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06-10-26 Part One - Maine Wants a Commie-Nazi

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In part one of Red Eye Radio with Gary McNamara and Eric Harley, voters in Maine have spoken. Liberal upstart Graham Platner won Maine’s Democratic Senate primary on Tuesday night, defeating Maine Gov...

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β€œWelcome to the show from the Relief Factor Studios.”

This is Red Eye Radio. All across America, we are Red Eye Radio. He is here currently, and I'm Gary McNamara, welcome in good morning. All right, so main Democrats, Eric, they had their opportunity because Mills was, she

was still in it, right, you know, she never officially withdrew, so they could have put

in the protest vote, but it's clear, main Democrats want the common Nazi. Oh, I thought you were going to say they had an opportunity to convince her to convert to Naziism. No, no, that wasn't my point, but I can understand, yeah, I mean to that conclusion. Yeah, I know that.

Not what I meant. I can understand it. There would probably be a big fewer over that. Yes. You did not see that coming, so another horrible jokes.

So some buckle up folks, so Mills got 19.6% of the vote, Platner got 72.4% of Democrats in Maine say, we want the Nazi, we want the Nazi, that's the kind of landslide dictators get. You know, you would think that, you know, this, forget about California. I'm not sure.

I'm not sure you go job as got those numbers.

That's what I'm saying. Maybe Maine is already an authoritarian government where the elections are because, I mean, come on, we're talking about Maine, you're telling me that Maine would vote 72.4% for a communist Nazi? Well, now I have to ask for a recount.

β€œI think those numbers are probably maybe low.”

My gosh, because if we're, I mean, it's, this is what you see in Venezuela. This is what you see, these are dictator numbers here, not quite 100%, but my gosh, landslide. Okay. Yeah, you, you great point. I mean, we don't want to, we don't want to compare it to North Korea.

Right. Yeah. That would be wrong to Kim Jong-un. That would be unfair to North Korea. Well, there was a problem.

He got 102.3% of the vote. Something was wrong at that point. The man didn't add up in North Korea, he allowed some tourists, and you know, they have a lot of tourists. They allowed tourists to vote.

Oh, I saw the, I just read a couple of it. It's like North Korea because they're selling arms and doing this, their economy is doing better. Oh, yeah.

And I'm thinking to myself, and I'm thinking to myself, the first thing, well, the first

thing I went, I can't wait till somebody actually analyzes, you know, the, the, the, the, the figures that they actually has the, the numbers and can, I don't know who actually has the numbers. And also those pockets, the money. No idea.

Yeah. But I'm thinking to myself, wow. Because I forgot who had was a liberal publication. I think it was the time. What's this a time?

Okay. Yeah. Or because I'm thinking was I'm thinking to myself, are they trying to sell, are they trying to sell a totalitarian communist dictatorship now? Is that the point?

I mean, not, well, not that you get it with Venezuela. Well, now that you, well, I look, you've got Tucker Carl. Listen, a, a can of so instead of the other day was talking about what a wonderful country, Russia is. Mm-hmm.

I mean, is this the push now from the, and I don't know, the fire left is becoming the fire right and the fire right is becoming the fire left. Yeah. It's just, it's getting confusing here. Yeah.

β€œI mean, uh, remember Tucker went into a Russian Walmart and did some shopping.”

He was there. Oh, my God. Oh, no, it was the, it was the Wall Street Journal. No. Yeah.

Was the world's most surprising economic success story is North Korea. Well, I don't know if success, they, they can, this was updated to Sunday. Right. Right. They can improve their economy if they're getting, if they're getting money from Russia,

China would ever in doing some arm sales, whatever, I mean, they're so down in the toilet. You could double, you could double their GDP and it's still nothing. Yeah. Right. Wow.

I hope that the, I hope the editorial page makes a comment on it.

Well, and they've got a picture here.

I didn't see this before.

I was on the app and, and, and I probably just scroll past the picture because I was reading one of the pictures toward the top of the article again, this is from, well, the last update was Sunday Wall Street Journal. It has from a point of view of the driver in a car, a driver in a car with two cell phones. So he's got two cell phones going and it says below the picture, taxis in Pyongyang can

be hailed through an app akin to Uber.

β€œAre you sure that's not Kim Jong-un just rounding people up?”

Hey, get in. Where are we going? Oh, is he showing you? Is, is the hotel there yet? Did anybody in the hotel yet that's been, yeah, I don't know, it's been there for about 20

years. Restaurants there serve up brick oven pizza and chicken wing. Yeah. I saw that. Show me, and show me where the average person is, is actually able to participate in this

eye. I look. Are they sure they weren't in South Korea? Watch. Why?

I mean, I just, they're mapped, that's the side down. I don't know.

The first thing I thought was, on the same day, the plan or wins the primary, they had

that story and I'm thinking to myself, you know, is the, is the, and by the way, the news division of the Wall Street Journal is different of the editorial. Very different. Yes.

Of it, they're basically, you know, two different companies. Right. And there is no report as of yet that, because it's a different company that very wise is going to control the editorial portion of the, of the news division of the Wall Street Journal, CNN, yes, burst out laughing yesterday when I saw that one.

Well, no, you know, what I thought of is what I said when Anderson Cooper announced, he was leaving 60 minutes to spend more time with his family, which I knew was alive because nobody wants to spend more time with their family. And so then he, so he leaves 60 minutes about the time that they, that, it was, I think it was after it was long after, very wise.

I don't know she was in play set or the new producer for 60 minutes was in play set.

β€œAnyway, I said, then, I said, well, here's the thing.”

You know, with the sale of, of, of, of, all the properties, with paramount, plus or paramount,

basically, you know, taking control of, of all this, and, and getting, ultimately, control

of, say in it, I've wondered at that time, does that mean Barry Weiss is going to get the job to, to basically overlook CNN, and which means Anderson Cooper, if he was fleeing to avoid working with Barry Weiss, he's still at CNN. Well, but I was thinking yesterday that, because I saw some stories written saying, "discuss, Kelly, realize that she's, she's not a Republican, conservative Republican."

You know, this, this, back and forth is going on between liberals. This, this isn't, well, Trump. Yeah, Trump. But Barry Weiss, yeah, right, you know, are you kidding me? And so, what I realized it comes down here are the possibilities that Scott Pellie wanted,

no changes at all, that he does believe that he's going to lose, well, I mean, he's gone now, that he was going to lose his ability to be a political activist, and still continued to lie that, you know, he's, you know, a fair and just telling the truth, or

β€œhe's a homophobic, you know, there's your choices, because Barry Weiss is a lesbian, right?”

She's a lesbian Democrat, and to use that kind of words, I mean, it has to be or it's a combination of both, it's either he wanted to continue his political activism, he wanted to continue his political activism, and he said, as a homophobic, I do not want to work for a lesbian, or a combination of both could be, we're just throwing out the possibilities. Well, no, that's because I'm trying to think like a Democrat.

Yeah, no, we don't put the hyphenated words before the people, no, to me Barry Weiss is a journalist. I know her for her work. I don't know her personally, and I think it's terrible that that that possibility exist, especially during Pride Month from Scott Pelley.

It's a great point.

It's bad timing Scott, and Hyde says I'm telling you, I just, it's, it's so much fun trying

to think like a liberal.

β€œWell, I just, I keep going back to the question that the Chicago Republican Party asked”

me on social media the other day, I answered or answered it on air, you know, think Scott Pelley will show up to the unemployment line, you know, apply for unemployment, you know, but I just picture him showing up to random businesses. I would like to apply for a job. No, you don't be the best.

He applies for unemployment, and then CBS comes back and says, no, no, no, he was fired for cause. Yeah. And so he couldn't get well, no, that's it because he was fired because they're bases.

β€œWe want to make sure that we don't have to abide by the contract, so we list this”

is cause and saying disparaging things during that meeting is what they quoted. And so we believe that is the basis for the cause, firing for cause. But if, you know, if you apply it to unemployment, he's not going to get his 500 bucks a week, if he's fired for cause, you know, if I were Elon Musk, I would hire Scott Pelley as my butler, yes, having both of the door.

I just want you to open the door and say yes, like in a question for me. I pictured him out of that soon and ended a Butler Tuxedo. Well, you know, it would be the exact same presentation as 60 minutes. Yes, sir, the door and then no, Mr. Musk does not eat door dash and then back in the background, Musk is going, yeah, I do bring me my Taco Bell, but getting back to the

original point, yeah, somehow we evolve in sometimes in a conversation, but it all flows. It does very neat. Yeah, uh, that plant or almost 73% of the vote. So the Democrats in Maine have made it clear, please give us a communist Nazi. Yeah. We got to have the communist Nazi. Look, it's the trend, right? It's the trend, New York City, quite possibly wants to answer to you see the

β€œformat for mayor. Did you know, I, because I did show it to you yesterday. Yeah. I think it was on Instagram, the AI thing”

of Trump with the New York next uniform on and he's playing basketball and he's going and going down the court and dunking it and they really look like the AI really look like my Madonna and his wife just screaming because he's helping the next win and they're just furious about it. Yeah. And then he goes up like does a spin around and dunks the ball? No, that's the start starts, you know, basically, uh, you know, pushing out his chest and uh, and and other type of motions.

Yeah. But showcasing showcasing one of my gosh, that was just very great. The AI is incredible.

Yeah. So that was that was fun to, that may have really been him. I don't know. But yeah, platinum, there we go. I mean, they're fully behind them. You know, you think that made just out of protest, you would have a bunch of Democrats, you know, maybe that if it was, you know, 55, 45 or something like that. But I mean, it was such a big landslide, the fact that all of this is known, you know, and and you think about it and and we said it, I saw gut felt also say,

you know, basically, platinum has come in and destroy two things. There's no moral high ground, ever for the Democrats, again, to call any Republican anazi and the whole me two thing, they just flushed down the toilet. Now it's, yeah, he says. Right. Right. Doesn't matter what the allegation is in words what he says. Yeah. It's, it's so it's just, I mean,

it's just, it is amazing. Now, we always knew it. We said this before when you practice identity

politics, when you judge people by groups and not individuals, you get a platinum. Yes. That's when you get somebody who is a Nazi. That's when you get the anti-Semitism. You know, that you see in the Democratic Party, that's when you get the acceptance of a Nazi philosophy is when your party has institutionalized identity politics. Yep. Then it's full on and it's getting as we said it would worse. It's going, everybody thinks,

well, you know, they're going to have to, you know, even years ago, years ago, but you said,

You know, at some point, they've got to make a turnaround.

You know, who? No. Well, you've got now, you've, you've got, uh, Tallarico line trying to pretend he's moving towards the center because they're going back. They're realized, okay, we can't promote this anymore. So let's lie. Right. So every, every major opinion that he had, he's now backing

off as if he's never had it before. And even the interview that we played yesterday was like,

they say that sure this radical, but, uh, tell us about this. Yeah. I'm, I'm, I'm not. I, I don't believe in, in, in, uh, you know, gender, you know, surgery for, for children, for children. Right. Yes, you do. You voted for it. You voted for it. You, you, you, you officially tried to make it happen. So there's finally coming to the conclusion. Now, Plattener's hurting that, but in Texas, it's like, okay, we've got to pretend that Tallarico is a moderate. When he's

not, he's as radical as you can. Probably get. He's vegan, but he eats barbecue. But that's okay, but Democrats are okay, but being lied to, it's just like the same with the Obama. They're saying with the lies because they're, the rank and file, the people that are, that are voting for

β€œthem. You have to be a liar yourself. Yeah. You have to be in denial. If you think they're going”

to make things better, or you're okay with the lies, which means you're an enabler of the lies. If you're voting for them, you know their line. Yep. You know, but maybe maybe we should be, maybe we should look at Maine and say, well, at least they're being honest. Yeah. We're common Nazis. Common Nazis. We're, we're trying, we're trying to get a nice relationship between Hitler and Lenin. Right, or Stalin. I mean, look at North Korea, the Vietnamese booming. We are right,

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to see where the Platner thing goes. Also coming up here in a little bit, we'll get to the situation in a ran. Southern poverty loss center before the house yesterday. What is zoo that that was Martin Luther King's niece. She was there. She Jasmine Crocodile after her.

Yeah. Oh, my gosh. Basically, she responded, "I pray for you." And all this, I mean, it was just

nothing. Okay. This has just been Crocodile's last hurrah. But I would say this. I didn't see again yesterday because before this all happened, you'd see the Southern poverty loss centers, you know, paid ads. Yeah. You know, all over Morning TV. Yeah. And, you know, and talking about all the good, they disappeared. But the ACLU is on there all the time. The advice I saw yesterday really pounds into the fact that they're protecting the United States from book burning. They're

book burning. They're book burning. They're book burning. They're not book burning. Banning books. Banning books. Banning books. Banning books. Banning books. No, they're not. They won't tell the truth. And even

β€œthe head of the Southern poverty loss center answer the questions directly if that's what you believe.”

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You're listening to Red Eye Radio from the Red Leaf Factor Studio. And he is Eric Hurley and I'm Gary McNamara. Welcome and good morning. We'll get to the the more on the the primarys last night. Carmelo Anthony found guilty. We'll get to that

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It's a national story, but just paying attention the last couple of days to the actual trial, which was a pretty short trial. The defense did not go to the max of my opinion of trying to make the claim of self-defense. To me, it was a pretty cut dry. And I thought about that yesterday, we didn't talk about it on the area yesterday, but I thought about it. I'm like, this is going to be, this is going to be a quick jury, and it was really thick.

Yeah, I mean, you talked about it was really, really quick. And the other thing is, you go on social media and you would have thought there was a thousand people outside the courthouse, and there was, it was anywhere between, I saw figures between 100 and 200 people.

β€œRight. Yeah. And likely that's what they were saying. Right. And so you're talking, and”

equal on both sides of the issue. Right. So you're talking about probably the majority on both sides were probably family and friends. Yeah. Certainly members of the community. Members of the community, right. And so, you know, it was, but I looked at this and I went, well, this is about a slam dunk as you can get in a criminal case of murder. Yeah, it is. And for those not familiar, they were at a track meet, and both students were 17 at the time. And the victim

had asked Carmelo Anthony to leave this area they were in, because he was on the opposing

team, track team. And so they, he said, you know, he basically asked him, I don't know, I heard,

β€œI heard, I saw more than a dozen times asked him to leave, you need to leave, you need to leave.”

And so, it actually came to a shove where the victim shoved Carmelo Anthony, they say, according to witnesses, Carmelo Anthony already had his hand, one of his hands in his backpack, he brings it out. It has a knife in it, in his hand, and he plunges it in the heart of the victim. There was no way to come up with a self-defense. I think they were probably, his defense team, was probably trying, making every effort to get there, but there was really no way to get there.

You can talk about it, the special consideration with what they call an instant crime of passion

In the state of Texas.

to push during the sentencing phase. And it's even then, you're, you're looking at a very deliberate

act. You can't make the self-defense claim. You can say to kids get in a fight. But it was, it was a straight on with, with all the witnesses pretty much saying the same thing. He plunged that knife into the heart of the victim. And that's a deliberate action. You can say, he lost his mind. It was an act of passion because, you know, they were kids. They can't control their temper. They're competitive because their athletes, all of that. But it still was a deliberate

action. And the jury came back with 35 years. And it's an aggravated murder charge here conviction, which means he'll be eligible for parole in 17 and a half years. He's

β€œ19 now. And so, you know, that's, that's what it comes down to. The parents of the victim, of course,”

as they were testifying during the sentencing phase, saying in the mother, it was just heartbreaking, reading it. You know, you'll get to wake up every day. I get to wake up every day to the same

I'm paraphrasing to the same nightmare. My son will never be here again. The victim had a twin brother

who showed up in court yesterday. And that was the first time. But again, this was not any kind of overcharging case where they were overcharging. You could have the back and forth on manslaughter. It didn't didn't apply according to the jury. And so, when you look at this entire case, there's no doubt. I can, I can believe that it is incredibly tragic that you essentially have

β€œtwo lives lost. Carmelo Anthony at one, at some point, when he gets out of prison,”

if there is proper rehabilitation, actually may have a life in his late 30 beginning and his late

30s as early as his late 30s and can go on. The victim will not be around. The victim is dead. And you cannot change that. And it's tragic that it came to that. But it did. And we have a justice system that essentially worked in this case. From the very beginning, not hearing, you know, just seen what was reported that had happened, I said, well, you're not going to get self-defense on this. At the minimum it would be manslaughter and

at the maximum it would be murder. And, you know, you're not talking about death penalty murder here because the state of Texas says death penalty or read life according to how the jury viewed it would be interesting to talk to the jury as to why they chose the 35 years as opposed to a life sentence. Yeah, there's a life sentence or whatever, yeah, I mean, and, but when you, when you look at it to me, this was legally, and hearing, you know,

hearing the testimony, seeing what happened, you know, what happened, the witnesses who testified,

β€œit was as close to a slam dunk I think as you could get legally. Yeah, right. You know,”

Austin Metcath, the victim here and his, if you look at his family, what they're going to, and often in cases like this, for me, I, I start by looking at what the victim's families are going through. And then you apply again, the fact that they were both very young. I mean, there's, there's transit, it's tragic all across the board. But again, a justice system worked, I believe, and finding the, the proper verdict. We can have a debate on punishment. I, I would

like to, I'm with you. I'd love to hear from the jury on that. I don't know that we have a will. They were sequestered throughout. And so I don't know. I, you know, it's, there's, there is no, there is no, there is no, there is no wind. Do you and I have talked about it? We don't talk, most often don't talk about cases until there is a verdict. And, and that's because we

Have to wait for the system to, you know, the, well, you see, or if it doesn'...

we'll talk about that. You see the real, you see the real evidence that comes out in the court case.

β€œThat's the evidence that's being presented by both sides. Yes, much easier to come up with the”

determination as to, you know, as to guilt or innocence based on what the evidence is and what the witness is say. I saw one lawyer commenting locally on the news and said it's unlikely, you know, it's, it's just not the case historically where you come back with appeals and get a lighter sentence. That would be the only point of an appeal because there is no, there's not going to be any changing of the verdict. And, you know, I just don't believe that,

that would happen. Why? So, I haven't seen anything that would, that would get you a new trial with an appeal. No, I don't, I didn't see any mistakes that were done by the court. No, nor have any been reported. No, that was just speculation on what the defense team would do, you know, beyond this. And I didn't hear anything. Oh, no, no, I just, I understand that. So, I, you know, there is, in fact, I mean, you know, if you, if you look at this case,

35 years, which offers, in this case, 17 and a half years is where he would be eligible for parole. I, I don't know if that's the best you're going to get. I mean, I could have come up with a shorter sentence, but that was shorter than I thought it was going to be. I thought it was going to be somewhere

β€œ50 years to life. And I thought that's what it would be. parole at 25. Yeah. And I, I just,”

well, possibility of parole. Right. Right. That's where the possibility comes in at the, the halfway mark. So, I, again, it's just, it's tragic all the way around. There is no win here. There is no. No, and it was heartbreaking the father who, you know, the, uh, ostimate kept father who lost it. I mean, he, yeah. Yeah, no, it's, he was full of any, and he talked about the fact of, you know, again, being, um, what do you call it? Uh, uh, I can't think of the, the,

the term he, he couldn't talk about it. Yeah. Yeah, traumatized. Yeah. No, no, no, no, I'm legally. Oh, oh, oh, oh, yeah, the, the, the gag order, the gag order. Yeah, I don't know why I couldn't think of that, the gag order on him, which he was just furious about. Yeah. He said, well, you know, everybody else out there was pounding, uh, you know, on, you know, the, the memory of his son, he couldn't say anything. Yeah. And so you could see the anger there. Yeah. Uh, I can't imagine.

That he had neither can I can't imagine. Can't imagine. And I've never had, you know, that,

β€œI've never, I think anybody, nobody in my family, nobody close to me, you know, I've had”

a couple of people commit suicide, but I've never known anybody who's been murdered. Yeah. Right. You know, so or anybody close to me, and I, I don't know if somebody who's young, I can't imagine it. Yeah. And I will admit that when it all happened and one of the thoughts I had was, you know, I think about my, you know, my great nephew, who's that age? Mm-hm. And probably a lot of people did too. And if you lose a child, yeah, murder at that age, right, it's just,

yeah, it, it, it, I, I, I know one thing, I, I know that I've seen it happen that, that, that deaths, I know somebody who's, uh, son, uh, died being irresponsible, broke up their marriage. Mm-hm. You know, it, it, it can, it has a potential to destroy families. Yeah. Even if neither parties had fault in, you know, the victims family, they made anything wrong. Yeah. But it just is, it's just, yeah, I experience that at the age of 10 in Del Rio, my friend, who died

suddenly, and, and, you know, was, was basically trying to have fun, and there was an accident,

killed immensely, uh, but the, the family did not, the parents did not, their marriage did not survive. We are right, I radio. I'm gonna go more with Gary McNamara and Eric Hartley. It's right, I radio. We are right, I radio, and he's a crummy and I'm hearing McNamara. Well, it's just, very quickly, and in the primaries, uh, yesterday South Carolina, apparently, uh, they like Lindsey Graham and South Carolina. Yeah. Uh, he got over 50% of the, uh, votes, so no runoff, 56.8%. Uh, Nancy Mace ended

up in fifth place, uh, for the governor, ship and said, she, he and I were chuckling during the

Pre-show meeting.

Epstein files, and he made the great point. You're like, well, the president ran on that. Well, no, that, that was the promise. You know, she said, I, I probably doomed my endorsement this time around. We're all for this race, uh, from the, the fact that I insisted on transparency with the

β€œEpstein files. Well, no, that's what they promised in, right, didn't deliver on. So, you know, and”

maybe I'm sure that's the point she's making is that, well, that's the problem is that I insisted

they follow through with their, their, uh, their campaign. When she did the Scarlet letter thing, yeah, I, I, that, that's when you and I went, I don't need the performative stuff. Don't need the drama. I don't, I don't, I don't. Just don't need it. Nope. , this is Ridae Radio on Westwood One. Meditian yoga joggen, I don't think I'm a fan of me. Wow, and that's just a joke. Of course, the

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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 Fector Studios. This is Ridae Radio. All across America, we are Ridae Radio, and he is Eric Hurley and I'm Gary McNamara. I'm telling you yesterday, the Southern Power of the Law Center in front of the house. Yeah, yeah. Martin Luther King's a niece, Alvita King, was there. And listen to this

back and forth between Jasmine Crocket. Before we go to this, I just wanted to mention that

because I never finished my thought at the bottom of last hour, just remembered it now, when

I was talking about that. If you're watching a morning TV, you see the AC LU, trying to get people to donate the $19 a month. Right. And the commercial yesterday, I watched like the first 15 seconds. It was all focused on the banning of books.

β€œIs there any banning of books going on for adults in the United States? No, what are we talking about?”

Age appropriate materials. This goes all the way back to the whole Disney thing. Yeah, right. No, it goes back to the end and in the Santas and in that whole thing and book banning and book banning and book banning. And the media kept using those words. And you know, in that case, too, they don't say gay. Don't say gay. That was the bill that they came up with in Florida. Don't say gay. Don't say gay. It was the don't say gay bill.

They have to lie to get their point across and what it was about was age appropriate material for children. Right. And we don't mean 13 new year olds or 12 year olds. We're talking seven and eight year olds. Yeah. That no. In their library, we censor all the time at my elementary school. They censored. Yep. Why you're a child. Right. And so they're calling it. They won't tell you the the ACLU will not tell you the truth. And if you look at it, what they're promoted,

the two things they promote are illegal immigrants. And not having age appropriate material for

Children.

poverty loss. And I'm like, my god, they, they really, they don't want to answer. If you believe

β€œit, be up front about it. If that's what you believe do. But this is the back and forth”

between Jasmine Crocket and Miss King yesterday. Here we go. So people of color, who is fighting for who? People of color do not feel comfortable or welcomed within your party. That's what you have to parade. Someone who has the name Dr. King attached to them so that people can be confused because I have been reading the comments online and people are like, who is this Dr. King? Because you want them to believe that somehow she espouses. Who Dr. King was on and to respond,

I think you were kind of ready to do that. But we're not given that opportunity. Would you like to briefly respond to that? Very briefly, Congresswoman. I am a bit emotional. I'm going to watch what I say. But it seems as though you have suggested that I am a bastard to the King family legacy. I am legitimately the daughter of Reverend Alfred Daniel William's King and Dr. Naomi Ruth Barber King. We are a family who loves God and I love you. God bless you.

So a lot kinder than I would have been. And she's the niece of Dr. Martin Luther King. Yeah, Junior. But she was trying to make it. I don't even know what Jasmine Crock's point was. I don't know. People think that you're the reincarnated Dr. King? Yeah. That she was sounded like to me that you're not Dr. King himself. So you don't have any say so here. But of course she does. She absolutely does and has for a long time in fact much longer

than you've been in Congress. And then this is Chip Roy going back and forth with Southern poverty, law center, interim CEO, Brian Fair ready for this is great. All right, here we go, all right.

β€œSo how many left is, how many left is to anti-Jewish groups do you have listed on your website?”

We name them. Anyone listening to this can go to our website and see our again, our year in hate and extremism report was released this morning. How many extremists is law-mic groups to you have the 1500 or so organizations you have in your hate map? Again, anyone can go to our website. I obviously have been looking over and can't really find one. Again, it is the SPLCs. You think SPLC can provide a solicit of the

Islamic arena groups to you have in your hate map? Mr. Wright, we don't target any group because of its religion. Really? I want to be clear about that. Really? Yes, that's exactly right. We target no group because of its religion. We target groups because they express statements and engage in activities that demean and vulnerability. You brought up LGBTQ groups. So you brought up LGBT groups a minute ago. So you think there's a bunch of Islamic groups that are pro-LGBTQ? Is that the position of the

SPLC? I just want to make sure the record is reflecting that. See, the laughter. Yeah. Right.

I mean, we all know they become basically their a political activist group to attack the right

β€œis what they are. Yes. That's what it comes down as we know. Yep. That's it.”

And again, just like seemingly everybody on the left with few exceptions, you have to make it up as you go along. You have to lie. And then I want to play this because this is a representative jail Paul. Whatever left of the squad, the remnants of the squad bringing up again, Charlottesville and lying about it. Yeah. Yeah. They have nothing else. Think about this. The whole thing about, you know, Trump, you know, their justification for Trump being

a Nazi was Charlottesville. Yeah. Yeah. Yes. And it never happened. They lied. Right. By omission.

And here it is. Okay. Here we go. And he and Republicans have tried to end birthright citizenship and have given hundreds of billions of dollars to rogue ICE and CBP agents to kidnap and disappear immigrants of all immigration statuses, including, by the way, United States citizens. But it isn't just the denigrating of black and brown communities that's so dangerous. It is

The praising, the pardoning, the condoning of extreme white nationalist direc...

House. In Trump's America, white supremacists at the Charlottesville rally are, quote, very fine

people. Never happened. Yeah. She's lying. Yep. But they can't. They've got nothing else.

You've got to lie by omission and they've been lying by omission. I'm getting away with it. Thanks to the leftist activist media. Since then, they keep using the same lie over and over and over again. They're still saying Russian collusion. I know. It was true. I know. It was that it was a giant. One of the biggest political hoaxes ever. Yeah. In a presidential election, I don't know a bigger, I don't know a bigger scandal than that. Yeah. I can't think of that myself.

β€œAnd that's why we said, you know, with the whole Scott Pellie thing, you know, he just, all you”

have to do is play that. And if you know what happened, you know, during it, you're like,

where's the lack of curiosity? And I said that for the longest time. Forget about the bias. The bias comes in because the lack of journalistic, you know, it's obvious that the bias is there because the lack of the journalistic curiosity that everybody should have. Look, we're biased in our opinion, but on everything, we apply, you know, where's the evidence? So we did the same thing for months and months, years, really. We asked the question,

where's the evidence? We know the allegation. Where's the evidence and where did it come from? That's not being a partisan. Right. That's trying to find out what the facts of a particular case are. Right. Yeah. And we said it from January 2nd, oh my gosh, we're coming up on a 10th year anniversary. Yeah. We come back from Chris's vacation, which is still a little while away. I know. We'll make them back. It'll be there. The 10th year anniversary, you and I sitting,

were we here? Were we in the other studio? We were here. We were here. Wow.

β€œYeah, we were, because we came over here in 2015. And I remember you, we, and our pre-show”

meeting, we're like, what's this thing about Trump colluding with the Russians? And that's when it started. And from that point we went, well, we know what the allegations are. We know what the dossier is. We're the dossier come from intelligence agencies. What does that mean? What intelligence agencies? Right. You're making an accusation. And remember the thing, Trump is a traitor, Trump is this. You know, the, the, the, you know, he needs to be, he needs to be impeached,

because he's a, he's a, he's a stew, jepoot, and everything else. And it was all created by the Democrats. It was all created by Hillary Clinton and the DNC. They actually took campaign money that they got, they found out about that, because they claimed it was for basically what campaign functions.

β€œYeah. And it wasn't. It was to, it was the money to pay people like Iggy Dan Chenko, a Russian”

national, as we always said, the only people that any colluded with any Russian was the Hillary

Clinton campaign, they knew she was going to do it in July of that year. Obama knew she was going to do it in July of that year, because his intelligence people told him that Hillary was going to try to do this to set up Trump. They knew it was going to happen. And, you know, Scott Pellie, this is months and months after that, had no curiosity, just all of the FBI and the things that they're talking about and how care for they're looking into it all. And as we said at that point,

either Andrew McCabe is a complete idiot or he lied or a combination of both. Yeah, why? Because that was the interview that was being done. Right. And both Scott Pellie and his producer. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. No curiosity as we had. And that's the thing. Well, we can compare it to how we covered it. We're not claiming that we're unbiased. What we're saying is we're not going to give an opinion on something where we don't know where the evidence came from and Scott Pellie

who's claiming that he's a journalist with no bias has no curiosity whatsoever in that. What did he say about that interview? What I was in most impressed with was I'm working on my Scott Pellie impression was how he was so careful in what he could say and could not say. Um, if you're a journalist,

That would make your you curious.

he was able to say while the entire time knowing that there are certain things he wouldn't or couldn't

discuss. That would make me curious. It wouldn't impress me. It would tell me this guy's dancing. Then he's trying to write the fence here. I'm looking for something that I can deliver to the American people because that is what true journalism is about in a free society. But he had no desire, Scott Pellie, to ever do that. No. No. And that's the one thing. And I was a radio station manager a long time ago, but over a station that had a very aggressive radio news department.

And I guess as a just doing this as long as I've done, plus just me in the, you know, choosing this business, there's a natural curiosity. Maybe it's not natural. Maybe it's the environment

that you're in and, you know, how you're brought up. But I didn't need to take a journalism course.

β€œNo, ever teach me how to do journalism. And I believe you can do journalism and still be biased.”

Because I believe we do it all. And the part of the journalism is, is the fact that I'm not going to argue something or take defensive something when I don't know whether it's the truth or not. I'm not going to take somebody else's word for it just because they say it with a motive of sophistication or confidence. It means nothing anymore. It might have when I was younger, all this speaks with confidence. It must be something there. You know,

Scott Penley's like me, he's an old man. You question everything. And look, it's, it's about, the entire thing is about the truth that is for us, it's not for him. It's about avoiding the truth. Yeah. And the activist media, this is how they have to do it. You hear it from the left all the time. You know, still, quote, the misquoting Charlottesville by omitting the entire quote, omitting the, the part that would change the mind. Remember it was

β€œMichael Rappaport. That's what started the turn for him. Yeah, the Hollywood actor. Yeah,”

who's running, he says he's running for mayor still in 29. He was going after Mandani from, you know, the, the watch party that turned into a riot would ever have for the next game. Right. Or he won't happen on my watch. I'm like, it's like, yeah, so he's apparently running. But yeah, that's, that's what kicked it off. That's what kicked it off. And then he said, I started to do that had me doing more research where else did the Democrats lie to me.

And, you know, look, it was late in the game. I think it was spring of 24. You know, so, but still, that's what happened. And this is, I can't have an opinion until I know the truth. I don't care to share an opinion until I know the truth. The truth to me is paramount.

β€œYou know, it's, it's the old, you know, again, you'll say I've often said it that everybody says”

there's two sides to every story. No, there's one. The truth. That's it. We are right, I radio. This morning's USDA farm report is brought to you by house products, tested, trusted, guaranteed since 1920. Summer heat found a late spring and several parts of the country. USDA B are all just Brad Rippie. Not extreme heat, not devastating heat by any stretch.

But certainly some areas of the country will be quite hot. With that heat, lasting through the week and into the weekend. The desert Southwest, it is not unusual to see triple digit heat in the afternoon. This time of year, in advance of the month soon, which is still almost a month away. Perhaps of greater concern, ag were culturally. Temperatures at or above 100 degrees across portions of the southern high

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with Gary McNamara. And Eric Hartley, it's Red Eye Radio.

We are winning with you and he is here at Hartley and I'm Gary McNamara.

Well, good thing, the Congress, the House passed and is going to Trump's desk now. Yeah, to sign God funding for Board of Patrol and I.

This basically takes care of Trump through the rest of his presidency.

Yep. Nice. So, this is good. Tom Holman saying there's going to be, you know, he's suggesting a fairly aggressive enforcement set of actions in New York. Very soon. And if Tom Holman says that I'm believing it, I don't think he would sit without it actually happening. And so, I don't know when that's going to be launched. What that is going to look like. So, but they'll certainly be enforcing that in New York. And the funding is a big deal.

β€œYou know, it's, again, you have to look at the core issues right now with the House and with the”

president and the border has been one word that he owned, you know, sent going back from the beginning.

In 2016 before he became president. So, this seals that up all the way through his presidency

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[Music] That's Red I Radio Live, every night on the Red I Radio App, available in the App Store, Red I Radio. And he is here currently and I'm Jerry McNamara, who is goodman, good morning. All right, my favorite audio cut from yesterday. Yeah, because it actually goes nowhere.

It's just as you would say, it's 1000 kids in the days of all screaming. Well, blah, blah, blah, blah, what happens? Again, this is on CNN. Yeah. And I'm sure Barry Weiss will probably say, you know, we got to do something when somebody makes a point and then 10 people are talking all of the same time. They're an extended period of time. It doesn't go anywhere.

Now, I find it entertaining in small doses and I found this entertaining yesterday. This is, I don't even know. You know, they're, you sit there, you look at these people,

β€œlike, who are these people? Yeah. You know, like, where do they, what do these people come from?”

You know, when I'm, where I'm a Republican consultant or a Democrat consultant, but it's a, a Democrat trying to make a point about Talarico and others. And you have Caroline Sunshine, who's a Republican strategist who comes back at her and then it all goes to hack. All right. Yeah. Here we go. All right. I think Talarico and someone like Gina, who knows, that have a real path to victory, not just in Texas,

but other candidates in Iowa or Ohio or wherever in this country, because we're actually talking about the issues that matter. And people want someone to deliver from that. And they're trying to get the property. You got it so wrong in Texas. You guys had a hilarious black woman. And for the party that lectures everybody about racism, you guys pushed her aside. So you could have a soy boy white guy who was created in a lab and looks like what

political consultants think are regular white. Sorry. It looks like they're not. They're still not the way. No one in there's a big amount of money. All right. But I don't know what the DNC on talk. I would like to see the profit of crocking is or just a funny person. It's like walking into the microphone room there and get Tarzan up on Saturday morning. He walked back over to the guitar side and there's flag different guys playing stairway to Evan. All the different parts of the song.

Oh my gosh. I'm going to go over to the drum section where it's quiet. No, it's this is exactly

I've always compared it to walking in like a pet go and I love pet go. Walk in and they have the

adoption centers you know within and so they have these cute little pets in there. The cats are always

Quiet.

quite often when there's stuff going on especially when you've got a bunch of people on a busy day with their pets there and then the young puppies see those other pets across the question. It just becomes it basically becomes a moment on seeing them remind me I got to bring the cat in on Friday. All right. I hate the twice a year. I've got to do it. It's pure hell. You know we lost Bella last year and it takes a while before you decide whether or not you

are going to get a dog. My wife and I would like to have a dog that can travel but it's it's just very some dog to dog and we talked about it. We'd love to have a smaller dog. She was a Belgian shepherd lab mix and so she was 65 pounds just a beautiful and sweet dog. Great great great great friend in pet and we would like a smaller one and which we've had in the past and we're thinking about that but we're just going to sleep on it for maybe a year or so and see. Because when you travel

that's the thing you've got a cat cats can take care of themselves. The cats are more like hey would you

leave? No that's you know again I was never a pet owner I was just in too busy and

β€œremember when I got mango the red eye radio cat because mango hung outside the studio. Right”

remember during the day the building manager would say don't feed that damn cat. Yes well the other cats were telling mango don't feed the radio people and and mango would sit right outside the door. Remember sit outside the door and finally the cold weather was coming and I just every say if it was like for three months yeah and finally I said it's going to get really cold I got to find out if this cat is you know go to the lost and found whatever and yeah and bring it in

and so grab that I mean I just dressed like a lion tamer and I had big gloves on and everything else can grab that cat through it in the through it in the you know the cage that I had next day brought it to the the vet they took care of it did due diligence could not find and I got a couple of people called me but couldn't find the owner and then they said this cat probably is out in the street obviously because the clip the ear which shows that it was fair on at one point my and yeah so

so Bella was in her first year of life in fact the couple that had her before us they they adopted

β€œher from pet go I think actually well so so yeah I mean this cat was out on its own for a while and”

but was a you know male cat very aggressive yeah very aggressive plain but not a mean cat and yeah scared to death you know somebody would come in the house would mangoed hide for a day

didn't trust any I always thought that somebody whoever had them and then let him go probably

beat him I'm just because of the fear that he had of human unknown human beings it just wasn't normal you know you see cats all over the place and you know they may stay away from him but they'll stare you they'll come close to you whatever and some cats will come up the paranoia that that he had and and uh when he when uh I hadn't for a couple of years got a clean Bella health big cat though look like a hunter or a big cat not necessarily fat just a big cat because never had diabetes or anything

brought into the vet they said clean Bella health three days later I come home from work cat jumps on the bed lays down next to me thirty seconds later jumps up kills over falls right

β€œout of the bed I went hey you okay gone dead like that yeah I think it was an aneurysm that”

big cats had that you know was said sits in the back you know of the body and just comes through and it's it's over and I went I'm done yeah I'm getting a cat not you know and the memories I got I decided to keep mango was I couldn't find I just couldn't bring him back and I said but I can't keep him my travel and then I found the computerized kitty litters and uh and uh

so I but I said no I'm I'm done I'm never getting a cat again five days later yeah I think it's

for short period but we we would love to um it'd be great if the pet could travel Bella could not travel she had horrible car sickness but um neither my I have a neighbor with a great dane and he has a son roof not the great dane the neighbor and the great dane you'll see them driving to the store from time to time and great dane sticking his head out the son roof because I think that's the

Only way you could fit that dog in that car it's a Cadillac and these so here...

the great dane big old heads sticking over the roof and it it just goes everywhere with with them and it's probably 200 pounds of food a day but it's uh you know it's just I love pets I love animals and I I love that I you know I love training uh pets Bella was trained when she came to us and and we got her from another couple who wasn't able to keep her and uh we I would love to have another another dog um we're I'm prone to toxins I've had two and they were just great great pets

what I what I found is when you have a cat and you just you and the cat yeah and I met them just

β€œI think just at the four-year mark now for Tiki four-year isn't yeah the four-year mark at the four-year”

mark four to five-year mark same thing happened with my other cat they really communicate with you yeah they are just as smart as dogs they just respond in a completely different way but if you can read a cat by their ears by their whiskers and by their tail you know it moved their in mango understood about 25 words would respond Tiki's probably up to 15 to 20 where she'll actually respond and and do stuff and yeah and and they communicate with you in

their own way they're just different they're different from dogs dogs communicate much like humans do cats don't and Bella would talk she would I mean she was trying to form words gonna imagine that yeah well did you ever see and it's on YouTube somewhere there's this guy who had a dog and would train that dog like 10 12 hours a day every single day yeah and they and they brought researchers into watch and they said that dog has the intelligence of a

three-year-old human well there it was amazing there was a YouTube channel a Kiyush the stunt dog

β€œit was an Alaskan Malamute I believe and and lived in Great Britain and the owner”

this dog was talking I mean this dog it was this close to forming words and there's one back and forth and unfortunately Kiy they called the dog Kiy passed away which was very sad it had she had a pretty substantial YouTube following and but there is one back and forth with the owner's mom Nana and the dog because every time the mom would make toast which was every day because it's great Britain and she had some marmalade on it a key which is

go up and you know and then just start talking and one time the dog just argued and there's a point in the video where the dog and I'm telling you the dog says no I'm not and it was

β€œI'm telling you it there was no AI it was the I don't know why this thing didn't get”

a billion views I she may have gotten a million or two million but and this thing should have been because I was like that was real that wasn't AI this dog is arguing with Nana with a screen mother face to Scooby-Doo like you know it was horrible on like cheesecoo I can't believe a dog just taught but there's a problem is I thought it was the animals but it's the you know

the problem is that you know it's again gets back to you know the ownership and if and it's

it varies from dog to dog even certain breeds may travel easier or better than other breeds but it doesn't guarantee you you know anything and and we right now we travel a lot and I just don't think it's fair to have a pet you know sitting there in the home alone or you know having to yeah dog you know dog you know I'm I'm never gone really for more than three days yeah and and I watch a cat on the camera and everything else and and and I know I have I have the app for

the kitty litter so I know if she's using that and how long and yeah and when you know how long you know what business are doing you really can monitor yeah the cat and if there's any problem

I'll you know a couple of my friends with keys can come over and take care but that's never

happened right never happened in this cat now doesn't really miss me it misses going out to the

Garage because that's you know she's the the cat I have now is a garage a hol...

that's it I mean it's like she'll start biting my toes if I'm asleep three hours because

β€œshe hasn't been out to the garage for a while yeah and then during the winter time that's gone she's”

want to go out she loves sitting 130 degree heat yeah bellies to go and sunbathe for about 15 to 20 minutes then she would come back to the door she used to love to go and land the sun I keep my house pretty cold

but she would love to go out land the sun and then she'd come back to the door in about 20 minutes

you've listened to pet hour this is pet dog on Eric and Gary on red eye radio we'll be right back

β€œwith more red eye radio with every currently and Gary McNamara”

we are when I'm ready oh he is here currently and I'm Gary McNamara there's a headline

so security has less than 10 years before reserves are exhausted great newly released 2026

trustees report confirms that the federal retirement safety net is less than seven years away from fiscal depletion it will the trust fund will completely exhaust it's a community

β€œreserves which are basically I'll use which by the way this is a coincidence because that's”

about the time I'll be exhausted in the fourth quarter it'll be in the fourth quarter of 2032 now once once a reserve dries up ongoing tax revenues will cover only 78% of scheduled retirement benefits according to the report that's only like yeah that's not that far away so now yeah I'm not going to retire that's it you know I may I may still well I mean I'll retire long after the money is gone well this this may keep me employed yeah you know all the way you know

closing in on 80 well look I'm used to not having money I've working radio yeah but I'll still have to continue working to supplement in case that goes away I guess right I may have to stay here for for that length of time right now won't you won't make as much as Social Security but it'll be something it's radio money oh I did look and did figure it out did you see that they believe that for 2027 you know and how much the increase is going to be for Social Security

because of inflation they cost a living increase yep three point nine percent to four point three oh somewhere in there and I figured out that was like how much is that for me yeah of course This is Ridae Radio, on Westwood One.

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