×

Clay and Buck

For a better experience,
download and use our app!

24/7 VIP Video: Clay and Buck Fired Up Over Fauci’s Latest Fraud

27 Oct 2022

Fauci is set to retire at the end of the year, but hopefully we’ll get to see plenty of him at congressional hearings, testifying about the massive frauds he perpetrated on the American people. You won’t believe what he said now.

Watch Clay and Buck lay into the Little Lab Coat Tyrant. Only 24/7 VIPs can view this exclusive commercial-free video.

If you’re not a member, sign up now. You can also use the special VIP email pipeline to Clay and Buck to share whatever is on your mind.

Watch It!

Recent Stories

Get Password Hint

Enter your email to receive your password hint.

Need help? Contact customer service.

Forgot password

Enter your e-mail to receive your account information via e-mail.

Need help? Contact customer service.

Our Favorite Election Nerd Ryan Girdusky Breaks Down the Key Races

27 Oct 2022

CLAY: One of our favorite congressional and Senate nerds. And I say that very affectionately, Ryan Girdusky, as we sit here 11 days out, has voluminous knowledge of basically all the races that are going on all over the country in the House of Representatives and also obviously in the Senate. So, Ryan, I’m going to start with a big broad question for you, and thanks for making the time for us. How many Republican seats in the House do you think the over/under on pick up is on the big map that you kind of pay attention to? And what do you expect to see in the Senate? How would you assess us 11 days out over/under where we’re headed?

GIRDUSKY: So, I wrote a piece for my Substack, the National Populist Newsletter, which you can get on Substack and I basically broke down the entire House and Senate races. And what I think is Republicans are looking at between 225 seats on the low end and about 249 seats on the high end. My estimate would be about 239 Republican House victory seats going into the the election in 11 days.

And in the Senate, I would say there’s a lot of seats literally on a 50-50 coin toss, specifically the big four, Arizona, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Georgia. Momentum is in the favor of Republicans in three of those states in Arizona, in Georgia and in Pennsylvania, Republicans have a lot of wind in their sails. Nevada is a very difficult state. It’s one of the very few states in the union that typically Republicans poll better than they vote on Election Day. It is also the only state in the union where people can go to the ballot and vote for none of the above. Which 4 or 5% of the public do. They get out of their beds, they get on their houses, they go vote and they vote for none of the above. Very special kind of people in Nevada.

BUCK: I was going to say, what is the motivation of the none of the above voter? How does it go?

CLAY: They hate everyone.

GIRDUSKY: One time none of the above one, it was in a Democratic primary. So, I mean, like, you never know. There are people who go out and they do that. I don’t understand why, but they do so.

BUCK: Okay. So I got to ask you about a couple specific ones here, Ryan, Clay has very has been very confident. I gave him full credit all along in Herschel Walker’s ability to pull this off in the Senate in Georgia just this week. There’s more allegations that are coming out, Herschel saying they’re lies. They’re throwing everything they’ve got at him to try to make it a Warnock victory. What dynamics are playing out there right now based on the numbers?

GIRDUSKY: So, right now Georgia has I think it has to be over a million early votes are already in in the state of Georgia. So people have been voting for some time now. The big thing to look out for going into the election is the black turnout. Blacks vote 90 to 95% for the Democratic Party in every election, with the exception of very, very few. And Herschel Walker will not break that trend, according to every poll there is to be found.

So, if 90% are voting for the Democratic Party, the big question is do they surpass 29%, which is what they had in 2020? As of right now, they’re at 30.7%. They start off very, very high. A sugar high of 38% of the vote was the black vote and is falling every single day. The last two days in a row, it’s been 26%. So where that ultimately falls is a big question.

The second big question is how much does Kemp do better than Walker in the collar counties outside of Atlanta? And that is the big question. There are many counties he’s not going to win, but he has to not be destroyed in them. So like Cobb County, Georgia, he needs to keep his loss under ten points, in Fulton County he needs to keep his lost under 40 points, in Gwinnett, under 15 points, in Newton, he’s got to either win or come within a few points. Henry County, less than 20 points. If they can keep those losses at a minimum, then the rural and exurban counties of Georgia will carry them both to victory.

CLAY: So, it’s really kind of fascinating, as you look at some of these tight races. And I want to beat this drum because I, Ryan, I bet you’ll agree with me here. There are a lot of people who are going to vote Libertarian that would otherwise vote Republican and just those Libertarian voters could swing the outcome in the Senate, right? So, if you’re in Nevada, if you’re in Pennsylvania, if you’re in Georgia, Arizona, you’re in Arizona and you’re voting Libertarian, you may well cost Republicans the Senate, maybe trade with somebody in California or New York or some state where it’s actually not going to be close.

GIRDUSKY: Well, there’s no Libertarian on the ballot in New York. So, it’s always the important states to actually have these Libertarians on the ballot. Yeah, I agree it is. I mean, and they have Libertarians. I mean, the Libertarians in mid 2010, they cost us the governor’s seat and Senate seat and it was the same guy who cost us both, both in Virginia for Ken Cuccinelli in 2013 and then the following year in 2014, the same guy cost the Republicans both seats.

I have never voted Libertarian, so I can’t, I’m not espousing, I don’t understand the beliefs to sit there and do that. The guy running in Arizona against against Kelly and and the Republican is advocating for changing the consent laws, that’s his main issue is changing sexual consent laws. So, if that’s your main issue, I guess you have a candidate. But I don’t understand some voting against somebody like Blake Masters who votes, who presumes 90% on every issue is a fairly libertarian guy.

BUCK: Can you tell us what’s the situation in Arizona right now for Masters versus Kelly?

GIRDUSKY: Well, Masters, well, they’re both under 50% in the polls. But Blake Masters has been tied to Kari Lake. Kari Lake is surging in the polls. She is very lucky to have run against one of the worst Democrats in the entire country, Katie Hobbs. But Arizona is a very fast changing state. A lot of Hispanics live there, a lot of retirees that may be leaning or Democrat, a lot of California refugees live there now and they bring their politics with them.

BUCK: And the Hispanic wave that we had seen some early indicators of going for GOP in unprecedented numbers in some of these races, is that manifesting? Is that actually happening based on the early voting places like Arizona, Nevada, for example?

GIRDUSKY: Yeah, but but here’s the thing, is that Hispanics are not a monolithic group. So, yeah, they could be surging in places like Orange County, Florida, which is a very heavily Puerto Rican community, and there are a lot of signs saying Republican voters among Hispanics is surging. They could be surging in the fajita belt of South Texas, those three congressional districts which are Tejanos Mexican. That doesn’t mean they’re going to be surging everywhere at the same place all the time.

So, what’s going to happen is even if it’s a wave election, that does not mean Republicans will do better in every single district. It ebbs and flows. And that was the truth of Democrats in 2018 or Republicans in 2010. There are places they outperform 2020. When the Republican, when the Hispanic vote broke so heavily for Trump, two of the areas they did not break as heavily for, one of the areas was Arizona. Arizona Hispanics did not break as heavily for Trump as they did in other places.

So, it’s something to sit there and see. It’s something that’s out there and see the three big demographics of Arizona that will really decide this election or if the Hispanic turnout is moving towards Republicans, if the Mormons, who hated Donald Trump and voted heavily against him, come home to the Republican Party. And if retirees — Blake Masters just said he wanted to privatize Social Security if they hold that against him, those are the big three that I think will decide in the suburbs of Phoenix and and Scottsdale and all the rest of it.

CLAY: All right, Ryan, I’m a super optimist. I think that this is going to be a Red Wave that could border on a Red Tsunami.

GIRDUSKY: It shows that you’re not from New York. Go ahead.

CLAY: So, Ryan, Election Night, you know everybody’s going to be gathered around watching early returns. Where would you say would be bellwether races to look at…

GIRDUSKY: I’m so glad you asked that.

CLAY: On the East Coast have that as the races start to come in that would give us an idea.

GIRDUSKY: This is my new post on National Populist Newsletter on my Substack. So, 7:00 actually polls are closing at 6, but 7:00 polls close in two big states, not two big states, but two states, Indiana and Kentucky. Kentucky has no swing districts in them. Indiana has one, and that is Indiana’s first congressional district. It is a historically Democratic county district. It is in the suburbs of Chicago. It is a large black vote. We have a female black Republican veteran running against a white guy in that district, a white Democrat in that district. The district is an open seat. Republicans have put a lot of money and energy, in the seat that moved substantially toward Trump. It is a mixture of Rust Belt voters and suburban white voters. What reflects there could reflect in parts of Michigan, in other congressional districts, in Illinois and in Wisconsin. So, it’s a very important seat just a look at. Republicans aren’t expected to win, but if they can get within ten points, it’s very important.

CLAY: That Indiana-1. That’s Indiana-1, you said?

GIRDUSKY: And the other two seats that are very important when polls close Virginia-7 and Virginia-2. Virginia 2nd is Virginia Beach, Virginia 7th is like the Richmond suburbs of like north central Virginia. Two Democrats who are rising stars within the party are fighting for their lives in both seats and Republicans have invested very, very heavily in both those districts. If Republicans win both, it is an absolute Red Wave. It is going to be balls to the walls, a mass sweep across the country if they lose both. It is really questionable how high the Republican majority gets to. The districts are more likely to win as the 2nd, the less likely win the 7th. But who knows? But nonetheless, those are the two big ones that they have to win. Then as you go to the 7:30 hour, more states close. Also, Florida closes at that point, too, in Florida, you should check out like certain counties and how DeSantis is performing in them.

BUCK: Clay has a quick one for you, then I have a question for you. Then we got to go. Clay, go ahead.

CLAY: No, Ryan, I was just going to comment. I was going to say, if you want to seem really smart at your election party, you drop that Virginia-2 and Virginia-7 knowledge. And if you have a Clay and Buck listener, that isn’t in that house, they’re going to be like, man, you’re really a genius. I was just going to toss that in as well.

BUCK: That’s why people should subscribe to Ryan’s Substack The National Populist Newsletter. Ryan, you don’t even have to give me much analysis on it or anything. Just is my man Lee Zeldin going to win the New York governor’s race?

GIRDUSKY: I really believe so. And I’ve said this over and over.

BUCK: Yes!

GIRDUSKY: I know I sound crazy, but I do feel it. Yesterday there was an event near near where I grew up in Queens County, where it was like a 40 South East Asian business owners who were Democrat donors, who endorsed Zeldin. And they’re putting signs in 250 gas stations across the state of New York. I have to believe that there’s some momentum. I mean, it is the last chance to save the state. And I think that the demographic changes with voting patterns among Asians, Southeast Asians, Orthodox Jews and and Hispanics are going to be enough to sit there and put them over the edge. I really hope so.

BUCK: All right, Ryan, thanks so much, man. Always so illuminating. Good to have you on the program. Thanks for being with us.

GIRDUSKY: Thank you.

Recent Stories

Mad Moms Across the Nation Are Voting on This Issue Alone

27 Oct 2022

We took a fantastic call from Kate, a self-described “ticked-off mom” from Ohio. You can hear her in the audio above. She’s joined the #MadMom Brigade we’ve been talking about on this show for over a year.

What mothers care about most are their children. And they haven’t forgotten what was done to their kids with school closures and mask mandates.

We had Colorado gubernatorial candidate Heidi Ganahl on just yesterday. This clip from her recent debate has gone viral.

The reckoning is coming in under two weeks. Moms will make the difference.

Recent Stories

Meet Matt Larkin, House Candidate in Washington’s 8th District

27 Oct 2022

CLAY: We are headed out right now to the Seattle area. We have a new iHeart, Seattle affiliate. We appreciate all of you out there at KPTR-AM 1090, The Patriot.

We are joined now by Matt Larkin, who is a House candidate in Washington’s 8th Congressional district. This is a potential pickup, I believe. Matt, you can explain the district, where it is and what you are hearing from your Seattle area, potential constituents, and what we can do to help get you across the finish line there.

LARKIN: Yeah. Hey, thanks for having me on today. This is great. Yeah, I’m running out in Washington’s 8th Congressional district. It’s a diverse district in that it covers both sides of the state. It’s kind of unusual that way. You have the rural ag side and the eastern side, and then on the west you have parts of the Seattle suburbs. King County, Microsoft is headquartered there and all sorts of things like that. So, it’s a very interesting district, but it’s a race that we can win. We can actually pick this thing up.

It was a Republican seat for 30 years, and then we lost it in 2018, which, if you remember, was a bad year for Republicans across the country. But now we have the tailwinds. This is our year in 2022, because presidents lose seats in their first midterms. They just do historically. So, this is an exciting, exciting race. It’s a coin flip right now. Cook has it as a toss-up and we’re sprinting to the finish because we have a message and we’re excited to win this thing back to the Republican side.

BUCK: Hey, Matt, it’s Buck. I’m just going to go out on a limb here. I can’t follow every congressional race with tremendous precision, because a lot of congressional races, yours obviously getting some attention. We’re so pleased to have you on the show. But I’m going to go out on a limb and guess that your Democrat opponent is laser focused on the insurrection of January 6th and abortion. Am I am I getting that one right?

LARKIN: Laser focused. And I bet you can guess what we’re laser focused on.

BUCK: Crime, immigration, inflation.

LARKIN: Yeah, those are the issues we’re hearing about at the doors, Buck. We’re hearing it and I firsthand, I’ve covered thousands of doors by this point, literally thousands. And that’s what I’m hearing. Inflation, inflation, inflation, crime, crime, crime. “Do something,” is what they say. This is out of control. And just to put it into perspective for you guys. Egg prices in my district up here in Washington are up 40%, milk and cereal are up 20%. I’ve got four little kids, 12 and under, three boys and a girl, by the way, the girl rounds out the group and you wouldn’t believe how many eggs, Cheerios and gallons of milk we go through.

BUCK: Can I just add, I’m also going to assume that in your district, based on where it is in Washington, you get a lot of people that were either in or right around Seattle who have moved a little bit further out. And so they’re kind of fleeing the urban decay of the the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone, etc..

LARKIN: Yes. No, you’re exactly right. And I grew up in Seattle, frankly, and I don’t live there anymore. I’m embarrassed of my city and I shouldn’t be. It’s such a beautiful part of the country. It’s such a beautiful city and it’s a disaster right now. So people are, they’re fleeing the decay of Seattle, coming out to the suburbs and trying to raise a family out here. But the problem is the crime and the homelessness and the drugs are following people out of Seattle.

They’re not just Seattle problems anymore. They used to be where we could just roll our eyes and say, “Okay, well, Seattle will be Seattle.” Now, it’s not that way anymore. It’s even over on the east side of the state, we’re seeing homelessness and drug abuse and crime. And, in fact, just the other day where we live, which is not in Seattle, by the way, but in and around the district, we had two friends with cars stolen out of their driveways and totally different sides of the district and within two days of each other. And this kind of crime, this kind of property crime is happening everywhere and people are sick of it, which is why, guys, we rolled out our campaign slogan a year ago, which is Make Crime Illegal Again. And it’s catching on for good reason because people feel like crime is legal right now in Washington State. We’ve got to do something about it.

CLAY: Matt, I’m glad you mentioned it because we’re we’ve had a lot of people from Oregon on. Obviously, there are many competitive races there. We’ve had a lot of people on in Washington in competitive races, Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, three of the most beautiful cities in the United States and, frankly, in the world. And they’ve all been destroyed, at least right now, by left wing political decision-making.

And you mentioned, Matt, you’ve got four kids. You came out. We met face to face because you have overlapping good friends that actually live in my neighborhood. It was great to meet you face to face. And for anybody out there listening, I want you to make sure you go support Matt. I’ve met him. He’s a great guy. But how much anger is there still among the moms and dads in your district over the way that Washington State handled covid and the amount of school that their kids missed?

LARKIN: Oh, tons. I mean, we were one of the most restrictive states in the country, if not the most. We’re still, just so you know, guys, we’re still under emergency control by the governor. He’s lifting it in the next three days, I think, finally.

BUCK: Oh, okay. Just before the election, the emergency powers for covid that never existed in the first place? That seems like the timing is suspect.

LARKIN: Go figure. Right. People are mad. People are pissed off. We lost a year of our kids education and that’s going to catch up to my youngest was in kindergarten last year. Not my youngest. My second youngest was in kindergarten last year and he wore masks all year. That takes a toll on kids. These things, these lost educational years that we have, make parents extremely upset. And it’s not just Republican parents, by the way.

Democrat parents feel the same way. They feel like they didn’t have a say in their kids education or anything to do with their kids’ school. And there’s a residual effect there. I think you’re going to see a pushback come Election Day here because there’s just this palpable anger that they feel like they don’t have voices or choices in their kids’ education anymore.

CLAY: So, Matt, as we come down the stretch run here, it’s sometimes difficult to kind of coalesce momentum nationwide. But what are you feeling about the chances of flipping this district and helping to send Nancy Pelosi back packing, kicking her out of the speaker’s chair? How much are the issues nationalized versus localized in your Seattle area?

LARKIN: Sure. I think they’re very nationalized. I think, I mean, it might be more pronounced here. The crime and the drugs are more pronounced here because we probably have it worse than most places in the country. But we’re seeing the same anger that I’m hearing about in the national polls here on the ground. The top-two issues that we poll are inflation and crime over and over and over again. So that tracks with national trends. We’re confident we’re going to win this thing.

In fact, Kevin McCarthy’s coming out for me next week to help me get some momentum and get some people fired up. They’re putting lots of money behind me to get us over the finish line here. In fact, this is, I think, become the top-ten most expensive congressional race in the country right now. So there’s a lot of momentum and half of winning is peaking at the right time and we are peaking at the right time.

We’re going to get over this finish line. And it’s really, really exciting because people realize, guys, my opponent is not a moderate. She tries to be, tends to be a moderate, but she’s not. She votes with Pelosi 100% of the time, not 98 or 97. I am not rounding up — like she literally votes 100% of the time with Pelosi in a purple district. And that’s not what the district needs right now.

CLAY: Matt, we also have had Tiffany Smiley on and I think we’re going to have her on again. She’s been running a heck of a campaign in the Senate against Patty Murray. I’m sure you guys have crossed paths a decent amount as well. If we get a big enough Red Wave, I think there’s a chance Patty Murray gets swept out. What does that say about the overall market for Republicans right now in Washington State in general? Have you ever seen Republicans on the ascent like this?

LARKIN: You know, there hasn’t been this close of a Senate race in a long time, I’ll tell you that. And Tiffany’s fantastic. She’s got three little kids about the same age as a mine. And she’s a fired-up mom who’s pissed off at what’s going on? Kind of like my wife and I. We’re just mad about the direction that the state’s going in. I think she’s got a real good chance to send Patty Murray packing. Patty should be scared right now, but it shows that the people are angry here in Washington and they’re blaming, and rightfully so, the people in power.

So, I think Tiffany’s going to win her race. I really do. And I think we’re going to win our race. And and it’ll send a signal to people across the country that even in reliably blue Washington, people are fed up with the status quo and they want changes.

BUCK: Matt Larkin running up in Washington. We want you to win, but how can people help? We got a big audience in the Seattle area and across the state.

LARKIN: Sure, spread the word. Spread the word. We’ve got a great website it’s Larkin4Congress.com, Larkin4Congress.com. Jump on, donate. We need money to finish our ad campaign strong. We need volunteers. So sign up to help. This is a grassroots campaign and we have the volunteers. We’ve got the doorbells. We need more helpers, though, always. So, tell 20 people to vote for Matt Larkin for Congress in the 8th Congressional district. And we can do this thing. It’s going to be a close race, but we’re going to win.

CLAY: Matt, good luck, my man. I appreciate you coming on and we’ll do everything we can down the stretch to help you out.

LARKIN: Thank you, guys, so much. Great to be here.

 

Recent Stories

Dr. Scott Jensen Aims to Take Down Minnesota Governor Walz

27 Oct 2022

BUCK: We are at what seems like the beginnings of the Red Wave here, my friends, but a very, very important race right now in Minnesota. The governor’s race in Minnesota is to be determined. Dr. Scott Jensen is with us now. And, Dr. Jensen, we appreciate you coming back on. You just got a big endorsement. Tell us what the Trump endorsement means to you and how things are looking right now with your throwdown up in Minnesota.

JENSEN: Well, the recent Trafalgar poll came out and shows us a half a point ahead. So, this has really been powerful because I think an awful lot of people across the nation are excited about the idea that Minnesota can basically tell a Democratic incumbent, governor, you’re done. You ill-advisedly locked people down, locked people out, locked businesses down, locked kids out. You did it willy-nilly trying to justify everything you did. You absolutely spurred on inflation. And from a crime perspective, Minnesota never used to have to keep track of carjackings. But when you get almost 800 in a year, people realize this is a real thing.

So, I think that’s what’s happening and that’s why we’re half a point ahead. And what it’s brought about for us has been just a resurgence of people interested in our race. They want to know where they give and so I’m just telling everybody, Dr. Scott Jensen.com, D-R-S-C-O-T-T-J-E-N-S-E-N.com. Help us out. The more we can match dollar for dollar Tim Walz, the more likely it is that we’re going to win and we’re going to help lead the nation on November 8th to a place where conservative values, reasonable values, truth is being elevated.

In terms of endorsements, we made an intentional decision that because this is such a Minnesota race with its own nuances, we would not seek the endorsements of political leaders. But we are grateful that leaders around the nation have recognized the fact that Matt Birk and Scott Jensen have the ability to lead and heal Minnesota. But we’ve been extremely pleased at receiving some of the endorsements from the Minnesota Police and Peace Officers Association and the Hmong community. And we recently got an endorsement from our Federation of Small Businesses. And then the big one for us was newspapers came out. Rochester, Duluth, Moorhead, a dozen different newspapers collectively in this forum, group of newspapers came out and endorsed us, and that was huge.

And so I think that there’s a momentum going on. I think Tim Walz’s unwillingness to debate, truly hunkering down in the basement, taking a page out of Joe Biden’s playbook, even people like Keith Ellison and Ilhan Omar are they’re not able to protect Tim Walz at this point. He knows that he’s out there naked because Minnesotans are furious that he hasn’t been showing up for debates.

CLAY: So, the failure when it comes to crime, obviously, your state was the epicenter of the George Floyd protests and everything that spiraled out of there. And Tim Walz’s failures not only had a lot to do with Minnesota, but it seems like a lot of other governors took the lead in how he responded. How much is that resonating as you talk to voters all over the state of Minnesota that there is a residual anger over the fact that those months of protests and violent protest were allowed to occur?

JENSEN: Minnesotans recognized clearly that at some level, Tim Walz is the godfather of this crime epidemic, not just in Minneapolis and St. Paul, not just in Minnesota, but literally across our nation’s borders. There were cities that burned in our nation that would not have needed to burn, had Tim Walz been a leader. And I think for a while people thought, well, was that a one-off situation? Tim Walz Just make a gross mistake. But they see the pattern.

They see that he did not put the National Guard on the street when he could have. And when he finally did, he ridiculed Jacob Frey, the mayor of Minneapolis. He called the National Guard a bunch of 19-year-old cooks. And he followed that with telling the police that they had to stand down and let the third precinct burn. And then at the state fair a couple of months ago, he tried to blame it on the police as to why that building was allowed to burn. And then a couple of weeks after the third precinct building burned, he told the state patrol to stand down and allow his demonstrators to vent their anger by tearing down a statue that belonged to the state of Minnesota and had been in place for decades.

I think Minnesotans are recognizing Tim Walz has been literally feeding us a bunch of hogwash and they’re standing up and saying there’s no way in the world Tim Walz is going to get us public safety. Recently, he said some DFL staffers criticizing moms and dads in suburbs were being afraid to go to downtown Minneapolis with this DFL staffer, sort of saying, “There’s no crime problem, you should be down here. Why are you such a coward?” And now that person is absolutely closed on their Twitter account. I’m sure that they were probably reprimanded by Walz’s team, but this is the kind of, if you will, tone-deaf nature of what’s been going on in the Walz campaign.

BUCK: We’re speaking to Dr. Scott Jensen. He’s running for governor in Minnesota. He can win this one, folks. But we have our Minnesotans listening right now. They’re going to have to mobilize behind him. Dr. Jensen, there are some people out there still in the political world in this country who are saying things like Kathy Hochul in New York says kids should still be in masks. How much is the backlash against not only covid authoritarianism, but being wrong and being authoritarian when it comes to covid affecting the Minnesota race?

JENSEN: It’s interesting. I think it’s a really interesting question. Thank you for asking. I think what we saw was this, especially in like 2020, we saw anything that went against sort of the liberal news narrative, it was misinformation. And they never recanted even when they were proven wrong.

For instance, right now I’ve been very clear there will be no mandates in Minnesota whereby kids have to take covid-19 vaccines in order to attend school. I’ve been very clear. Tim Walz won’t respond to that. But if you go back to that question that tantalized America, and even now we’re starting to see reports from the Senate, the U.S. Senate. Where did the covid-19 virus come from? And there were many people, including myself, that thought that this most likely would be a natural reassortment of RNA material between different species. But Robert Redfield, the former CDC director, he came out after he was no longer CDC director and said that he was uncomfortable attributing that covid-19 virus to a natural reassortment and that there was more and more data that would indicate that it probably was a lab incident.

Even today, we’re seeing this come out in the news. Well, what does that mean? Does that mean that the people that ridiculed you or me about spreading misinformation, are they going to now apologize to us and say, “Well, I guess it wasn’t that way?” There was a signature sequence of amino acid bases on the covid-19 virus that people recognized a long time ago. Didn’t seem to be consistent with that which would happen in nature. It would potentially happen in a laboratory-produced virus. So, are these people going to apologize to us or are they just going to sort of brush that under the rug?

CLAY: No, they’re never going to apologize. And, frankly, many of us out there who are asking these questions are going to be validated. I think the irony here in many ways, as you well know, Dr. Jensen, is that people try to claim they’re going to be on the right side of history. And anybody who studies history knows it’s difficult. And I feel pretty confident the people who locked down this country and took kids out of school for months are going to end up on the wrong side of history. Quite clearly, they already are. Dr. Jensen, thanks for coming on. What can people do in these last 11 days to try to make sure that you are able to get to that governor’s office in Minnesota?

JENSEN: Two things. We need the financial support. The Democratic money machine is alive and well. Our website is D-R-S-C-O-T-T-J-E-N-S-E-N.com. We’d love you to support us and help us. But the other thing is, I would ask all Minnesotans and even all Americans to remember that on March 13th, 2020, our lives changed because that’s when Governor Tim Walz issued his executive order, his first executive order, declaring a peacetime state of emergency. And from there, he told family businesses to shut down. He told kids, you’re locked out of schools. And he told sick, frail nursing home patients, you’re going to die alone. That day should be burned into our psyche. March 13, 2020. Minnesota was no longer governed by a governor. An empire had taken seat.

CLAY: It’s really well said. Dr. Jensen, we’re for you. We’re going to help you as much as we can these next 11 days. Hope everybody listening to us in Minnesota and beyond will do so as well. Thank you, Doctor.

JENSEN: Thank you.

Recent Stories

This Must Stop: Pennsylvania Says Election Results Will Take Days

27 Oct 2022

We must go back to having our elections decided on Election Night. Listen to Clay and Buck’s passionate arguments in the audio clip above, as well as taking a look at the important points that follow.

They can do it in Florida.

The Democrats talk endlessly about “threats to democracy.” Well, this is the biggest threat to democracy out there. Rock star, soon-to-be governor of Arizona Kari Lake has the right idea.

If Americans in both parties can’t trust the results of elections, we’re all in trouble. Solve this now.

Recent Stories

NY Post Hacked with Absurd Headlines, Hochul Staff Believes It!

27 Oct 2022

The New York post website and Twitter accounts were hacked this morning with headlines we can’t even repeat.

The hack was obvious. Nobody at the NY Post would write any of this, but Kathy Hochul’s press secretary thought it was real!

Never think people in positions of power can’t be really, really dumb. In many cases, they’re dumber than the rest of us. Shouldn’t Hochul’s staff be commenting on the real news. Like this horrific crime data?

Speaking of Twitter, we have to admit we’re a little disappointed Elon Musk apparently isn’t firing 75% of the staff.

However, hopes are still high that Elon will do what he says he wants to do at Twitter.

But should President Trump go back to Twitter or stick with TRUTH Social? Does he need Twitter the way he did in 2016? What should Trump do? Tweet us @ClayAndBuck — or TRUTH us @ClayAndBuck — or if you’re a 24/7 VIP, send us an email.

Recent Stories

Closed Captioning Issue? No Problem! Oz Offers Fetterman Second Debate

27 Oct 2022

The John Fetterman campaign and his allies in the media keep blaming his all-time worst debate performance on the closed captioning.

Well, Dr. Oz has responded to that one brilliantly.

Tucker provided some typically spot-on analysis of what this episode tells us about Democrats.

Deep down, Democrats know what a disaster this was.

But the truth is that Democrat Party of today would vote for a candidate in a coma. If you haven’t seen the debate for yourself, watch it. It’s only an hour.

Fetterman is back at it again today. Listen to him try to say “Statue of Liberty.”

It’s sad and liberals trying to make excuses for this guy are a disgrace.

Recent Stories

Another Economically Illiterate Democrat Senator

27 Oct 2022

It’s astounding how many Democrats — even the elected ones — know nothing about how the market works.

Democrats are the “Drill, Baby, Drill!” party all of a sudden? Don’t think so.

If Republicans were really in the pocket of Big Oil, wouldn’t they want gas prices to be as high as possible? No, it’s Democrats who have always wanted high gas prices and now that they’re in charge, they’ve got ’em.

Another Democrat argument that doesn’t make any sense.

Recent Stories

De Facto President Klain: GOP Will Make Inflation Worse

27 Oct 2022

Things continue to look better and better for Republicans. The GA, AZ, NV and PA Senate races are all trending GOP.

Herschel Walker now up 5 points in the latest poll.

Blake Masters is making a move in Arizona.

So, with Biden about to go to his beach house in Delaware for the weekend, the defacto president, Chief of Staff Ron Klain has taken over making the Democrats’ closing argument.

They’re like kids in a playground: “I’m not a stupid head, you’re a stupid head!” And for the record, what Klain said is a lie. Republicans are going to stop the damage Biden has done to the economy — as well as on the border, crime and everything else.

It’s so bad for Democrats, they’re sending Biden to New York. New York!

Buck’s already predicted a Zeldin win, but Clay’s still a little nervous about the governor races in New York, Michigan and Oregon. But hey, who would have believed Republicans would be in the conversation in these deep blue states?

Red Tsumani alert!

Tweet us your take @ClayAndBuck — or, if you’re a 24/7 VIP, send us an email.

Recent Stories