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Quin Hillyer - Biden vs Trump Debate and Trumps VP - Mobile Mornings - 6-25-24

Duration:
39m
Broadcast on:
25 Jun 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

News Sports. Weather from Dr. Bill Williams. Traffic info from Kane. And one of the Gulf Coast's most familiar voices. It's Mobile Mornings with Dan Brennan and Dalton R. Wig. Morning from Dan Dalton FM Talk 106-5 Mobile Mornings. Good to have you, Paul. It is nearly seven minutes after eight o'clock right now. Sunshine on your Tuesday morning. It may give way to some clouds and maybe a little rain this afternoon. That's what happened yesterday. He said it came down pretty pretty heavy here. And I think I got a shower like that at home, but it was closer to two or three o'clock. Yeah, we got a pretty strong downpour here at the studios and looks like our best chance for heavy rain would be tomorrow and Thursday for the rest of this week, but rain in the forecast. Just as we see every pretty much every summer at kind of routine where the afternoon gives way to some spot showers and spot thunderstorms, but it is going to be hot. We need index over 105 for most of the rest of this week. It's a Tuesday. That means it's time to talk with Quinn Hillier from the Washington Examiner and Quinn Hillier dot com. Good morning, Quinn. Good morning, guys. So we've got a lot to get to this morning, including the blocking of Biden's save plan, the student debt relief plan that, well, after the Supreme Court shot him down last summer, he tried, tried again and then bragged about it. I will get into that plus big debate Thursday night and still waiting for Trump to reveal who he will pick as his VP candidate. But let's start with some news that came last week. Just after you got off the air with us, we learned that the legend, the baseball legend, Alabama legend, Willie Mays had passed away at the age of 93. And the timing of this, I mean, it couldn't get worse or it couldn't be better, I guess, depending on how you look at it, if he was ill. The same week that Major League Baseball in the entire nation was set to honor Willie Mays and so many other players from the Negro leagues at Rickwood Field in Birmingham. You have Mays passed away two days prior and then really kind of the focus of the sporting world turned to him for several days. And turned to Alabama, turned to Alabama and then you had the big game Thursday night where a South Alabama Jag, Brendan Donovan, was the star of the game. But you wrote an article about Willie Mays after his passing. Well, look, Willie Mays was my first and longest-lasting hero and he was one of the few that, you know, actually usually lived up to that honor because he was not just, I mean, I am convinced and so are a lot of people. That people be greatest baseball player ever but also just a genuinely good and decent human being. And I explained all the, some of the reasons why in that column of mine, you know, and I, you can see how big a fan I was. You go back and look at my Facebook feed over the last year, so I didn't, you know, I knew he was old, I didn't know he was going to die, but somehow I got on some list where, you know, little vignettes of Willie Mays come up. And I share them again and again and again over the last year I must have about three or four dozen Willie Mays posts, you know, long before, you know, months and months before he died, Willie Mays posts on my Facebook feed. This man epitomized what sports should be both on and off the field and at a time when baseball was the game, it really was the national pastime. Football hadn't hit it big yet, basketball hadn't hit it big yet, and he was a joy to watch. He was just a walking or more like running a joy machine, and I could go on and on. I could talk about Willie Mays every time you have me on, if you wanted me to. You know, the thing, the unfortunate thing is, yes, baseball was the national pastime at that time, but he also played in an era where it was a little ahead of TV coverage. I mean, there was occasional TV coverage, World Series and the game of the week and all that kind of stuff, but, you know, it's great players Willie Mays was. We don't have like an overabundance of highlights in his career. You've got that one great catch in the World Series and he turns and throws after running to about 460 feet in the outfield, but, you know, it's really a shame because he was evidently a spectacular player. It really was, and actually the best catch I have ever seen, and I saw it, I mean, live not at the stadium, but in person on TV, getting a Saturday game of the week in BC, was when he was almost 39 years old. Wow. And you can still find video, but unfortunately, the video stops right about three seconds before it really should. But what happens is you got Bobby Bonds running in right center, that old candlestick park going out a deep hit to the wall and right center. He's going out there trying to figure if he can somehow jump up to catch his ball that's going to be way off the fence. They didn't have a wall. It was a big fence. And all of a sudden, sprinting over from center comes Willie Mays elevates, you know, gets his feet four, four and a half feet, maybe more up in the air. Catches the ball at the same time that he hits both the fence and Bobby Bonds. Wow. Okay, so boom, boom, boom, just massive collision, wall, ball, Mays and Bonds. Mays crumples to the ground, and then the video stops, but I remember it, and then I researched this years ago. What happens next is Mays is either completely knocked out or he's got the wind completely knocked out of him. Either way, he's crumpled on the ground, not moving. He's motionless, and Bobby Bonds looked down, and Bonds raises Mays's glove and opens it to show the ball still in it. Wow. We'll get around to your health later, Willie, but I just want to make sure that we get the out. Hey, and that Rickwood event the other night, guys, it reminded me so much of an event we had in Mobile in 2010 when Henry Aaron's house was dedicated at the stadium. And we had Willie Mays and Reggie Jackson, of course, Henry Aaron, Bruce Souter, Aussie Smith, Bob Feller, Ricky Henderson, Cleon Jones, all in on the porch. Unbelievable. I mean, that was quite an event, Quinn. I don't know if you were around or if you remember that. I was actually in Washington at the time, but I've seen a lot of the pictures and some of the video, and Willie was always really good at recognizing others too. There was no jealousy as far as I could tell between him and Hank Aaron. Right. They got along great. Just a remarkable person I could go on. I do want to say something about that Rickwood game because there was a guy there throughout the first pitch, 99 years old, Bill Greason. He was at Iwo Jima in World War II. Served our nation, came back, went into the Negro League, and in 1948, throughout, I mean, was the winning pitcher in game three of the Negro League World Series, which his team went on to win. His team was the Birmingham Black Barons, and it featured a young 17-year-old Willie May. So they were teammates in '48. Greason ended up in '54, finally playing one year in the majors. Bill Greason, 99 years old, throws up the first pitch. Then they interview him, and they keep trying to go back to how awful it must have been to, you know, to be mistreated as a black man, you know, which was awful. And, you know, which was all true. And he just smiles. He just, he just beatific almost, and he says, "Look, I controlled what I could control, but I thought I was blessed. I got to go out and play baseball every day, got paid for it, and you'd go out and you'd see this beautiful green field, and I just loved it, and I've had a wonderful life, which is great enough." And then they come back around, he says some other things, he says some patriotic things. Then they come back and try to go at the, you know, "Weren't you terribly mistreated," et cetera. And he says, "Well, look, I knew whatever I dealt with, I was out there, always not just me, I was representing somebody. I was representing my mama." And he said, he said, "And so, if something bad came my way, I just knew I had to act right and act dignified, because I was representing my mama, and he repeated it." And it was just wonderful. If I could inject that interview, the video of that into the veins of every American, the patriotism and the decency and the forgiveness that he showed, I would do it. It was wonderful. I'm not seeing the interview, I am seeing the first pitch, and you can tell what a gracious individual. Yeah, and what a week for Birmingham and for Willie Mays and Major League Baseball last week, Willie Mays dead at 93. But great article, Quinn. I'm going to share that, some good stuff you put up there. We have a big week this week in the November presidential election, and we're talking about a debate earlier than we really ever had. And no debate commission involved here. Trump decides he will sign up for whatever Biden is willing to do, and that's the case. Two debates, the first one on CNN Thursday, and I can't remember if maybe ABC or someone picked up the second one later on in August, I believe. But they have Biden, they said, has been at Camp David preparing with, I think, 16 people trying to get him ready for this debate. And while Trump, I'm sure, is getting ready for it, he's been out on the campaign trail. Do you think Thursday night's debate will move numbers one way or the either depending on how these two candidates go about their work Thursday night? This is a big roll of the dice, and I do think it's too early in the year for a debate. I don't think it's right, except that in this case it might be good to have it, because if either one of these old men really show signs of decline, it's still technically early enough that the parties can replace, replace whichever one looks terrible on the party's ticket. And maybe that's why Biden, you know, there are all these rumors going around, that's why Biden seemed wanted to do it to see if he was actually up to it. So if he's not up to it, then they can pull a bait and switch. I don't know. I mean, look, if one of them really bombs, then yes, it could move the needle. There are so many people out there that it disaffected, that are what are called double haters, and I'm not sure hates the right word. You know, but double not want these guys. And they're going back and forth, they really, really are. I mean, of course you got 40% that absolutely want Trump, and 40% that absolutely hate Trump, and you got the people that can't fan Biden. But there's a large number, 20 to 25%, that don't know whether they're going to vote against Trump or whether they're going to vote against Biden. Or whether they're going to vote against Biden or whether they're going to vote third party or whether they're just going to stay home. Those people can be moved if one of these guys really bombs. Yeah, and you know, well, a lot's been made, of course, of both candidates, the slip ups that they make on the campaign trail. I think it's disingenuous of a lot of people who try to say that Trump is on the same mental level as Biden. As we've seen, you know, of course Trump, he's messed some names up, he's gotten some things wrong. He keeps doing his Trump thing, but we've seen Biden freeze up time and time again, where he really just looks lost. So how much cruel? As far as how Thursday night goes, I mean, there's one thing that Biden can't do, and that is to blank out, right? Blank out on the stage and look like he's completely gone from everything that's happening in front of him, which could happen. For Trump, and Dan and I've talked about this some, I think his best mode of attack would be to not be the normal attacking Trump that we've seen in the past, but maybe more of almost like a cordial guy, a mild guy with his head on, right? Right, who says, "Hey, I can fix things, and I can handle this economy and all these wars going on around the world better than Biden." Does that seem like the two things candidates ought to focus on, or what do you think, Quinn? Yeah, no, I think you've got it absolutely right. And you know what, if I'm Democrats in my heart of hearts, I'm almost hoping that Biden completely freezes up. Because if they put, now granted, if they put Kamala Harris at the top of the ticket, they're going to lose also. But if they yank both of them, and I wrote a column explaining how they can sort of buy off Kamala Harris to do something else, if they replace both of them with somebody who's somewhat more to the center like Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania, you know, somebody that's not dottering and freezing and mumbling, then they suddenly have a much better chance of winning. So, you know, maybe they want Biden to fail. Interesting. All right, Quinn, a lot more to get to, and we will after this break, it's Quinn Hillier from Quinn Hillier.com and The Washington Examiner, Dan Adalton, Mobile Morning's on FM Talk 10065. Quinn Hillier, Quinn Hillier.com of The Washington Examiner, Dan Adalton on Mobile Morning's. Quinn, let's get to Trump again, and some say he already knows who his vice presidential, running mate is going to be. What do you think? Well, Trump said that he already knows, but that he hadn't told the person. There's been a lot of speculation. My sense is that reading some tea leaves that he probably hasn't narrowed down to either Ben Carson or Tim Scott. My friend, Derory Mardock, Libertarian Conservative columnist and Fox News analyst had a column this week that said there's a poll that shows nobody on the supposed Trump short list moves the needle much in either direction except Tim Scott, who moves at 6% of the undecided voters say they would be more likely to vote for Trump if Tim Scott with the running mate. Now 6% is oops. That's Tim Scott. Yeah. Yeah. That's Tim Scott right there. Put him on. Yeah, exactly. So anyway, so I don't know where he's going, but if those poll numbers are right, then that would be a good clue. Yeah, and online, Quinn, these last couple of days, the rumor is it's been narrowed down to two candidates, but not those two candidates. And I'm kind of partial to JD Vance is my selection, but he's not either in those last two that I've been seeing Doug Bergham, North Dakota Governor, and Glenn Youngkin, who has not really been mentioned on many of the short lists, but the well liked Virginia Governor. What would you think about him being on the ticket? Well, if he chose Glenn Youngkin, it would be a very, very smart choice. I think it would actually be the smartest choice. I didn't think that he and Youngkin had much rapport. Right. But, you know, but if he wants to win, and frankly, to have somebody who could step right in and govern if some happen to him, Glenn Youngkin would be a great, great choice. Yeah, it'll be interesting to see. And you mentioned it last segment. I just want to ask you because it is a poll under on the Washington examiners. I was looking at your stories, but the question is, do you think that Biden will be replaced if he kind of flails at this upcoming debate on Thursday? And then more and more chatter in democratic circles that that might be the case. I know you said who you thought might step in like Shapiro, but do you think there's an actual greater than 50/50 chance that happens if Biden flails? If Biden really flails, then the odds do go up slightly above 50/50. The odds right now would be against it. You know, if he even comes close to holding his own, they're too many landmines, and it's too complicated to switch him out now. But if he flails, there is time technically to do it, and there are ways they could go about it. So, yeah, I would not be surprised, again, only if he flails for them to pull a bank switch, but they got to give Kamala Harris something because they know they can't go with her. And if they give her a 9th Circuit Court of Appeals judgeship and say, look, you'll have this job for life, you know, their lifetime appointments. And they say, we will force you through between the election and inauguration because we've got a Senate majority. If they do that, then maybe they can get rid of her, too, and go with somebody that they think can get more votes. Running short on time here, Quinn, unfortunately out of time, actually, let folks know where they can pick up your work online, but also the trilogy, which is now one novel there on Amazon. Yeah, it's called the accidental profit, and you can get it at Amazon or else to read all my stuff, subscribe at QuinnHulier.com, or just Google QuinnHulier and Washington Examiner. Thanks a lot, guys. Yeah, man, as well as we appreciate it, Quinn, thanks a bunch. All right, there you go, QuinnHulier, Washington Examiner, QuinnHulier.com, and coming back, we will turn up your voice, 251-343-0106, and there's a number of things we can get to, including the latest blocking of a Biden student debt relief program. Second time this has happened now in the last year and a half for Biden, we'll get into that, plus automakers pushing back on a federal regulation that they have emergency breaking systems in every vehicle by 2030. Interesting topic there. I think we could bring up when we come back on Mobile Morning's right here. We'll look at over to 8.30 with Dan and Dalton on Mobile Morning's Good to Have You Along, and we'll be back with you in about four minutes. Good morning from Dan and Dalton, FM Talk, 106-5, 8.35, and here's D.O. Yes, and I'm telling you, the segment brought to you by our good friends over to Bias and Comer Law, the local personal injury law firm, and they are local. 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So, when Governor Jeff Landry of Louisiana signed into law, a law that requires each public classroom in the state of Louisiana, starting from kindergarten to state-funded universities to display the Ten Commandments, I think we both knew there'd be some. There'd be a reaction to it, but I didn't see this coming. A spokesperson of the Hindu community in Baton Rouge, or the state of Louisiana, I guess, is now seeking to have ancient Sanskrit scriptures displayed in public classrooms. It's like you're going to have the Ten Commandments? How about this? The President of the Universal Society of Hinduism, Rajan Zed, said in a statement that the Gita, I guess you say, was a historically significant document, and he believes is a treasure that should be displayed in public school classrooms. The Hindu statesmen noted that the multiple prominent Americans were influenced by the Gita, including philosopher Henry David Thoreau, physicist Jay Robert Oppenheimer, also physicist Albert Einstein. Zed believes that increasing the awareness of other religions would make classrooms in Louisiana well nurtured, well balanced, and enlightened citizens of tomorrow. Bobby Jindal was Governor of Louisiana for a stretch, and he was Indian American, I don't know if he's Hindu or not. Anyway, that wasn't what I was expecting to be a first challenge, not even a challenge. We'll just kind of lope on there with you. How about us, too? And I don't know anything about it. I know that Hindu is a very passive religion, I believe. It's the old zen thing, just trying to get your head right and all that. I know very little about it, except it's an Eastern religion, and it's not associated with any kind of terrorism or anything like that. But in any event, there is the first step dropped, and you knew that was coming, right? I didn't know it was going to be them, though. Yeah, I thought that Reagan's kids organization freed him against religion foundation, although I'm sure that they probably have not stopped putting out press releases since that was signed into law by the Louisiana governor. Right, that's the first reaction I knew that we were going to get was that. And I guess the 10 commandments have also got not just the religious aspect to it, but really historical aspect. Of course, you know, here in the United States. And there's been some good breakdowns of the story with Jeff on the Jeff poor show and some of his guests that he's had along. I've learned a lot from some of his guests about just kind of the separation of church and state. And I feel, you know, just as a normal human being, normal American here, I don't see the problem with having 10 great rules to live by being the 10 commandments up on the wall. On the walls of these schools, although I know that, and knew that it was going to bring forward all of these other people pushing back like the Hindu there. They're not pushing back, though. They're just saying it should be at us on to. This is a notable, notable scripture that would be that we think would benefit the kids so that you'll have the Muslim saying the same thing. That's what I'm saying. Yeah, you'll have the Scientologists saying, hey, we've got some cool rules. I think the 10 commandments of Scientology are, by the way. I'd like to see that. Don't cross Tom Cruise. That's rule number one. Yeah, exactly. And unless it was, and I'll say this before I talk about this, unless it was AI, unless it was deep fake or cheap fake as the Biden administration started calling him. Trump during one of his recent rallies said he would like to see the United States Department of Education abolished and take it back to the states. And very similar to his argument that he's put out there on Roe v. Wade and the right to not have an abortion that he thinks that should be taken back to the states. And he said that all the way through, at least through his presidential term. That'd be a lot of people on the streets, man. A lot of people unemployed up in D.C. Yeah, but the DOE, he said, get rid of that. And I'm sure some of you out there would know that that would come with a lot of pitfalls. You're probably like, well, that would be absolutely insane. But to me, it makes sense to take education, take a lot of these things that we have kind of just put on to the front. Put on to the federal government and then let them do what they please. I mean, Alabama and Mississippi and Louisiana, Florida, so different from Oregon, Washington state, California, that to me, stuff like this makes sense. If Louisiana, the legislators there and the governor signs the law and they say, hey, we want to put the 10 commandments back in the schools. And it makes it through any kind of court run through the courts in Louisiana. I don't see why that should be a big deal. Same thing if Alabama did it, Georgia, Florida. And if Oregon decides that they want to put, you know, whatever on the walls of their school, no telling schools, no telling, and you've got the people who are representing others in the state of Oregon who passed something and the governor agrees with it, let Oregon do it. It's fine. If I'm living in Oregon and I know not everyone can just pick up and move and not everyone wants to move, but if you're living in a place that is completely hostile to your beliefs, there should be another place in America where you can go. And in America where you can go and live and find some place that's maybe more in line with your beliefs. I think Biden, I mean, Trump railing on the Department of Education. Now it would lose him a lot of votes from, I was looking here and I'm really, really surprised if what I'm seeing is correct. 4,400 employees in the Department of Education. I would have guessed there'd be a lot more than that, but if that's all it is. And honestly, there's no way whatever happened. He's not getting that through Congress because even if he had a clear majority with the Republicans, there still are enough that wouldn't go along with the plan. But he's floating things like that where a lot of Americans are saying, yeah, let's bring the power back home, bring the power back to the states to decide what our kids are learning, what we can put in the walls of our school. We had that dispute, was that Theodore high school where they had the, on the dugout, they had something written like a scripture in God we trust, maybe it was a verse. Yeah, yeah, something like that. And you had the freedom from religious foundation, who ruins everything, come down and say, hey, you got to scrub that off and they did. We had Commissioner Johnny Hatcher on with us after that. There's no reason that if the people in Theodore, people that go to school there don't have a problem with the Bible verse being written on the dugout of their field that they shouldn't be allowed to do that. And so I think kind of, we've seen smart messaging from Trump before, and there are a lot of notes that he's, you know, he's trying out a lot of things on the campaign trail. That's kind of what he does. And you saw it in that interview on a podcast, I think it's the biggest tech podcast, the All In podcast, it's a big time tech and business podcast. And he said something about if a foreign student, if an immigrant graduates from a junior college, a four year college, they should automatically be given a green card. And when he said that, a whole lot of people on the right were like, hold up, that doesn't sound like a great idea. And then a lot of think pieces came out about that, how there would be colleges kind of just sprouting up around the United States with one year degrees. And basically, you know, you pay to get a green card, you pay to go to school for a year or whatever, you qualify, graduate with some weird social justice degree and you're good, you're in. And Trump, after that, he's like, well, actually, no, I'm not, he kind of started changing his tune on that after the pushback, something we've seen him do. And along the campaign trail back in 2015, 16 and on forward things out there. And the thing that, you know, with Trump coming up on this, the debate's going to be very interesting because just in tone and temperament of Donald Trump, I just don't think that Trump can afford to just bludgeon by it. And I didn't even though he, maybe he could, but maybe he should, but there's no need if he wants to win. If he wants to win, I think, and also so often, it's just the way it is. If you watch the mainstream or even further left to the media, they're just, they use his words against him all the time to create this villain, or somebody who's going to be somebody who was going to do all this damage to the country. Well, he had him for years. Where are the craters on the earth in those four years? And he was fighting for his life the whole time. So it's like he is, he's, I don't want to say victimized because, you know, Republicans hate to call out victimization because they talk about the left doing it all the time. But there's ways that they will take his words. For instance, I guess I never got to that story, but who wasn't that cleared him? Snopes. Snopes. Snopes who generally, not known for clearing Trump, but they cleared him from eight, nine years ago about that thing in Charlottesville, Virginia. I guess it was seven years ago from ever saying that the Nazis and the so-and-so's were very fine people. Yeah, we're good people too. When they broke it all down, they said, no, that's not what he said. Now, if you're seven years late, but anyway, I don't remember, that's why Biden said he jumped into the race because back then, everyone was like, this dude is out of his mind. He's too old. He doesn't seem to have the charisma you had. But Biden said, you remember, he was like, I have to eat into this race. This is someone who called Nazis very fine people. It was like a centerpiece of him jumping in. Yeah. Yeah. And I think, you know, everyone says immigration number one issue, economy, the number one issue. I think we're all kind of, you know, shading our eyes from what's happening internationally and how quickly, specifically what's going on in Ukraine and Russia can pop off and be a major world war. Yeah. And say what you want about Trump, you know, he, he droned some very big time players in the Middle East. There were certain, there were certainly fighting going on while he was in office, but no major wars started while Trump was in office. You know, and you can't, you can't necessarily directly, maybe some of the audience say, oh, yeah, you can't. You know, Afghanistan was a complete debacle. We know that. So was that Republicans will tell you that was the whistle that signed to, that sent the signal to international internationally, that you can do what you want to do now. Yeah. And you can, you can now invade Ukraine and you can, China can now act like it's about to knock off Taiwan. Right. And so is it a direct correlation? I don't know, but what other things played a role in that. But I just think, and even Cuomo, the former New York governor, was quoted in the New York Times saying the charges brought against charges and then eventually the conviction in Manhattan was a complete forest. That's Andrew Cuomo said that. I don't know if that gets your attention or not. And Trump should be bringing stuff like that up all the time too. Yeah. Yeah. He should. Look what Cuomo said. Yeah, exactly. 849. Not exactly bosom, but he's at bowling every Tuesday, by the way. No. 849. A lot of text to get to here. We'll get to him right after the break. 2513430106. If you want to jump on, join us there. Good morning from Dan and Dalton on Mobile mornings. Jeff Porto on the way, including State Rep. Terry Collins, State Senator President pro tem Greg Reed. And I guess he has John Wall on once a week. Al GOP leader of all that. And there you go. Jeff Porto straight ahead on FM talk 10065 with Dan and Dalton. And get to this story quickly before the text as we talk about the federal government getting involved and not really realizing what they've done. A trade representing major automakers last night called for the NHTSA, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, to reconsider a new regulation that they put in this last spring that requires nearly all new cars and trucks to have advanced automatic emergency braking systems by 2029. The Alliance for Automotive Innovation Innovation, which represents pretty much all the big car makers, wrote to the trade group, wrote to the administration and the leadership of congressional transportation committees that they had filed a petition for that rule to be reconsidered. They argued the regulation, which was adopted in April and would require all cars and trucks to be able to stop and avoid hitting vehicles in front of them. While moving at speeds of up to 62 miles an hour is quote practically impossible with the available technology. Now this rule was kind of tucked away in the 2021 infrastructure law. They said these car makers had to have pretty much all cars. Lawmakers tucked something away where we really didn't see it. Yeah, believe it, believe that. The trade group said that those requirements at higher driving speeds will result in vehicles quote automatically applying the brakes far in advance of what a typical driver and others on the road would expect and would likely result in rear end collisions. They're saying it would actually create more problems. And you know, the cost of these vehicles would go up too. Because they keep adding these different regulations. My car's got something like that. We've all got something that's in place there, right? Because I've had the brakes. It's like a beep beep and the brakes collision in oncoming or something like that. It senses that I'm getting too close or it senses something that I may not be aware of. Mine's gone off twice since I've had my truck and neither time was I anywhere near, near. Like I could see where it might have seen that something might happen. Yeah, but both times I was like, well, that was weird. Didn't do that. And I don't know if mine was, mine didn't lock up. It was just saying, hey, you might be about to hit something. Yeah, I mean, it didn't lock up, but it kind of breaks a little bit. I don't know. But I do have something and I probably check the record. I probably need it. Looking at the text line, texture here says easily forgotten these days. But remember when the DNC chairwoman Donna Brazil gave the CNN debate questions to Clinton before debating Bernie? Yes, I do. But they said they're not going to do that for Biden. That's what they say. Paul says this election is all about deception. Are enough people deceived and how many ineligible voters will get to vote could be millions. Yeah, there's a few groups out there saying that voter registration applications are being sent out to illegal immigrants all over the United States. And then it becomes, I think that puts that on the state to this to know whether or not it is illegal to register to vote. So I don't know what is going to happen in November. Paul, different Paul says the Department of Education is a historically young department. Yeah. We survived about 200 years without it. I thought that was a good text. This text says, "No, I agree with state rights, but can you imagine the lawsuits that would be coming from what some states would be doing in the public schools?" There would be so many lawsuits and so many complaints, it's not worth it. But there's lawsuits and complaints every day. Now, Martin says in addition to the Ten Commandments, they should include the golden rule too. After all, it's pretty easy to abide by. You know, I want to say, and golden rule is what do unto others as you would have them do unto you, I think. Yeah, I think it's a different golden rule, but I think they had that one up in one of my classrooms early on, if I remember correctly. But yeah, I don't think that the golden rule has been making an impression on the youth like it used to. No. Because I felt like I heard that all the time. Like treat others the way you want to be treated, but I told my kids too. Pretty simple stuff, but no, we were seeing a complete disregard for nearly any rule. Too often, more often than we'd ever want, the clip of the shooting in Montgomery was just completely insane. And sadly, it's not highly unusual. Yeah, it isn't. And King of all-in-name textures interesting here, I think he's talking about as far as maybe a candidate to replace Biden, he says, "My opinion is that Blinken is overlooked." He seems even tempered on the world stage, overlooked by Dems. So King of all-in-name textures thinking, "Maybe there's a possibility." And he says, "The Dems are overlooking him, but they slide Antony Blinken into that role." I don't think Blinken would have any kind of charisma that would help him get elected. He'd play guitar. He can rock out. 859, Jet poor on the way next.