you've got to give it to them. They've fought more lawsuits, and there's more coming. What's going to happen next is there's no eligibility rules out there. You can play forever in college. Yeah, notice. I mean, there's guys playing until you're 15. Well, the kid at Vanderbilt. Yeah. Right, exactly. It seems like forever. Juco for two years, and then he comes and plays for two years in college.
in big boys league and he said well those other two years back okay we'll give them back to you so but i'd love to be able to help them it's going to be so hard yeah to do it it seems like it and there's a lot of your old colleagues who decided you know saban's being one of them
Matt Brown, you look at the Virginia basketball coach Bennett, the Villanova basketball coach. I mean, everybody sort of has the same story on the way out. They're like, this isn't what I do anymore. You can't build a team. It's not about relationships. It's not about education. Or development. The players are running the teams now. You holler at me, I'll find a place to get the same amount of money somewhere else. Yeah.
That's tough. For the life of me. And I didn't coach during all the transfer portals and all that. For the life of me, why do you have a transfer portal?
I understand after the season, but then you go through spring practice and you have another one. And you open it up again. Why would you do that? I know there's a player last year that transferred from a team. He went to another team for $500,000, got paid, went through spring practice, didn't like it, quit, and went back to the team he transferred from. Well, there's one guy. The Iowa kid, wasn't it?
Yeah, right. There's one guy running towards college football, and there's been a lot of talk about how well he's going to do this year at Bill Belichick at North Carolina. I wonder if you have any thoughts on whether you think he'll succeed with the Tar Heels. He's proven he's a good coach. Yeah. But if this works –
I'd be shocked. Okay, you're an athletic director. You go out and you hire a young guy and pay him a million dollars a year. You take that other eight million that you was going to pay somebody like Bill Belichick and go buy you players. Players win games. Coaches ain't going to win a game. They're going to lose one, but they're not going to win games. You can't build a program anymore. Bill Belichick, Nick Saban, myself, we were all came up through the knowledge of
This is how you build a team. You go recruit. You bring them in. Develop. Develop players. Work the heck out of them. Beat people in the fourth quarter. That's how I did it. And they're always going to play hard for you. I mean, now it's minor league sports. And so what you're going to end up having is you're going to have all these teams, which, what, at the end of the day,
1AA, and I call them 1AA, Division II and all that, you've probably got 300 or so. And you're going to end up with three divisions. You're going to have the bottom 100 that just maybe get a scholarship. Then you're going to have the scholarship group of the middle group of the 100. Then you're going to have the boys that are going to get paid. What's going to happen? Yeah. The only way around it. Man, and they all got GMs now.
I mean, that's the other thing that I find fascinating, right? You've got the athletic director. You've got a head coach. Notre Dame just hired a general manager from Detroit Lions. You've got GMs. I mean, it is professional. And we spent, for all my years, there wasn't a week go by I didn't talk to our players about drugs, about gambling, because gambling is a big problem. You don't think we don't have a gambling problem now? Oh, it's out of control. But they don't want to catch it.
So you got the drugs, the gambling, and all the things that surround, you know, the things, agents. Yeah. You know, hey, don't talk to agents. Now they got guys come off the street and say, listen, I can get you $25,000 more than another school. He's not registered. You don't know who he is. Most of the time lying to the athlete. There's no...
to what they're doing now. We can't keep this up. It'll ruin it all. It breaks down the relationship between the coach and the player, and that makes a difference in a game. Yeah. Yeah. That's brutal. And what I hear is he sounds sort of fatalistic about the ability to actually put in any sort of governing. But we talked about earlier, the NFL,
Back in the 60s, Congress gave them antitrust, which they could be a monopoly. So what they did, NFL and AFL all came together, and they did one TV right for everybody. Well, now they make $300 million or $400 million a team a year. Now, if they're going to make it in college, they're going to have to do the same. All of them are going to have to come together, and then they'll have two or three spokesmen and –
Have a revenue. And they all come in, you know, the TV said, okay, we'll give you this or that. They would triple the,
their TV revenue. They'd go from 4 billion to 10, 12, 14, 15 billion overnight, and then you'd have more money. That's where the money's at. And that's really the only way they're going to be able to do that. You want a part-time job running the NCAA or at least one of these conferences? Because it seems like the guy's got some good ideas. Well, when you spend 40 years looking at the good and the bad and the ugly, because I've seen it all, but I couldn't do it in this day and time. I could not. Too frustrating. Yeah, it's just frustrating to
You can't build a team. You just got to buy one and hope you buy the right ones. And if you don't, you know, things aren't good. Yeah, man. Well, we got maybe one more piece of business and a couple of things we want to get to.
Look, a lot of big things on the horizon. Obviously, the whole reconciliation process that carries much of the Trump agenda. And it's going to be tricky, although I feel like in the Senate, and you tell me your perspective, but it seems like you've got a lot more consolidation within that conference and unity about a purpose here in terms of getting tax deals done and getting what we need to do and energy and the border and everything else. You optimistic about all that? Yeah, we got a chance to do it right. Yeah.
Problem is you got the house and the Senate. Yeah. Now the house passed something. Now to me, it's not enough tax. It's not enough cuts, but we have to get the tax bill redone because if not next year, everybody will pay at least a thousand dollars more a month in taxes. We can't afford that. We'll, you know, the Democrats, they're licking their chops because they'll move right back in. That sounds great for them. Yeah. Oh yeah. Yeah. So, so we're doing it and, but we got the debt limit coming up in the next week. Yeah. And, and,
Are we going to shut the government down? Yeah. If we do, it'd be because of the Democrats, but who's going to get to blame? Yeah. We are. Yeah. And so we got to get something done. The House has done something. We've done something. I think at the end of the day, we'll see us merge and leadership will hopefully get us out of this mess and pick the best of both worlds. Well, and it's where it's helpful to have President Trump and his leadership, too. I mean, there's a...
sort of a unifying message at the top here that, you know, it's tough to do when you don't have a president in your own party. Yeah. And the president, I will say this,
You hear all the Democrats talk about this is for the billionaires. President Trump is standing up for the middle class. It's exactly what he's doing. He cares less about corporations. They're going to get their tax break. Billionaires, they're going to make their money no matter what happens. We do not have much of a middle class left because the Democrats about destroyed it. We about lost all of our farms. I mean, they just run them out of business because of regulations and the input costs.
But we have got to save the working man.
And there's two things that President Trump knows he has to get done. He's got to cut spending and he's got to grow the country, get manufacturing back. If we don't do those two things, the rest of it makes no difference. So we've got to build a bigger tax base. I think we get about $5 trillion a year sent in from people across the country, but we spend $7 trillion. We can't do that anymore. Right.
It's over. Well, every time we've cut taxes, we end up with more revenue because the country grows. Exactly. You cannot explain that to a Democrat. Isn't that amazing? It's an amazing concept that happens each and every time, and they still look at you like...
Wait a minute, they cut taxes. That means we don't have as much coming in. These people, I mean, you can't explain common sense. The intentional stupidity of it. We got more people working. We got more people paying in. That's how we're getting more money, you know? Well, I mean, look, I can sense the frustration of dealing with Democrats. Lord, you know, bless you for even trying. A lot of people want you to come home and run for governor. Are you getting that? Any thought? Well, here's what happened.
that's what I was gonna do at the beginning. And then we had a governor that was impeached, Kay Ivey moved in, our Lieutenant Governor, and I said, you know, I'm not gonna do that. So I see we got Doug Jones up here as a Democrat, and I said, you know, I can beat that guy. So I worked my tail off for about a year and a half campaigning seven stops a day all over the state.
because I knew I had to get the Alabama people to vote for me. My wife says, how are you going to get those voters? You stuck your thumb in their face every day for 15 years. Tough to scream war eagle. Yeah. But I win. And now Kay Ivey's going out and all that same groups want me to run for governor. I'm liking it here. Uh, I like representing Alabama. Uh, I don't have to make my mind up for months anyway, because you can't even start raising money till summer. But, uh,
I'll decide, but I'll tell you, it's a lot better now. My God. It's a lot better. I mean, it ain't even close. I mean, they kick you in the teeth, and they turn you over and kick you again. I mean, that's how it was. I know it. I've never seen anything like it, but they had it all. And then we had a...
guy at present that didn't know what day it was and we all knew he wasn't running the show. Except he'd read in the newspaper that he was doing mental gymnastics behind closed doors every day. And the media covered for him. That's one of our biggest problems. If the media was non-biased and just called balls and strikes like they should, I mean, we'd be so much better off. Yeah, we would. We probably wouldn't have the Ruthless Variety Program though, probably not. Mainstream media.
It is. They've lost it. You've got a few cable shows now that are pretty good, but CNN, I mean, they've got to be leaking oil bad. Yeah, it sure seems like it. No question. They're just no fun. But it's helped you all. Yeah, it has. My son told me,
About a year and a half ago, I was the first senator to come out for President Trump. And I said, you're crazy. You can't win. I said, you wait and see. And then he said, listen, Dad, you need to start listening to RFK. You need to start listening to Elon Musk, what they're saying on podcasts. Joe Rogan, Ruthless. All you guys, because y'all tell it like it is, but you explain it and people listen to it. They don't do it on two minutes of mainstream TV. They just...
No, they don't really care. And people know we have a point of view. We don't hide that from anybody. And you watch mainstream news, and they pretend like they're unbiased, but everybody knows they are. Yeah, the topic selection. As long as you tell people the truth. And, you know, we have all these nominations, and I tell all these nominees, listen, NIH director today, I told him, listen,
Fauci ruined trust in this country when it comes to medical because of COVID. And the first thing you got to do is get a good team and build trust back with American people. Absolutely. We got these biolabs all over the world that we fund that people are going, why in the hell do we fund these biolabs in Ukraine? They got eight over there, eight or ten, and their bombs are flying everywhere. And they got germs in these things. I mean, you can't.
I mean, it just, it's, it's good advice. I hope he takes it. No. Yeah. Well, I hope he takes it too. He will. So you brought us a little memento here. Some Vulcan gin. Turns out it's a home hometown product. Yeah. I've drank all the vodka. So we didn't have vodka in it to bring you, but that's Charles Barkley. Yeah. He started at five, six. Friend of yours. Yeah. Good friend. Big Auburn guy comes a lot of the football games, basketball games, uh,
when I first got to Auburn, they, you know, I'd play in a,
in a pro-am or something. He was playing with Barkley. After playing with that swing for about a year or so, they'd ask me, Coach, we need you to play in this tournament. I'll play as long as I'm not having to play with Charles. But now, golf swing's good. Oh, is it really? Oh, yeah, he's gotten better. He's worked at it. Got some lessons? Yeah. He plays in enough pro-ams. Yeah, golf swing's better. Lost a little weight. Well, maybe a little bit.
Maybe a little bit. What a great personality that guy's got. Unbelievable. Yeah, he's a real entertainer. Yeah. Well, one of the great things about you and your career from sports to here is the relationships that you've made, the things that you've been able to do, the concepts of all the things we're talking about relate it back to just
normal, everyday conversation. We live in the greatest country on the face of the earth. Not close. And I've had the chance to travel around the world several times in the last few years being in politics. Can't wait to get home. People don't realize what's happened to Europe. Europe's gone. They've lost Europe. Why? Immigration. And that's the reason. That's what they were trying to do here. The globalists were trying to overrun us here. And thank God President Trump got in. We got Holman and
and New Homeland Security Group. First of all, you've got to stop them. I have even people from my constituents in Alabama, we've got them all over, and they're not working fast enough. And I tell them, listen, we've got to stop them coming in first. We've got to get the wall. We've got to get all the technology done.
They will go home. I promise you. We only do one thing at a time. But unfortunately, it's going to cost us billions of dollars of what the Biden administration did to this country through immigration. No question about it. But we're heading in the right direction. Thanks to President Trump, your leadership, Senator. Thank you so much for coming in here. Thank you. It's always a pleasure to see you. Keep us updated on everything. Well, NIL is going to be interesting because we're going to make a big push. I'd love to be able to help.
I tell my buddies, you don't want the federal government involved. But if we get involved, it ain't a rule. It's a law. But I just don't think we can pull it off with everything that the Democrats want to do through this. Yeah. Well, if we can, I think you're the one to do it. So thanks so much for joining us. Thank you. Until next time. Thank you.
Man, that guy is just so fantastic. I mean, every time you hear him talk, the libs lose their minds, and that's how you know he's over the target. Yeah, it's so true. He's shown up with a very specific idea of what it is that he wanted to do. He's become very popular. Yeah, I mean, the issue of getting men out of women's sports is like an 80-20 issue. It's a good one to fight on. It is a good one to fight on.
We're going to follow up with him, and undoubtedly our conversations continue. At some point, he's going to get a jacket. I think this is like three times that he's been on. Yeah, that's right. We're going to start passing out a lot of jackets around here, Wolf. I hope we got a tailor on the ready.
Anyway, with that, fellas, I think we've done it. I think so. Absolute banger of an episode. Gentlemen, thank you so much, Senator Toberville. And thank you so much to our dear listeners. Remember, if you have not yet, go to our YouTube, hit that subscribe button. More fun and video. So until next time, minions, keep the faith, hold the line and own the libs. We'll see you Tuesday. Stay ruthless.