I don't know what's the best price.
Wow, there's the third star in the third star.
A few years after the high school. I don't know if that's what I wanted.
βStreamer on the 13th April, parallel to U.S.β
is really a new episode. That's a problem. And you're a part of it with your head. Give it a try. I'm excited about the second highlight
as House of the Dragon and Wicked. All of it has only two or eight and ninety months. Streaming, but not so, wow. Now, it's Red Eye Radio, Gary McNamara. And Eric Hurley, talk about everything from politics to social issues.
And who's 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.
He is Eric Hurley and I'm Gary McNamara. Good morning. Good morning. So much for being here. Thank you.
Thank you. All right. So I'm a little bit behind today. All right. Just so everybody knows, dance back in the hospital.
And when you're 100 years old and you're back in the hospital, it's never good. Yeah. So he's still fighting and everything else. But there was just, I was just so busy yesterday that, you know,
I was trying to catch everything that was going on. In fact, I'm flying in later on today to go to go see him. And day one thing, he is a fighter. Yeah. That's for sure.
But I heard today was, no doubt. My sister was telling me they're in the room. And the, you know, the heart monitors going. Yeah. Turn off that damn machine.
[ Laughter ] You know, I said to you during the pre-show meeting, the strong minds are the ones that quite often you see as the survivors. They're not, they're not often the lattice individuals either. But, you know, you'll see the local news story on, you know,
βLady turns 110 and her secret to longevity is.β
Whiskey. Usually it's a shot a day shot a whiskey before every meal. And I eat nine times a day.
But you know, it's always something, you know, then in great wisdom.
But you can tell there's a strong mind there. Your father has a very strong mind. I know, I know my father has a strong mind strong will. And the doctors, his doctors are amazed at that, that his ability to manage everything. He reminds me, my dad reminds me of you managing your type two diabetes.
Because my dad is doing everything to the tea of what his doctors are asking him to do. He gave his numbers in order. But for my dad, it's about being around to take care of my mom. And I know that's, you know, what his, and if you knew my dad's life starting from his childhood, you would know that he had no choice but to be a fighter.
Your father has that strong mind, you know. Yeah, he does, but it's tough at 100, especially when he's got a massive infection. Yeah. And, you know, but he's still hanging in, he's hanging in there a lot better than anybody thought from the beginning day and a half ago when he first went in.
Yeah. So that's, well, we're friends for John. Yeah, I was going to say, if you're spiritual or religious or whatever, if you say a pair from my dad, I would really appreciate it. So I'm going into, you know, seeing him.
John is a non-present contributor to this program. Yes. He has, he has made contributions over the years through his son Gary. You may know him. And, and those lessons, you know, the Obama lessons of my father.
That's a very different book than what Gary was doing. [laughter] I mean, vastly different. Yes, it would be completely different. And, but we, you know, we have with great joy and pride shared those lessons from both of our
dad's over the years with John, you know, the D.T.J. for us. He says D.T.J. and do the job now. Oh, man, that was so funny a couple of years ago when he said that to me. Because he looked at me like, yeah, you don't have it. You know, it's like, no.
Oh, no, he goes D.T.J. and D.T.J. and D.T.J. and do the job in the way he said it. Yeah. You know, and, you know, he has his coherent moments and he doesn't.
βSo for him, I'm like, is, is this what moment is this?β
Right. And he says, no, no, that's not it. It's D.T.J. and, I'm like, oh, man, he's just drifting. He doesn't. Right.
He goes, do the job. Now. Yeah. [laughter] You know, that's one of those leadership things.
You know, both of our dad's been leaders, you know, in their careers. And, and that's one of those leadership things, you know, and get on it. Oh, that was just, and the only thing that was disappointing is I was in the room alone.
Yeah.
None of my brothers and my brothers and sisters, you know, weren't there. Or my niece because they would have, they all know it. Everybody knows. Yeah. In the family D.T.J.
I mean, everybody knows it. Yeah. It's like, you know, I got to D.T.J. Yeah. D.T.J.
And by the way, for people that never heard that before, what that means is stop lining.
Get the job done. Yeah. Do the job. Yeah. You know, as we always, I'll tell you, I've applied it not to, you know, get into details.
But I've applied it very important personal things in my life, that where, you know, I felt like I was getting message from God and in part John McNamara. You know, it was, look, you know, this, this is the job. This is what you've got to do in this case.
βIt may not be work related, but it's the task that you need to do.β
What you need to do in order to make, you know, this work or whatever it is. I know it's personal and I know what you're talking about because it's related to me. And I told it to my dad. Yeah. Just so you know, he went, it changed my life.
It made him very, very humble. That decision, that decision changed the trajectory of my life in a positive way and forever. So I'm eternally grateful. And we're praying for him. Yeah, so hopefully he can hopefully confide this and win.
So we'll keep you, we'll keep everybody updated.
I really don't have to, you know, it's interesting because I really don't have to say a lot about my dad at one period because I've said it so long over such a long period of time that everybody, everybody sort of knows, you know, they just sort of everybody listens and, you know, even on social media, you know, and, you know, friends, whatever they all know. Right.
They all know their dad. So yeah, but you know, well, before I didn't later on today, and we'll check out to see how he is. I'll tell you this, though, because this was a lot, I was going back in two weeks. So I actually wasn't going back this weekend. And so I made the flight and everything at the, at the, at the last moment.
It was able to get a hotel. You can't find a rent a car in Buffalo. Wow. Can't find one. Wow.
Because why Niagara Falls. Wow. Yeah. Yeah. You know, the afters between June.
Oh, yeah. Okay. So it's on Labor Day. It's that season, right? Okay.
Yep. And so here we go.
Not sure what's going on next weekend.
And it's like the, you know, the thing is the car rental is the one thing where you get hit. Yeah. You know, but for my hotel, I can cancel one day before. And for plane flights, you can cancel right up to it. And you can't get it.
βYou know, they, they don't, you have to pay a lot.β
If you get a refund, the ticket price is $300. If you actually wish to get a refund, it will be $4,000. And, but there's no, there's no expense. If you, if you, if you get it, if you, if you, if you get it for the, the credit. What?
And for what? Fly by the time. So it doesn't matter if I get the credit. Yeah. I'm, I'm looking for a lot of people don't fly a lot.
They want the refund. Yeah. I just, you know, I get the credit. And for my hotel and for parking at DFW and the airlines, I, you know, can cancel right up to the, right up to the end and get it.
Cars you can't think of a charge as something. So yeah, I was even looking. I don't, I don't know what the schedule is. Right. You know, like for next week and I just don't know, depending on how my father does.
And so I'm like, should I make it now? Should I not make it now? You know, it's like the, and so I have to look to see what the, you know, what, what it all is. But it's interesting.
It's interesting how cars will charge. I think it's $50. If you cancel outside of 24 hours. If you don't, you have to pay. I think 150 or something.
Mm-hmm. And then if you don't show up, you, you know, you owe the entire thing. But yeah. But it's okay. I'm, I won't be there.
I'm only there for day and a half and I'll be Uber and it, you know, everywhere. So, and the thing is this is the, the savior. There's a Tim Horton's in the hospital. Oh, that's open 24/7. What?
What a brilliant idea. That is. I know that's a great idea. Tim Horton's done. We all stood at the location.
I mean, for, you know, for families who are visiting. And, you know, that, because that's kind of one of those things. When, in the moments where, if you're visiting a hospital, it's never for it. It shouldn't say never.
It's quite often not for a good reason. Less it's the birth of a child. Right. You know, but you look at situations like that. And if you're from that region, a Tim Horton's going to be that
respite for the moment, right? Where you go in and, you know, just to take a break and take your mind off things and grab some coffee or something.
βOh, that's what I, I told my sister, I said, look,β
since it'll be, since the visiting hour started seven a.m.
Yeah.
I said, I'm going to go to sleep with the hotel.
Wake up, take the Uber. You know, instead of going over to your place, I'll go straight to the hospital at breakfast at Tim Horton's. And I'll take care of Dad. You know, I'll be there if we guys want a little bit of rest
for a little bit. Sure. You know, I'll take care of it at that point.
βThe only thing is, I think about this is that the,β
the hospital is, and this goes back maybe, oh, I'm going, I think it was, I even working here at the point. It was one time where my mom got real sick. Yeah. And, it probably was about 15, 17 years ago.
And I talked to my dad and they were at that same hospital. And my dad said, he said, oh, yeah, she's okay. And I could tell when his voice he wasn't. She wasn't. So I flew in and didn't even tell him and I showed up.
And he goes, why did you come? And I said, I heard it in your voice. Man, heard something in your voice. And he said, yeah, we didn't think she was going to make it last night. Yeah.
And so that always sits me when I go to that hospital.
It's like always in the back of my mind. Yeah, but like I said, he's a fighter right now and he's a fighter. And like he was, he was singing. That was the best part of you. Actually singing.
So being singing back to me. He was singing McNamara's band with my sister yesterday. He love his like, you know. Yeah. You doctors and nurses, you know.
And I will say that part of that is part of that is the dementia. Because my father is not like that where he would ever talk loud. Well, my, except when he was yelling at me, my mother-in-law who has a beautiful singing voice. Um, quite often we'll break out in song.
βShe is, uh, she's, uh, I think they call it stage three orβ
Level three, uh, dementia. She's advanced dementia. And she, when we're there, she will often break out in song. And she, and that's the one thing we can connect with her. You and I've talked about that where the song just comes to their minds.
It, it blows, it blows my mind. And, and I wonder, they probably won't allow it in the hospital. But if we bring in this harmonica, he'll start playing it. And you, you sit there and you're going, that's when you say how the hell does the brain work. Glenn Campbell, his family said,
Every, if he picked up a guitar, he didn't lose the thing. I know it, you know. And my father would just start playing. And on his hundred birthday two months ago, he did, you know, where all the harmonica, and he wasn't, you know, he wasn't in the greatest cognitive state.
And it was like, well, Dad, you're a hundred. No, I'm not. [laughter] We all burst out laughing. Yeah.
And then when we gave them the harmonica, it's a play happy birthday. And then five minutes later there, he is singing with us with the birthday cake and everything else. And it was, it was all great. So like I said, if you're spiritual, it will just say a prayer from my dad. Yeah, we'll be seeing him later on, uh, today and hopefully he pulls through this.
Yeah. So, uh, interesting day yesterday. Wow. Got an interesting post on exit we want to go through. Even though we didn't age well.
It didn't age well. And it was, I think it was respectful. Oh, yeah. It would be guards to the way it was written. Yeah.
It was respectful. And how it was written. And I certainly appreciated that quite often. It starts with, you guys don't know. And it's, when it starts with, you guys.
It's like, yeah. Yeah. But in response, it's, I thought you're right. With you guys. Yes.
You guys. Yeah. Okay. We get it. And some people do get upset.
But, but, and we're on, and that's usually when we're on the same side. Uh, you know, and even when we're on the same side. And it appears we're on the same side as this listener. But it didn't age well. It was written, you know, very, very early in the morning.
And then the, the days of ants kind of, uh, you know, changed things around. But yeah. Yeah. It was basically the only defense that that you had Republicans making, who were saying, we don't know what it is.
Everybody is speculating. Yeah.
And as we said, we always, if there's something out there, if there's a source story,
we said, we always say it could be this or it could be that or it could be that. We've always done that. But everything that we said during the week. Yeah. Everything that we said from the source stories that came out were right about what was in the
deal. Right.
βSo that's why we said it didn't age well for him.β
And because he was talking about the fact that there may be top, there was nothing top secret in there. Nothing top secret. And so we'll get to that coming up here and just so much else, uh, to, uh, to, to talk about out there. The, the Fed.
Yeah. Yeah. Well, this is exactly what I said about, you know, the whole thing with wars. Or, or whoever you were going to replace your own power with. The nature of the Fed, which should have been the criticism all along.
Look, I have a problem with the Federal Reserve. And, you know, if you want to go full ran poll, we should audit the Federal Reserve or whatever. And, and those, you know, those concerns, um, you had some at the Fed.
Uh, that wanted to raise the, we're in favor of raising interest rates.
And, but it doesn't look like, I don't think we're going to see a lowering of the interest rates anytime between now and the end of the year. I could be wrong depending on what happens with the economy based on what happens with war.
βBut I, I, even then, I think the market prices that end to get us back to where we were,β
which means there, it doesn't necessarily constitute lowering those rates. Uh, again, I could be wrong. Um, we'll see what happens. But, well, what I thought was interesting is, you know, nothing happened. Right.
And yeah, but the other thing that happened was, as we said, worse came in and said, "Look, we're not going to give our detailed opinion every month anymore. Everybody shut up." Yeah. That's basically what he said.
Well, and, you know, the, the markets look at that and, because they're trying to figure out where interest rates might go, you know, next time, right, estimating.
And here's what we'll be watching.
There's a reason that they did that. And I don't disagree with warship's approach here. But there is something to be said about transparency. If we're not going to audit the Fed, then we want to know what you guys are thinking. And because if you make a move and then say, "Well, we're not going to tell you why.
We make a move." I mean, we're not going to go into the details of why we made the move. Um, well, the Fed minutes will, I understand. Well, they're very bright. That they're going to do.
No. They're going to explain, but it's like where they do the, the minutes. The, the, the, not even the minutes of it, but every month.
Basically, we're not going to be giving our opinion of where we think it's going to go.
Because then by the time we get to doing it or every week or whatever, the predictive territory, we're not going to be doing that anymore. Because we, we sort of box ourselves in by doing it. Well, and, and again, I don't disagree with him on that.
βThe only thing I would encourage would be going forward is, you know, in fact,β
get, get out of the predictive and just say, if things go this way, then this could happen. If things go this way, this could happen. But I think it's a given. I think the market's already priced. Those contingencies in, up or down.
And so, you know, that may be useless. And maybe wasting everybody's time and worse may, may see that as, ah, now you're just blowing, you know, hot air by that point. So we'll see. We are right.
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Here at Red Eye Radio, he's here calling. I'm Gary McNamara. I'm going to show you the situation that we're in. You see the Nate Bargazzi controversy that Nate Bargazzi went to the UFC to see. But this is the thing.
You do anything that's associated with Trump and all of a sudden you're political. Now, there's been this thing with Nate Bargazzi. I think just my observation. He may tell you it's not true.
βI think all the comedians love him and they call him the nicest comedian in the world.β
And he's worked with lots of liberal comedians and he's a clean comedian. He's also a Christian. So, there are a couple of comedians that I've seen have him on their podcast. That you could tell they were kind of going out on a little bit. Then maybe it was friendly jabbing or not.
Nate never made a big deal out of that.
But if you as a clean comedian who was openly a Christian, go to any event associated with Trump, how dare you. And Nate is great. He's really not political in his comedy at all.
He's got his best form.
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Do you have your time? Just go to shopper boutique@prunterladen and direct one. Good bye! [Music] You're listening to Red Eye Radio from the Relief Factory Studio.
[Music] And he is there. I'm Gary McNamara. We are Red Eye Radio. Welcome in, good morning.
Thanks so much for being here. All right, some of the emails that are exposed to communications that we've gotten, whatever, from people. This was one of the more interesting yesterday. Because the ones that agree with us, you know, that gets to be boring.
So, this is Latamore, who sent this to us. And this was yesterday.
βIn times when operational secrecy is essential,β
national security, the openness of our media and the public discourse presents a distinct challenge. I've long defended free speech and free press. As indispensable to the constitutional order, yet when sensitive operations require certain facts
to remain unknown, not only to the public, but especially to our adversaries, the media's practice of filling every gap with speculation, partial reporting and demands for media answers, undermines that need.
Adversaries such as Iran, watch and listen, monitoring our news talk. News and talk radio to gain any advantage from the free flow of information and commentary. Meanwhile, portions of the public show little patience
for incomplete knowledge. And press for prompt full answers. This subordinates strategic considerations to the appetite of disclosure. Someone knows must remain for operations to succeed.
The constant demand for transparency. They'll understandable.
Cannot always be met without real cost.
βSometimes you cannot get what you want when you want it.β
Acceptance of limited public knowledge. In critical moments paired with discipline, patience is necessary element of sound national policy. On the last note, you voted for the man to govern for God's sake.
Let him govern. He will either succeed or fail, and we will go from there. All right. Number one, as you know,
that has been that has been dated now, that we know that. And again, when we do speculation, when we, you know, source story, we'll say, look, this is a source story.
We always tell you. Yeah. And we say, this is what they say. It could be that it might not be that. But speculation is one thing.
I would say this to Rand pays a lot more attention to what the president and the vice president say than Eric and Gary. But there was no top secret stuff here. That was an excuse to throw out.
I mean, that speculation right there. You're accusing us of putting out speculation. Which your implying helps the enemy when you're saying that there is, that there may be operational secrecy here,
where there's no operational secrecy when you say we have a deal. And then you send surrogates out to promote that deal. And then you say you shouldn't question it, or if there are stories out there,
shouldn't question the politicians on it. Well, and we don't speculate to the point of conclusion in a situation like this, especially because you cannot, we don't have all of the information. We'll say, if this is true,
if these reports are true, if that part is accurate, if that holds, if that remains. Yes. We'll use those qualifiers for a reason.
And it's not an out. It's just how you should approach it. If you don't, we're not sitting in the situation room. Right. So, and let him where we appreciate
your very thoughtful message to us on X. And I agree. For speech, and I would say I would add true journalism, a kind that people like Barry Weiss believe in,
is essential to a free society.
But it is when you look at a situation like this. The people come and go. The ideas remain. I don't pledge allegiance to a person.
I don't vote for them and say,
just let them run, just let them run their show. If they're doing something I disagree with,
βit's because I think it will come back at themβ
and fail and they will not be able to complete their overall mission and agenda items. And that's a concern for me. I don't have at near as much confidence in the GOP in terms of capital Hill as I do in this president.
That confidence is waning based on items from this week alone. And that's a problem. That's a problem for people like me because I don't waver one way or the other.
If it comes out, if we get ultimately under this president,
the regime is gone and we get all of the uranium, then I will say, well done, Mr. President, and that will be it. He's a public servant. I'm not going to just hire him and let him run.
I hired him to do a job. I expect that to be done. We are letting him, because this is the last part. And this is where, in my opinion, let him or goes to the emotional part of it.
On the last note, you voted for the man to govern for God's sake. Let him govern. He will either succeed or fail. We will go from there.
You and I aren't stopping him from governing. Yeah, no, there's nothing that we say. There's nothing we don't stop him from governing. We're responding to him governing. Right.
And so I just, and he responded to the criticism of the president, responded to the criticism clearly. Right. And that's the seven. That's the way that it works.
But there was no top secret in here.
So that blows the first part of the argument.
Right.
βIt was nothing top secret in here at all.β
Yeah, because after this written, every day, they put everything out there. And all the sort, the source stories that we brought to you on the air on our podcast and on our radio show. All of it turned out to be true. Yes.
All of it. Right. Sometimes it doesn't work that way. But in this case, it did. Right.
On the, on the, when he said one last note, you voted for the man to govern for God's sake. He said, "For God's sake, he will succeed or fail and we will go from there." First point, as we said, we're not stopping him from governing. We're commenting on, you know, his governing and what they have said.
In fact, we have been much more critical as we will be in a couple of minutes, a couple of minutes.
About the things that they said, which we believe are straw men arguments. J.D. vans made another one yesterday. Complete straw man argument. It doesn't exist out there. Right.
But they're not on the 100,000 true thing. Right. When they're not being credible, when you can blow a hole through their argument, then you have a right to speculate what are they doing. Right.
And, and, and let me just, I just want to finish this. And, and with a thing here, what you voted for in the man to govern for God's sake. So let him govern, he will succeed. Do you know what our job is? This is what we do for living.
That's what we do. This is what we do for living. And it, it's not. And, and you're right, Gary, it's, it's not that we're stopping him from governing, but we will, because it implies let him govern without criticism.
Right. That's what you're saying. Yeah. And that, that's not what, that's not what this country was founded on. And I don't care if it's somebody on our side or not.
Keep in mind, if you've been paying attention, and maybe I'm not sure how long a lot of them were spending listening. And we hope it's for a long time. That's all we require, listen all of your life every night. But if you're a new listener, rather new listener, and you didn't listen along the way,
President Trump gets high marks where other GOP presidents didn't get. Maybe with the exception of Reagan and modern years, President Trump has accomplished a lot. This is why, by the way, this entire thing to us is disappointing. I won't say shocking, but it's disappear because it's not over yet.
And I'm putting that asterisk there. Well, no, we, again, it's a long the way the messaging has to be very clear. Or, or you don't have to necessarily put all these things out every day, because tossing these things out every day. You know, I saw someone say yesterday, well, he's just trying to keep the enemy confused.
You're keeping your constituents confused.
βAnd keeping the enemy confused, what is, what is, what is the purpose of keeping the enemy confused?β
Right, exactly. They, if they don't see you acting, there's no confusion. They understand, right, you're not going to act.
Right.
And they're being proven right.
βAnd for example, I want to, let's, let's play this particular audio from JD eventsβ
when he was on the Megan Kelly show, where this absolutely was using, you know, this complete straw man argument. Here we go. And importantly, we have a constituency right now that is saying that we're going to send boots in the ground. They want the Donald Trump to send hundreds of thousands of brown troops into a ran.
The best things are people. But we need people. Who? Yeah, who?
First Megan Kelly saying, who?
I don't know of one. Yeah, I don't know one. You know, there's, there's a talk of, of having boots on the ground. Someone may get to get the uranium, but that would be boots on the ground after you had wiped out the government. Yes.
Of the government. And the agreement was there in the proper security be there to get the, and, and we didn't propose that. Trump did. Well, no. Trump still won.
He said we're going to get it.
βWell, and he said this is what it would take.β
Right. And we've known that. And I don't know where the hundred thousand number. But if someone commented. Uh, in terms of hyperbally.
You know, you're going to send in a hundred thousand. That's hyperbally. That could be taken seriously. Or if there was a Republican out there that said, look. In order to win a war, the way Trump is stating.
We're going to win the war. Yeah. You know, we're going to need hundreds of thousands of ground troops. And that's not going to happen. Right.
You know, I could see that might have been said somewhere. But Trump in was selling it was where we fight wars in a different way. And that is, as we know, Salamani and other terrorist leaders that we've taken out. And that is, it was clear. We can win this by killing the leadership level.
Then the next leadership level. Then the next leadership level. Then the next leadership level. Then the next leadership level. Right.
We keep them underground. And then we put the, you know, we put the, you know, the, the blockade on. Uh, when the, but no one. There is no one talking about. Hundreds of thousands.
I don't know anyone talking about. Unless it was used in the fact of criticizing Trump strategy to begin with that you can't win a war on this.
And we said, well, it'd be unique because we've never.
I don't know a war where we have targeted the leadership like we have in a ran. And we said, we hope it works. And it might, but you've got to be consistent. And that means every single level of, of, of, of leadership in that country that's related to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, you take out.
And that was the plan. And the plan was when we do that. And when we finish the job as he sets almost a quote, finish the job. Then the Iranian people, you can take over. And we know that was the case.
Because the president talked about the Kurds stealing our weapons.
βWhich still that scandal has to, you know, what do you mean?β
They stole our weapons. I think this, you know, how did this happen? Right. You know, these are all totally legitimate questions. You know, that are, that are out there.
But that's a strong man argument. But there was no ground, there was no ground swell for ground troops at all. No one. And that's where JD vanch, you know, you look at that. And then you look at when he talked about we're not going to, you know,
the 300 billion isn't US taxpayer money. Nobody was making that argument. And when you're making a strong man argument, it means you don't believe that you can convince your constituents that what you're actually doing is right, otherwise you tell the truth.
Because the 300 billion dollar mark wasn't about, again,
never was about taxpayer money.
It was about the fact that you would be enriching Iran to fund their proxies all over again. Right. And this is not what we want. This seems like.
President Trump, you know, from where he began, you know, a unconditional surrender. Those words were important. And now, we're shaking hands with the IRGC and signing a deal. We are Red Eye Radio.
We'll be right back with more Red Eye Radio with every currently and Gary McNamara. We are Red Eye Radio.
He's our currently, and I'm Gary McNamara.
Welcome and good morning. Yeah, I'm going to play this a quick audio cut. This is the president yesterday. Here we go. All right.
Talk to you about the Randio. Yeah. This is in the low 70s now. That's amazing.
βSo that's what speaks, that speaks louder than words.β
The alternative would be a worldwide depression. You know, the stupid people want to have a worldwide depression. And the stupid people. So you can only go so far. Drive somebody into the ground and a lot of bad things happen.
Number one, the straight would never open because they don't like floating
billion dollars ships up and down or straight. When the rockets flying over them and mines all over the place. So the straight would never be open. It wouldn't be open for a long time. So we have a very hot stock market.
We have a very starting to be a very low oil price. Wow. Just wow. Wow. Wow.
Yeah. And the most response was, well, I wonder who caused the closing of the straight of hormones. How did this all happen? Yeah.
Yeah. It's like.
βAnd then again, that the people like us that.β
Backed him on it and backed him on what he wanted to do.
That now he has reversed. Are now the stupid people who want a global recession. Yeah. I feel like that cut that we played from Senator Kennedy yesterday. Were you just starting to --
What? Yeah. You know, brevity is not his strong point. So we'll get into that a little bit more coming up. Now for the our news is brought you by House products.
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gutes fΓΌr alle. Hey there. I'm Paula Penn. I help people make the smartest money decisions possible. If you don't control your money, it controls you.
Yeah. You're not in control of your finances.
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We are Red Eye Radio. He is Eric Hurley and I'm Gary McNamara. Welcome and good morning. Thanks so much for being here. You know, we had mentioned in a previous hour about the whole Nate Bargazzi thing about the,
you know, he's getting severely criticized for going to the UFC or UFC 250 last weekend. And it was funny because I saw I saw posts from Democrats saying, I hate Trump. You know, I hate Trump. I hate everything about him.
But Nate Bargazzi, really? Yeah, you're going after him. It was pretty funny. It was just like, well, you're talking Nate Bargazzi. And it's like, and then Nate said, I'm not political.
And it's like, well, you sort of have to understand what's going on in the world. Nate. Well, you know, I mean, it's, but you know what? If it's a historic event. Nate, Nate, his friends with Joe Rogan.
They've known each other for years. He's been on Joe's show several times. You know, he's a comedian. And if you get access to something like that. And you're non-political.
You'd want to look at and go, you know, I want to see what this is all about. You know, I mean, there's nothing wrong with that.
Of course, with the left, you can't do anything.
You're practically maga if you do anything.
The nicks are going to the White House. The owner of the next. Oh, yeah. Donald Trump and I have been friends for years. And we're going to, we're going to the White House.
Did you see the one player of the, I can't think of the player's name on the nicks. Yeah. But apparently he played in Texas. I had to play probably for San Antonio. I don't know if he played for San Antonio who he played for.
But they said, what do you think about Texas goes, I miss Texas. Yeah, I miss the Texas. I bet he does. Yeah. Yeah.
Because you know, we, we had talked about it with the whole, you know, this goes back 15 years ago. Was it maybe 10, 12 years ago? Mm. With the whole Phil Nicholson thing. Oh, yeah.
βPhil Nicholson complained and remember how he was attacked.β
You know, the left went bonkers at him when he said nine. Well, what are you talking about? And we figured it out. We actually did the figurine. And we said, okay, there's a, he'd be paying was a 13% tax.
Yeah. In 13% tax there and zero in in Florida for income tax. Right. And then we figured it out based on what his earnings were. And what his earnings looked like they were going to be over the next 10 years.
Which if he hadn't destroyed his career. Yeah. But you know, he might because I still think going to live was the wrong thing for him. Because he didn't need the golf money. Right.
Right. You know, if you're talking about long term, he was viable. He could have become another Arnold Palmer in being a spokesperson for the rest of his life and making mega dollars on it. He had that image.
Right. Going to live killed that. Now he got the money upfront. Why he did it. You know, it's his, his choice.
But when you, when you look at going back to the original thought. We figured out that it could cost him over a period of 10 years. 80 to $100 million. Yeah. And we went.
Who, I don't care how much money you make.
Who in the right mind's going to give up 80 to $100 million.
Right. When you actually put it that way. So when I saw the guy from the next day that I missed him, it's Texas a lot of. I missed the taxes or the lack of taxes. It should have been.
But I interested in what he meant. Yeah. But the neighbor gets you thinking because I, when I see him. You know, a funny thing is I don't look at him like any other comedian. I look at him as being this very gentle guy who's just sort of going through life with observations.
And not the same as sign fell. Right. But a much more com or thing like. And sort of this sort of a a less sarcastic Normic Donald. Yeah.
Well, he's going. More like inquisitive. Yeah. Well, and it's a lot. It's often self-deprecating.
Yeah. humor. He talked about in.
βIn the Tennessee kid, which was I think his first netflix special several years ago.β
He talks about he goes, you know, I played golf one day. And then I had to drive after that, you know, to drive home or to his next destination. I forgot which. But I was, you know, going to just change my shirt, you know, my shirt was sweaty. And I'm going to change my shirt.
So I opened up, you know, the back of my car. I was changing my shirt. I had my shirt off. He goes, you know, no older guy walks. The main goes Olivia.
Yeah. Yes. No. What's worse is that the guy didn't recognize, you know, that I wasn't his wife or the fact that he thought maybe I looked like his wife, you know, I'm paraphrasing the joke.
But I mean, he's, he's got so many great, so much great material over the years. Number one touring comedian. I believe two years in a row. Um, Nashville based. Uh, he, I think, and dusty sleigh have done such a great job.
I think for comedy and clean comedy. Uh, dusty sleigh is just hilarious. He's the real deal. And, and the same with Nate Bargazzi. Nate's dad opens for him.
He's a former magician, former clown.
βHe's actually, Nate's, I think, first album was called Yelda by a clown.β
It's great material. But, you know, he's a nice guy. Speaking of celebrities and sports and, and everything. Oh, by the way, I did see that what's his name? Dana White.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. He, he said he'd never do this again.
Apparently he lost a ton of money. Yeah. Well, yeah, you know, doing this. So he said, not, not, not doing it again. So glad we did it, but it's a one-time thing.
But when you, when you look at sports in general, I just want to mention it.
The whole, uh, the whole pride day thing with the San Francisco Giants.
You saw about that right where the San Francisco Giants, right?
Uh, you know, they, they had, you know, pride night. And you had to wear, I think it was a hat or whatever.
βA pride hat, everybody, you must wear it. You have no choice.β
Hmm. And so you had some of the players put Bible versus on it who were Christian. Hmm. And the Major League Baseball has threatened them. Interesting article.
It says the culture wars and pro sports go on for now. Talking about how the culture wars are working in reverse. I said this, uh, a few years, uh, you know, a few years back. Part of the part of the problem, you know, before we even get to the pride thing. 'Cause I'm seeing this for the longest time.
Gay pride, white pride, black pride, all ridiculous. It's stupid. And I've been saying that since I'm at a talk show host, it's stupid. I don't know if anything against any of those people. Right.
Pride is not based on what you are.
That's what you accomplish. That's who you are. Yes. What do you do as a person? What do you do as a person?
Right. It's a, it's a stupid, stupid thing to be taught. Things to be talking about. Yeah. Right.
Because you know, I won't go into it. But, you know, Normic Donald did the same thing, but in a much more crude or way. And I'm glad you won't go into it. Exactly. Almost zero of that material can be aired.
Yes. But, but the, the, the point was you haven't accomplished anything. Right.
βAnd that's what how people generally view, uh, pride.β
But the other thing is the big, the big thing that the LGBT, who did was add the tea because now pride represents the mutilization of children. Yeah. Now pride gay pride represents men, the misogyny, the, the misogyny and sexism of the radical transgender movement. Mm-hmm.
Now it endorses. And I don't, I don't know. Uh, if Major League owners have even thought about it. And it endorses naked men in girls' bathrooms. Yeah.
It endorses the misogyny and sexism that we saw and the threats against women in college sports and women who say no, we ought to be able to have our own sports. Yeah. And that's one of the reasons that it's getting so much push back now. Right.
And it's going to continue to do it because you took it to a level. I mean, the whole pride thing to begin with is stupid. It's just stupid. It doesn't make any sense. Pride's what you accomplish.
Not what you are. Right. Right. And, but that's one. And I'm, but that's long gone.
People have already accepted. But I'm just going to say pride is what you are.
βBecause you should be proud about what you are.β
Shut up. It's, it is your character. Right. I character. My oldest granddaughter turns 21 today.
21. Wow. And I think to myself, my wife and I were having this discussion. That our children and our grandchildren. The people that they are, how they conduct themselves.
They're not perfect. But we're proud of the way they conduct themselves. They're good people. There's not, they're not as good as their grandparents. But that's, you know, they'll get there with time.
Does she have their age pride? Is there 21 pride? Right. I can drink. Well, man.
Apparently she's going out with friends tonight. And I, I have been told they're going to Uber. And that's a good thing. But, you know, it's, but it's not really about that. In fact, I think for her health.
It's not something that appeals to her. But yeah, no, she is about.
She's always been about helping others.
She's extremely strong positive. And, you know, like, all people, she's had her ups and downs in life. You know, where moments where, you know, she was sad, or maybe thinks that she didn't do a good job at this. Usually it's school related.
She's in college now. And then she goes back and tries again. And accomplishes everything that she wants to. And she will do that in life. She's, you know, we look at our kids and grandkids with such great pride.
And they're just on how they conduct themselves as people. They think they're behavior. Right. And then there are accomplishments. But it doesn't mean, well, you know, they have to be a neurosurgeon.
I mean, that's great too. If you're, if your child is a neurosurgeon, that's awesome. But being, picking a road and saying, This is what I'm going to do for this reason. And, you know, it's seeing that gives me great pride.
Because I think to myself, you know, I don't feel like that comes from me. Maybe I set some examples along the way.
It just seems that these are just good people.
No, I, you know, I disagree.
βI think they looked at your life and said, we don't want to be like Grandpa.β
No, I think that's what motivates me. I think that's a big part of it. Yeah. Two, I wasn't going to say that on the air. And, you know, I mean, the grandmother has her faults.
But when you look at, you know, they, they ha ha ha. Oh, you're in trouble for that. She doesn't ignore it. But, but, but I do think that society probably would, would have been more acceptance of the whole gay pride thing.
If it was just gay. Adding transgender in there opened up a whole other door to the culture of misogyny sexism, the threatening of female athletes not being able to identify what a woman is trying to erase women is what the radical transgender movement did, which is if you look at the people that promote pride day,
they're all the liberals that promote the radical transgender movement.
Well, and I think that was this, that was the step too far that they will, that they will lose on it. Again, I mentioned the whole thing about you pride to begin with. It's about what you accomplish. It's about your behavior.
It's about having great character traits and through having great character traits. You will accomplish great things. And that's universal for everybody. But when you go down the path of, you know, whether it was white pride, black pride, gay pride, whatever thing you want to throw out there, all of that's just it's just stupid.
It's just stupid. Well, it doesn't, it doesn't accomplish anything. What you're saying is, I'm proud of what I, I'm proud of what I, their argument is, I'm proud of what I'm naturally am. Well, that's a ridiculous, that's a ridiculous opinion to hold.
Well, because, you know, again, comes down to we always look at the character of a person.
They're behavior. And, you know, I don't think anybody should have to live their life in secret and be a shamed of their life as long as they're not hurting other people.
βAnd everything in their life is consensual and, and about bored.β
But pride is misapplied here. Yeah, absolutely. So when I saw the thing, and, and when articles saying the culture wars and pro sports go on for now, saying how, you know, the culture wars are moving, you know, obviously to the right.
The intimidation tactics aren't working anymore. And again, I think that one of the major reasons, I think the major reason is, is the radical transgender movement that's so obviously misogynist and sexist and the threats that were thrown at women out there and still. You know, we made a joke the other day about the whole thing about, you know, at the UFC fight, the one fighter saying Michelle Obama is a man.
And the outrage from the left, we go, why are you outraged? Well, because they, they, they called her a man. Well, what is a man? Define a woman, define a man. Well, we can't do that within why you angry.
Yeah. Right. You know, that's the kind of, you know, stupidity. And then we got, by the way, I got, thank you so much for the number of people that responded that when I was an eight year old and, and, you know, my, my brother and my neighbor harassed, you know,
we're harassing me because of the cute little dimples and the curly Q and his hair and then I brought up. And then I had other people call me a femme and some, it's a lot of people. But wow, I even heard that one in 50 years. And then a ton of people don't know. It was Sissy, not femme.
I go, no, I was a femme. [laughs] Were you a violent femme? No, I was not a violent femme. Well, I mean, the violent fems were caused because of the discrimination against fems.
Yeah, they got violent. Hey, we didn't change to choose the name. That was their choice. I didn't think we were going, oh my gosh, that was, you know, that was so funny. We were just saying, yeah, that's, they were who kids are called me a femme.
Yeah, you know, because of my cute little dimples and the curly Q and my hair at eight years old. By the way, there's still a tiny part of me when I hear that that goes here. [laughs] It's like it's just stayed with me for 62 years. Yeah.
Right now.
βBut you should hear what our boss has about you.β
Well, the thing is, it doesn't matter anymore. I mean, as we've all we said, because we brought it up a couple of months ago again. We need to have mandatory military service. And we went now. Everybody needs to be a talk show host for a year.
Yeah. And at say four years, four years. And take all the criticism and all the hate and everything else. And then you go, I don't care. Yeah.
You don't care what other people think anymore. You just don't. Right. And you can tell if somebody actually wants to have an argument, you know, honest debate or doesn't.
Right. And you know, if you want to see where the honest debates are not, that would be social media. Yeah. Exactly.
Exactly. That that that evolved that evolved into insanity very quickly and name calling.
And and everything else.
And it's just like, you know, it's.
βBut yeah, people need to have thicker skins and doing this business really helps.β
I'm so glad. I mean, it's sometimes it could be tough getting to this point. But I'm so glad I got to the point where you're like, man, I'm care. You're an idiot. Yeah, whatever.
Okay. You know what, sometimes I am. You're an idiot. I'm fine with that. I don't care.
I accept that. Whether you're a femme. What? Yeah.
You do on a cat and drink white.
That's how I'm saying. Not a lot of wine. You can't handle it anymore. But if we are, if we are right. I radio.
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Get in touch with what I radio told free at 866. Mindy Red Eye. [Music] We are on our radio. He's here calling and I'm hearing McNamara.
Actually the best one was the woman one time that was getting on my case saying she knew I was secretly gay because I have such a great relationship with my father. And I went, "Well, won't that be with my mother?" And it's like, "I don't even know the correlation."
βBut I think she thought she was actually going to get to me.β
But I am ahead of her sexual, but after my relationship history, I have no pride in that at all. [Laughter] [Music] [Music] [Music]
[Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] That's Red Eye Radio Live.
That re-night on the Red Eye Radio app. Available in the app store. Red Eye Radio. And I'm getting McNamara along with Eric Hurley coming up in just a minute more on quote the deal end of quote. Alright, for 250 years it's all been about life, liberty and pursuit of happiness.
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800 the number for relief or go to relieffactor.com. Relieffactor.com for your three week quick start at 1776. You know, when we talked about the deal, we talked about that really, the only defense that you heard from the surrogates of President Trump outside of the professional ones. We're the fact that we don't know everything.
We don't know everything. We don't know everything. And one of the reasons that they were saying that are you can't trust what the media was reporting when it came to what was in the deal. You can't trust them.
Let's wait till we hear everything.
They weren't defending the things that were being said.
They were just saying we don't know whether they're true. Now we know that everything that we brought up that the source story said ended up being true. All of it, and the things being said by the President and J.D. Vance are crazy. Yeah, listen to this from the President. All right.
This is the President talking yesterday about the state of Hormuz and admitting we can't beat Iran. That's what he's saying. Yeah. We can't as after he's talked about, we've decimated everything there. There's nothing left.
Now he's saying there's no hope that the United States could ever beat them by what he said right here. Here we go. Since in the low 70s, man, that's amazing.
βSo that's what speaks, that speaks louder than words.β
The alternative would be a worldwide depression. You know, the stupid people want to have a worldwide depression and the stupid people. So, you can only go so far. Drive somebody into the ground and a lot of bad things happen.
Number one, the straight would never open because they don't like floating billion
dollarships up and down a straight. When the rockets flying over them and mines all over the place. So the straight would never be open. It wouldn't be open for a long time. So we have a very hot stock market and we have a very starting to be a very low oil price.
And that's one of the things, and this has been discussed many times before. Trump thinks if everything is an economic transition, excuse me, transaction with somebody. Right. Then they think the same way that we do. Right.
Everybody talks, you know, that's why they talk about the, you know, the $300 billion that, you know, we're going to, you know, the goal is to normalize a ran.
βAnd, you know, this is a thing that, that, that commercial profit can defeat.β
The, the Sharia government that exists there. Yeah. And it's just bizarre because so much of what him and Vans are saying is what Obamacet. And you just, you shake your head going, this is just nuts. Let's go to, let's go further to this.
This is on Trump on a ballistic missile program. Here we go. We'll be working on a parallel effort with the Gulf nations to address non-nuclear issues, such as the conventional ballistic missiles, which we'll be talking about. And support them.
They have to have some because other people have some. They got to have some. Somebody said they, you shouldn't give them one. But I have, guys, I like some of these guys. But I don't think this, I don't think this, I don't think this is smart.
This is the guy, again, you notice what he's doing. Everybody's not smart, everybody's not stupid. Here is Trump. All right. I'm going to read the quote from Trump.
All right.
First off, it's in reality.
This is from National Review in reality. Iranian missiles are a huge problem. Because he said, let me just see, maybe he says here. Let me finish the quote here. Here we go.
All right. Here we go. Okay. Sure. You shouldn't let them have any missile.
I said, well, what am I going to do?
βAm I going to let Saudi Arabia have missiles, but they can't have them?β
Yes, sir. Can't doesn't work that way, you know? It doesn't work that way. And missiles are at the problem. missiles are, they heard a little location, but they don't blow up the planet.
Wow. In reality, Iranian missiles are a huge problem. And you don't have to take it for me. You can take it from Donald Trump in October of 2017. In announcing his declining to certify Obama's Iran nuclear deal, Trump said,
Iran develops to plays and proliferates missiles that threaten American troops and our allies. Trump said that under the Obama deal, Iran has received massive sanctions relief while continuing to develop its missiles program. In the same speech, he said that under his strategy, we will address the regime's proliferation of missiles and weapons that threaten its neighbors, global trade and freedom of navigation
informally pulling out of Obama's deal in 2018. Trump criticized Iran for exporting dangerous missiles. In May of 2018, when he formally pulled out of the Iran Arabia of the Obama deal, he once again said that Iran exports dangerous missiles and that not only does the deal fail to hold Iran's nuclear ambitions, but it fails to address the regime's development,
a ballistic missiles that could deliver nuclear warheads. In launching the war in February, Trump told the American people,
They've rejected every opportunity to renounce their nuclear ambitions,
and we can't take it anymore.
βInstead, they attempted to rebuild their nuclear program and continue developingβ
the long-range missiles that can now threaten our very good friends and allies in Europe. Our troops overseas and soon reached the American homeland in making the case during his April prime time speech on the war. He explained that one of the primary rationales for launching it was that Iran's strategy was so obvious. They want to produce as many missiles as possible, and they did with long-range possible,
and would soon have had missiles that could reach the American homeland, Europe, and virtually any other planet on Earth. One of the reasons a Trump claimed that the war was such a success was precisely that the U.S. was pounding its missile programs. Now suddenly, it doesn't matter, and if you don't change with him, you're stupid.
For God's sake, we all know it. We went in because of the nuclear weapons and the ballistic missiles. That's why we went in. It's as if he's talking about a totally different enemy. I know.
It should, it's apps.
And then basically saying, you know, we can't stop, we can't stop Iran.
You know, and then anybody who doesn't agree with it, you're a stupid person if you don't agree with him. He's the one that started the war. Started this action. He's the one that said it would be, he said the only.
He said it. We didn't say it. He said unconditional surrender was the goal. And now he's reversing everything that he said previously, and trying to make it sound like anybody who doesn't agree with him now is stupid.
Wow. Yeah, absolutely just yesterday was his worst day, by the way. Yeah, it was all over the place within minutes. I mean, it was just everywhere. He was just scattered.
And even like I said, you know, here's, here's Fox News here. You know, I saw criticism of Fox News, oh, they're just going along with everything. Which isn't true. But this was this was on this guy Benson on bread bear show. Can't think of the name of it for the moment.
But here it is.
βWell, Brad, I think looking at this holistically,β
there are three big issues that would need to be resolved. That's what we've been told at least. These have the Iranian regime potentially in a deal like this. One is the nuclear program, of course. Another is the missile program.
And a third is support for the terrorism proxies.
And based on what we're seeing, two of those three, the latter two are off the table, it seems completely. Not even part of the conversation toward an eventual agreement for a lot of people. That's unacceptable, a deal breaker. I happen to think if you can focus on the very top item there.
And permanently, verifiably through coercion, eliminate Iran's entire nuclear program dismantle it completely. That would be a win, that could be a good deal. But to see President Trump today seeming to equivocate a little bit on, maybe civilian purpose, nuclear program,
staying in the offing or low level enrichment.
βThat could cross a line, I think, into bad deal territory.β
And it's not helpful in my view to see the vice president out there publicly saying, those people pointing out these concerns and raising these questions are warmongers or they want hundreds of thousands of troops on the ground. Or, you know, they want all the Iranian people dead. He said these things, I don't think that's fair or accurate.
And it reminds me of the Obama team and their straw manning and demagoguery during the JCPOA debate. So a lot of reasonable questions being asked right now. I just wonder what it's like when they all meet. You know, see how it's seen the response about region's expressions. Yeah, it was, it did not look good at all.
And I know, as I said, we've seen the defense because we've seen people that have disagreed with us. And the only defense was that everybody was speculating, you know, instead of, you know, finding out what was actually in it. Now we know it's in it and all the speculation was right. I didn't find anybody that agreed.
You know, that said, well, if that speculation is true, I still agree with it. You really are getting any defense of the president coming from Republicans is milk toast to best like,
Well, we're hoping for the best and trust the president.
How can you trust the president when he talks, well,
βcompletely 180 degrees, which president, which one, which version are you trusting in?β
The February one, the April one or the one now. Right. That is a completely different opinion than what he held just a few months ago. Right. Tell me, which one you're trusting? And then when you gaslight when you say things when you're calling people stupid
for going along with the narrative that they believed in you? How they believed you were doing the right thing with Iran and now calling them stupid because they won't change on a dime and agree with you now. Yeah. You know your argument is weak.
Yeah. And JD vans is, again,
not a straw manning is just unbelievable.
βLike nobody's saying these things, nobody's saying these things.β
Right. And the other thing is that's really weak is when they keep and JD vans but all over the place talking about you, well, well, that's the propaganda coming from that. That's a propaganda. That's the propaganda.
But we believe this portion that they really do want to get rid and they believe they've gone the wrong direction for the last 47 years. Stop it. Stop trying to sell me something that Korean John Pierre would. Right.
And I agree with Andrew McCarthy, Trump and JD vans believe that the people that vote for them
are in basiles that they're idiots or that they don't get in line if they're called names. Right.
βYou'll get in line if you're called names because you don't want to offend them.β
Right. Sorry, but the Republican party's a little bit different. And conservatives a little bit different than the Democrat party. Yep. Issues actually matter and credibility actually matters.
Yep, and right now this administration doesn't have any on this issue. Nope. None. None. We are Red Eye Radio.
We'll be right back with more Red Eye Radio with Eric Hurley and Gary McNamara. We are Red Eye Radio. And he's our company and I'm Gary McNamara. I want to play this audio from Mark Helper and his podcast. Yeah.
Here we go. All right. You got to assume several things. You got to assume that these Iranian leaders are different than the past leaders. Eric, Eric, and my friend conservative commentators.
He's the same people. These are religious allies who's religion demands that they build a nuclear weapon and destroy Israel. Are these really different people? And one of the striking things that's occurred since the deal was signed. Or yet signed and announced and then signed is the present device president are openly saying.
This group of Iranian leaders, they're different. Now the president said that for a while, but they're saying now I'm fatigued. They're saying this is a good deal. You'll see when you see it. But what makes it a good deal is not necessarily only what's in it.
It's that we're dealing with a different kind of Iranian leader. Here's the president. But there you go. Yeah. It's assuming, as we have said, that people think like him.
Right. Right. They're concerned about economics. Whether or not they don't think like us. Right.
They don't. No. This is Red Eye Radio on Westwood One.


