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Clay and Buck

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Don’t You Wish We Had Trump and Dr. Atlas Back?

5 Aug 2021

BUCK: For those of you who are living in Dallas or something, just wait a few weeks before you invite Clay to come give you a big speech or something there, because all the sudden the mask mandates may be happening. And we have some breaking news on that for you coming out of Nashville.

But first, an argument that doesn’t seem to get made very much with all of this is, “At what point do we just say people have made their decisions and that’s it”? At what point can we just say, “You’ve had a chance to get vaccinated. If you don’t want to get vaccinated, that’s fine.” Clay and I are not vaccinated. So you know that’s it. And you sort of deal with it as you can, because anybody that has a problem with that, they should be fine because they are vaccinated.

CLAY: That’s right.

BUCK: Here is Governor Spencer Cox of Utah.

COX: The CDC is asking all of you who are vaccinated to take one for the team once again to protect people who are not vaccinated but who have the opportunity to do so. Also, I’m — I’m guessing that the Venn diagram of people who are vaccinated — or unvaccinated and willing to wear a mask is very, very slim, if at all. And so, I’m grateful that there are people who are willing to sacrifice and wear masks again to protect the unvaccinated. I gotta be honest with you. I don’t know if I’m one of those people. I’m really tired. I’m really done with it, and I’m not real excited to have on sacrifice to protect someone who doesn’t seem to care.

BUCK: Yeah, Clay, this is, “Do we live in a free society or not?”

CLAY: Yeah!

BUCK: That’s where we are, ’cause freedom actually means the freedom to choose something that maybe doesn’t work out for you.

CLAY: And make bad decisions. Look, every day people make awful decisions. If you’re walking by on the street and you see a morbidly obese person and they’re eating a big bag of M&Ms, you don’t knock the M&Ms out of their hand and be like, “Oh, my God. How dare you!” People make choices for their health that are poor.

That’s part of what freedom allows. So I don’t like the full way that the governor of Utah said it there, Spencer Cox. I think the better argument is the one that you and I have made — and I just want to keep making this. “If you want to be vaccinated, good for you. The data reflects that you will be safer certainly if you are over the age of 65.” And that’s why, Buck, 90% of people who are 65 or older they’ve looked at the data and they made a rational decision.

They have at least one shot. Seventy percent now of people who are 18 and up have at least one shot. But then there are people like you and me who have already had covid, and if you talk to many doctors about covid immunity — natural immunity versus vaccinated immunity — natural immunity can, in many cases, in the case of many viruses, be safer. So we can make rational decisions for us like everyone out there should make rational decisions as well.

I think the political argument to make at this point in time is, “Look, we’re encouraging everybody to make good, healthy decisions. But we’re not going to require everybody to wear masks to try to protect people who want to make the choice otherwise.” And, by the way, this also means I don’t think that the media should be covering every single person who gets sick and has said before, “Hey, I’m not really afraid of covid.”

That sucks, but there is so much moral lecturing going on here. To me, at some point rational adults have to be given the opportunity to make rational adult decisions, and we just have to move on. I have been there for a long time, and you know you have, too.

BUCK: I think we’re also at a point where the people who have been willing to do things that now are obviously very either just completely silly and idiotic or almost worthless need to have some feeling of, “Well, I’m right on this one!”

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: You have to think if you’ve been double masking, if you as people in my building where I live here in New York City — and I’ll never forget the first time I saw it. It happened a few times. They were wearing a full head-to-toe hazmat suit to go outside. And they were probably 30, the couple that I saw doing it.

CLAY: Zero statistical risk and they’re wearing hazmat suits.

BUCK: And they’re wearing hazmat suits. If you were wiping down your groceries with Lysol because Dr. Fauci told you to — which he did, by the way — now at least you say, “Well, I was listening to them, but I’m not like those dumb vax deniers who live in the rural areas.” Forget about the —

CLAY: Minorities, yes.

BUCK: — communities in New York and in Los Angeles and everywhere else that have chosen to not vaccinate, and forget about it Clay and Buck who are sitting here as two unvaccinated guys, although they’re twisting my arm and they’re gonna break it pretty soon, it seems, on getting vaccinated or not.

Clay, things that would have sounded like dystopian fearmongering a year ago when it comes to what the Democrats want to do about all this stuff are now being talked about as though it is an imperative. Not even just something that we should consider, an imperative. You have the United States military about to be told, “Every single person must get the vaccination.” There was an editorial — we mentioned it yesterday — and had to change the title because the title was initially put ’em on the no-fly list.

CLAY: Yes. Like you’re a terrorist.

BUCK: Put the unvaccinated on the no-fly list.

CLAY: Like you’re Osama Bin Laden if you don’t have the vaccine.

BUCK: Instead of standing up and yelling, “I have a suicide vest” or something, you stand up and say, “I am unvaccinated.” That was like the big fear they were gonna have of somebody on a plane. And here we are talking about this because people in power actually want to do these things, and we have been warning and warning and warning because the incrementalism is obvious, the second you understand the mind-set of the left. It’s just two weeks. Just two masks. Just do whatever we say. Until we finally say “no,” it doesn’t stop.

CLAY: It’s 18 months now since “two weeks to stop the spread.” And, by the way, last segment we were talking about how there are different decisions that are being made on a county-by-county basis as it pertains to. My hometown. I was a public school kid K through 12 in Nashville, Tennessee. While we’ve been on the air, the school board voted 8-1 to require all students to wear masks. And I think what you’re going to see, Buck, is major battles developing over masks, which, by the way, have been proven (chuckles) — it’s to disappointing — don’t work.

BUCK: I got told yesterday in New York City in a restaurant again. Remember now I said I was gonna make people tell me.

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: And they called me beforehand, and I thought, “They can’t be serious.” They said, “We have a policy where you have to wear a mask when you walk in, but that’s it.” So really, I just want to know. It’s really very much like genuflecting now in church.

CLAY: Yes. True. It’s a good analogy.

BUCK: It’s really bending the knee to the authority. Not celestial relationship with Jesus Christ your Lord authority, which you do when you genuflect. I’m talking about genuflecting to the government authority here or just kind of the apparatus of covid control, because it is actually impossible to make an argument that there is any epidemiological or health benefit whatsoever from doing this.

And yet yesterday, in my hometown, in my own city, I was told, “Excuse me, sir…” We’re already having the conversation face-to-face. “Excuse me, sir. Can you put a mask?” Then I had to do the whole, “I don’t have a mask. Can you give me…?” “Oh, okay.” “Now I’ll put it on for you.” People that think this is normal either want to control you beyond any reason — that’s a lot of them — or they actually are suffering from an anxiety induced mental illness. There’s no third option.

CLAY: Just think about it. When we finish the show today, I’m going back to the airport. I’m going out to the airport. I’ll have to put a mask on in order to enter into the airport. I will be… As I walk down the concourse there, if I decide that I want to stop and have a beer, Buck, I can stop and have a beer, take my mask off and be in a crowded bar in the New York City airport.

If I decide that I want to eat, I can stop, I can take my mask off. Several of these bars, when you’re walking down the concourse, they have bars that look out into the concourse where like you can reach out and touch somebody who’s walking by. You can sit there for hours if you wanted to, if you had a long layover — drink, eat as much as you want — permissible. The minute that you are moving and you’re not drinking or eating something, you have to have a mask on. What sense can that possibly make?

BUCK: From the very beginning of this, stretching back to when I had to move my… I was doing the radio show in New York down in Tribeca, down in Lower Manhattan. I had to just in 24 hours set up a home studio and do this whole thing and everything was locked down and New York.

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: Clay, I was sitting at my desk doing radio as the hospital ship sat there. I could see it right from my window. The hospital ship went up the Hudson because we were gonna be overflowing, I had friends next to Central Park where they lived sending me photos of the field hospitals!

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: There was all this panic. But from the very beginning, I had a concern and tried to spread the word as far and wide as possible about the challenge of conditioning people to just obey. And now my worry is that as we see, we’re at the end of this process here of the actual pandemic. The people who have been pushing for all these restrictions and all these demands and all these commands are looking to use this for other things.

They have a cowed and obedient populace that is so now conditioned, trained, really, Pavlovian style to do whatever they’re told If the government can convince you that you have…? Even if not the government, but it really is a function of government brainwashing, that you’re safer by putting a mask on when you walk up to somebody; then you sit down and you have it off the whole time? They can convince you of anything. Men are women. Abortion is just a choice. They can convince you of anything.

CLAY: I’m with you in that what’s scary about this is the lack of organized pushback. In Europe, there are a lot of organized pushing back against the ridiculous rules. We’re not seeing that in the United States. It’s scary.

BUCK: Gonna come in here in just a little bit with our friend Alex Berenson, who has been on the forefront. This guy takes more heat than anybody else on this one and has been very influential in a lot of the thinking of the Trump administration and, gosh, do I wish we had Trump and Dr. Atlas and some of the people who were seeing this more clearly. I’ll never forget, Clay, Trump told me in the Oval last May, “We will never do another lockdown,” and now it’s Biden so now that doesn’t count anymore.

CLAY: And I think Biden wants a lockdown!

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Biden vs. DeSantis on Covid

5 Aug 2021

BUCK: The back-and-forth between Governor DeSantis of Florida and President Biden and all the Democrats and all Biden’s handlers and enablers and all the rest of it throwing down over the covid issue. It’s almost like this is really political and they don’t care what the actual numbers are.

We’ll get into that. Plus, Representative Cori Bush wants to defund police while demanding that she continue her own private security detail. The McCloskeys in St. Louis. You remember them during the BLM riots? They’ve been pardoned by the governor of Missouri and some people are saying that’s not enough. They’re gonna go after them still.

Plus, fallout from not just one Cuomo but the Bros Cuomo: The governor facing impeachment imminently; plus, you have the other one, the Bro Cuomo over at CNN, who is facing an ethics issue. (But Jeff Zucker will probably catch his back.) But let’s first, Clay, start with how all of a sudden it’s Texas and Florida’s fault that there’s this Delta variant situation, according to Joe Biden.

BIDEN: Florida and Texas account for one-third of all new covid-19 cases in the entire country. Just two states! Look, we need leadership from everyone. If some governors not willing to do the right thing to beat them pandemic, then they should allow businesses, universities who want to do the right thing to be able to do it. I say to us these governors, “Please help, but if you aren’t going to help, at least get out of the way of people that are trying to do the right thing. Use your power to save lives.”

BUCK: You know what this, Clay? This is the president of the United States, who runs the federal government, complaining about red states — at least with Republican leadership right now, red states — that are trying to frequent the rights of people and end the covid tyranny, Biden is saying, “Step aside so we can have the private sector do our dirty work. Step aside so the federal mandates will be easier to put through without states trying to block us.”

CLAY: Yeah. And not only this, remember this goes back a ways, right? There has been a desire, I think, for Joe Biden to shift the blame for anything covid related to anybody in a red state. Remember what happened when Texas opened up. He said it was “Neanderthal thinking” that the state of Texas would in any way be opening up.

And there was all the discussion about all the craziness that was going to happen, all the virus that was going to spread. Governor Greg Abbott opened up, and, for the most part, what we are seeing is this new Delta variant has come in. But if the Delta variant didn’t exist or hadn’t made its way into the country, there was virtually no covid left in the old variants, if you want to call them that.

So this is Biden who ran his entire campaign predicated on, “I will keep you safe,” who ran his entire campaign from the basement, now looking around and trying to figure out who he can blame because covid has reared its ugly head again. Now, the data doesn’t reflect that anybody should be panicked. But I think what Republicans are looking for is somebody who can fight back. I actually think this plays really well for Abbott and DeSantis to be able to go head-to-head with Joe Biden, and that’s what Governor DeSantis down in Florida just did.

BUCK: Exactly right. Here he is, the governor of Florida, lightin’ up Biden on this one.

DESANTIS: Joe Biden suggests that if you don’t do lockdown policies, then you should, quote, “get out of the way.” But let me tell you this. If you’re coming after the rights of parents in Florida, I’m standing in your way. I’m not gonna let you get away with it.

CROWD: (applause and hoots)

DESANTIS: If you’re trying to deny kids a proper in person education, I’m gonna stand in your way and I’m gonna stand up for the kids in Florida. If you’re trying to restrict people, impose mandates, if you’re trying to ruin their jobs and their livelihoods and their small business — if you are trying to lock people down — I am standing in your way, and I’m standing for the people of Florida.

CROWD: (applaus)

DESANTIS: So why don’t you do your job? Why don’t you get this border secure? And until you do that, I don’t want to hear a blip about covid from you.

BUCK: So he’s got ’em nailed on the border issue, which is a total mess as we’ve discussed here before. Wide open. And it’s wide open, Clay, notably because of specific decisions made by the Biden administration starting in January of this year like ending the Remain in Mexico policy, the destruction of interior enforcement against illegal aliens all across the country. So that’s been a choice that’s been made. But don’t you remember, Clay, when the states were asserting rights back when Trump was in power? We were being told by places like New York, first of all, Cuomo was gonna have his own vaccine testers. You remember this?

CLAY: Yeah. Yeah.

BUCK: That you couldn’t trust the vaccine that there were gonna be state authorities overriding the federal authorities. Now you have a federal government that’s saying, “Oh, the states don’t get to actually use quarantine powers or decide not to use them as they see fit.” Top-down federal tyranny. That’s what it feels like.

CLAY: Can you imagine if they decide — and we don’t know how it’s gonna play out — to bring Joe Biden back because they’re terrified about Kamala Harris having the lowest approval ratings of any vice president in many of our lives? Can you imagine Ron DeSantis against Joe Biden on a debate stage? I mean this honestly.

I’m not sure that I can think of any matchup we’ve ever seen in a presidential election that would be more of a slaughter than DeSantis going head-to-head with Joe Biden. Right? Biden left himself open for one haymaker after another. Trump was a mess in that first debate. Second debate, he clocked him. Imagine what DeSantis would be able to with 82-year-old Joe Biden if they tried a Weekend at Bernie’s Part 2-style drag Joe Biden across the finish line again.

I think there’s nervousness in the White House because when they have these back-and-forths, DeSantis is destroying the logic underpinning any of the criticisms from Joe Biden, and he’s doing it as the governor of Florida not even really on an equal footing. This is a bad, bad, I think, calculus by Joe Biden to try to blame some of these Republican governors ’cause I think it blows up in his face.

BUCK: Well, what’s really happening here is the Democrats are trying to take the first step to the permanent covid health/security/theater state. They’re trying to keep this in a theater where it’s gonna be here together because if you start to put mandates in places, if you have people that set up vaccine passports. L.A.’s thinking about it. They already have an L.A. city councilman thinking about it.

CLAY: I saw that story. Yes.

BUCK: New York is still on the line for it, the defense secretary, Lloyd Austin, is expected to make mandatory for you’ll active-duty military personnel mandatory covid vaccine. Which then you have to ask, “Doesn’t that have to be mandatory for all federal personnel, too?” This is the incrementalism of the permanent covid state. It’s happening right now.

When we should be talking about how we get to full normalcy, instead, they’re trying to enshrine aspects of the apparatus of control in the bureaucracy that would linger forever. More variants. Another upsurge in the wintertime. It will all be there already. The whole system will be there in order to assert levels of control against us. That’s what I saw the Democrats doing right now.

They’re trying to do it while people are still concerned up, the numbers are high enough that they can get away with some of it. Because otherwise, what are we really even talking about with them at this point? They’re not gonna actually get to zero covid. They want to put this apparatus in place so that they can have a lot of control over our lives for a very long time to come.

CLAY: And the larger context, I would say, is the variants aren’t gonna stop coming, and vaccination isn’t going to end the variants because again, look at what’s going on around the world. The percentage of vaccinations around the world are very low. Where did the Delta variant come from? India. Where are the future variants going to come from?

Third World countries that have not been able to vaccinate their people, and there’s always going to be a new variant of covid-19 — it would seem to me — for years and years. This is becoming as we talked about on the show endemic and flu-like in that this isn’t going to be — at least not based on anything that I’m seeing so far from the vaccines, this isn’t gonna be — polio that basically ceases to exist.

This isn’t going to be a measles or a mumps where it almost doesn’t exist anywhere. This is gonna be endemic. It’s gonna be like the flu, and there’s always going to be, at least in the short term — until people start to act rationally and reasonably — evidence out there of why you should be panicking and the evidence of panic allows the continued capturing of freedom. And that’s what we’re seeing happen right now is all over the country, this expansion which we had hoped was going to start to diminish with the vaccines. It hasn’t. Freedom continuing to be gobbled up.

BUCK: DeSantis spoke about how, by having an open border, to your point, Clay, about the variants and how they’ll be continuations of these iterations of variants. That’s what’s gonna end up happening, and let’s also not forget that Fauci said just yesterday we could be heading for vaccine-resistant covid this fall. So he’s essentially saying even we might get to a place where variants completely evade the vaccine, which is fascinating, almost like what happens sometimes with the flu but that’s a whole other conversation we’ll get into which we have not been able to conquer and eliminate entirely.

But here’s Governor DeSantis saying we’ll just bring it all in.

DESANTIS: He is bringing in people from over 100 different countries across the southern border. Every variant on this planet — some we don’t even know about — are absolutely coming into our country that way, and what they’re doing is, people are coming and then they’re farming them all over the United States — putting them on buses, putting them on planes. And so when he’s lecturing people about imposing covid restrictions and lockdown policies and not only doing nothing to stop the border surge but actually facilitating it on the other hand, he just loses all credibility when it comes to covid.

BUCK: If you want to fly into the U.S. from the U.K., Clay, and the Democrats get their way it’s gonna be mandatory vaccination; there’s gonna be a whole bureaucracy around it. If you just walk across the U.S.-Mexico border and read off the little sheet of paper that the cartels give you to say, “I want to claim asylum in your country,” you get released.

CLAY: Yeah.

BUCK: You get let go.

CLAY: Not only that, if you go to Mexico on vacation, you have to have a negative test to come back from Mexico. I did that in February. But if I had been — and I’m a citizen, obviously. If I had been walking across the border, it would have been an issue at all. And DeSantis is right, that there is a strong argument that can be tied together.

And I think it’s a really potent one for the Republican Party to tie border insecurity to covid variant spreads because they’re gonna be coming from somewhere outside of this country, by and large, and that’s where the danger comes from. So are you going to secure the border or not? It’s a tough response for the Biden White House I think there, given the failures they have at the border right now.

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Does Anyone Care About the Constitution Anymore?

5 Aug 2021

CLAY: I want to play a clip here in a moment, but I don’t believe that there’s any way that this is constitutional. We really don’t have a massive amount of history here as it comes to pandemics and what authorities mayors have and governors have and everybody else. But over a year after this emergency began and our pandemic response lost its mind (chuckles), it seems to me that one of the fallouts has been people now just make choices that they know are unconstitutional and dare judges to stop them.

That is what is going on right now with the eviction moratorium, and let’s hear what Jen Psaki said. We played this yesterday and discussed it, because Biden basically said, “Hey, I’ve talked to all the constitutional scholars. They say they can’t do it, but I’m gonna do it anyway,” and now Jen Psaki is trying to clean up the mess one more time that Joe Biden made. Here’s what she had to say about Biden’s power when it comes to eviction moratoriums.

PSAKI: Well, the president would not have supported moving forward with any action where he wasn’t — didn’t feel there was, uh, legal standing and legal support. Uhh, we obviously don’t control what the courts do. Uh, and we — we have (sputters), of course, seen what the Supreme Court, uh, decided and how they ruled. Which was not related to public health, as you well know, Kelly. It was related to the relationship between the landlord and the renter. Uh, but… uhh, this is different in that it is more targeted. Uh, it is focused on counties with higher substantial case rates, uh, uh t-to protect renters and CDC ultimately decided to — decided to adopt it.

BUCK: That is simply idiotic babble. The decision that came down which was 5-4 thanks to Kavanaugh deciding that it would be better to allow the unconstitutional action to continue because the CDC had already said it was going to end, well, now they’re just coming up with a new order. So it was, “Okay, we’ll let this go because it’s going away anyway, and it will work out better for everybody.”

This was the Kavanaugh logic to go along with the four crazy libs who of course just feel like socialism by fiat is that good thing; so they were on board for it. But now we’re finding out, “Oh, it turns out that they’ll just keep doing this.” So, Clay, this is even worse than what we’ve seen in the past.

Because at least before when Obama did something that he said he knew was unconstitutional, it hadn’t necessarily already been tested in the court, this is the Democrat Party with Joe Biden at the head of it saying straight up, “The Supreme Court says I can’t do this. So I’m just gonna do a version of it again and waits for them to try to do something about it — and by the time they get to it, it’ll be too late.” That’s tyranny.

CLAY: There’s no doubt about that. It’s also allowing — and this is big-picture analysis here. It’s allowing the CDC to effectively override property ownership. And this is significant because it’s easy in this sort of world we live in now where there’s constant demagoguery as it pertains to rich and poor and different identities.

But we talked about this yesterday, and I think it’s significant. A huge percentage of people who are landlords are not super wealthy. In fact, they have lived their entire lives to put themselves in a position. There’s a great story that I was referencing yesterday about a guy from Versailles, Kentucky — for those of you who don’t know Versailles, Kentucky, it’s an area up around Lexington.

And he owned an apartment complex, and he did all the repairs there, and he had managed it for years and years, and he paid himself $75,000 a year. Suddenly with this new situation that’s going on, not only with the eviction moratorium but, Buck, with the capital gains taxes. If he decides to sell this property… He was planning on retiring and living off of it.

He’s gonna have to go potentially… We’ll see what’s gonna happen with the budget. But right, now Joe Biden has talked about the capital gains tax going from 20% effectively to 43%, a doubling in terms of how that’s going to impact people just based on timing. They’re trying to make it retroactive.

All of this is while the economy is still trying to recover from the deep freeze that we put it in over covid. We can’t allow these agencies to be stealing away property rights. It’s unconstitutional. And it’s shameful, frankly, that Joe Biden knows it’s unconstitutional and politically he feels like he has to do it no matter what.

BUCK: Well, let’s just think about it. What’s the limiting principle here for the CDC right now? Essentially what the federal government under the Biden administration is saying is, “We think it’s better if people don’t have to leave the home they’re currently in because of the pandemic. So we’re just going to seize property,” in a sense. We’re going to take assets, take money from people.

This is a form of really thuggish Marxism at its core, and we’re gonna do this — and, by the way, I understand the Trump administration also went along with this early on. But it had not yet been tested in the court. It was earlier in what felt like a true emergency. It was a different set of circumstances. But most notably, the court had not ruled yet.

That is a different thing. We’re crossing a Rubicon here where the court, the Supreme Court can rule and the executive branch can say, “Yeah, but we really like this,” and if there’s no limiting principle, what can’t they do? Why can’t the CDC just tell everybody, “You know what?

“You’re gonna have to just give your home to the people who are currently in it, because we really can’t have the kind of social distancing we need if people are gonna be out there looking for homes to move into.” Why not? They can say whatever they want, apparently. That’s the Biden administration approach.

CLAY: They’re gonna try to argue that they’re narrowly tailoring this rule so that it isn’t implicated by the previous rulings, but I think they’re gonna fail in a big way. By the way, Val in Buffalo really quick here wants to talk about this in particular. Val, what you got for us?

CALLER: Hey, thanks for taking my call. You guys are great. Yeah, Val from New York, Long Island. What it is is that with the extension of the moratorium, I like perhaps 20 million other Americans, you know, we’re like in this boat where I had a tenant who was paying his rent and everything, and then I let them stay an extra year ’cause I wanted to sell my house.

And then because of covid they lost their jobs and they just kind of hanging in there, and I can’t even evict them and the goalposts get moved from like September to December to January to May, and now they’re being moved again. And I can’t even take any action on that.

BUCK: Do yu have to pay the mortgage, Val?

CLAY: (chuckling)

BUCK: You have to keep paying the bank, don’t you?

CALLER: Right. I’m paying the utilities, I’m paying the taxes and everything. I just want to sell the house and retire, and I can’t take any action!

CLAY: He is being held hostage by the existing policy that the CDC has put in place directly contravening his ability to own his property and make money off of it as he sees fit. And this is a flagrantly unconstitutional action that Joe Biden has undertaken, even though there’s no legal basis as he himself said yesterday.

BUCK: Wait, but, Clay, I thought Biden was gonna protect us from the crazy Marxists in the Democrat Party. I thought that was the promise that they made. Oh, no, we knew it was all a big lie and now we’re seeing it play out before us.

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NJ’s Murphy: Second-Worst Governor in America

5 Aug 2021

MURPHY: Please get vaccinated!

CROWD: (applause)

MURPHY: These folks back there have lost their minds. You’ve lost your minds!

CROWD: (applause dies)

MURPHY: You are the ultimate knuckleheads, and because of what are saying and standing for, people are losing their life!

CROWD: (smattering of applause)

MURPHY: People are losing their life, and you have to know that. Look in the mirror!

BUCK: Welcome back to the Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show. Clay, that was governor of New Jersey. I just want to play that because here’s a guy full of sanctimony, yelling at some people that don’t agree with his vaccine stuff. New Jersey has the worst death rate per capita, actually, in the entire United States. Worse than New York.

CLAY: It’s almost in the world.

BUCK: One of the worst on the planet.

CLAY: It was last year, New Jersey… People focused on New York. But if you looked at the data in the United States, New Jersey was worse, and for a while… Now, I think some of the other countries have caught since on a per capita basis, I think. But New Jersey could not have done any worse responding to covid than what they did.

BUCK: And if you don’t want to listen to everything that Governor Murphy — who is, speaking of a knucklehead, this guy’s an imbecile — says, then you’re bad person. It’s like we’re not supposed to pay attention to what these guys have said all along and all the declarations and all the haranguing people and telling everything about, “If you don’t do this…” Remember Cuomo? Cuomo straight up saying, “You’re gonna kill people’s grandparents unless you do what we say.”

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: Which included wiping down groceries.

CLAY: By the way, the irony of Cuomo saying that — who killed more people’s grandparents with his awful decisions than anybody in the entire country.

BUCK: Of course. And remember hand washing?

CLAY: Oh, yes.

BUCK: Hand washing was our key to getting past this in the beginning. There were reminders everywhere you’d go. “Wash your hands 20 time a day!” There were people probably scraping the skin off their fingers using abrasives because they’re being told this, and then we find out, “Oh, it’s actually aerosolized and basically not not coming from surfaces at all.”

CLAY: None of that mattered.

BUCK: But if you question anything, they just completely ignored what’s actually happening with the history. Murphy is an imbecile. The only advantage that he’s had is that Cuomo is such a disaster on so many fronts that the governor of New Jersey looks like he’s not necessarily the worst. He’s not the worst governor in America because of Cuomo. That’s basically what he’s got going for him.

CLAY: And I do think with all this panic and I understand what I call fear porn, right, all of the terror, all of the covid variant, Delta variant discussion, it’s kind of worth pointing out that the number of deaths that are occurring in the United States right now from covid are still — and again, it’s “with covid.” I think that’s a significant factor.

Because unfortunately the people who are the most susceptible no matter what from the get-go have been elderly. They have been people with immune issues already. They have been people with multiple comorbidities. But even with all the attention that covid is getting right now, we are still talking about covid being a relatively low-down-the-list cause of death basically since the vaccines became widely distributed.

BUCK: You’re losing… I’m looking up the New York Times figures right now, and the average as of August 4th is 410 people a day dying from covid.

CLAY: And again, I would say “with covid.”

BUCK: Right.

CLAY: Because they’re testing positive. There are a variety of different things there.

BUCK: But when you look at what that actually means comparatively to other forms of mortality that we just accept in day-to-day life, at some point here it feels like there have been a couple of very broad, fundamental misconceptions about how reality works and the left has embraced them. One, that the government can really protect you, and, two, that we can conquer mortality in some way if only we all act together collectively and do everything. There are always going to be diseases out there that, unfortunately, take our loved ones.

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: There’s gonna be heart disease, there’s gonna be cancer, there are gonna be these things. And so we all thought we were in this place where we were supposed to get it to what would be considered a number that society can with sadness but understanding, say, “This is the way it’s gonna be.” We’re at those numbers, Clay. Doesn’t matter. Get it to zero.

CLAY: I’m showing you right now. This is the death chart. It has barely moved at all for months, and we can’t get covid ever to zero.

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CNN Uses Kids to Push Masks in Schools

5 Aug 2021

BUCK: One of the favorite tactics of leftists out there is to either make up a conversation with their children… They do this on Twitter. They’ll say, “My 9-year-old said that the Republicans’ refusal to go along with the change in the filibuster…”

CLAY: (chuckling) That’s right.

BUCK: Yeah. I’m pretty sure your 9-year-old did not say that, Blue Check Writer for the Washington Post. But they also like to use children to make their political points and here’s an example of that. It’s a 12-year-old reading a letter. This was put on CNN.

GIRL: I would like to encourage the requirement of masks at school in Duval County. I’m so worried that if masks are not required, my brother could go to school one day and the next be dying in the hospital.

BOY: At school I wear two masks, because I want to make sure I don’t get sick.

GIRL: It’s okay to have your own opinions. It’s, like, you can think what you want to think. But also, the… These masks have proven that they’re saving — that they are saving people.

BUCK: So I just want to be very clear here, Clay, because Democrats and the left — because they’re shameless and have no principles — they love to use children as political land mines in a sense, right? They push them forward to carry the message and when you start to criticize the message, they say, “Why are you criticizing the children?” They did that with Greta Thunberg if you remember, the 16-year-old.

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: Look, kids should not be used as political props in this way. The adults who do so are odious. CNN putting them on TV is appalling. I’m not criticizing children. I’m criticizing adults who think that I should give a you-know-what what a 12-year-old thinks of mask policy, Clay. But you’re actually dealing with mask policy when it comes to kids right now.

CLAY: Yeah. Those were kids, by the way, in Jacksonville, Florida, where Ron DeSantis is and kids going back. My kids return to school tomorrow. So I have a first grader and I have a fifth grader, two elementary school kids. I know some of you out there are saying, “What?” You’re checking your phones right now. You’re saying, “Wait a minute. It’s gonna be August 6th.”

Yeah, we start early in many different parts of the South. We get out early. They get out in May — early May, relatively speaking — and my kids are going back. I’ll be walking them to school tomorrow, and I’m genuinely curious to see. There’s no mask mandate in the public school where my kids are going. But in Nashville — which is where I live a little bit north of where we are now — they do have mask mandates at some schools.

And so I know there are a lot of parents out there right now — and I’ve hinted at this before, Buck, because I think it’s going to turn into a monster battle to see what parents do, ’cause last year a lot of parents… I’ll put myself in this category, Buck. We were just excited to have our kids in school and so they had to wear masks but they got out in March. It had been months.

BUCK: We’ve talked about it. Can I just say, Clay, I worry. I’ve been so disappointed at how much most of America —

CLAY: Accept.

BUCK: — has been willing to go along with here and I’m with you, man. I want to see angry moms out there, but I think a lot of them even in places they’re just gonna say, “It’s just a mask.” This is what I’m talking about. “It’s just this thing.” I don’t know if people are angry enough over this. They’re much angrier about vaccine mandates than they were mask mandates.

CLAY: Yeah, but I think there’s something about the kids because we know the data. We’re gonna talk, by the way, to Alex Berenson in the third hour. He’s gonna be in studio with us here in New York and I’m excited to talk with him about this. But the data is also clear about kids, despite what that 12-year-old was saying, that CNN was falling in love with it.

BUCK: Isn’t that appalling? Can we just for a second…? CNN puts 12-year-olds making the case that they want made on TV? What are we supposed to do with that? How about a 5-year-old, CNN? Do you want to have a kid that can’t even read and write yet telling us what should happen with the masks? But you know what the answer is? You and I right now, there are people that are probably — Media Matters or whatever — saying, “Clay Travis and Buck Sexton trashing children over mask mandates!”

CLAY: (chuckling)

BUCK: That’s what they love to do.

CLAY: Yeah. Well, I’m sure that headline will exist somewhere. But I do think that there are… Because, again, last year it was just, “Hey, I just want my kids to be in school. This year I want my kids to be in school and I want everything to be 100% normal, ’cause that’s what the science tells me should be the case. Teachers, if you’re terrified get the vaccine.

Kids are not primary spreaders. The virus never has spread abundantly through kids. That’s one of the good things about the data that it tells us about covid since last year. And we know that teachers aren’t under particular risk. But I think there are a lot of parents like me who are gonna be taking their kids to school in the next few days — and I’m gonna be doing it tomorrow — that are genuinely curious to see, does it feel normal again or are we still kind of under the scope and the ambit and the control of this mask-policing nonsense?

I think it’s a really fascinating position as we move forward.

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Rep. Cori Bush: Cops for Me, But Not for Thee

5 Aug 2021

“Cori Bush wants to defund police while demanding that she continue her own private security detail,” Buck said incredulously while describing the hypocrisies he and Clay would dissect today.

Clay gave the Democrat representative from Missouri credit for one thing: consistent lunacy.

“There are still lots of people out there in the Democratic Party who want to pretend that they never called for defunding the police. A lot of them have backed away from it, but one who is still making illogical, absurd, and ridiculous arguments is Cori Bush.”

How can Bush – who famously condemned America in her July Fourth tweets — call for defunding police, Buck argued, when she has private security for her own multimillion dollar home? Clay said at least “looney bin” Bush is consistent since almost all her peers have backed away from the issue that insults their constituents.

Watch Bush’s new public shrieks about defunding here:

 

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Rush Rejected Fear, Democrats Rule By It

5 Aug 2021

Be sure to listen daily to Rush’s Timeless Wisdom podcast here or on iHeartRadio. It’s absolutely essential information from America’s Forever Anchorman.

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EIB 24/7: Clay & Buck’s Stack Of Stuff

5 Aug 2021

  • Newsweek: A Doomsday COVID Variant Worse Than Delta and Lambda May Be Coming, Scientists Say
  • Breitbart: Swedish Expert Claims People Could Require as Many as Five Covid Vaccine Shots
  • PJ Media: DeSantis Blasts Biden: ‘I Don’t Wanna Hear a Blip About COVID From You’
  • Breitbart: DeSantis: Biden ‘Loses All Credibility’ on COVID by Doing Nothing to Stop Border Surge
  • Daily Wire: Psaki Uses Edited Clip To Attack DeSantis, Falsely Implies He Isn’t Helping Get People Vaccinated
  • Daily Wire: Psaki Blasted Over Misleading Attack On DeSantis: ‘Trying To Distract From Her Boss’s Failures’

  • Daily Wire: White House, CDC Insist ‘Lawyers’ And ‘White House Counsel’ Signed Off On Eviction Moratorium Extension
  • Daily Caller: Believe It Or Not, Trump Voters Are Not The Only Vaccine Resisters
  • Bloomberg: Bloomberg’s tracker shows which states are making the most week-by-week progress in closing their racial vaccination gaps.
  • The Hill: $5,800 bottle of whiskey given to Pompeo by Japan is missing
  • FOXNews: Trump big winner, progressives big losers in twin Ohio congressional primaries
  • The Federalist: If You Don’t Suspect Deep State Provocation At The Jan. 6 Riot, Start Paying Attention
  • TexasNewsToday: If a landlord earns $ 75,000 a year, it could become a tax bracket for millionaires

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    Cuomo Won’t Go Easily

    4 Aug 2021

    CLAY: The continued fallout of Andrew Cuomo. Eleven women found to have legitimately accused him of sexual harassment, nine of them working inside — either past or present — of his office in the governor’s office of New York. And yesterday afternoon Joe Biden came warbling out, and he said Governor Cuomo should resign. Here is what that sounded like during Biden’s press conference and also an address that he had yesterday.

    REPORTER: So will you now call on him to resign, given the investigator said the 11 women were credible?

    BIDEN: I stand by that (sputters) statement.

    REPORTER: Are you now calling on him to resign?

    BIDEN: Yes.

    REPORTER: And if he doesn’t resign, do you believe he should be impeached and removed from office?

    BIDEN: Let’s take one thing at a time here. I think he should resign.

    REPORTER: Yeah, but —

    BIDEN: I understand that the state legislature may decide to impeach. I don’t know that for a fact. I’ve not read all that data.

    REPORTER: And he’s using a photo of you embracing him in his self-defense to say that these are commonplace kinds of embraces that he made in the allegations against him. Do you condone that?

    BIDEN: Look, I — I’m not gonna flyspeck this. (sputters) I’m sure there are some embraces that were totally innocent. But app– Apparently the attorney general decided there were things that weren’t.

    BUCK: I wish that someone had asked where kissing a stranger on the top of the head and like massaging her temples falls into this, ’cause Joe Biden does that.

    CLAY: That’s why it was so funny when he mentioned that, and also Joe Biden has a serious sexual harassment claim against him.

    BUCK: Sexual assault claim against him!

    CLAY: Yeah, that everybody just pretended didn’t exist from I think it was Tara Reade, if I’m remembering her name correctly. So, Buck, you’re pretty plugged in in New York circles. Do you believe that Andrew Cuomo is going to resign? Do you think there’s the any way he’ll be forced out, impeached? If you were setting odds, is he still governor at the end of the year?

    BUCK: I think there’s very little chance, as I said yesterday, that he will resign. Almost no chance.

    CLAY: Yeah.

    BUCK: I think the Democrat legislature is unlikely — I’d give it a less than 50-50 shot — to take action against him, and so that’s why. And I know people will say, “Oh, what about this Democrat who says this is going too far?” You gotta think about a few things here, all right? Cuomo… First of all, baseline, Democrat politicians have no principles that they have to defend. It’s about power. It doesn’t matter.

    And you see this with Biden and the eviction moratorium in the CDC where, “We’re gonna do it because we can do it,” becomes the operative principle. That’s all that they care about — and they want to do it. That’s what matters. But you look at the power dynamics in New York state, let’s take a peek at them for a second here. Governor Cuomo comes from a very connected and powerful family.

    He has a whole lot of not just favors to call in, but also pressure to put on people in the New York state political system. This is probably it more than anything else: What is the incentive for a guy like him who is clearly a somewhat deluded sociopath, what is the incentive for him to step down? What does he get other than an ignominious end? It’s the downfall of the dynasty.

    At least in his mind, if they have to force him out, he can always say, “I was wrongly accused, it was exaggerated, it was a political hit.” It’s like if you take a plea bargain, you’re guilty. You go to jail and you fought it all the way through court, you at least get to say, “I’m an innocent man,” which we know a lot of people in prison continue to say (chuckles) no matter what the evidence is against them.

    I think there would be a case like that. So Clay we can do it just on that level. Resignation? I would be shocked. Now, I don’t believe anyone can predict the future, but I think the chances of Cuomo resigning? If I were giving you betting odds, I would give someone 10 to one on that one, 10 to one he doesn’t.

    CLAY: Ten to one would still give you roughly a 10% chance that he would.

    BUCK: I’m talking about money.

    CLAY: Yeah, yeah.

    BUCK: If I put money on the line.

    CLAY: But the way I’m working through it is, I’m like, I buy into your argument that there’s way he’s gonna resign because resignation is an admission of guilt. And if he were going to admit that he was in some way guilty he would have been able to do that before the investigation took place; he could walk away.

    I’m with you. I don’t think there’s any way that he is going to actually leave. Now, the question becomes, is there the political capital to force him to leave. There is at least one state senator, James Skoufis, who is saying, “This is done. He’s going to have to move on. There’s no way he survives this.” Let’s listen to this, and then we’ll react as well.

    SKOUFIS: So look, the — the next step is waiting to see, uh, in the very near term whether the governor does the right thing here. Everyone up to the — the for it the president of the United States of his own party has called on him to step down. And short of that, if he doesn’t do that immediately — and by immediately, I don’t mean months or even weeks; I mean today, tomorrow — then the legislature ought to take the necessary steps to remove him from the governor’s mansion. It’s over. You know, there’s no gray area. There’s no “maybe.” There’s no scenario in which the governor survives this. It is over. The writing is on the wall, and it would be best for this state if the governor, uh, did this willingly.

    CLAY: So the question, I think, that comes out of this is, is it possible the New York legislature says, “Andrew Cuomo, we have the votes to impeach you and remove you from office?” And, frankly, I’m not an expert in New York state impeachment protocols. But if that is to occur, is there any way Andrew Cuomo resigns then, Richard Nixon style? Or is this a situation where he just refuses no matter what and calls their bluff and says, “I want you guys going on the record with who demands that I be impeached and who doesn’t.” How do you see that playing out?

    BUCK: Oh, I think this is gonna be Saddam in the spider hole with the crazy bed hair situation. I think this is gonna be he’s gonna fight it to the very end. This is who he is. He is the governor of New York, in his mind. He was raised for this. In his mind, this is his entire destiny.

    CLAY: His destiny.

    BUCK: Exactly, and this is his fiefdom. Remember, Pelosi and Schumer and Biden, that would be like NHL players saying that some NBA player has to resign.

    CLAY: Yeah.

    BUCK: It’s a different thing. It’s not the same system. And Cuomo’s powerful enough in the position he’s in and as I said has enough favors, has enough clout that the federal pressure alone is not going to do anything against him. So now you get to… Here’s the question as I see it. You’ve got people in the state legislature who are coming out and saying, “It’s over. It’s done.”

    CLAY: Yes.

    BUCK: And this get this moment of, “Ahhhh, see?” You can actually read it on social media. People say, “We’re Democrats. We have principles. See? We’re gonna do the right thing,” and they get that little serotonin hit of self-righteousness.

    CLAY: Yes.

    BUCK: They’re gonna feel like for a few days, “Oh, we’re gonna clean up our house,” but how quickly are they gonna schedule the process for removing a governor? How many governors have even been removed in the history of New York state? How well-oiled is that machine even if they wanted to do it?

    And if Cuomo can get delays, he stays, and so that’s part of this was where I have to say there’s a question mark. If you see them saying, “We’re gonna hold hearings in September. We’re gonna have meetings about this in November,” then it’s guaranteed he’s good to go because there’s no way the public opprobrium is gonna die down in all this.

    CLAY: It’s a little bit like being in intensive care if you want to make an analogy. The longer you can last — and this, to me, is one of the geniuses of Trump, is he recognized that our media is not designed to handle complex stories that take multiple days without new twists and turns. And that if he came out with a new tweet, that the media — like a dog chasing its tail, would keep running around in circles, never able to actually catch up to him. And that is why I wonder if Cuomo is gambling that what is a massive story yesterday when it came out, still a big story today will not, Buck Sexton, be a story on next week, right, or the week after, certainly the month after.

    BUCK: To give everybody a sense of this, in California they’ve already recalled their governor, and they may do it again here.

    CLAY: In September.

    BUCK: But they have a precedent. Yeah, Gavin Newsom’s sweating a little bit, if you’ve ever seen Gavin Newsom sweat. Here is, though, in New York state, they’ve had 56 governors. Only one has ever been impeached from office.

    CLAY: How long ago was that?

    BUCK: Over a century ago. And if you want to know what really moves the needle here for impeachment in New York, it wasn’t, “Oh, he was doing something corrupt.” It wasn’t that he was taking bribes. It’s usually bribery, corruption. You look at judges that are removed from the bench, which has actually happened, federal judges —

    CLAY: Yes. It’s pretty egregious.

    BUCK: It’s usually they were bribed, or like public drunkenness on the bench — which sounds like it might have been kind of entertaining. But on this point, it was that he defied the wishes of the political machine of Tammany Hall here in New York City. William Sulzer was elected governor in 1912, and he was impeached on orders from Tammany Hall boss Charles Murray, and that was because he wouldn’t do what Tammany Hall wanted. So it was basically, “We own you, Governor. You do what we say.”

    CLAY: Yes. You’re our stooge. You’re out puppet.

    BUCK: That’s the only person, Clay, in history to ever be impeached as governor from New York.

    CLAY: So the precedent which I do think is significant, it’s a good one historically that you put in place is, the machinery is not well-oiled in order to allow this process to take place; it’s not as if we have had any recent experience at all. No one living today, basically. Maybe a couple people who were alive in 1912, but almost no one living today even still exists that was alive during the process of that. So this is, again, I think that Cuomo’s big gamble is that the American media is too dumb and too focused on day-to-day scandal to focus on him.

    BUCK: Are they still on his team, though?

    CLAY: I don’t know.

    BUCK: Are they still ultimately on his team? ‘Cause I would argue that they’re making a big show of it, that they’re so upset about this. But will they be upset if he’s still governor in six months as long as he delivers on a woman’s right to choose and is anti-gun and all these other things? I think they’re with him despite the histrionics.

    CLAY: I think that this is an interesting study that can be applied going forward. To me, it’s one of the big legacies of Trump — and we’ve seen it happen with the Virginia governor, we’ve seen it happen both parties — is if you just hold on long enough, people forget about whatever you did that’s wrong.

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    De Blasio Demands Vaccine Passport That Will Kill NYC Tourism

    4 Aug 2021

    CLAY: New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said we are going to have vaccine mandates, and I think that would have gotten a lot discussion. Instead, Andrew Cuomo kind of soaked up all the oxygen. Here is New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio explaining why that is necessary.

    DE BLASIO: The Delta variant has changed the game. Unless we want to run the risk of going back to restrictions and having our freedom taken away and people losing their jobs again, it’s really clear what we have to do. People have to get vaccinated, and — and we had a long period where it was voluntary. There was incentives. It was compassionate and kind. But now it’s time to get a little blunter about the fact that everyone needs to get vaccinated for the good of their family, their community, their country. And a lot of people, I think, are close to that point, but they needed a little more of a push.

    CLAY: Unless we want our freedoms taken away, you must do exactly what the government tells you to do, Buck Sexton.

    BUCK: I love that, right? Unless you are willing to sacrifice your freedom, we’re just gonna have to take away your freedom. (chuckles) This is quite a formulation.

    CLAY: The logic is amazing.

    BUCK: And this is a classic de Blasio. I mean, this guy has done more to destroy the city of New York than most of his harshest critics could have ever really imagined. The city has never been fully back. It is not the tourist hub that it was. It is not the dynamic place of just incredible economic engine room capacity that we’ve seen in the past.

    Instead, it’s just, you know, kind of a little bit back. We were out last night, I mean, under the new rules in a few weeks, Mr. Travis, you’re not gonna be able to have that amazing New York City brisket that you are perhaps a little shy about telling your people in actual the rest of America.

    CLAY: Yeah, it is.

    BUCK: It was pretty good. Pretty good.

    CLAY: It’s really kind of the rubber-hits-the-road moment for a lot of people. And you’re gonna have to make this decision as a New York City resident. I’ll tell you this. And I heard from a lot of people after we talked it yesterday. I think there are a lot of people out there where I live that might come to New York City on vacation that are interested in spending their money after they weren’t able to travel around in 2020.

    They’re gonna take New York City off of their tourist destination because you might want to come up here and go to a Broadway play or you might want to go out to a good restaurant or stay in a nice hotel and you’re gonna bring your family up and you’re gonna spend a lot of your hard-earned cash in New York City.

    They’re gonna go to other cities now, and I don’t know that de Blasio is so tone-deaf to what the rest of the world is thinking that they haven’t even contemplated this. But, Buck, you’re putting so many of these bars and restaurants… You were talking about how a lot of the bars that you’re used to in your neighborhood are gone.

    BUCK: Closed. Gone. Never coming back. There’s no sense of full reopen really here in New York. I think we’ve just gotten so used to being downtrodden; so used to feeling like, “Oh, any scraps from the table of the freedom that has been taken from us we’re supposed to be thankful for,” and this is yet another moment in time where you’re seeing that play out.

    They’re threatening us with this in New York City. You ask, “What am I gonna do?” I don’t really know what the answer is because I can’t be barred from all public accommodations in my own city, and that’s what they say they’re about to do. Meanwhile, we’ll talk about what the Boston’s acting mayor is saying about this coming up later. She’s got some strong words against the vaccine mandate.

    CLAY: A Democrat, black mayor.

    BUCK: She’s a Democrat, black, female mayor, and it’s because it’s gonna dramatically impact the Latino and African-American — disproportionately impact those communities in New York and would do so in other cities based on vaccination rates. This is a window into the Democrat mind, actually. It’s, in essence, a distillation of Democrat hypocrisy. It’s like we’ve taken it all the way down to its base layer.

    ID for people to vote? Horrible and racist! Vaccine passports? Totally fine! You say, “Well, hold on a second. There’s disproportionate impact of IDs. If there’s disproportionate impact on the IDs and therefore it’s bad, how is that not a problem with vaccine passports?” The answer is, “Because we say so. Watch CNN more. Stop asking questions.”

    CLAY: I think, again, the practical impact… I think about this from the context of a dad who takes vacations with his family. I’m not gonna take my family to New York City if I can’t go to a restaurant or I can’t go to a ball game or I can’t go to a play. And if I’m saying that, there are millions of people like me who would enjoy bringing their family to New York City to show them the city and experience New York on a vacation that are not gonna make that choice.

    The bars and restaurants that are already struggling, you’re taking away certain percentage of their overall business choice you’re pulling a lot of those millions of tourists out of that flowchart. I know people like to make fun of the people in the red states like me. There’s a lot of people with money to spend that get spent in blue states on vacation. “Guess what? Another trip to Disney World, kids! We ain’t going up to check out the Statue of Liberty or Central Park.” There are a lot of real people will make that choice.

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