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[Transcript]
Tucker Carlson: How many Texans do you think are all on board with letting 7 million people cross into their state illegally? What percentage? Zero. Zero. I don't care what your race or national origin. Nobody is for that. That's insane. Has the governor of Texas done anything meaningful to stop that? No. 'The Republican governor.' He's got a National Guard. He's the commander in chief of the National Guard and it's Texas. So they're all large and they have double-stacked magazines in their sidearms. Do you think they couldn't stop that in a week?
Of course. Just assemble along the border. We're not doing this. No, he refuses to do that. He won't do it. It's not like no one suggested. I've suggested to him three times, including in private at a cocktail party in Dallas last year. "What are you doing, man? Don't you have a National Guard? Why don't you seal the border?" "Oh, it's very complicated." No, it's not. No, it's not. If someone's trying to break into my house, it's not complicated to repel the person. Do you have a firearm or don't you? Are you willing to defend your house and your children or aren't you? "Well, it's more complicated."
Really? Tell me how. Speak slowly so I can understand. It's not more complicated than that. It's more dishonest than that. You're lying to me. You don't want to do it because your donors don't want you to do it. It's that simple. Greg Abbott. Liar, liar, and worse than liar, betrayer of your own people. That's what that is. I was polite at the cocktail party, so I didn't say any of that, but I fumed internally like an Episcopalian.
[laughter]
I thought those things. But the point is, if you assume that just because everybody wants something, you're going to get it, think again, pal. It's very likely that, in fact, you won't get anything that you want. You will just pay for what a small group of other people want. That's the way it works.
Audience: Boo.
Tucker: Boo. Boo is right. Boo is right. It's not just frustrating. It's a betrayal of the core promise of the country, which is the people rule. That's a criminal act.
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Transcript:
Keyshawn: Absolutely.
Skip: Yes, all right.
Keyshawn: That's what that's what teams do in the division. They draft off of each other. When I was with the Jets, all of a sudden New England started drafting bigger corners because Eric Moulds and myself was in the division and Marvin Harrison. So they wanted to try to figure out how to slow us down. But when you look at both of these teams, the notable players under the age of 27 Devante Smith, Jalen Hurts, AJ. Brown, Jalen Carter, Nolan Smith, Jordan Davis, and Josh Sweat. That's some stuff right there.
Skip: It's some stuff.
Keyshawn: When you talk about the Cowboys and Tyler Smith and CeeDee Lamb and Tony Pollard and Terence Steele, Trevon Diggs and Micah Parsons. The quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys is 30 years old. They're still young for the quarterback position. He's still got a runway. But guess what Jerry Jones just went out there and did? He went and got even a younger quarterback in Trey Lance.
Skip: He did.
Keyshawn: Just in case something don't go the way we need it to go over the next couple years, we still stand young. So when you look at it, both of these teams are going to be around for a long time. And Howie Roseman has done a tremendous job at selected players. About five years ago or so prior to that first Super Bowl that the Eagles won, people was like, "Man, get this dude out of here." They was trying to run him out of Philadelphia.
Skip: I agree.
Keyshawn: Then all of a sudden, boom, he hits the switch and does well, drafted players and assembling guys in free agency. So I see him around for a very, very long time, Skip.
Transcript:
Tim: Chris Nelson. I'm going to give you my assumption of this guy. His profile is Indie reporter saved by God's Grace. Updates on Ron DeSantis and Florida News. I think this guy is a fake journalist that is running a sock puppet scam for the DeSantis campaign. But let me clarify once again, what I mean is masquerading as an independent reporter, but just being fed talking points by the DeSantis camp to promote Ron DeSantis. It is the worst and most pathetic communications attempt I've seen.
Transcript:
Keith Olbermann: On the Thursday Countdown podcast, Trump tells a deposition that he saved the world from nuclear holocaust and saved millions of lives because he was the only one to ever think of dealing with North Korea. You're welcome, losers. He didn't save Peter Navarro, who goes to trial, but only after failing to grab a paper Trump lost sign that had been held about an inch over his head. He didn't save Rudy Giuliani, who goes to trial for slandering Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman, and then hours later goes on radio and slanders Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman again.
He didn't save Kevin McCarthy, who will now have to start an impeachment without holding a vote, which he once violently criticized, or hold the vote and lose the vote. The knives are out in Georgia for Fonnie. Willis. The Georgia state senate majority leader, a Republican, now threatens her with reprimands, sanctions, hearings, defunding, and removal. His name is Gooch, and he is from Lumpkin County. But the Georgia state house speaker, another Republican, says trying to defund Willis violates separation of powers. I fear for his safety. A huge ethics scandal in cable news. Why MSNBC must fire one of its primetime anchors. All that and more on the Thursday edition of the Countdown podcast, available now wherever you podcast and also available on YouTube.
Transcript.
Timothy: Here's the crazy thing. So we've talked about my dad a lot on the show. So a few years ago, I took possession of my dad's old desk, which is this massive oak desk. That when he passed us. Like I always said, "The one thing I want, I want your desk." Because I was so used to seeing him at this desk that he because he worked out of the house. So my brother brought the desk down. I put it in my office, started unpacking it, chock full of just nonsense stuff that old men leave on their desks.
Just so many, I can't go into it. But one of the things I found was a pack of D batteries. As I'm scrunching wait a second. I think there's a pack in that desk. I went out to the office, found the batteries, brought them in. Sure enough, they were still working. So all my flashlights and lanterns were ready to go, thanks to my dad from beyond the grave, still helping me be prepared.
Maggie: Oh my gosh, I love that story. That was like your dad being like, "I got you." I love that.
Patrick Wyman: Wyman. You may know me from my history podcast, Tides of History. Or maybe you remember when I used to write and talk about mixed martial arts. Or from my Substack newsletter Perspectives. Or maybe you've seen me picking up weights in my garage or a large rock on the beach, but in addition to all those things, I'm also a dad. Not just in the sense that I have children who are a blessing and a joy, sources of wonder and meaning in a harsh world, but also a cultural dad with all the habits and hobbies that implies.
Now, there are a lot of things that aren't that great about being a parent. Small children tend to be pretty demanding. At their worst, they're petty tyrants without much in the way of higher cognitive function or control over their bowels. You win some, you lose some. Parenting changes you. You start to occupy a new social and cultural space, which has its downsides, but also some pretty great upsides. More than anything, you are not required to be cool anymore. That moment has passed. You don't have to care what anybody else thinks. You're free to be a little eccentric, to have Hobies that bring you joy, to explore interests that are really and truly yours. That's a really specific kind of freedom.
Freedom to do what you want, at least in small doses, and freedom from a certain kind of pressure to conform. Not all the pressure, but some of it. The cultural role of a dad gives us the potential to lean into that freedom. If we play our cards right. Dads are allowed to spend hours obsessing over the grill, watching documentaries, or reminiscing about mediocre NBA players of the late 1980s and early 1990s. We expect dads to have some not really useful but in-depth knowledge about-
@dctune I find the 'hybrid clean verbatim' strikes a balance between accuracy and readability. Trial transcripts are fun to work on when all participants are audible. #transcriptionists