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Clay and Buck

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Elon Musk’s Fight for Freedom on Socials

18 Apr 2022

CLAY: It is Tax Day. A lot of people are cutting checks that are painful to cut today. A lot of people also not cutting checks at all because they’re a part of nearly — I think the number is — 60% of Americans, Buck, are not going to pay any federal income taxes at all today. One guy who is I believe paying potentially the largest tax bill in the history of the United States, Elon Musk, who sold some of his Tesla stock, and — as a result — is in line to a monster tax bill.

And one of the things that has been intriguing over weekday — we’ve talked a lot about this free speech battle that has emerged over whether or not Elon Musk is going to be able to purchase Twitter. Twitter stock, by the way, as we speak right now, up about $1.50. They implemented the poison pill on Friday to try to keep Elon Musk from taking control of the company.

And over the weekend, Elon Musk fired away, fired off several different tweets relating to that battle, and I saw this, and I was kind of stunned by it, Buck. Jack Dorsey, who was the longtime CEO of Twitter, also was a cofounder. He said that the board of which he is a member has, quote, “consistently been the dysfunction of the company.”

He also said “the plots and coups of the Twitter board could be made into a Hollywood thriller one day,” and earlier in the day another capitalist who was quoted for saying “good boards don’t create good companies but a bad board will kill a company every time.” Jack Dorsey responded, “Big facts.” And then he was asked by a Twitter user if he’s allowed to say these things about the Twitter board, and he simply responded “no.” (chuckles)

So all of this was happening, of course, on Twitter. There’s an outstanding $54.20 offer from Elon Musk. So far, no competing bid that has emerged. And Buck you sent — and all this is so fascinating because the Washington Post and the New York Times and all these companies that are owned by billionaires — memorably the Washington Post owned by Jeff Bezos — are arguing, “Oh, my goodness, can you imagine if Twitter is owned by a billionaire and he has the ability to say and do what he thinks is right for this company?”

The hypocrisy staggering because their companies are if he came out owned by billionaires as well, and there is a monster debate that has ensued by First Amendment, free speech who can and cannot be permitted to say what they think. Buck, do you think that Elon Musk is going to be ultimately successful here or do you think the forces are so aligned against Elon Musk that even though he’s the richest man in the world, they’re not going to allow him to be successful?

BUCK: I think he’s gonna end up taking control of Twitter, but I would add that I’m so psychologically investigated in that outcome that I have to say, I think it’s probably tainting my ability to be entirely objective. And I still think that the most fascinating part of it for me isn’t… Yeah, sure, a free speech platform would be pretty amazing.

I think in the early days of Twitter it was much closer to that. It was also kind of the Wild West. (chuckles) Twitter was crazy in those early days but it was closer to a free speech platform. In recent years it’s become more and more restrictive. But for me seeing the way that while they were lecturing the whole country — the Democrats were lecturing the country — about how a hundred thousand dollars spent on Facebook by Russian bots or whatever by Russian interests was election interference…

You might have one of the most powerful platforms in media companies when it comes to particularly the direction of political conversation in this country lying to the American people and actively putting its thumb on the scale for one side on the other. Not just in a presidential election, a whole range of political affairs.

I think seeing the extent of Twitter censorship and elevation simultaneously, right…? It’s not just pushing some people down. It’s lifting other ideas and individuals up to make them seem more popular, to make them seem more mainstream. The mainstreaming effect that Twitter can have, I think, has been an enormous asset for the left.

“Oh, well, this idea of teach 5-year-olds gender stuff, it’s trending on Twitter! It must have been normal, right?” There’s been a lot that they’ve been able to engage in. I think they’re terrified of that, and I think there are a lot of people even in the legacy media who don’t want it to come out that they’ve had a whole bunch of assistance this whole time.

Another thing, Clay — I tweeted about this over the weekend — same thing’s true at Facebook, folks, with likely even more effect on the national political conversation. And when I say the same thing is true, there’s massive censorship going on at Facebook. They have this whole strikes thing that you get and you have to appeal and they are constantly playing games.

Remember, they always say, “Oh, it’s about hate speech or it’s about the most vile things that a person could say.” That’s a lie. I was getting Twitter and Facebook strikes for saying, “Hey, look at this study on masks. It turns out masks don’t work.” By the way, I’m right and they’re wrong. The little Twitter conversation health morons owe me an apology, but that will never come.

CLAY: It’s a real deal. And we talked to the Babylon Bee CEO Seth Dillon who pointed this out, but as one who ran a media company, I testified in Congress that we could see, Buck, as soon as we did anything… I don’t have the data in front of me right now. But the first time that we had Donald Trump on the OutKick show, our Facebook traffic immediately declined 80% because we had several stories which were positive in nature with Donald Trump in the headline.

You can go look at the… I don’t know what the Facebook algorithm is, obviously, ’cause they keep that hidden. But you can go look, Buck, at the trajectory of OutKick’s traffic and as soon as we had Trump on, the traffic fell off for two or three weeks before it comes back. We lose 80% of our traffic for having positive stories about Donald Trump at OutKick.

This kind of thing would happen at Facebook when we did mask stories, when I would come out and say, “Hey…” Even quoting from the CDC’s own website, they would ding it as not scientifically accurate. When we did those stories — and people say, “Okay. What’s the impact of that?” Well, the traffic is a huge part of the revenue for the company.

So I could quickly see why so many companies end up toeing the line of what is the line that they’re going to expect and accept at Facebook? We’re never crossing that line because if we do that’s gonna cost us hundreds of thousands, potentially millions of dollars in revenues. And that’s how you end up with groupthink is Facebook — and to a large extent I think Twitter is as well — they decide what’s acceptable opinion and if you cross that line, there’s financial consequences.

BUCK: We’ve also seen this with the massive hypocrisy about election acceptance, I guess you could call it, where after Hillary Clinton lost — that’s right — in 2016 to Donald Trump, social media was an enormous megaphone for all kinds of crazy conspiracy theories about Russia-Trump collusion, about a secret bank or secret processing of transfers from a Russian bank to Trump Tower and about meetings that never actually took place and about a dossier.

Let’s just understand: The pee tape dossier thing was spread all over social media constantly. The whole thing was a lie, okay? The entire thing was just absolute crap. And that was shared all over social media. So I do understand there’s a very real, a seething frustration, because after a 2020 election where there were a lot of things that went on that were I think violations of law but treated as though they weren’t…

Whether it was the extension of the voting deadline in Pennsylvania or the way that there was an abuse of in you safeguards of mail-in balloting, we weren’t even allowed to have a conversation about that in the open after the election. It was, “Shut it down, shut it all down.” So it’s not only that we weren’t able to work out, “Okay.

“What election fraud or what election fraud possibilities, even, for the next time around are real, what are exaggerated? Where do we go? Where do the Democrats maybe cheat? Where did actually things just look that way?” We couldn’t have an open discussion about that, and that came after four years of Democrats pretending Trump stole the election and used Facebook and Twitter and other platforms to constantly share that information.

So the double standard on that issue alone of election integrity and stolen elections — let’s be honest — is breathtaking and infuriating for people who actually wanted to be able to share their ideas and learn about other people’s ideas for what really happened.

CLAY: We let Stacey Abrams become a patron saint in this country, certainly of the Democrat Party.

BUCK: And a millionaire!

CLAY: She went from having a net worth of a hundred thousand dollars to having a net worth of over $3 million. And, Buck, she refused to concede that she lost the election to Brian Kemp. And now she is running again. And I bet if she loses in 2022, she’ll refuse to concede again, and that will further embolden her as one of the faces of the Democratic Party.

So as you look at the hypocrisy that is being played out here, it is so… This is why, for those of you out there — and I understand. It’d be fascinating to know, 5 or 10% of you, maybe, listening right now are on Twitter. But that is where the stories are built. That’s where the narrative comes from. And so having a fair-minded leader of Twitter — someone like Elon Musk who can take this company private and just figure out how to have a publicly available algorithm that would show us once and for all what sort of discrimination is going on.

Because, Buck, I come back to this time and time again because people in tech always say, “Well, that’s not us; it’s the algorithm.” And they never have to answer the question, “Yes, but you built the algorithm.” I could build an algorithm to give me any result that I want, Buck. And so that is why Twitter is such a rigged game. They’ve built these algorithms to consistently favor far-left-wing agenda stories.

They allow them to trend. They make them seem more popular and representative of the American public than they actually are, and then that has a drastic influence in the overall politics. Now, I think the positive is gonna be Democrats have so given themselves over to what Twitter opinion is, that it’s led them astray from where most of the country is, ’cause only about 2% of people are tweeting actively on a day-to-day basis on social media. And all that factors in. And I think it’s gonna end up being one of the death knells of the Democratic Party in 2022.

BUCK: Yeah. The best part about being a Democrat is that you get to be wildly ignorant of reality around you, but have all of your in-group talking about or showing their love for you online for your ideas. The virtue signaling, Clay, that’s the sweet spot right there. This is why you see all these leftists, who all of a sudden are all about putting up that Ukraine flag right next to their photo of themselves on their Twitter profile, double masked — just to be safe — outside.

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CIA Knew Trump-Russia Claims Weren’t “Technically Plausible”

18 Apr 2022

BUCK: Story up in the Washington Examiner by Jerry Dunleavy: “CIA Has Known Trump-Russia Collusion Data Not ‘Technically Plausible’ Since 2017, Durham Says — An agency believed to be the CIA concluded the data underpinning certain Trump-Russia collusion allegations was not ‘technically plausible’ by early 2017, casting further doubt on claims pushed by the Clinton campaign before the 2016 election.

“Democratic cybersecurity lawyer Michael Sussmann was indicted last September for allegedly concealing his clients — Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign and ‘Tech Executive-1,’ known to be former Neustar executive Rodney Joffe — from FBI general counsel James Baker in September 2016 when he pushed since-debunked claims of a secret back channel between the Trump Organization and Russia’s Alfa Bank. indictment alleged Sussmann lied when he said he was not providing the domain name system data allegations to the FBI on behalf of any client when he was…”

Clay, it’s frustrating, ’cause we found this information later on in the process when it’s much less likely to have the same degree of political impact than it would have had only we known about it earlier. This is disinformation, this wasn’t a mistake, and I think that’s what everyone… The whole Russia-Trump collusion thing — which is not over insofar as we still are waiting for the final report at least from Durham, who is doing a full-scale investigation of this.

This was the primary method through which the Democrats rallied their base and tried to slow and even destroy the Trump administration. They knew — the people pushing it early on knew — it was a lie. It’s not even that they believed their own BS, Clay. That’s what’s starting to emerge more and more. This was Russian-style dezinformatsiya, which means they knew it was crap and they were pushing it anyway because it could hurt their political rival.

CLAY: It’s also super frustrating — and this is me speaking as someone who was involved in a media company. The amount of dollars that they were talking about that Russia was spending to influence the 2016 election was minuscule. And anyone who is involved in a media company at all — CNN, New York Times, Washington Post — this is the essence of their business.

They would understand there — anyone who’s involved on the business side would — that the hundred grand in advertisements that Russia might have been trying to buy to influence the 2016 election, was not even enough to be considered a drop in the bucket and so the entire narrative that they tried to run with…

Buck, what’s frustrating to me is, I saw and knew what we spent on advertising on Facebook and what was spent by competitors and everybody else. And it’s so much money that the idea that they were selling that this could have ever been impactful was such a lie, and they knew it was a lie, anybody involved in those media companies did.

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Elizabeth Warren Grasps for a Scapegoat

18 Apr 2022

CLAY: There’s a New York Times editorial up, Buck, from Elizabeth Warren, senator from Massachusetts, that says: Democrats must pass their stalled agenda or brace for big losses in the midterms. The big losses in the midterms are happening no matter what. Here’s my concern, Buck. That Democrats might recognize that no matter what they pass, they’re getting shellacked.

But they also may recognize that Republicans are not gonna have enough of a majority in the House or the Senate to be able to overturn what they pass while they have the majority, while they have the Senate, while they have the House, and while they got the White House. And so whatever they pass would be in effect for multi-years because it’s difficult to overturn something.

And so I wonder if they’re just gonna throw their hands up, Buck, and say, “You know what? That argument I think is untrue from Elizabeth Warren. I don’t think it’s gonna change what’s gonna happen in the midterms.” I think she probably recognizes that. But what’s gonna change is the power to implement any of these policies, and they might just say, “Screw it. We’re gonna have a big tax increase. We’re gonna spend a bunch of your money while we can, ’cause otherwise — starting next year — we won’t be able to.”

BUCK: We should never underestimate the Democrats’ willingness and shamelessness in scapegoating. They’re doing a horrible job. We know that. That’s obvious. The numbers all show it. They’re not doing a good job with the economy, with crime, with the border. And we have the biggest war going on… Now, look, it’s Putin’s fault. It’s not Biden’s fault. But we do have all these international institutions in the U.N. and U.S. leadership on the world stage, all these things they talk to us about, and we weren’t able to stop a Russian invasion before it occurred.

So, I think that’s all true. It didn’t happen under Trump. I think that’s all noteworthy. But the scapegoating, Clay, that means that they’ll say, “Oh, are you having trouble buying gas? It’s ’cause of those greedy corporations. Are you having trouble making ends meet? It’s because the rich don’t pay their fair share.” Forget about the fact that it is government policy that drives inflation.

It is inflation that now means that the average American is working an extra month for free, basically. I mean, you’re looking at an 8% reduction in your wages for the year compared to… I know inflation’s usually about 2%, but real inflation — which is a whole other conversation of what you really need, not just what’s in the CPI basket — is higher than 8%.

CLAY: No doubt, and that is my concern now, that Democrats are gonna turn from, “Hey, let’s try to find a way to win some elections in the midterms,” to, “We’re done for. Let’s pass what we can while we still can.”

BUCK: It could happen.

CLAY: And that is a challenge. I think that might well happen.

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Caving to BLM Turned Our Cities into Disasters

18 Apr 2022

BUCK: There was a decision made — largely pushed by the political pressure off the BLM movement — to start being a whole lot more permissive, not only about violent crime, shorter sentences, bail reform laws, things of that nature, but just day-to-day crime. Shoplifting has been almost legalized in some major American cities with predictably disastrous consequences, along with turnstile jumping and public urination.

These are lessons that were learned in major cities in the eighties, in the nineties, and Democrats decided, “You know what? Let’s just try it again. Let’s just see what happens when we abandon law and order in the name of social justice.” Criminal justice gets sidelined for social justice. And the mayor of New York — who I have been a skeptic of from the beginning and find deeply disappointing a few months in, Eric Adams — says that it is actually…

They’re gonna try this, Clay. They’re just gonna see what will fly. You know, they’re gonna try all kinds of stuff. Here he is telling everybody that it is Republicans who are guilty of defunding the police or wanting to because they won’t pass Build Back Better.

BUCK: This is all politics.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

CLAY: Being concerned about people being in prison for too long is a luxury of a low crime era. And what happened time after time after time was people said, “Oh, we’re punishing criminals too much,” and, as all the DAs started to lead… This guy had been arrested — the one who shot on the subway — 12 times, Buck, nine times in New York and three times in New Jersey.

And I understand that the three-strikes-and-you’re-out crime bill — which basically said, “Hey, you commit three felonies; you’re gone” — there were people who got caught up in that and ended up getting Draconian sentences as a result. But as a group, we put people who were violent behind bars and crime came down for the rest of us. And now those same people? Back out on the streets, not suffering any sort of significant consequences for their criminal behavior, and all of us are bearing the price.

BUCK: I’m just gonna tell everybody this — and I know not everyone’s gonna like to hear it, but it’s true. The Trump administration got caught up in some of this stuff. We’re gonna be honest about this; let’s be honest about this. Trump administration was pushing the First Step Act, the Trump administration after BLM…

Now, when I say, “caught up in some of this.” Maybe they were 5% or 10% as caught up as the 90 or 95% of this was Democrat policies and ideas. But this became fashionable on the right as well for a while, not just… When I say Trump administration, I mean that more generally also with the GOP, the Trump White House, but also a lot of people in the GOP were talking about criminal justice reform.

This became fashionable for a while, and it was always, “We’re locking up too many people for nonviolent drug offenses.” That’s not really the case when you look at what the drug offenses actually usually involve. Drug offenses are often easy to prove, and so federal prosecutors will say, “Well, we’ll get you on the drugs. We’re not even gonna go after the weapons possession.

“We’re not even gonna go after the violent gang assault or whatever the other charges may be.” So all you see for an individual are possession of X ounces of fill in the blank with illegal drug. We weren’t actually locking up a whole lot of people for decades for just having a bag of marijuana. And I think that’s started to become the perception that was pushed by a lot of people to get… Clay, why else do we have all these criminal justice reform laws going into effect 2018, 2019, 2020? And then the BLM movement came about, the undermining of police as racist.

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Dem Pollster: Pretend Trump Is on the Ballot

18 Apr 2022

BUCK: Here is a Democratic pollster, for example, saying you know what we have to do, Clay? The Democrats need to pretend that Trump is on the ballot.

WOODBURY: “That’s exactly right, tiffany. Morale is extremely low amongst the Democratic coalition. We are seeing cynicism with a perceived lack of progress on the progressive agenda, and the truth is Democrats have made significant progress on issues most important to Democratic base but they are not telling that story. Part of what we have to do in the midterm is portray a message of unfinished business and there’s two sides of that, a part of that unfinished business, we have to put Trump on the ballot.

The multiracial coalition, the surge that you spoke of in 2018, and that came back out in 2020, what united that surge was an anti-MAGA, anti-Trump, anti-racism sentiment that really started to bubble up in the summer of 2020. We have to put Trump back on the ballot, but that does not mean that we get to make every Republican seem like Trump.”

BUCK: So, can I just point out, Clay, that it’s incongruous? I mean, he really gives away the game with, “Oh, yeah, we’ve made a lot of strides with the progressive agenda,” which is just not true. In fact, the only places where they push with the progressive agenda things like schools where they had these big fights over the “don’t say gay” bill, they’re actually losing ground now. Those battles are going against them. If they were doing well and delivering for the American people, the Democrat Party wouldn’t then turn around and say, “Let’s pretend that Donald Trump is on the ballot.”

CLAY: Well, and it didn’t work in 2021 because that’s what they tried to do, and that was in short order after Trump had been on the ballot. So now two years in, you have to own whatever is going on, good or bad, Joe Biden is responsible for it. You can’t blame the bogeyman of Trump. Now, that certainly may well be the strategy in 2014, Buck, and that’s actually one of the things that concerns me about Trump running in 2024, which I think he’s gonna do, and I think he should win.

But Trump has to run a different campaign in 2024 than he did in 2016. In 2016, he was the change agent. In 2024, what Republicans need to run on is, “Joe Biden was a disaster and we’re not going to be a disaster,” and my one concern about Trump in 2014, is Republicans will have everything set up to win. Will Democrats be able to argue against Trump as opposed to defending Biden?

Because what should be on the ballot in 2024, is all of the failures of the Biden administration. What Democrats…? You just heard. They’re trying to do it in 2022. I think it’s gonna work. It didn’t work in 2021. But if Trump is on the ballot, does Trump become the story as opposed to Biden failures? Because if it’s Biden failures, Republicans win.

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Imagine if Build Back Better Had Passed

18 Apr 2022

CLAY: With the economy, with the 8.5% inflation that we’re seeing which is the highest in 40 years, can you imagine where we would be if Joe Biden had actually gotten what he wanted, which was this $5 trillion plus additional federal spending from Build Back Better? I mean, as bad as things are for the economy right now, you basically had Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema — two senators in the Democratic Party — who kept this from happening.

‘Cause, remember, it passed the House, and there were people who said, even when Joe Manchin was trying to dial back how much they were spending, “Hey, there’s no way that we should be… Now is the time to spend!” Remember they tried to argue, Buck, “Oh, this will actually make inflation better”? If they had spent that $5 trillion that they wanted to spend — and $5 trillion probably is not even a full calculation of what they were gonna be spending.

Can you imagine how much worse place we would be in? And it kind of draws back in again — and I don’t know the answer. But I do wonder if Republicans — and a lot of them are listening to us right now in the state of Georgia — had been able to win one of those Senate seats, how much different does things look even with this 8.5% inflation that we have now? I think if the Democrats had gotten what they want, Buck, we’re talking about 10 or 12% inflation as we talk right now. What if the Republicans had won just one of those Senate seats, what is inflation right now, 4 or 5%?

BUCK: And we should have won at least one of those Senate seats.

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: That was really a self-inflicted wound by the GOP. A lot of infighting, a lot of lack of strategic imperative and discipline in that moment in time after the 2020 election. It was very frustrating. But, yes. To your point, Clay, things are so absurd that Joe Biden got in the habit of doing his loud whisper thing (impression), “It’ll reduce inflation.” He was saying it would reduce inflation to spend trillions of dollars additionally beyond the trillions of dollars in the federal budget as it stands right now.

CLAY: We just dodged… Look, I know a lot of you out there listening to us right now are struggling, that one gallon of gas that had been bought right before kind of crystallized for me as I was getting ready. I drove down to Birmingham, met a lot of listeners, by the way, down in Birmingham over the weekend. But as bad as the Democrats have made the economy, they came close to making it infinitely worse. They cannot have any more power at all as we’re all dealing with the fallout from what they created.

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By the Numbers: High Crime and Gas Prices Cause Pain

18 Apr 2022

BUCK: Crime way up here in New York City, the place that is supposed to be… Because of history, because of what had happened before, New York was the city that, in many ways, led the charge in normalcy, safety, cleanliness of the streets, making everything function better as a city.

From bringing down homicides to bringing up sanitation, New York was this place that was a beacon in the nineties for the rest of the country. And guess what? The big lie we were told for a long time — remember this, Clay? — was that the murder numbers were up — and pretty much everywhere across the country.

Shootings were up, violent crime was up because of covid, which never made sense, but it was purely a delay tactic, and what we’ve seen now, is just hoping that something else would come up or really that the numbers would start to fall, right? It was just, “Don’t allow people to talk about this because the longer they do the more frustrated they’ll become. So, act like it’s covid,” even though that made absolutely no sense from the very beginning.

Clay, they’ve got a big problem. You might have seen over the weekend there was a new Pew poll that come out, and it turns out — and I think this is entirely unsurprising — that the top-three concerns for African-American voters: Crime, housing, the economy. Crime really at the top of the list. Racism at the very, very bottom of the list. It just feels like one year in, one-year-and-change in, Biden’s whole presidency is just a catalog of failures so far.

CLAY: Yeah. It’s an unmitigated disaster on virtually every level for the Biden administration — and, in particular, Buck, if you look at those numbers, it reflects what we’ve been saying on this show for a long time. What did we say on Friday? Joe Biden’s approval rating among Hispanic voters is down to 26%. That’s lower than it is for white voters, and even for black voters, I believe, it was down to 65%, which is an unbelievably low number for historically a Democratic president to find himself in. And it’s because white, black, Asian, Hispanic people tend to have the biggest similarities in thoughts.

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C&B 24/7: Clay & Buck’s Show Prep

18 Apr 2022

  • New York Times: Democrats Can Avoid Disaster in November – Elizabeth Warren
  • FOXNews: Elizabeth Warren in NY Times: Democrats must pass stalled agenda or brace for ‘big losses’ in midterms
  • FOXNews: Federal judge blocks mask mandate for public transportation
  • Federalist: This Tax Day, Biden Should Release His Full, Corporate Tax Returns
  • New York Post: Here’s a dozen times Joe Biden played a role in son Hunter’s business dealings
  • New York Post: Democrats are campaigning on Jan. 6 hypocrisy – Miranda Devine
  • UK Daily Mail: ‘We’ve got to save democracy in order to save our species’: Democratic Rep. Raskin says we can’t fight climate change while dealing with the right wing and says Trump’s ‘attempted coup’ will be focus of the January 6 hearings
  • Daily Wire: Protester Who Kicked It At Pelosi’s Desk Was ‘Pushed Into The Capitol,’ Lawyer Says
  • BizPacReview: Durham: CIA deemed data on Trump Russian collusion not ‘technically plausible … user created’

  • Federalist: 3 Blockbuster Revelations From The Latest Special Counsel Court Filings
  • Breitbart: Durham: Five Hillary Clinton Associates Are Taking the Fifth in Russia Hoax Prosecution
  • Breitbart: Inflation Here to Stay Despite White House ‘Temporary, Transitory’ Claim
  • HotAir: Democrats are now fighting over how Biden’s agenda imploded
  • PJ Media: ‘Fact Checkers’ Claim Biden Wasn’t ‘Shaking Hands With Thin Air.’ Oh, Really?

  • New York Post: ‘The ultimate waste’: Young people say no to TikTok, social media
  • Bloomberg: Elon Musk’s cryptic tweet channeling Elvis baffles investors
  • Bloomberg: Judge Rules Musk Go-Private Tweet False, Tesla Investors Say
  • The Hill: Jeff Bezos prepares to challenge Elon Musk for space dominance

  • Townhall: 23 Possible Terrorists Apprehended Illegally Crossing U.S.-Mexico Border in 2021
  • Breitbart: Exclusive Photos: Migrant Flow Continues on Holy Saturday in West Texas Border Town
  • Breitbart: Tour the Ecological Damage from Mass Migration on Texas Border River

  • New York Post: Images reportedly show burning Russian warship Moskva shortly before sinking
  • New York Post: Zelensky warns the world to ‘prepare’ for Putin to unleash a nuclear attack
  • US Sun: Mystery as ‘dead’ captain of sunk Russian flagship Moskva filmed at ‘survivors’ parade as hundreds of sailors missing

  • HotAir: Health experts: Hey, the vaccines were never intended to prevent infections
  • New York Post: Shanghai aiming to have zero COVID cases outside quarantine centers
  • Wall Street Journal: BA.2 Proves the Pandemic Isn’t Over, but People Are Over It
  • Wall Street Journal: Inside a Shanghai Mass Quarantine Center: No Showers, Lights On 24/7
  • Daily Wire: Former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey Lashes Out At Twitter’s Board As Elon Musk Tries To Buy Company
  • Daily Wire: Elon Musk Publicly Slams Twitter Board After ‘Poison Pill’ Adopted

  • UK Daily Mail: Riot cops clash with protesters hurling rocks and setting cars alight in Sweden after anti-Islam Danish politician threatened to burn the Koran in Muslim areas
  • New York Post: Fans shade Viola Davis’ ‘cringey’ Michelle Obama portrayal in ‘The First Lady’
  • Washington Post: The culture wars’ next frontier: Public libraries
  • Fort Worth Star-Telegram: Parent in bunny suit hands out condom-filled Easter eggs at Texas elementary school
  • DNYUZ: Disney, Built on Fairy Tales and Fantasy, Confronts the Real World
  • Daily Wire: Another Poll Finds Most Americans Oppose Teaching K-3 Children About Sexual Orientation, Transgender Issues

  • PJ Media: Brooklyn Subway Shooter Frank James Is Already Being Memory-Holed
  • UK Daily Mail: Passing the buck, Eric? NYC Mayor Adams blasts social media for ‘brewing’ online hatred that stoked subway shooting suspect Frank James: Says firms must ‘step-up’ to prevent crime
  • New York Post: Democrats who claim white supremacy is top problem ignore black racist killers – Deroy Murdock
  • Daily Wire: Ilhan Omar Slammed Over Tweet About Christians Singing On Plane: ‘Shut Up And Stop Being A Bigot’
  • UK Daily Mail: Boston University Professor Ibram X. Kendi declares Republicans ‘The Party of White Supremacy’ and claims conservative efforts to limit teaching of critical race theory are really ‘grooming’ children to become racist

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    C&B Holiday Edition: The Best Easter Candy

    15 Apr 2022

    BUCK: It is Good Friday and coming up here on Easter weekend for those of us who celebrate. I’ll be celebrating with my family here in New York City. And because we’re at the first iteration Clay of the new generation because my sister has a little baby who’s about 18 months old now, so he is the centerpiece of all family gatherings now.

    CLAY: Oh, of course. Yeah.

    BUCK: We just sit around like, “Oh, my gosh. Is that the third word that he just learned how to say?” and we all like, “It’s amazing!” You’ve been through this a few times. I haven’t been through this before with new member of the family like this, a baby. But there are some pretty intense debates that break out over the best Easter candy.

    And I’m just gonna say, I don’t understand what’s with all the hate around Cadbury Eggs lately. I mean, Cadbury Eggs, I think, are fantastic. I’m also a big jellybeans guy. I don’t even mean the fancy jellybeans. I’ll go old school jellybeans. So there’s that.

    CLAY: I’m gonna be super controversial here, Buck, and I’m gonna ride or die with Peeps. I like Peeps.

    BUCK: This is Clay the contrarian. There’s no way you like Peeps.

    CLAY: I am a big marshmallow guy, right? Like, I’ve always been a big s’more guy. And effectively you’ve got some sort of, you know, like sprinkle on top of a marshmallow. I’ll eat it all day long. I like Peeps. I’m not afraid to scream it from the rooftops. The kids may not be big fans, but I don’t know about…

    Buck, my kids are all-in on the Easter bunny like they have been all-in on Santa. And the Easter baskets that the Travis boys maybe have gotten have been too good, and so my first grader this morning, he came up and he said, Dad, you know how we can track Santa, which tracking Santa is a great way on the app to get your kid in bed Christmas Eve although, by the way, did I even mention this, Buck? Santa on the Santa Tracker app from NORAD or whoever puts that thing out, they had a mask on Santa in a sleigh.

    BUCK: Unacceptable. Unacceptable.

    CLAY: Come on. But he said —

    BUCK: Was it an N95, though, Clay? Because Santa needs to take the virus seriously.

    CLAY: No. Wasn’t even an N95. The fat old man, he could be in danger from covid.

    BUCK: The elves could fashion an N95 for him.

    CLAY: He said, hey, Dad, is there an Easter bunny tracker app? And I said, you know what? I don’t know. I bet there is somewhere. So, Santa and the Easter bunny both very popular with young side of the Travis household. And the Peeps are gonna come and they’re gonna arrive and nobody else is gonna eat ’em and I’m gonna eat ’em.

    Now, I don’t think you can pound a bunch of Peeps in a row. It’s like some of these fruity drinks that are popular now, the Claws drinks, you know, these women drink, I don’t understand and some men. I don’t understand how you drink like three or four of them. But you can have like one. I can have one or two Peep without, like, falling party.

    BUCK: So, according — this is just from History.com, and this is one of the things where I feel like you never find out and everyone says, “No, I know the real…” But, you know, sometimes the origins of words, the origins of tradition. According to History.com, for whatever that’s worth, “[T]he Easter bunny first arrived in America in the 1700s with German immigrants who settled in Pennsylvania and transported their tradition of an egg-laying hare called ‘Osterhase’ or ‘Oschter Haws.’

    “Their children made nests in which this creature could lay its colored eggs.” So, to those of us today who think a giant bunny hopping around — an eight-foot-tall bunny hopping around — shooting out brightly colored eggs sounds like an acid trip, it turns out this goes back to the 1700s and a German tradition of an egg-laying special bunny or hare and that that is where this tradition sort of caught on from. But, yeah. That’s what it says.

    CLAY: A lot of Easter egg hunts. I like the boiled egged, right? A lot of you make the colored eggs for Easter, as many people do. I enjoy — much to the kids’ chagrin — ripping off whatever color they have and eating the boiled eggs underneath. That, to me, is pretty outstanding.

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    The Great Migration: Where Americans Are Moving

    15 Apr 2022

    CLAY: We are number one in 11 markets and growing, and that is certainly helping so many of us. And, Buck, let’s see if I can get ’em all. Thank you, particularly in Sacramento, San Diego, Salt Lake City, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Houston, Louisville, Memphis, Birmingham, Raleigh, and Milwaukee, where we are right now, number one radio station in the country. We need more of you to step up.

    But we love the 11 cities where we are in many different states number one in the country right now, and a lot of people are moving. And maybe you’re soon gonna be moving to a place where you can hear us, if you can’t hear us now. And, Buck, that is what you call a perfect radio transition to what you have in front of you right now. I have not seen this list. But explain to the people what you have in front of yourself right now.

    BUCK: Yes, thank you for the alley-oop, Mr. Clay.

    CLAY: Yes.

    BUCK: So here we go. There is more data now up on the Daily Mail on the flight from major cities. Now, understand these cities all have one thing in common, other than population size — they’re all big cities — and that is that they have absolute, ironclad Democrat control at the city level and also at the state level, which I think is noteworthy, too, right?

    Because if you… For the people who live in Dallas, let’s say. Dallas, which is not on either of these lists, that’s a Democrat majority city, but it’s in the state of Texas and so you still have some sanity at the state level because the city has to abide by state laws and has to exist within that ecosystem, although Austin definitely pushes… I love Austin. It’s a fun place to visit. Man, there is some wacky left-wing stuff going on in that town.

    CLAY: Early preview, by the way: Austin, we are going to be in September on the weekend of the 10th, the University of Alabama, Buck’s favorite football team, is traveling to play against the University of Texas in Austin. We are planning to be there as a show, potentially having a fun taillight-related event potentially, surrounding that game.

    BUCK: Yeah, I need to know which one has a larger fan base that listens to our show so then I know who I’m rooting for. So we have to do a little bit of data crunching on that one.

    CLAY: That’s a good… I don’t begrudge you because the state of Texas is massive. Now, they have not been in a national championship game in about 15 years, since Colt McCoy got hurt in the Rose Bowl game against Alabama. Sorry to bring it up. They’ve been through several different coaches for the Longhorns. Let me guess six cities, Buck. I don’t know these cities. Let me see how many of them I can get.

    BUCK: Yes. Go for it.

    CLAY: These are the cities that people are fleeing the most, according to the most recent data.

    BUCK: Can I just add before you get to them?

    CLAY: Yes.

    BUCK: We also have the six that they’re moving to the most which we’ll get to in a moment. Go ahead.

    CLAY: Yes. I would guess L.A., San Francisco, New York City, Chicago. I would bet that all four of those are on the list. The additional two cities that I would think that people are moving from is more challenging, because I’m confident in those. Let me just stick with those four. Did I hit all four of those?

    BUCK: Chicago is not even on the list, I will say.

    CLAY: I can’t believe that. It’s a flawed list.

    BUCK: (laughing) He demands a recount! San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York all clearly on the list.

    CLAY: Yeah.

    BUCK: And what’s amazing here is that, according to this data that I’m seeing, San Francisco, when you add it all up, may actually… I’m trying to see if it’s by percentage or by aggregate numbers. San Francisco has been decimated by people leaving.

    CLAY: Yes.

    BUCK: I think it might even be almost… You know, “decimation” comes from the ancient Roman punishment of the legions, decimatus, where they would actually beat to death one out of 10, and that’s where we get the term decimation.

    CLAY: Oh wow. I had no idea. How did they pick the one out of 10?

    BUCK: I think they drew lot by stone, essentially. But if you were a cowardly legion or if there was a portion of a legion that was cowardly, they would be engage in the process of decimatus, the killing of one out of 10, as an example to the other to never be cowardly again, hence the term decimation.

    CLAY: Probably worked!

    BUCK: Yes, I would think so, and I think the other members of the legion actually did the beating. So, yeah, it definitely left an impression. Ancient Rome, amazing in many ways, really messed up in ways, too. Like, there’s a whole lot conversation there we could have. Okay. Let’s but bring it back to the decimation of San Francisco, meaning the population flight. They’re number one. Los Angeles and New York are right behind it. Washington, D.C., interestingly enough, was on this list.

    CLAY: It has to be per capita because there’s only like 600,000 people who live in D.C.

    BUCK: Their covid lockdowns?

    CLAY: Yeah.

    BUCK: D.C. was pretty much as bad as New York from what I understand. They were wacko over a lot of the lockdown policy and then the other two cities are Seattle, Washington, and Boston, which Seattle… We love our Seattle listeners, and we’re hoping to send you not really a ray of hope because it’s audio.

    But — I don’t know — a note of hope through your ears in the Seattle region listening to us, and we’re right there with you. I’m in New York; so I know what it’s like to be surrounded by the crazies. All right, Travis. The six cities people are moving to in America in the biggest numbers — and here’s a fun fact. These are overwhelmingly in red states.

    CLAY: Yeah.

    BUCK: Oh, gosh! They’re Democrat cities. Fine. But they’re in red states. What do we got?

    CLAY: I’m gonna give you a bunch. So I think people would be moving — again, I think it’s per capita. So I’m gonna toss out a bunch. Houston, Dallas, Austin, Salt Lake City, Phoenix, Nashville, Tampa, Miami, and Atlanta and Charlotte, Raleigh.

    BUCK: Okay. So you got a few, but there were a lot that were… “Samsonite, you were way off.”

    CLAY: Yeah, that’s not good.

    BUCK: There were some that you had… I don’t know if anyone’s gonna catch that movie reference, by the way, that’s a particular one but if you haven’t seen Dumb & Dumber recently I think it does hold up. It’s not a very high-end comedy in Dumb & Dumber. Anyway, Miami, Phoenix, Tampa, you nailed those. Obviously, we’ve got great audiences. Huh! Three cities where we’ve got fantastic audiences of people who understand what’s going on.

    CLAY: Yes, not a surprise.

    BUCK: The other three that were on here, one is surprising, and I think it’s gonna be getting bigger and bigger, and that is Cape Coral, Florida, has a lot of people moving to it. Again, I’m just going based on the numbers.

    CLAY: Yeah, Cape Coral. I don’t even know where Cape Coral is, do you?

    BUCK: I think it’s up in the north, kind of near where they used to fire the rocket ships.

    CLAY: Cape Canaveral? Near Cape Canaveral?

    BUCK: Am I wrong? By the way, Florida people may be completely laughing at me right now.

    CLAY: Well, Cape Coral is a small enough place. That’s a tough one to get, right? It’s not like there’s millions of people there.

    BUCK: Oh, man, I was way off. (laughing) I’m way off. I’m sorry. It’s next to Fort Myers. It’s next to Fort Myers. How is that…?

    CLAY: Where we had our awesome event. We love you, Fort Myers. I’ve always been a great Cape Coral guy.

    BUCK: It’s the home of the Fighting Cape Corals. It’s great!

    CLAY: (laughing)

    BUCK: The team there they have, the AAA league, I don’t know. I don’t know anything. Okay, and then there’s Las Vegas —

    CLAY: Vegas I should have gotten.

    BUCK: — which, obviously Nevada has shall we say it, Clay, Nevada has zero state income tax, right? So that’s a lot of —

    CLAY: I think that’s right, yeah.

    BUCK: A lot of California flight. And then Sacramento which I —

    CLAY: Interesting.

    BUCK: That one, I don’t understand necessarily. I’d be fascinated to hear what our audience in Sacramento would offer up on that one. Why are so many people moving to…? Maybe they’re just gonna be like, “Hey, we got a great downtown, great quality of life.”

    CLAY: I think it’s probably affordable housing.

    BUCK: That’s like San Antonio. When you ask why do people move to San Antonio, they’re like, “‘Cause it’s a great city. It’s safe, it’s nice, it’s got good food, it’s got good weather, you know, it’s in Texas.” So could be.

    CLAY: I would bet it’s people who want to stay in California, but they want more affordable lifestyle and they want a little bit more sanity, because as you move north in California, outside of San Francisco you end up with more sane people, right? The stat that I love, here’s a great stat for everybody to share as you’re gathering with your Easter, Passover crews.

    More people voted for Donald Trump in 2020 in California than in Texas. That’s true, and everybody’s mind is blown. More people voted for Donald Trump in California than in Texas in the 2020 election. Now, population is why. But people think of California as deep blue and Texas as, by and large, deep red, and there are actually more Trump supporters in California than in Texas.

    BUCK: See? These things matter, my friends. These things matter. The demographics have an effect on all of us. But, anyway, I just think it’s interesting because we talk about the data in terms of the polling and perception and the economy. People voting with their feet is something that is real. It’s a big deal to get up, especially move your family, change your job, change all this stuff.

    And there’s a singular narrative here of people are leaving Democrat hell (laughing), Democrat-controlled hellish conditions — and I can speak from experience living in Midtown Manhattan — and going to places with lower taxes, more individual freedom, and less collectivist insanity. So it’s good stuff.

    CLAY: And I can speak to that because that’s where I live.

    BUCK: Yeah. There you go. Look at that. Clay brings news of the free state of Tennessee.

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