In hour 4 of The Armstrong & Getty Show:
Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio, the George Washington Broadcast Center.
Jack Armstrong is Joe Getty Armstrong and Getty and no he Armstrong and Getty. Yeah, I'm going through my notes.
Joy Reid on MSNBC last night said she was hearing directly from Obama world and they were in a state of panic.
That's a powerful world.
Yes, yeah, there is no more powerful world in democratic politics than Obama World. So some more low lights of the debate and some more frantic commentators who are loyal Democrats. You're gonna enjoy it, guaranteed. Plus to help assess the blockbuster Supreme Court rulings that have just come out today and yesterday. The fabulous hymn Sander for Tim the lawyer from the Goldwater Instant to that's at the bottom of the hour.
This could be our finest hour.
Well, in this hour, the comedy break will be the funny routine, the the who's a better golfer among old men? Abbot and Costello routine from last night between Joe Biden and Donald Trump, which I can't believe even really happened.
I'm still not sure it really happened. It couldn't have somebody wake me. I'm dreaming. But first, it's a fun look back at the week.
That was good. Lord, what a week cow clips of the week for us?
Now, should I be nice? You tell me how to weak could.
The whips of the week?
You gotta go and start a new migrant fight league.
Just actually allow them to file a paperwork for legal status in the United States.
You do know that there is vetting that border officials do when they they counter someone.
They do.
I've been to the federal facilities.
No doubt in my mind that it is a casing video for some sort of terrorist attack.
In southern Russia.
Multiple heavily on gun maniputures simultaneously attacked two churches. Julian Assange agreed to plead guilty to one felony count of conspiracy to unlawfully obtain and disseminate classified information.
Our values and our way of life are the antidote to the poisonous populism of the right.
I mean, do you have confidence in the Supreme Court? No, I think they've gone road.
If his name was not Donald Trump, any if he wasn't running for president. From the former agent in New York I'm telling you that case would have never been rung.
Facing calls to step down and embroiled in a widespread FBI investigation, Oakland's mayor blamed her troubles on everyone.
You don't at a say today the power yourself.
People shouldn't have to choose between groceries and the student loans. With how this, we would not have been able to afford the costs to be able to have our own house.
To live with our daughter.
Nobody else is gonna tell you was wife. But they're not consimmering any white else or a shore that's.
Good as hot.
They even picked that Colin Marikawa bozo.
My biceps are the size of his head.
I've never had anything wax. I've had everything waxed my entire body. I'm smooth as a dolphin.
Had to tell oh yeah, and then I.
Always up every morning because I'm sure you've noticed. So anyway, where were we.
Now?
I say he'll come out old jacked up, right, old jacked.
Up, well mountain dew or whatever it is.
Of course, no one expects that Joe Biden will be on cocaine.
But yeah, the cod with dealing with every year we have to deal with.
I really don't know what he said at the end of this, and I don't think he knows what he said either.
Speaking of which we must slide immediately back into debate analysis and analysis of the analyzers as well.
Here's a good example of Joe Biden last night. We hadn't played this yet. This is one of my favorite moments.
What I'm going to do is fix the taxes. And for example, we have one thousand trillionaires in America, I mean billionaires in America, and what's happening. They're in a situation where they in fact paid eight point two percent in taxes. If they just paid twenty four twenty five percent, either one of those numbers, they've raised five hundred million dollars billion dollars, I should say, in a ten year period.
Okay, all right, that was easy to follow.
I'm sorry, what we're what are we talking about again?
He had to he had to fix every single statistic.
He gave trillions.
I'm sorry, billionaires, you charged them twenty four I mean twenty five or either one will work.
And then what.
Michael, before we get to John King, gimme one o five place.
I need to hear it.
Making sure that we're able to make every single solitary person eligible for what I've been able to do with the UH, with the COVID, I scould be with dealing with everything we have to do with. Look, if we finally beat medicare, thank.
You, President Biden. President Trump was right.
He did beat medicare. He beat it to death, and he's destroying medicare.
Good for Trump, I mean, just the way he handled that, well, he just let it. I mean because he had to hear in his head, you beat medicare?
What the hell you talked about it?
And that was folks, that was early on in the debate. Yeah, millions and millions and millions of people were watching.
Yeah, that's why. That's why last night is what it was. From what I can take in from watching all those pundits, that's when their phone started exploding. And that was the second answer. That's when all the phones blew up, like, okay, it's over now.
What Well, John King of CNN, they're longtime reporter and commentator and less unhinged than a lot of them.
He came strong clips thirty Michael.
This was a game changing debate in the sense that right now as we speak, there is a deep, a wide, and a very aggressive panic in the Democratic Party. It started minutes into the debate and it continues right now. It involves party strategists, it involves elected officials, it involves fundraisers, and they're having conversations about the president's performance, which they think was dismal, which they think will hurt other people down the party in the ticket, and they're having conversations about what they should do about it. Some of those conversations include should we go to the White House and ask the president's step aside. Other of the conversations are about should prominent Democrats go public with that call because they feel this debate was so terrible.
So that's still out there, prominent Democrats going to him privately or coming out publicly saying wow.
And we have I think underappreciated. One of the points John King made there, which is, given Biden's performance and a near certainty of losing barring some crazy.
Development that you know, he's your own imagination.
That will absolutely kneecap murder the Senate races. It will decimate the races for the House of Representative right.
See, you know I forgot about that. A lot of the people who are more plugged into politics. Brought that up last night. That is a reason why you would push him. Well, yeah, but you push him out and Kama is the candidate though.
See I this is another one where I am going against the mainstream. You can't run Kamala Harris. I know there are enormous problems, mostly because of identity politics with flushing her, but that.
There will be so little enthusiasm.
You might be better off with the mummy Biden than the dummy kamalaw I don't know.
Okay, so you can put you push him off the ticket so that won't hurt you on election day. But he's still president until January twentieth, which is a roll of the dice.
Yeah, I mean somebody who came off like he came off last night, with half of a week to rest. All the best pharmaceuticals and doctors.
In the world.
The idea that he might not be able to serve at all within a few months is not a stretch at all, not some sort of wild use of my amountinmentack.
No, the lots of people said last night he shouldn't be president right now, right, Holy crap. Well, we got to get the entire golf conversation on because it was just so damned entertaining.
I mean.
It made me doubt everything. I'm not sure what I believe anymore or on any topic.
Anytime Donald Trump has to rein it in by saying, let's not act like children. And when Donald Trump is the voice of that's when things are authorials. I would say, aayway, if you haven't heard that, or if you want to hear it again, it's coming up the down ballot races will be so affected that will cause a lot of House and Senate members of the Senate to be more willing to talk openly about Joe Biden can't be the nominee because I don't want to.
Lois turnout since eighteen sixteen when the population was one hundred and thirty thousand people.
Right when your job is threatened, you're more likely to say, ah, can we get a different guy at the top, because nobody's gonna vote and I'm gonna lose. And then the other thing that Mark Awpern kept mentioning last night on his zoom was if the fundraising drives up, then he can't run. I mean, he can run, but he won't have the money to like really compete, and that's what usually happens.
Excuse me using the worst letter, But who the f would donate to the Bidy campaign at this point unless they just want to remain in the good graces of the Democratic.
Party, That's what he was saying. Rod, And they had I don't know if you ever watched Game Change when it used to be on Showtime. That was a pretty good political show. But it had Mark Alpern, It had John Holman, and then this other guy, Mark McKinnon was the third guy on there. Always wore a cowboy hat. Anyway, Mark McKinnon was on the Zoom last night. He said, nobody's a bigger anti Trumper than me. I'm a never Trumper. I hate Trump, blah blah blah. I voted for Biden. I can't vote for Biden again. I don't know what I'm going to do, but I can't vote for him after tonight. I mean, that's where it is with the people at the top levels of democratic politics.
Okay, so what you're about to hear is one of the most ridiculous exchanges in the history of conversation, never mind presidential debates. I'm going to introduce it this way for the golfers in the audience. The debate, which was already going to shoot about one hundred and fifteen, this is where it shanked the conversation into the woods.
Listen, if you dare.
For President Trump to follow up, you would be eighty two at the end of your second term.
What do you say to voters who have concerns about your capabilities to serve well?
I took two tests, cognitive tests.
I aised them, both of them, as you know we made at public He took none. I'd like to see him take one, just one, a really easy one. I go through the first five questions. He couldn't do it. But I took two cognitive tests. I took physical exams every year. And you know, we knock on wood wherever we may have wood.
Wait for that.
I'm in very good health. I just won two club championships, not even senior, two regular club championships. To do that, you have to be quite smart, and you have to.
Be able to hit the ball a long way.
And I do it.
He doesn't do it. He can't hit a ball fifty yards. He challenged me to a golf match. He can't hit a ball fifty yards. I think I'm in very good shape. I feel that I'm as in good as shape as I was twenty five thirty years Actually I'm probably a little bit lighter, but I'm as good as shape as I was years ago. I feel very good. I feel the same. But I was willing to take a cognitive test, and you know what, if I didn't do well, I aced them to Ronnie Jackson, who's a great guy when he was White House doctor. And then I took another one, a similar one, and both one of them said they've never seen anybody asam.
Thank you, President Biden.
You can see he.
Is six foot five and only two hundred and twenty thirty pounds or thirty five pounds. Well, you said sixty four two hundred. Well anyway, that's your anyway, just take a look at what he says he is, and take a look at what he is. Look I'd be happy to have a driving contest with him. The REMA. I got my handicapped, which when I was Vice president down to a six.
And but by the way I.
Told you before, I'm happy to play golf. If you carry your own bag, I think you can do it.
That's the biggest lie, and he's a six handicap of all, I.
Was an eight handicap, now eight. But I have you know how many good I've seen this?
Wing?
I know you Wing. I must learn act like President Trump. We're going to let's not act like children. Do you a specific concern?
I'm mortified as an American and as a golfer.
So when Joe Biden says I'm a six handicap or our challengesm that can you carry our bag?
Could you do it?
Challenges him.
Trump doesn't like pivot to a real issue or anything like that, says, no way, you're a six handicap.
Kids into it.
Like this is the biggest of all. Are you serious? Either one of both of you, either one of you? Oh my god, that that that is surreal superpower in the history of the world. And these are our candidates.
What do you? What do you?
Because I don't know anything about like amateur golf, especially senior and amateur golf at golf clubs. What's the likelihood Trump is winning the flat out competition they have at his golf club.
It's it's possible if it's a net event, meaning you apply your handicap. He's in the tour sandbagger, which means his handicap is is seriously inflated and uh and a cheater. So and nobody will call him at it, call him on it at the club he owns. So I suppose that's conceivable. It's it's it's very unlikely, but it's conceived.
Does the guy who owns the golf club regularly win the championship?
I've never heard of that happening. Uh No.
Also, the whole bragging about how low your handicap is. Anybody who did that, nobody would play with them the rest of their Life's that is such a douchey thing to do as a golfer.
You just you don't do that. It's like seriously about talking about the size of your genitals.
Oh really okay? Oh just yeah, what way I'm about an eight?
Wow?
What?
No way, you're an eight?
What? Oh I am? Yeah? Sure take a test.
That don't happen to the second debate.
No kidding, that's what they'll get to in the second debate.
Oh, you were right when you said somebody needs to stage that golf turner.
Oh my god, contest.
Yes, yeah, the fact that Joe Biden does Joe Biden actually think he could walk eighteen holes carrying clubs. You barely made it to the podium last night. What are you talking about?
Well, I tell you what deal will work out any logistics you want. But you got Tiger Woods, caddy and for Biden or whatever. Most golfers are conservatives, honestly, But Scotti, Scheffler, Ben Holty's for Trump, Jim Bagger vance comes out of the misty Woods and caddies have Jim nantz do the play by play five hundred million dollars to the winner's campaign.
That would be like half of the take. So yeah, please, I would love to watch that.
I can't believe Joe Biden late in the debate last night, in his current state, challenged somebody to like a physical fitness activity.
Wow.
I would cancel life saving heart surgery to watch that tournament, oh boy. Or it's mentioning that the fabulous Tim Sanderferd, Tim the lawyer from the Goldwater Institute's going to be with us next segment to analyze some astonishing, incredibly important Supreme Court decisions that have just come out. Be more enlightened than your dopey dopey friends, and stay tuned.
Trump could avoid taking the bait on January sixth, than a couple other things that I didn't think he could do. But he couldn't avoid taking the debate on who's got a better handicap at golf?
It's it's it can't. Did that really happen? Somebody wake me up? Somebody slapped me, wake me up? And Trump was the one to put an end to it. Tay, we're reacting like children here. Otherwise you would have kept going Biden will not be the candidate. You heard it here first about a year ago, but you heard it again here.
Uh. Some of the biggest rulings in a long time in one. And I know Tim Sanderfer's been begging for for years. Oh but he's popping champagne right now. We'll talk to him.
Coming up Armstrong and Getty.
So I'm gonna spray ten today?
Should I go to misst Body Bar, the Glow Station, Glow with Mo. I don't know how to choose one of these based on the name Glow with Mo. You like the name of Glow with Mo. Yeah, with Glow with Mo? Is it mo is in Maureen?
Or is in? I call it a flaming mo.
No, I don't know right well more significantly, please welcome to the Armstrong and Getty Show. Tim the lawyer Sander for Vice president for Litigation the Goldwater Institute. Also an adjunct scholar with the Cato Institute. His latest book, Freedom's Theories, How Isabelle Patterson Rosewilder Lane ein Rand Found Liberty in an our Age of Darkness is one of the most fascinating reads about the first half of the twentieth century I've ever come across.
Also, Tim sanderfer Hello, Tim, hey.
Thanks for having me. Now I must say I am a glow station guy.
Oh okay, glow station. Okay.
Here's my reasoning is that it sounds more like the kind of place you'd meet a girl.
Ah well, okay, there you go.
I don't think girls are going to be going to glow with mo.
I see what you mean right there?
You have a wife who is both beautiful and brilliant.
Don't talk giving me advice.
I'm not going I'm not going to this, Tan sate. I don't need to. I live in Arizona, so I'm not going on. I'm advising you.
No, no, no, no, no, you can't even think like that.
So this this has got to be like one of the happiest days of your life. Some of these Supreme Court rulings.
Yeah, it's pretty sweet. We got a really good decision in the Chevron deference case as well as a really good decision in the homelessness case this morning that have really helped not fix any of these problems, but have really helped restore some sanity to a to a couple of legal areas that were frankly, really off the mark.
Now I'm as happy as a well regulated clam about all of this too. But before people run out and throw exsit a Chevron station, what is that case?
What does it mean?
So Chevron deference is it's called that from a nineteen eighty four case called Chevron versus n RDC. And what the court said in that case was, if there's a bureaucratic agency that has authority to enforce some law, then the agency is allowed to interpret that law more or less however they want to.
That's nut.
If you challenge that in court, the court is required to accept whatever interpretation the agency has put.
On that law.
Well.
Gee, an all powerful fourth branch of the government sounds delightful to me.
That's right, because to imagine like the EPA. The EPA has the power to enforce the Clean Water Act. The Clean Water Act makes it illegal to discharge a pollutant into a water of the United States. Okay, so what is a water of the United States? What is a pollutant? What does discharge mean it? Under the Chevron case, it's up to the EPA to decide, And they, of course expand interpret these terms in ways that expand their power. So they've defined you even the dirt that's already in the bottom of a river, they've defined that as pollutant to the river. And they've decided that a perfectly dry land is a water of the United States. And they've done these crazy things. And then when you challenge it, you go to court, you say, that's not what the law says. The court uses this Chevron precedent to say, oh, no, well, we were required to rubber stamp whatever the agency says. So in today's ruling, the Supreme Court said that's wrong, and they overturned that Chevron ruling and said, no, if a judge is considering a case about the power of an administrative agency, the judge has to use his or her independent judgment to interpret the law the way that judges have always done since time immemorial. I mean, that's what judges are supposed to do, is interpret the law and not just bow and scrape to unelected bureaucrats who are trying to expand their own authority.
Or does this mean that Congress people are going to have to spend less time tweeting, going on cable shows and getting spray tends and actually, you know, deal with the more intricate parts of the law.
We can always hope, I mean, that is certainly their job. That is what they're supposed to be doing. And under the Chevron ruling, because it gives it, or it gave it's so nice to use the past tense, because it gave these bureaucrats the power to interpret the law however they wanted to. That gave a really handy excuse to Congress critters who didn't want to do their jobs. They could pass these broadly worded statutes that, you know, like I like to say, just outlaw bad things and then leave it to the bureaucrats to define what bad thing means. And here's a money quote from Justice Gorsuch in his opinion today. He says, Chevron deference acquires courts to place a finger on the scale of justice in favor of the most powerful litigans the federal government, and guarantees systemic bias in favor of whichever political party currently holds the lever of power. Because the reasonable bureaucrat can change his mind from year to year or election to election, that people can never know with certainty what new interpretations might be used against them. That's exactly right. The Chevron rule gave was open season for federal bureaucrats and made them less accountable to the people who after all, these bureaucrats are supposed to be our employees, not our bosses.
So I suspect that the significance of this case will play out over the rest of our lives.
Yeah, it's not really clear what exact rule the court wants lower court judges to follow in future cases. They say, well, there are times when you should take a bureaucracy's expertise into account, and that is I think that is obviously true. So we'll see what future courts do with this rule. But getting rid of this basic rubber stamp these in the case law is really a great advance for those not just people like me who were kind of pro freedom and don't like government bureaucracy. But even if you're not of that view, if you are worried about democracy, you should be worried about things like Chevron because these bureaucracies are not elected, they're not accountable to the vote, and Chevron gave them basically free reign. So today's ruling is good both for freedom and for democracy.
Before we get to the Grant's Pass ruling, which has been my white whale since the moment it came down from on high, there was an SEC ruling yesterday that strikes me as being kind of from the same ideological framework is the one we're talking about, in that it doesn't let an agency be the judge, jury, and executioner of America.
Yes, that's right, in fact jocracy. That decision makes clear why today's Chevron case is so important, because it sounds like we're talking about a bunch of abstract ideas. We talk about deference and interpretation, but jarcacy is how the rubber really meets the road. In that case, a guy who was charged with committing fraud. Now, if you're charged with committing the crime of fraud, you're entitled to a trial by jury. That's what the Constitution says. But the Securities and Exchange Commission, one of these unelected bureaucracies, they didn't want to give this guy a trial in front of a jury, so instead they charged him with an administ crime, which is basically exactly the same thing as the fraud charge. But because it was qualified as administrative, then that meant he wasn't entitled to a trial by jury. Instead, he had to go through an administrative hearing, which of course is presided over by a member of the same bureaucracy that has accused him of wrongdoings. So you know, the prosecutor is paying the judge, and that that's clearly not what the Constitution intended. And the Supreme Court said that also the other day and said, no, people are entitled to a trial by jury by the Constitution, and these bureaucracies cannot just find clever ways to get around those kinds of rights.
And at the end of that so called hearing, can they take my money or put me in jail?
Oh yeah, well, they.
Can send a trial.
They can impose all sorts of civil penalties on you, which of course are effectively the same thing as a crime, and if you refuse to pay, then you're going to jail, and if you break out of the jail, you're going to get shot. So government coercion is always under it's always might use all sorts of ver to make it sound like it's some sort of you know, informal process of democracy and anything. But the government only has its power because it can throw you in jail and take your things and even kill you.
I think it's kind of funny that after last night, you're still pretending that people are capable of governing themselves in.
All those times.
That's a fair point.
I think every American except too, are capable of governing themselves.
So let's talk about the infamous Grants Pass ruling, which has brought ruin upon so many cities and towns in the United States, particularly Blue cities and states.
What happened? What does it mean? So?
The Ninth Circuit ruled a couple of years ago that it violates the Cruel and Unusual Punishment clause to enforce laws against public camping like sleeping in a tent in a park or on a sidewalk or something, unless the government gives that person a shelter bed, and they've made clear that church shelter beds do not count because they said that would violate the First Amendment. So that basically tied the hands of cities when it came to dealing with homeless problem, the homelessness problem or here in Phoenix and in some other cities. It gave a handy excuse to government officials who did not want to do their job. They could say, well, it's not my fault, I can't do anything. The Ninth Circuit said, I'm not allowed to do anything, and so it gave them a real good excuse to just allow people to have these huge homeless encampments like happened here in Phoenix when you had a thousand people living in the so called zone in downtown for two years and one hundred and twenty degrees summers. The US Supreme Court today overturned that Grant's pass ruling, that Ninth Circuit ruling and said, no, the Constitution does not give you a constitutional right to sleep in a public park. There's nothing cruel and unusual about enforcing laws against public camping or sleeping on the sidewalks and urinating and defecating on the streets and these sorts of things. The Constitution says uses a Cruel and Unusual Punishment clause language it's concerned with things like being torn or being abused horribly by the people who are in charge. And that's not what's going on when the city goes and says, I'm sorry, you're not allowed to sleep here. And if you do that, that's illegal, even if the person is addicted to drugs or or has mental problems or whatever. And unfortunately, as you said, the Ninth Circuit ruling, not only did it lead to a wave of homeless problems in the Western States that are subject to the Ninth Circuit's jurisdiction, but it gave a really handy excuse to progressive city officials who, for ideological reasons don't want to enforce these kinds of law.
And myself urge, we saw So what was the vote on that one?
That was six to three. Unfortunately, you're seeing lots of these six to three decisions because we have justices on the court who are more committed to the regulatory welfare state than they are to the Constitution of the United States.
So I was about to say, why did it take so long? You know, is this the the Do we have a system where it takes too long to get to obvious conclusions? But if it was six to three, I suppose there's a chance of it it moved faster. It would showed up in a court where they would have said, yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah. Maybe I'm also frustrated by how slow the court operates. Sometimes it does not seem to be justified. But you know, there's nothing we can really do about that.
Yeah, I mean, it's shocking how long it takes to take up some of these issues that I don't know.
I guess that's just the way it is.
Just it real briefly, because we don't have much time at all. What DoD thessenters say in the Grants past.
Case, Well, there's a lot of wringing your hands about compassion and what about these poor people and so forth and so on. Now, the problem with that is that it's false compassion. Leaving people to sleep indefinitely in a public street, in a sidewalk or in a public park or something like that. The idea that that is somehow more compassionate than arresting a person for violating the law, holding them responsible for their actions. And then getting them the treatment they need if that's what they need, whether it's drug abuse or mental problems or whatever it might be. That is actual compassion, just refusing to do it anything about it, and allowing people to congregate in these public areas and then also commit trespasses, violate the laws against pollution, you know, commit crimes, you know, arson, and all these sorts of things that happened in these areas. The idea that that's somehow more compassionate is truly it's it's so backwards that it shows how what a situation we're in when when intellectual leaders think that that is somehow the kind thing to do, right.
But I've always got to throw in mind, how about being compassionate to the taxpayer, the.
Citizen who wants to take their kid to the park.
How about being compassionate to them?
Absolutely, the property owners the taxes, they are the real innocent victims of these policies because they pay their taxes for police protection and then they don't get it and it's through no fault of their own. And then these businesses are required to address when when a crazy person comes into the business and threatens the customers, threatens their employees. They basically is these policies are conscripting these businesses into being homeless treatment facilities, which they have no ability to do and which is a real, a real risk to their liability. So that's what's happening, is that government is either refused by refusing to do its job. These cities are basically outsourcing their power and they're Fortunately there is something that Arizonans can do about it, this coming Ballid Initiative to or this coming election, there's going to be a ballid initiative Props three to one to two that says that if the city refuses to enforce these kinds of laws and you have to take steps to protect yourself by putting bars on your windows or hiring a security guard or something like that, you get a TACK three fund for that amount of money because you paid your taxes for police protection and you're not getting them. A lot of those listeners out there who are in Arizona will pay learn more about Prop three twelve and vote in favor of it this coming fall.
And if God and James Madison are willing, this will spread to other states. Tim sanderfer Vice president for Litigation at the Goldwater Institute, the Goldwater Institute. Well worthy of your support, Tim, thanks a million, great stuff.
Thank you guys.
I know bleeding heart liberal is a term from like the seventies, but the whole compassion for one crowd but never compassion for the law biting tax paying crowd drives me nuts. We had a lot more on the way. We'll finish strong, but.
I can tell you it started minutes in. It started with the first couple of answers, and it has continued throughout the night from oh my god, Oh my god, Oh my god, to what do we do about this? And it involves very senior people in the Democratic Party, including elected officials, saying.
We have a problem.
So it's John King on CNN last night, right after the debate, and I hope it doesn't happen while we're on vacation. I guess that's.
Breaking bull crap, Jack, breaking bull crap. Who the Biden administration says there's no chance he'd withdraws, not even in his plans, and they're looking forward to the next debate, which is straight out of the I'm staying in this till Super Tuesday, five minutes before you pull out of the.
Race, Like Ron DeSantis did, like Nikki Haley did. Right, Sometimes, like an hour before you pull out, you do a big rally and jump pumping down and.
Raise some funds like Kamala Harris did and her miserable failure of a campaign. If the Biden administration is listening, when you do make the big announcement, the historic game change announcement, how's July eighth's work for you? Will that be convenient after our vacation please?
Yeah, well, I'm not I'm not going to be able to come back from my vacation.
If time don't.
A staycations so I could jump on the air.
You know, but it'll it'll still be here when we get back. It's not like when we went on vacation and nine to eleven happened. I mean, that is, you gotta be on the air for nine to eleven.
What if Joe Biden throws himself off the top of the Washington Monument, what then?
Huh that'd be a shocking development.
All right, Hey, folks, it said it's time for final thoughts with Jack Armstrong Joe Getty. Hopefully after maybe we can go out in a Spot five and kiss myce cream.
Just just have a good old time.
You know whoever did that, you need to update it with the current Joe Biden, because that's Joe Biden from like six months ago. I got a cough a couple times. Here's your host for final thoughts, Joe Getty.
Let's get a final thought before vacation. I hope from everybody on the crew. Our technical director will lead us off. My Gleangelow. I've been hyping this for two years.
I've claimed they're gonna use a Joe Biden look alike. I think the second debate it will be a look alike.
Body doubles utilizing AI Voice generation. Absolutely, Katie green Aer esteemed Newswoman. As a final thought, Katie, this has.
Been a final thought of mine in the past, but last night solidified it.
Jill Biden is evil. Yeah, there's something going on there.
Yeah, she's bent in one way or another. I'm not sure how exactly, but Jack a final.
Thought for us.
So I'm trying to find a place to get a spray tan before I go on vacation, and I'm looking around at various websites. Some of them you can choose the girl. They have a picture of her that's too close to like kind of like a strip club or something. I'm gonna choose the twenty five year old who's gonna I'm gonna stand there in my underwear in front of her.
That's weird.
I'm not doing that. Yeah, that's like orderline, you know. Yeah, yeah right. My final thought, there's no point in picking a.
Biggest this or best that in a lot of ways, but this is in the top tier of news days in the last fifty years, including nine to eleven, the election to Trump or whatever today between the debate and the likelihood of Biden dropping out in the Supreme Court.
Stuff man with a blockbuster, I'd say Armstrong in Getdy wrapping up another grueling four hour workday.
So many people think so little time. Go to Armstrong in geddy dot com. Got a lot of great clicks for you. Drop us a line if there's something you see we.
Ought to be talking about.
Send it along mail bag at Armstrong in geeddy dot com.
Pick up a T shirt. Helps keep everybody on the staff.
I was telling a young person out there, when I was your age, something exciting happened like once a decade. See you later, God bless America, Armstrong and get it It was a slow start, that's obvious to everyone.
I think there was a sense of shock. The panic that I am hearings is not like anything that I have heard from.
Oh my god, oh my god, oh my god.
You know, dumpster fire flames. That was painful. I think a lot of voter is probably tuned out.
They will wake up in the morning and they will do something else because this is not sustainable.
Let's not act like President Trump. We're going let's not act like children. A great Friday, you mother, the Armstrong and Gaddy