[Music]
Now, it's Red Eye Radio, Gary McNamara, and Eric Hurley,
“talk about everything from politics to social issues and news of the day,”
whether you're up late or you're just starting your day. Welcome to the show from the Relief Factor Studios. This is Red Eye Radio. All across America, we are Red Eye Radio. Eric Hurley and I'm Gary McNamara.
Or the live golf is saying that... That's how many months did they have?
Yeah, yeah, it's a great point, but I've never,
and we were just talking about a little bit that live golf announced that all the funding stops and see how much they've... They...is estimated they've lost six billion dollars. Wow. Wow.
I never understood the business model. Never understood it. You know what's interesting is, I look at... Because they... Often these sovereign wealth funds will get into...
Oh, they always do. Get into different types of investment. In fact, the paramount plus move to buy Warner Brothers is backed in part by sovereign wealth funds. So they see the trend there, right?
Streaming contents.
Jared Kushner actually is also part of that group.
But when you look at...
“When I were talking about it, I think we've talked about it on the air,”
but during the top of the hour we were talking about it. Of the air, and it's... You're talking about a game that you cannot... You cannot assimilate the golf culture. You know what I mean?
The golf has its own culture. I think every sport does, but... But there was no... I didn't see how this was ever going to work with live. There was...
I was kind of open-minded about it. I thought, well, or I had a question. Well, am I just being, you know, ignorant here? Is it that they could actually... Could it really take off in parts of the world where it really has it?
I mean, if you look at Europe... Certainly there. But in the States, I mean, if you look at the PGA, there is something, and you made the point about the masters. About...
And there's a culture surrounding the masters of... You know, it's... I don't know, it's prestige. Well, you have also the fact that it is... No, I won't say it's a purely American game because it's not, but it's...
It has its own culture. If you take the four majors that exist out there, which are the masters, the PGA championship, the US Open and the British Open. Yeah.
The ones that really drive the audiences in the United States and Europe combined are the masters and the British Open. The British Open is... Now, if you're a golfer... And I'm going to go for my whole life.
Not as much as I wanted to lately, because a stupid show gets in the way. Yeah, thanks a lot, listeners. Work and stuff. Oh, alright. I shouldn't just blame that.
Age gets in the way. Well, maybe that too. Maybe. Join skin in the way, and I'm talking about the knees and elbows. Yeah, not the plant substance.
Not the pre-rolls. Right, exactly. But you look at it and those two are built on... The absolute history and tradition of golf. Yes.
And you can go back, and, you know, for example, it's people find it interesting that that...
When I got an email on time saying, "Well, I never thought about it.
You really do go back a lot, long, long way on golf." When I talk about, you know, that in the last century, the greatest team moment was the US-A hockey team. Right. The Soviets.
Yes. Of course it had to be, because that was like... An elementary school beating a college football team. Right.
“That's what it was really like when you consider it.”
And the other one was the US-1912. I keep forgot the year. When Francis, we may win the US Open. And Disney did a movie on it. The greatest game I've ever played.
It's great movie.
I've never seen it. It's really well done. Character development is just really, really great. And where he beat Harry Vardon, and I can't think of the other guy's name to win the US Open.
And he wasn't really, I mean, he wasn't... He wasn't at all in their league whatsoever. But that's based on tradition. You look at the masters, and you go back to Bobby Jones. If you're a golfer, you know who Bobby Jones is.
If you're not a golfer, you're like, "I heard of that guy." You know, somewhere way back, you know, way back when. But you know, you go and you look at the, even, you know, the tradition, the traditions here of the golf tournaments. Here are the Byron Nelson.
Yeah. You look at stuff like that. I mean, that's all based on tradition.
“In the, it's the one sport where I think the history and tradition”
is greater than maybe on the other sport. In Europe and the United States. Right. Right. Okay.
Or North America. I'll say North America because you could include Canada with golfing fans. And all that. So they include us with hockey now. So it's okay.
We'll get to that in just a moment. Hey, I'm Chris Fanfleet. Go behind the scenes and beyond the headlines with the biggest names in pro wrestling and beyond. You could pop up in WWE tomorrow.
Would Serie be there? Or would page be there? Page 100%. So when you're setting up Logan Paul to frog splash you through the announce table, it's going through your mind.
This should make every headline in the world. It makes sense. Right. In Jelly Roll. We knew we had that kind of a moment.
“Mindset, motivation, and what it takes to succeed.”
Insight with Chris Fanfleet. Follow and listen on your favorite platform. A couple of emails I got on on. Believe it or not.
Never thought doing this show.
I get emails on hockey. But I have. Yeah. And so I never understood the business model or the political cultural model. Or goal that they were going after.
Right. Because you heard that in the beginning. Well, they they wish to get into the golfing culture. And this will mainstream them. I'm like, well.
Maybe if you buy an American football team. There might be more talk on it. I never understood what the. I didn't see it as a money making proposition for the money that they were going to spend. Well, that's the thing is that you can't.
Buy the culture. And tradition. And the history assimilating. Might be possible in some cases over the years. I mean, I don't not specifically with golf.
But but if if that were to happen. If there were more involvement. You know, and then all of a sudden it started to naturally develop. But this came in as a major.
Money thing a major and and that's basically how they got the talent.
I mean, the contracts were just over the top. Yeah. Now, one thing it did do is it totally increased the amount of money that American golfers can make. But it's also limited the number of golfers that get. You know, that really can make the the you know, the great money.
But you know, when I when I look at. You know, the the history and tradition aspect of it. There's a debate going on right now inside golf that a lot of people don't know. There's been a couple of golf tournaments.
“I think even the one done in Houston where if you've had an American and somebody who's not an American in the last two and they're fighting for it.”
They're booing the player who was in American and cheering like crazy for the American. American and you're saying, well, what's the big deal? I mean, of course, they're going to cheer for the. But then you don't understand the culture of golf. You don't do that at the masters.
If you noticed, there was no booing. Rory macaroid. None. Right. Because that part of the culture of golf.
Now you get kicked out, but also if you ask the vast majority of those people who attended it or people that really love golf. Whether you should be booing. Well, there's a whole etiquette of golf that comes into it. You don't do that. Right.
In football. Yeah. Boo the day lights out of a hockey, boo the day lights out of them. And then hockey, if you lose the series, you shake hands with them and everything else. Right.
But I mean, that's been in golf. I mean, there's had to bake going on. Should this booing and there's a lot of the traditionalists that look at it and say, wait a minute. Anybody who becomes truly a golf fan.
Not somebody who just picks it up for a couple of years and never does it again.
But if you truly are into watching golf and playing golf, you more likely fall into the tradition of the, of the history of the etiquette of the sport.
You just do.
Right.
“And when I saw, for example, the television broadcast.”
I didn't want to watch it, but I watched it because I do the show and wanted to see where they were going on the television broadcast.
I always, especially that I watched the first couple of years.
I would turn on maybe once every month to see the tournament was going on or every tournament for 10 minutes. Couldn't handle the music being played. Right. When there's music, I don't care whether it's rock music, rap music, whatever. When there's music and it's loud in the guy's pudding, you turn it off.
Yeah. I don't want to see this. Yeah. The leader not the shorts. Hmm.
Even though every one of us wear shorts when we go out, there's a half to indexes. Yeah. There was something about wearing shorts that made it seem not as professional. Yeah. Right.
You know, and you might say, yeah, but it's wrong to have that bias. It might be, but that it exists. Right. Plain only three rounds instead of four. People on a mouth gave you that and said, okay, you're not really serious about golf.
And then the team stuff that they had that they made such a big. We've got these teams. I love golf. I probably have paid more attention to golf than 99% of humans on the planet who aren't basically, you know, in professional golf.
Right. I didn't get the team stuff. I could care less about the team stuff. Hmm. We have team jones playing team.
And then they had, if you've ever watched it, they had like the NASCAR sidebar of all the teams and everybody else. And I'm like, no, I just want, who's leading it? Right. So I want. Yeah.
A little corner of this guy's leading. He's in second place. He's in third place.
“And you have to, you know, the the top six or seven golfers.”
And then every now and then you show, you know, you go through the top 30 golfers in it.
But it was just I never understood where they were going.
I never understood what cultural impact the Saudi wealth fund was trying to make. I never understood the political. I'm maybe I understood what their goal was politically. I didn't see how they would reach it. Well, again, it seemed to be almost like they were trying to prepackage.
They were, they believed that they could build it instantly. Without a simulating tradition. And you, you can't golf is not the sport you do that with. Right. You know, I look at it the same way as I do the.
I don't even know what the what what it's where they've now moved to all smaller stadiums this year. And it's on Fox like like I think night a week and then on the weekend. You'll see it on there. And they've gone to much smaller stadiums like 15 to 30,000 instead of playing in 70,000 stations where it's completely. Or actually stadiums where it's completely empty.
Right. But still when you've a 20,000 seat stadium that's half empty, you can see it.
But I don't understand what the point is, it's always going to be minor league football.
I don't understand. Again, I'm not looking for a cultural or political goal or model there. But on the business. And if at the business model, I don't understand what the hell they're doing. And when you've seen, for example, how minor league baseball has pulled back a few years back.
How many teams were lost at that point? Right. I thought like, okay, this business model isn't working anymore. We just, you know, we can't do it. Well, I mean, it really is a combination of the entertainment money in terms of attendance. And then time, in terms of viewership.
“Because if you look at, and I think a lot of this happened post or during the COVID years.”
But after the COVID years, when we had been shut in for a minute, it was like we were doing nothing. But watching screens, whether we were working from home or watching, you know, whatever. But you were always looking at a screen. And I think people's attention span started to change at that point after we came out of that. And people discovered something called outside.
So they got up in the house. And I think there is something to that. But, but also, it was, I think, inevitable that people would measure, all right. Not just my entertainment dollars, whether I'm subscribing to a streamer or attending an event. It's also my entertainment time. How much time I'm going to spend on anyone. Think, one of the biggest competitor for any form of entertainment is the smartphone.
Yeah.
There was an article, I saw last week, a couple of restaurants are trying this. No phones allowed. By the way, that's not going to work. It's not going to go into the streetway.
That will never go into streetway.
But you are not allowed to, because in one restaurant owner that was doing this, we would rather have them enjoying their food than taking pictures of it.
“Yeah, dude. Do you know what they're doing with the pictures?”
They're sending them to other people and advertising your restaurant for free. But, but the now, just the masters, no cell phones allowed on the course. Right, at all. Right. Because so many people live stream things now. They're social media and you can't have that community. But they were talking about the fact, no, they want they don't want the players disrupted.
They don't want people taking pictures. Right. But I heard a great point that you have the audience that the excuse me, the patrons that are there watching. Yeah.
I must use the correct master's language, that the clapping is louder because they're not holding
on to their cell phones. Right. Oh, my gosh. But I mean, in all forms of entertainment, they're banning phones because they in part because they don't want people, you know, live streaming it or creating a video and then sending it out.
A lot of comedians do that.
“But, but if you think about the biggest competitor with any form of entertainment,”
it's the phone. And in terms of watching entertainment, a lot of people watch entertainment on their phone. But there was a survey that showed like the overwhelming of 60 something percent of people say, while they're watching something streaming on their TV, they're looking at their phone while they're doing it. Like pretty much throughout.
I can't, I can't like it.
But us, you, you and I can't say are we examples of that because I don't know how much I would be on my phone. If I hadn't been in this business for as long as I've been in it because the majority of being on my phone is not entertainment. It's worth work.
Right. Right. But I'm on it all the time. Yes. So I fit that classification work.
I'm watching something on TV.
“It's very rare that I don't have the cell phone in my hand.”
Right. Which means if I'm watching a movie, I've got to rewind again because I keep missing the parts. Right. Yep.
But then I've seen every movie. I think known to mankind. And so many of today's movies don't interest me. So. Exactly.
I'd rather do show. I'd rather work. Yeah. I don't need to see the 112 Spider-Man movie put out in the last nine years. But we are real.
Radio brought to you by FPPF fuel power max owner operators with authority. Really have two options when it comes to sourcing freight. Brokers on the spot market or directly from the source, the shipper. As any trucker with relatively recent experience with spot freight knows, the highs of work in the load boards can be really high.
On the other side of that coin, however, when the market flips and favor of shippers, it can be tough to keep your business afloat working with brokers. The smallest carriers with direct customers, however, can hang on through tough times. For even prosper, as long as demand for their customers' product remains at least somewhat stable.
Owner operators in it for the long haul make direct business with customers a principal goal. Owner operator business 101 is provided by over drives, partners, and business program. Go to overdriveonline.com to the partners in business section of the website for more detail on this and many other topics.
Draw to you by shallotella, with advanced synthetic technology is designed to help keep your rig running, with more mileage and less maintenance. Find open for your goals, 866-90-read-eye on Red Eye Radio. We are Red Eye Radio, and he is her currently an I'm Gary McNamara coming up on the bottom of the hour. I'm going to play just one more audio cut from the California debate the other day, because there's the narrative out there that wait a minute, what's going on. I found great interest in it, because there is you look at California right now, and you see that Gavin Newsom is not, he's not going to be the next president.
His numbers are terrible, people don't want to be California, and it's been coming up some of the narrative. We've got all these Democrats who caused the problem in California. Right. Telling you how they're going to fix the problem, and they're afraid to say anything that might upset anybody else that might not be woke.
The Republicans are out there going, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
It's really interesting.
“We'll have an audio cut to show that coming up.”
You're listening to Red Eye Radio from the Red Leaf Factor Studio. And we are Red Eye Radio. He is her currently, and I'm Gary McNamara, download our app. I run Eye Radio app today, listen when you choose. And right now it's free.
Yeah.
It's always been free, and it will always be free.
But right now it is, too. Yeah. We will increase the cost by 200 percent. Yeah. Zero times 200.
It's that's based on the exactly. That's based on the Mitch Headburg line. I used to do drugs. I still do drugs, but I used to too. You used to too.
All right. So got emails last week. Got emails in the last 24 hours. Last week was the whole thing of of for. And I think it was the Boston media that started it.
Yeah. What the heck is going on at, you know, because the NHL players are going on. Right.
You know, why is is Buffalo?
Why are the why? You know, why are they playing the Canadian National Anthem? Yeah. And it's was humorous for people like me grew up in Buffalo. They've always done it.
Yeah. And it's been as far back as I can. Remember to the point when we used to play driveway hockey or street hockey. Yeah. When we were kids.
Well, we would take a. I don't think cassette even existed at the time. But a small real to real that we had. And we would play the Star Spangled Banner and the Canadian National Anthem. And as little kids standard extension.
Yeah.
“And it's just, you know, that's what you that's what you did now.”
Yeah.
At the game, what day of the week is it now?
It's Thursday. At the game on Tuesday against Boston and Buffalo as the. The singer was singing the Canadian National Anthem. The microphone went off. Hmm.
This thing went viral. I mean, it went viral. I've thought it was all over the internet yesterday. And it was the Buffalo fans singing the Canadian National Anthem. And they do all the words.
Yeah. I love it. And it, I got hit again with that going. Gary, is that part of the, is that part of the, the, the culture up there? Do you, do you know like the Canadian National Anthem?
Well, yes, especially the part that we know. Takes off the Liberals in Canada, which is the part of the Canadian National Anthem. That says, God keep our land glorious and free. No. And so that's what was going on.
The Buffalo fans knew that that would tick off the Liberals of Canada to keep saying, You know, God, and you probably heard it went God. You know, they wanted to make sure they sang it louder. Right. Okay.
Let, let me be serious now. It's interesting because you probably know from spending time on the Southern border. That even on the Southern border or Northern border, when you grow up there and you're, you're close as, You know, you know, I don't, I don't live there anymore, but when I live there, you're so incredibly close. And growing up things are different since 9/11.
Yeah. Yeah. We used to write our bicycles over 13, 14, 15 years old. We just write our bicycles over the peace bridge and go over to Canada and go to, you know, some of the parents they had cabins.
You know, and we go visit their cabin. Yeah. We get a key. One of my friends are going to key. We go up there and we, we visit.
Right. We go to Crystal Beach, which was used a former amusement park that was up there. You didn't even think about it. We had no ID. We had nothing.
You just crossed the border. You had to go into customs. What are you doing? Going up to our parents' cabin. Not mine.
My parents didn't have a cabin room. Right. And you went over. Can't tell you how many times I crossed the peace bridge as a kid. And that is, that is, as you got older.
“I remember walking for the, to the, this be 92.”
I remember going to the friendship festival there in a concert. That was right across the peace bridge, right in Fort Eri. Right. Yeah. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there. I think I was going to go up there.
I think I was going to go up there. The last family reunion was in the '90s. There's not going to be another one. There won't be another one. It's just probably so many of the people that were there in the '90s.
30 years ago aren't around anymore. There was all the hats, McNamara, reunion.
I never, I wasn't able to go because of work.
I did get to know some of my Canadian relatives. For the most part, they were conservative. I come from a split family. Like a lot of people do, where you have a number of Democrats and Republicans. As we get older, you really don't have those discussions as much as we did when we were younger.
It's really everything now is more about family, even with the cousins and everything else. You really don't get involved in that much anymore. Especially when all of us cousins were talking about our parents or memories of our parents.
“That's what happens at the family reunion, unions these days.”
It's just important to understand that there is no cultural difference when you grow up on the border.
None.
Zero.
“You didn't think about it in the slightest.”
You never thought I'm going to a foreign.
You knew you were going into a different country and you knew right. Right. We got to customs don't be a jerk. But culturally, but culture that there was no doubt. Not to me, but yeah, it was all pretty much one culture.
Now, might have changed a little bit five percent or something in the, in the, what is it almost 30 years since I've lived. Yeah. In Buffalo, maybe, but I don't sense that it has at all, you know, when I'm there, I don't sense it at all. Right. Right.
I mean, the thing with that my buddies from Dell real tell me a few of them were born and raised there. But when they go back to visit relatives, they tell me it's different. And that's because of the danger presented by the cartels. Oh, and every border town on the southern border has that same element. So, you know, other than that, culturally, it hasn't changed.
And, and expect Canada when their liberal economic ideas fail, expect the Conservatives to come back and power again. Yeah. Why? Because liberal economic ideas don't work. Socialism doesn't work.
It doesn't. No.
“And you and I, you and I were looking at, uh,”
Poli have going up against Carnegie the other day. You know, and they're going back and forth. And they're saying we cut the deficit and Poli have was saying wait a minute.
The deficit was 31 billion.
Now, it's 90 or whatever. It's 65 billion. How? How if you were 35 billion here or 65. And it was like you could have had that argument in the United States.
Right. Exactly. You know, the BS that was going on. 65 is more than 30. Right.
Exactly. You have the first line laughing. Yeah. But I want to play this one audio cut here from California, though. Because we've been focusing on a couple things there.
And one of it is the Gubernatorial Debates going on. And this is a Chad Bianco.
“And this is where it's like, this is like, the Twilight Zone.”
You know, you've got the Democrats here that created all the problems,
talking about how they're going to fix the problems that they created. But here's part of the, the, the, the back and forth. Here we go. I feel like I'm in a Twilight Zone here. I, we need to start.
We have a group of of 20 year old kids this 20 ish. And we're just sitting here lying to them about broken, democrat policies in California for the last 20 years. And we're going to sit here and blame a president who's been president for a year.
This is absolutely ridiculous. Our, well, what do you do? We care. If we cared about California. By the way, did you hear the clapping?
Yeah. It was a clapping. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
We wouldn't worry about what the federal government is doing. California is the fourth largest economy in the entire world. What do we care about a cut to medical? If we had a single payer of California? Absolutely not.
If you want socialism go somewhere else because single payer people come to America for the best medical coverage and care in the entire world. And what if you don't have any health care? What are you going to read? Take killer seed.
I thought I got to answer. But apparently we're just going to do this all the way. Only have so much time. But we still have, we have two more. So we're going to take it from me.
Now I see where we're going to go when you attack the democrat policies that have destroyed this state. If you, if you elect a governor who cares about the state, it's not going to matter whether president Trump or president whoever takes something away from the state. Because the waste fraud, the abuse of our money in California by a government
that we already know hundreds of billions of dollars. And we're worried about president Trump taking away that. Okay. There you go. Yeah.
Yeah. You don't hear Texas or Florida talking that way. No. And that's the whole point they're saying look, we can control our own destiny. We choose to control our destiny, which is hurting our state by doing the wrong policies.
Yep. And worrying about the wrong thing. As we have said over and over again for years, these are choices. Interesting to see how this resonates for November. I don't know.
I mean, it may not resonate at all. But if there were ever would be a time for it to resonate, you would think this would be the time. I would think. We are Reddy Radio. Coming up more with Gary McNamara and Eric Harvey.
It's Reddy Radio. We're going to radio. He's early and I'm Gary McNamara. Welcome in good morning.
Hey, here's this super majority of Americans think Jerry Mandarin is a seriou...
A new poll released Wednesday found a super majority of Americans question.
“Believe that the partisan Jerry Mandarin is a serious problem.”
Rasmus and found 88% of likely US voters believe it's a serious problem when states deliberately redraw congressional districts to favor one party, including 65% who say that it's a very, very serious problem.
The poll comes after Virginia voters last week, narrowly approved a referendum that paves
the way for these state congressional maps to heavily favor the incumbent democratic party. Well, you know what that I hopefully. What it shows is that the public understands the whole concept of the constitution that was based on the tyranny of the majority.
“That's why we have an electoral college.”
That's why we have the Senate. But and when you look at Virginia as we mentioned earlier, there's a two for there where they're taking away power from people.
First by the redistricting and then by joining the compact, which says our citizens of
Virginia don't matter. It's what other people in other states believe. Right. That's pretty amazing. [Music]
This is Ridae Radio on Westwood One. Hello America, Mark Levin here. Many people seem to be incubating a rage looking for somewhere to go.
“Are there times when you think the country is out of control?”
Do you see all these things and you wonder what in the world is going on? What's it this way five years ago, 10 years ago, 20 years ago? Do we have the will or not? But we are Americans. And I believe we absolutely do have the will.
I do this show for you. And when you're not interested anymore, I will just go away. I got my privilege show. Follow and listen on your favorite platform.


