Episode Transcript
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0:00
The NBA playoffs are here, and
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FanDool. Talk to me, Chuck GPT.
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of interests and stuff. Even Charles
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withdrawal or bonus best that expires.
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The rush hour is
0:32
on the air. It's
0:34
time for the soul
0:36
of excellence. He is
0:38
a radio host at
0:40
77 W.A.B.C. here in
0:43
New York. The rush hour
0:45
is on the air.
0:47
Rush. Rush. Rush.
0:49
Now here's Bo
0:51
Snurdley. Welcome,
0:53
my friends, to the
0:56
Monday edition of both
0:59
cities, Russia. How are
1:01
you? If you would like
1:03
to be part of the
1:05
program today, 800.
1:08
848922 is how you
1:10
reach us, 800. 84922.
1:12
I've heard the days
1:15
described as manic Monday.
1:18
Yes, that was, I
1:20
believe, the AP. And...
1:23
Others are raging. They
1:25
are mad. They're upset.
1:28
They are angry because
1:30
they've been looking
1:33
at their portfolios.
1:35
And they're not
1:37
happy with what they
1:39
see. Yes. Programming note.
1:42
Her Highness will make
1:45
a rare weekday appearance
1:47
with us. Her Highness
1:50
Princess Diana. has
1:52
elected that
1:55
she will acquiesce,
1:58
demands, pleadings
2:00
and appear on the
2:03
weekday program tomorrow to
2:05
explain the big China
2:07
theory. And so that
2:10
programming note, you should
2:12
be here every day,
2:14
but if you have
2:17
something to do to
2:19
make an appointment to
2:21
hear this because whatever
2:24
this theory is, it's
2:26
bound to be worthwhile
2:28
listening to. Now,
2:31
like I said, there
2:33
are so many stories.
2:35
Market craters. Trump says
2:38
don't be weak. Trump
2:40
threatens to add 50%
2:42
tariffs on China if
2:44
retaliatory tariffs not dropped.
2:47
Stocks quake after Trump
2:49
threatens to escalate tariff,
2:51
despite seeing how much
2:54
Wall Street, Wall Street
2:56
hates it. The Wall
2:58
Street agent. And then
3:01
there's this. Conservative icon
3:03
rages at Donald Trump
3:05
over 20 million stock
3:08
loss. Orange is the
3:10
new black according to
3:12
Dave Portnoy. And a
3:15
recent ramp from the
3:17
conservative Barstool Sports founder.
3:19
When it came to
3:21
Trump's tariffs, his remarks
3:24
were made during a
3:26
Monday morning live stream
3:28
he manned for nearly
3:31
an hour on X,
3:33
as markets opened to
3:35
general unrest. The stream
3:38
quickly devolved into an
3:40
anti- Trump rant. When
3:43
Portnoy revealed he had
3:45
suffered some 20 million
3:48
dollars in losses since
3:50
trade obstacles were announced
3:52
last week he proceeded
3:55
to tear into Trump
3:57
While referencing swirling fears
4:00
of another black Monday
4:02
and unexpected stock market
4:04
crash seen on Monday
4:07
March 19th 1987 and
4:09
doing so Portnoy also
4:11
pay under president's complexion
4:14
rechristening April 7th 2025
4:16
Orange Monday The
4:19
stock market is getting crushed.
4:22
I've lost 20% of my
4:24
net worth, he continued before
4:26
bringing up how Trump over
4:28
the weekend bragged about being
4:30
a very low handy capitalist,
4:32
senior-age golf tournament in Jupiter,
4:34
Florida, or something. And you're
4:36
out on the golf course.
4:38
Portnoy, who is a reported
4:40
net worth of more than
4:42
a hundred million dollars, raged.
4:44
Indexes have since recovered some
4:46
losses with the Dow Jones
4:48
about 1.9% that was midday
4:51
today. Yeah,
4:53
I'm losing 20 million, but I
4:55
still have plenty of money. It
4:57
all shakes down. He went on
4:59
before using the experience he garnered
5:01
running his own company to provide
5:03
some purported expertise. Look at bars
5:05
through sports, right? All right, the
5:07
economy takes. Are advertisers who do
5:09
business overseas and sell products and
5:12
advertise? I'll say sell less products.
5:14
It gets more expensive. What's the
5:16
first thing they cut? Ad budgets,
5:18
ad budgets that we get. Suddenly
5:20
we're not getting as much money.
5:22
Suddenly I have to fire Nate,
5:24
a bar stoop staffer, and lay
5:26
people off. You're sitting there with
5:28
$80 million talking about how you
5:30
got to lay off the little
5:32
guys in your firm. How nice
5:34
of you. Dave. Really? 80 million
5:36
bucks, supposedly, and you're sitting around
5:38
whining that you may have to
5:40
fire people? Really? So
5:45
much class in the world.
5:48
Jay North. Sad note here.
5:50
TV's mischiefist Dennis the Minus
5:52
dies at 73. Jay North.
5:54
who started as the townhead
5:57
mystery maker on TV's dentist
5:59
the minutes for four seasons
6:01
starting in 1959 his died
6:03
he was 73 he died
6:06
in his home in Lake
6:08
Butler Florida after battling colon
6:10
cancer he had a hardest
6:12
biggest amount of this friends
6:15
deeply he called us frequently
6:17
and did every conversation with
6:19
I love you with all
6:22
my heart he was six
6:24
years old when he was
6:26
cast as the smiling troublemaker
6:28
in the CBS sitcom Adaptation
6:31
of Hank Kitchman's popular comic
6:33
strip that took place in
6:35
idyllic and an idyllic American
6:37
suburb. Often wearing stripes, shirts,
6:40
and overalls, Dennis, and mischievous,
6:42
and frequently frustrated his retired
6:44
next door neighbor, Mr. Wilson.
6:46
I love Dennis the Minus.
6:49
Steve Colbert is begging the
6:51
deep state to jump in.
6:53
and stop Trump because we're
6:55
all effing dying. I'm not
6:58
effing, well we all are
7:00
effing dying, but only God
7:02
knows when we will be
7:05
called. We start dying the
7:07
moment we're born. But we're
7:09
not dying because there's anything
7:11
that Donald Trump is doing
7:14
and I'm not gonna spend
7:16
more time with that story.
7:18
And let me just be
7:20
really straight about something here.
7:23
You know, over the weekend
7:25
Donald Trump, I think, where
7:27
it was today, he came
7:29
up with a term, what
7:32
was it, the panikens, for
7:34
people that are panicked, the
7:36
panikens. And it's kind of
7:38
fitting. I found this, I
7:41
don't know, cut 16 have
7:43
ready Carlos, please, I do
7:45
not know, whether this is
7:47
from this. I didn't see
7:50
the date on this. I
7:52
saw this clip on social
7:54
media. And I said, hmm,
7:57
this looks like an interesting
7:59
clip. I don't know whether
8:01
it's from a past age
8:03
or the present age, but
8:06
it's one. One of the
8:08
world's wealthiest men, there are
8:10
plenty of rich men and
8:12
women, right now, everywhere in
8:15
the world, wealth, is abound
8:17
in some quarters, but one
8:19
of the world's wealthiest individuals,
8:21
Warren Buffett. And
8:24
I found this interesting given
8:26
the panic that we're seeing
8:28
and the crying and moaning
8:30
from people that haven't lost
8:32
a dime unless they have
8:35
sold their stock and taken
8:37
the loss. And
8:39
here is what Warren Buffett had to
8:41
say. A lot of investors are told,
8:44
retail investors are told, that they should
8:46
have a certain percent of their portfolio
8:48
in bonds. Maybe they're told 60-40, maybe
8:50
they're told 70-30 stocks to bonds. That's
8:52
something that you should do and that's
8:54
the safe way of doing it. What
8:56
are they missing? Some people should not
8:58
own stocks at all because they just
9:00
get too upset with price fluctuations. If
9:02
you're going to do dumb things... because
9:04
your stock, a stock goes down, you
9:07
shouldn't own a stock at all. What
9:09
are done things selling a stock? Yeah,
9:11
selling a stock goes down. I mean,
9:13
you know, if you buy your house
9:15
at $20,000 and somebody comes along next
9:17
day and says, I'll pay you $15,
9:19
you don't sell it because the quote's
9:21
15. You look at the house or
9:23
whatever it may be. But some people
9:25
are not actually emotionally or psychologically or
9:27
psychologically fit to own stocks, but I
9:29
think they're more of them would be
9:32
if you get educated if you get
9:34
educated if you get educated. on what
9:36
you're really buying, which is part of
9:38
a business. And the longer you hold
9:40
stocks, the less risky they become. Whereas
9:42
the longer the maturity of a bond,
9:44
the more risky it becomes. That's interesting
9:46
advice from Warren Buffett. Interesting. Interesting the
9:48
way to look at things. Now, there
9:50
are a few things that I want
9:52
to do, because I want to have
9:54
time to do them. One of the
9:57
people that I have always enjoyed hearing
9:59
from. would be
10:01
Victor Davis Hansen. And he
10:03
has a few words to say
10:05
about the current climate and
10:07
Trump's tariffs. And then I
10:10
want to revisit a former
10:12
president of the United States.
10:15
A well-known president of
10:17
the United States. Well, they're
10:19
all well-known, but a man
10:22
that defined his era as
10:24
president of the United States. In
10:26
fact, many of us thought...
10:29
and said he was sort
10:31
of like the yoda of
10:33
politics. He was just the
10:35
politicians, politician. He could,
10:37
he could, this guy could
10:39
sell ice cream to the
10:42
indigenous people of the North
10:44
Pole. He could, yeah. Or
10:46
someone lacked us in tolerance, yeah.
10:48
Yeah, I like that even better,
10:51
because that doesn't get us
10:53
into trouble with any ethnic
10:55
group. He could sell ice
10:58
cream. He can sell straight
11:00
up ice cream to the
11:03
lactose intolerant. That's the
11:05
kind of guy we're
11:07
talking about. We'll hear
11:10
all that when we
11:12
get. Thank you, Carlos.
11:14
Blondie. Sad news today,
11:17
Clint Burke passed away
11:19
age 70 after a
11:21
private battle with cancer.
11:23
Best known as the
11:26
drummer from Blondie.
11:31
He stayed with Blondie shortly
11:34
after the band formed
11:36
all throughout their entire
11:38
career Blondie of course
11:41
five number one singles
11:43
Including this one James
11:45
Goldman Snurdi with you
11:47
it is the Monday morning
11:50
rush hour keep it right
11:52
here my friends 800-84-89-22-2-2 is
11:54
how you reach us rush
11:56
this is the rush hour
11:59
with those nerdly 77 W.A.D.C.
12:02
It's the
12:05
rush hour
12:08
with Bo
12:11
Snurdley. Bose
12:14
by the
12:16
pseudonym Bo
12:19
Snurdley. Rush?
12:22
Now here's
12:25
Bo Snurdley.
12:34
from the debut
12:36
album of the
12:38
police. Outlando Stemor.
12:40
Of course, written
12:42
the story of
12:45
a guy who
12:47
falls in love
12:49
with a working
12:51
woman. The title,
12:53
Rock Sand, comes
12:56
from the play,
12:58
a character in
13:00
the place. Um,
13:03
well, Sereno de Bursarac, of
13:05
course, Thing got the idea.
13:07
He saw a poster of
13:10
that hanging at a hotel
13:12
in a hotel for you
13:15
in Paris. Now, the interesting
13:17
thing about this one, everybody
13:20
knows this song, right? Everybody
13:22
knows this song. This song
13:24
did not chart when it
13:27
was first released. It didn't
13:29
even make the charts. It
13:35
was re-released in 1979 and
13:37
then it charted. But when
13:39
it was first released, eh-uh.
13:41
And then of course if
13:44
anyone saw Beverly Hills Cop...
13:46
I think it was one
13:48
of the opening scenes in
13:51
Beverly Hills Cop where Eddie
13:53
Murphy's sitting in a jail
13:55
cell and he... He's singing,
13:57
he's got a cassette walkman
14:00
or something and you hear
14:02
him attempting it. Yeah, the
14:04
police. James Goldenbosirli's rush hour.
14:07
Let's listen to Victor. This
14:09
is a point that I
14:11
struggled to make. Victor of
14:13
course can do it in
14:16
two minutes and change and
14:18
it's a great point. This
14:20
is a class thing. It
14:23
really is. Donald Trump, Mirabel
14:25
Dictu, I can't believe he
14:27
did it as a classical
14:29
Republican, he's not classical Republican,
14:32
but what Donald Trump did
14:34
was he said this Republican
14:36
is going to side of
14:39
the working man. It's not
14:41
going to choose Wall Street.
14:43
Wall Street hates Donald Trump.
14:45
Have you ever seen anybody
14:48
in this audience that's watching
14:50
or listening? Has anybody ever
14:52
in their wildest imagination think
14:55
that Democrats would be on
14:57
the floor of the Congress
14:59
blasting Donald Trump and worried
15:02
that Wall Street's going to
15:04
be hurt and not talking
15:06
one word about the working
15:08
classes that are all for
15:11
this? Because they think finally
15:13
somebody's listening. And the final
15:15
thing is, has it had
15:18
any effects? Don Trump says
15:20
$4 trillion in foreign investment.
15:22
The figures I've seen are
15:24
commitments. They're not actualizations yet,
15:27
but $3.1 trillion. If that
15:29
comes in, $3.1 trillion, there'll
15:31
be millions of jobs that
15:34
come in here for people
15:36
to avoid these tariff. Because
15:38
he's just saying, if you
15:40
come in the United States
15:43
and you want to help
15:45
us, you can keep the
15:47
profits. You just have to
15:50
have the jobs here. If
15:52
you're Mercedes-Benz and you get
15:54
a 3 to 8% profit
15:56
on your sales. Fine! But...
15:59
the cost and the services
16:01
and the labor is going
16:03
to be here. You're going
16:06
to pay for things here.
16:08
And so it's going to
16:10
be a boon to the
16:12
interior of America and the
16:15
Democrats, because they have no
16:17
other alternative agenda, they are
16:19
taking the side of the
16:22
Uber rich, even while they
16:24
blast oligarchs and aristocrats and
16:26
plutocrats. No, you're on the
16:28
side of plutocrats and aristocrats.
16:31
You guys were the party
16:33
of globalization under Bill Clinton
16:35
that started it all off.
16:38
You were the people who
16:40
thought globalization was neat because
16:42
you could wean the billionaire
16:44
class over to your side,
16:47
which is about 70% of
16:49
them are on their side.
16:51
So they are speaking in
16:54
their interests. They're not speaking
16:56
for the people of Pennsylvania
16:58
or Michigan or Wisconsin, the
17:00
working people. And there in
17:03
my friends lie something that
17:05
I want to examine after
17:07
our next commercial break. That
17:10
is what Victor David Hansen
17:12
says Bill Clinton kicked off
17:14
this globalization trend. Actually it
17:16
was around before Bill Clinton,
17:19
but it exploded in earnest
17:21
during the Clinton years. Don't
17:23
you remember the Naster deals?
17:26
Don't you remember? All the
17:28
goodness that China goes into
17:30
the WTO? Don't you remember?
17:32
Yes, so this is when
17:35
this move toward globalization really
17:37
exploded in America under Bill
17:39
Clinton. So, we will discuss
17:42
that. Because that is vital
17:44
to understanding everything. That is
17:46
happening right now as today
17:48
Donald Trump tells China. Oh,
17:51
yeah? Well, then take this
17:53
James Golden both thoroughly both
17:55
series rush hour do not
17:58
go away Since
18:03
the election is over, if
18:06
you voted for Trump, that
18:08
does not mean we can't
18:11
be friends. We're both adults,
18:13
we can be cordial and
18:16
mature. And since the election
18:18
is over, if you voted
18:20
for Trump, that does not
18:23
mean we can't be friends.
18:25
We're both adults, we can
18:28
be cordial and mature, and
18:30
your fucking dreams. I help
18:33
you. So during the break,
18:35
I casually said to Carlos,
18:38
yeah, just joking, I said,
18:40
hey, Carlos, let's play some
18:42
Billy Holiday coming back. As
18:45
you know, Billy Holiday is,
18:47
right? I mean, now I
18:50
should. But what did you
18:52
say? Before the, okay, before
18:55
the break, I didn't even
18:57
know if he was a
19:00
she or a he. Okay.
19:03
Today is the
19:05
heavenly birthday, ladies
19:07
and gentlemen, for
19:09
Billy Holiday. Eleanor
19:11
Harris, the greatest,
19:13
widely recognized as
19:15
the greatest jazz singer,
19:18
female of all
19:20
time. Over a
19:22
hundred records in
19:24
her short career,
19:26
worked with the
19:28
best of them.
19:30
Count Bacy Duke.
19:33
Lester Young, everybody. Of
19:35
course, the movie lady
19:37
sings the blues, a
19:39
movie about the life
19:41
of the great, the
19:43
one and only Billy
19:45
Holiday who passed away
19:47
in 1959, aged 44
19:49
years old, with the
19:51
music, and the incredible
19:53
talent of Billy Holiday,
19:55
born in this day,
19:57
1915, will live forever.
20:01
The James Golden Snearley.
20:03
And before we get to Bill
20:05
Clinton, and I do want to
20:08
get to Bill Clinton, you
20:10
know, we have this big nationwide
20:12
rally. There were paid protesters, folks.
20:14
There's no secret anymore. We
20:16
even have, I don't know whether
20:19
we'll have time to play it,
20:21
because it runs actually over
20:23
five minutes. A woman explaining the
20:26
entire process of how she got
20:28
paid. To protest and
20:30
what she had to do in
20:32
order to get paid But
20:34
before we go there
20:36
there was another woman. This
20:39
is emblematic of the kind
20:41
of behavior that was at
20:44
the protest this woman
20:46
was wearing a shirt
20:48
Basically saying is he dead
20:50
yet or something like that?
20:52
Is he dead yet? and These
20:55
other she was holding up
20:57
a sign also wishing
20:59
death on Donald Trump and this
21:01
is what she said to the
21:03
personally interviewed her because of it.
21:05
Tell us what you mean by
21:08
this? Well I mean that it
21:10
won't fix all the problems but
21:12
it sure is a great start
21:14
that liberation day should not be
21:16
should not be connected to what
21:18
he has done that is not
21:20
liberation and I just hope for
21:22
this country that we can rise
21:25
above this and the good way
21:27
to start Might be to have
21:29
somebody leave so you know we
21:31
can all do you do you
21:33
wish that that guy never missed?
21:35
Yes three inches who would have
21:38
ever thought that I would
21:40
be so excited about You
21:42
know getting an additional three
21:44
inches, but I really was
21:47
hoping and and and it
21:49
would have really it would
21:51
have really cemented Semented the
21:53
idea. I I just I
21:55
really regret that he didn't
21:58
wasn't on the target. Do
22:00
you think another temple happen?
22:02
Oh, I sure hope so.
22:04
I mean, this is what,
22:07
this is the unfortunate part
22:09
that this whole debacle, this
22:11
last eight to ten years,
22:13
has absolutely made me this
22:16
kind of person. I would
22:18
never have guessed that I
22:20
would wish for the demise
22:22
of another person, but I
22:25
wish, I hope. I can't
22:27
wait for it to happen.
22:29
I think he'll be forever
22:31
sealed and cemented in the
22:34
minds of millions of people
22:36
as some sort of deity,
22:38
but not in a mine.
22:40
Yeah, and so that's what
22:43
you have on the left.
22:45
Now, I mentioned when Victor
22:47
Davis Hansen talked about globalization,
22:49
and again, I spent a
22:52
lot of time with this
22:54
last week, the Washington Poster,
22:56
New York Times, I believe
22:59
it was. Well, no, it
23:01
was the Washington Post, WAPO,
23:03
they got it right. Actually,
23:05
what Donald Trump is looking
23:08
to do here is put
23:10
the nail on the coffin
23:12
on globalization. Those are my
23:14
words, not theirs. They would
23:17
be moaning, be moaning the
23:19
end of globalization. And then
23:21
you heard Victor David Hansen
23:23
in the remarks that we
23:26
played before the break. Talk
23:28
about how Bill Clinton played
23:30
a major role and that
23:32
was the expansion. That's when
23:35
globalization went into hyper drive.
23:37
You had the trade agreements
23:39
like NAFTA and other trade
23:41
agreements. NAFTA by the way
23:44
wasn't the only one. And
23:46
you had China. This, my
23:48
friends, is Bill Clinton. as
23:51
China was being admitted, poised
23:53
to be admitted, into the
23:55
World Trade Organization. Let's remember
23:58
what was promised and what
24:00
was said. The WTO agreement
24:02
will move China in the
24:04
right direction. It will advance
24:06
the goals America has worked
24:08
for in China for the
24:10
past three decades. Really. And
24:13
of course, it will advance
24:15
our own economic interests. Economically,
24:17
this agreement is the equivalent
24:19
of a one-way street. It
24:21
requires China to open its
24:23
markets. with the fifth of
24:25
the world's population, potentially the
24:27
biggest markets in the world,
24:30
to both our products and
24:32
services in unprecedented new ways.
24:34
All we do is to
24:36
agree to maintain the present
24:38
access which China enjoys. Chinese
24:40
tariffs from telecommunications products to
24:42
automobiles to agriculture will fall
24:45
by half or more over
24:47
just five years. For the
24:49
first time our companies will
24:51
be able to sell and
24:53
distribute products in China, made
24:55
by workers here in America.
24:57
Without being forced to relocate
25:00
manufacturing to China, sell through
25:02
the Chinese government or transfer
25:04
valuable technology for the first
25:06
time. We'll be able to
25:08
export products without exporting jobs.
25:10
Everything he said was wrong.
25:12
Has turned out to be
25:14
absolutely wrong. It has not
25:17
been a one-way street unless...
25:19
The street signs have changed
25:21
in that one way street
25:23
instead of it being from
25:25
America to China turned around
25:27
the street sign was from
25:29
China right to America because
25:32
that's where the trade is
25:34
going. You hear Bill Clinton
25:36
said we won't have to
25:38
do anything we'll just keep
25:40
the status quo and oh
25:42
yeah China's going to open
25:44
up their markets to us.
25:47
They're not by the way
25:49
and everything he said was
25:51
wrong and is wrong in
25:53
this quest. Because
25:55
China played Bill
25:57
Clinton. China played
25:59
the Democrat Party.
26:02
China played the
26:04
world. Now, you
26:06
look at what has
26:08
happened. Americans are
26:10
still locked out. And it's
26:13
not just China that
26:15
we're locked out. We have
26:17
so many markets that
26:19
Americans cannot sell
26:21
into and jobs
26:23
going overseas. But
26:25
this is what sparked.
26:28
this massive wave of
26:30
globalization. China's admittance
26:32
into the World Trade
26:34
Organization, where they have
26:37
never ever played by the
26:39
rules of the World
26:41
Trade Organization, and where
26:44
American politicians, including Bush-41,
26:46
including Bill Clinton, who
26:48
by the way had
26:51
some interesting donor issues
26:53
with China. if
26:55
you remember, John Wong and
26:57
so forth. John Wong, wasn't
26:59
he the guy that said White
27:01
House is the White House like
27:04
a subway? You go, you put
27:06
your token in, and then you
27:08
get what you want out of
27:10
it. In other words, you pay
27:12
the play. It was John
27:14
Long back in the days.
27:16
Loral Space Corporation. Big players.
27:19
Help China get on their feet
27:21
in terms of technology Bill Clinton
27:23
and that little talk talked about
27:26
technology transfers We help China become
27:28
the military superpower that it was
27:30
Not to mention the corporate
27:33
cheating that has gone on
27:35
and the demands that China
27:37
made to allow American businesses
27:40
to come in there. Every
27:42
single thing that Bill Clinton
27:44
promised Americans and the world
27:47
about admitting China into the
27:49
World Trade Organization has
27:51
turned out to be a complete lie.
27:53
Now, but again, it's not just
27:56
China. Two things, one here, let's
27:58
go six and seven. First, Senator
28:00
John Grasso, Wyoming, talks about what's
28:03
going on with cattle in Wyoming.
28:05
And then right after that, we
28:07
have a news report, Fox News
28:10
reporter, talking to an Illinois cattle
28:12
rancher. Let's, Carlos, nail the two
28:14
of those back to back. Congress
28:17
has given the president more and
28:19
more authority on tariffs, specifically national
28:21
security, for unfair trade practices. President
28:23
Trump is fully... within his authority
28:26
and I appreciate what the president
28:28
is doing on tariffs specifically in
28:30
our home state of Wyoming. In
28:33
terms of beef, the cattle producers,
28:35
they're saying it is about time.
28:37
One of the countries that you
28:40
just showed on that slip before
28:42
I came on, Australia. Australia sold
28:44
$29 billion worth of beef in
28:47
the United States and we haven't
28:49
been able to sell one hamburger.
28:51
in Australia because of Barry. They
28:54
showed Thailand. 30% tariffs on beef
28:56
coming from the United States. Vietnam,
28:58
50%. You look at these numbers
29:01
and the ranchers of Wyoming are
29:03
saying, thank you Mr. President, it
29:05
is about time. Well first I'm
29:08
going to start with, this industry
29:10
isn't a unique position. While other
29:12
people in agriculture may be a
29:15
little bit worried about the tariffs,
29:17
people like Alan Adams here who
29:19
run this cattle farm are uniquely
29:21
positioned because... Again, as you said,
29:24
this will level the playing field.
29:26
So tell me how you're feeling
29:28
at this moment. Well, you know,
29:31
we've struggled with tariffs my whole
29:33
adult life in the cattle business.
29:35
And so we were happy to
29:38
hear the president last week mention
29:40
that beef was one of the
29:42
things that he wanted to have
29:45
tariffs lowered. And so some of
29:47
the European countries in Australia have
29:49
been difficult for us to sell
29:52
beef in. And so they get
29:54
to sell beef into our... country
29:56
and we're happy to have them
29:59
compete against us, but we'd like
30:01
the same chance to sell the
30:03
great taste of American beef to
30:06
them. These guys are just so
30:08
so Americanly nice. and beautiful. We'd
30:10
just like the chance to be
30:13
able to sell against, I mean
30:15
then you compare that to the
30:17
spitting mad opposition that are demanding
30:19
death for Donald Trump wishing for
30:22
it. And you listen to the
30:24
spirit of these people who have
30:26
been kicked in the behind for
30:29
decades over the promises made. Two
30:31
Americans about globalization and instead what
30:33
it is costing them are their
30:36
livelihoods and For many of them
30:38
any chance of you of having
30:40
an early retirement No, they have
30:43
to work there these people are
30:45
hanging on by a thread and
30:47
in many cases you have so
30:50
many farmers ranchers Fishermen that have
30:52
gone out of business Generational businesses
30:54
closed down over these promises that
30:57
were made never kept and the
30:59
same people now that are invested
31:01
so heavily in Wall Street that
31:04
are walking away with portfolios like
31:06
Dave Portnoy complaining because he's only
31:08
worth $80 million on paper now
31:10
instead of a hundred million dollars
31:13
and Orange Man bad while these
31:15
people are struggling for their lives.
31:20
I'll tell you what Let's go
31:22
visit burning 10-11 banny Sanders remember
31:24
this I believe in trade But
31:27
I believe in fair trade not
31:29
unfetted free trade. I do not
31:31
believe that we should be shutting
31:33
down factories in America 2019 having
31:35
corporations run to Desperate countries where
31:37
people are paid a dollar or
31:40
two dollars an hour. I don't
31:42
believe in that the functional trade
31:44
is not make just to make
31:46
large corporations wealthier tariffs when tariffs
31:48
are necessary absolutely will use all
31:50
the tools that we have At
31:53
the end of the day, I
31:55
think, Americans perceive. And you ask
31:57
me why there is momentum for
31:59
our campaign. These trade agreements were
32:01
written by corporate America, were written
32:03
by Wall Street. The goal was
32:06
to shut down plants in America,
32:08
to stop having to pay workers
32:10
in Iowa, Vermont. This country, decent
32:12
wages, moved to China, paid people
32:14
low wages, and bring their products
32:16
back up. But supported by democratic
32:19
administrationsrations. You're quite right. Many of
32:21
these policies, you are absolutely right,
32:23
many of these policies were supported
32:25
by not only Republicans, by President
32:27
Clinton, and unfortunately President Obama. They
32:29
are bad policies. They are opposed
32:32
by and large by every trade
32:34
union in this country, and I
32:36
believe by the majority of the
32:38
American people. At the end of
32:40
the day, the American workers should
32:42
not be forced to compete against
32:45
people in Vietnam who make 56
32:47
cents an hour minimum wage. How
32:49
do you roll back the clock
32:51
on those agreements? And what you
32:53
say is, look, we want agreements
32:55
that work for the American middle
32:58
class. I want to see, we
33:00
have lost, just through review, since
33:02
2001, we have lost almost 60,000
33:04
factories in the United States of
33:06
America and millions of decent paying
33:08
jobs. Not all of that is
33:11
attributable to trade, but a lot
33:13
of it is. And at the
33:15
end of the day, If corporations
33:17
can shut down in America, pay
33:19
people 25 cents an hour or
33:21
50 cents an hour or someplace
33:24
else, that's what they will do.
33:26
And we have to stop that.
33:28
We have to demand, they reinvest
33:30
back in this country and provide
33:32
decent paying jobs here. Always the
33:34
politician. He says since 2001. Folks,
33:37
this started in 1998 with Clinton.
33:39
It's nearly with you here. Ah,
33:41
the knack. My
33:45
surround
33:48
out.
33:50
James
33:52
Golden
33:54
Snurdley.
34:00
Coming
34:04
back, your
34:08
calls.
34:10
Bruce
34:13
Gary,
34:15
born
34:18
today.
34:21
Drummer.
34:24
For the
34:27
knack. It's
34:35
the rush hour with Bo Snurdley.
34:37
Bose by the Suden
34:39
and Bo Snurdley. Rush?
34:42
Now here's Bo Snurdley.
34:44
Bird Deddy Day for John
34:47
Oates. Of course of Holland
34:49
Oates. This one, 1982. One
34:51
of their big ones,
34:53
Man-Eater. Forty million
34:56
records. One of
34:58
the best-selling music duos
35:00
of all-time. Holland Oates.
35:03
Happy birthday to John Oates. Before
35:05
we get to rapid phones,
35:08
before we get breaking, Princess
35:10
Diana sent me this, thank
35:12
you Princess, Diana, breaking, a
35:15
U.S. Supreme Court justice, John
35:17
Roberts, has temporarily blocked the
35:20
district court order requiring Kilma
35:22
Abrego Garcia to be returned
35:24
to the United States by
35:27
midnight. this outrageous order by
35:29
this Obama appointed judge apparently
35:32
has been put on hold.
35:34
This judge that thinks he
35:37
has the things he
35:39
has jurisdiction over what
35:41
happens in El Salvador as
35:43
well as running the executive
35:45
branch. So we shall see
35:47
how this turns out. Now,
35:50
we will first see. A.K.A.
35:52
Boznerley presents rapid phones. And
35:54
we began with Dom in
35:56
Minnesota. How are you this
35:59
afternoon, Dom? Hey James, I
36:01
have waited 35 years for a
36:03
working man president. Now we have
36:05
one coinciding with the release of
36:08
the working man movie. You gotta
36:10
go see it. It's a great
36:12
one. Uh-huh. Okay. Well, I don't
36:14
know about the movie, but we
36:17
do have a working man president
36:19
and this, by the way, should
36:21
this is one of the reasons
36:23
why Democrats are so flummets. What
36:26
are they doing? They are actually
36:28
protesting against... the segment of the
36:30
population that they claimed for many
36:32
years to have the exclusive ownership
36:34
of, that being the working people
36:37
of America. They could care less.
36:39
They care about their own pockets.
36:41
They care about Wall Street. That's
36:43
it. Jerry in New Jersey. How
36:46
are you? Hi, James. It's with
36:48
a heavy heart. I have to...
36:50
Just say that you want to
36:52
celebrate the life of Clem Burke
36:55
who was Bayonne's best and blonde
36:57
these best drummer he passed away
36:59
from cancer and Our hearts go
37:01
out his family and prayers. He
37:04
was just a really great guy.
37:06
I owe my Drum and career
37:08
to him. I bought my first
37:10
drum set real drum set from
37:12
Clem way back when Oh my
37:15
gosh I hear the emotion Jerry
37:17
I know this must be a
37:19
tough loss for you. We played
37:21
Blondie as our first bumper today
37:24
in honor of Clem and thank
37:26
you for the call. Great guy.
37:28
And thank you Jerry. God bless
37:30
you my friend. Oh I guess
37:33
it's time to go. I'm sorry
37:35
to the calls we could not
37:37
get to. May God bless and
37:39
protect each and every single one
37:42
of you, your families, your loved
37:44
ones. Love and gratitude my friends
37:46
always. For you being here with
37:48
me and allowing me to be
37:50
with you. God willing. We
37:53
are back tomorrow for the Tuesday edition
37:55
of Boston Rouge Rush Hour. Until then
37:57
I bid you, I do. Bye.
38:00
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38:33
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