Here's Where Fani Screwed Up Royally
Here's Where Fani Screwed Up Royally
Here's Where Fani Screwed Up Royally
Time | Text |
---|---|
The storm is coming. | |
Markets are crashing. | |
Banks are closing. | |
When the economy collapses, how will you survive? | |
You need a plan. | |
Cash, gold, bitcoin, dirty man safes keep your assets hidden underground at a secret location ready for any crisis. | |
Don't wait for disaster to strike. | |
Get your Dirty Man safe today. | |
Use promo code DIRTY10 for 10% off your order. | |
Disaster can strike when least expected. | |
Wildfires, hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes. | |
They can instantly turn your world upside down. | |
Dirty Man underground safes is a safeguard against chaos. | |
Hidden below, your valuables remain protected no matter what. | |
Prepare for the unexpected. | |
Use code DIRTY10 for 10% off and secure peace of mind for you and your family. | |
Dirty Man safe. | |
When disaster hits, security isn't optional. | |
When uncertainty strikes, peace of mind is priceless. | |
Dirty Man underground safes protects what matters most. | |
Discreetly designed, these safes are where innovation meets reliability, keeping your valuables close yet secure. | |
Be ready for anything. | |
Use code DIRTY10 for 10% off today and take the first step towards safeguarding your future. | |
Dirty Man Safe, because protecting your family starts with protecting what you treasure. | |
The disaster, the disaster, that is the Fannie Willis case, the disqualification motion in Fulton County, Georgia. | |
This trio of prolific perjurers, all of that, all of that, is completely missed, completely sidestepped by the fact of what's really going on involving that case. | |
Now, like anything else, whatever you see it as, I want you to take the usual media reaction And dismiss what they are saying. | |
Dismiss what they are saying because what I'm trying to tell you is simply this. | |
They are going to take the most obvious, the most blatant, the most low-hanging-of-fruit approach there is, missing really what this is about. | |
Because what we're seeing right now is something that's being missed. | |
First, there's the system itself. | |
How many of you fine people are asking yourself this question? | |
How is this allowed to happen? | |
Does this happen that often? | |
Is this rare? | |
Is this common? | |
When somebody lies like this, shouldn't there be some way of stopping it? | |
How does this happen? | |
When people lie deliberately in front of the world, is it because they're crazy? | |
Psychopathic? | |
Is it just the way we are today? | |
Is it a part of this incredibly horrible, entitled world of self-indulgence? | |
Is that it? | |
Is that how this works? | |
What precisely is this thing that motivates? | |
How do you get somebody, like a Fanny Willis, who doesn't, what, talk to people? | |
She doesn't... | |
Get advice from anybody? | |
Nobody comes to her and says, no, listen. | |
Do yourself a favor. | |
Don't be a laughingstock. | |
Just admit this and move on. | |
You're going to cause yourself more problems. | |
Did anybody tell her that? | |
Or is she so gone, so bereft, so disconnected from reality that she just doesn't care? | |
How does that work? | |
Tell me, how does that even remotely work? | |
Tell me. | |
How does everybody miss what is really going on here? | |
How do people miss the issues here? | |
The legal issue is not whether she had an affair. | |
The legal issue is should she be disqualified? | |
And this is classic. | |
This is classic critical thinking. | |
IRAC rule. | |
Issue. | |
Should she be disqualified? | |
Rule. | |
IRAC. | |
Rule. | |
What are the rules of disqualification? | |
What are the... | |
Burdens that must be met. | |
Who has the burden? | |
What must be shown? | |
How do you rebut the burden? | |
What are the factors we need to look? | |
What does precedent say? | |
What does the law say? | |
What does case law say? | |
What do similar cases show? | |
That's the rule. | |
Next is analyze. | |
Compare the issue. | |
Compare the rules. | |
Look at them collectively and ask how these things work. | |
And then finally, see the conclusion. | |
The conclusion. | |
Where does this end? | |
How does this all end? | |
What's the ultimate? | |
How do you fix this? | |
Not, is she lying? | |
Not, did he come over there? | |
Not, is he cheating on his marriage? | |
Not. | |
And also, the question that I ask you is, what does race play in this? | |
This is a question nobody wants to talk about. | |
I love it. | |
Everything people don't want to talk about. | |
That's what I'm going to talk about. | |
Politics and religion, that's what I'm going to talk about. | |
Race, I'm going to talk about it. | |
Sex, gender, the unspoken word, no. | |
How much does her race play at all in this? | |
These characters, if these were three, just change only the race. | |
Same personality, same arrogance, same everything. | |
Would it make a difference? | |
Would it? | |
Truly? | |
I submit no. | |
No. | |
No. | |
Not at all. | |
And this kills her. | |
Because the thing I would have to tell Fannie in particular is, it's not about race. | |
It's about you. | |
It's not that you're an arrogant black woman. | |
You're an arrogant person. | |
You're disgusting. | |
You're repulsive as a human being. | |
Not your race, not your gender, not your looks, not your dress, not your clothes, not your weight, not your age. | |
Nothing. | |
You. | |
You are repulsive no matter who you are. | |
No matter your gender, no matter your ethnicity, it doesn't matter. | |
You are an absolute, you are disgusting. | |
You're a liar. | |
You're arrogant. | |
You have such contempt for everybody. | |
You think you are above it all. | |
And we've all known this. | |
We've all known this. | |
This is all about you. | |
You did this. | |
Not your race. | |
No, no, no, no, no. | |
The notion of racism, like the term anti-Semitic, has suffered from metal fatigue, as it's been like. | |
Metal fatigue. | |
It's been so used and so... | |
It broke. | |
It doesn't mean anything anymore. | |
It doesn't mean anything. | |
Racism is dead. | |
It doesn't matter. | |
We don't even know what it means. | |
You've been false alarming us for so long on race, and nobody cares about it. | |
Nobody is even paying attention to it. | |
It doesn't matter. | |
It doesn't matter. | |
We have been, for the past... | |
I don't know. | |
Let's say, what, 60 years? | |
Let's make it simple. | |
50 years. | |
Many of us, many of our people, have lived in a world where Jim Crow is over. | |
We live in a world with a complete and total mixture of black and white, of cultures, of music and food and politicians and ideas and voices. | |
And you name it, biracial, multiracial, transracial, whatever you want to call it. | |
It's over with. | |
We're done. | |
It doesn't matter anymore. | |
You're using this canard. | |
It's all you've got. | |
And when you're raised, by the way, with a fellow, with a man, who seems like a nice man, your father, Mr. Floyd, who spent his life involved in this. | |
Argument in this fighting civil rights, which was a huge, huge problem. | |
And many would submit that it's not there. | |
But the thing is, is that if they lose racism, and I mean the people who are the racial arsonists, the people who have this chip permanently fused on their shoulder, like a hump, like some... | |
If you take this away, then they're going to have to work and perform on the same playing field that you and I do. | |
This has nothing to do with race. | |
Nothing. | |
And she can't understand it. | |
What does she do? | |
She goes to a church, a black church known for and that is a part of this Important historical aspect from the Civil Rights, Dr. King. | |
And she does the usual thing. | |
She has a note. | |
She's reading. | |
She doesn't even know the argument. | |
She's so disconnected with the idea of racism, she has to remind herself on paper because she doesn't buy it. | |
She doesn't buy it. | |
If anything, if anything, and I know nobody wants to talk about it, It helps you. | |
Being a black woman today could help you. | |
Don't ask Rachel Dolezal that because she's a trans racist. | |
We'll talk about that some other time. | |
She's using some argument that might have worked, I don't know when, but how dare you try to dredge up Drag out and review and put this into the same context of Dr. King and social civil rights. | |
You did this. | |
You did this. | |
This is you. | |
100% you. | |
Not your race. | |
No. | |
That's the thing. | |
That's the best part. | |
You have you to blame. | |
Nobody else. | |
Congratulations! | |
You wanted equality? | |
You got it. | |
This is equality. | |
Now you're going to suffer. | |
And now you're going to have to learn that what you've done, what you've done is 100% you. | |
And America has had it. | |
America has had this argument. | |
It's like disco. | |
It's like vaudeville. | |
It's like bell-bottoms. | |
It's a fad. | |
It's old. | |
It's done. | |
Remember, During the times of Emma Goldman, Sacco and Vanzetti, one of the biggest fears, this was pre-Red Scare, but it was anarchy, anarchists. | |
Sacco and Vanzetti, Emma Goldman, not anarcho-syndicalists, but anarchists. | |
We don't even hear this now. | |
Did you ever hear about the anarchists? | |
You understand this? | |
What's his name? | |
Michael Malice or whatever? | |
You know, nobody even understands what anarchy is. | |
It's the same thing. | |
Racism? | |
One day you're going to be talking to your grandchildren, maybe your children, and they're going to say, tell me about this thing. | |
That's right. | |
There were people in our country who were denied employment, denied occupancy, because they were black. | |
Because they were black? | |
But now it's because they're white in some cases, because of some weird title shift that being white is now considered not just the minority, but the evil. | |
Because you will hear... | |
White as a pejorative, an old white man, as an angry white man. | |
MAGA, white nationalism, white supremacy, white populism, white, white, white, white, white, white, white, white. | |
And your kids will say, so being black was a problem? | |
Yes, it was. | |
People couldn't go into stores because of this. | |
When was this? | |
I'll show you pictures. | |
This is how alien is. | |
Because today, I don't know what you're talking about. | |
That argument's done. | |
And I know this completely, completely angers people because there are people who are hanging on to this like you cannot believe. | |
Don't take racism away from me. | |
Now, don't get me wrong. | |
Racism exists. | |
Transgenderism exists. | |
Transphobia exists. | |
Misogyny. | |
Misandry. | |
Yes. | |
How much? | |
That's a different story. | |
How much? | |
There are school boards now. | |
There are schools and school boards where they want children, school children, to learn, as part of the curriculum, the horrors of white Whatever it is. | |
Separatism, whatever it is. | |
There are people, there are politicians today who actually are saying, actually with a straight face, we believe in reparations. | |
We want you, who has absolutely no connection whatsoever to slavery other than some historical horror. | |
Horror. | |
And by the way... | |
I was reading something the other day about, was it Gates, the Harvard professor on, what am I trying to say? | |
You know, your legacy, you know, that kind of thing. | |
Anyway, genealogy, I should say. | |
That the number of slaves over a 300-year period that ended up here, Compared to the rest of the world? | |
It was de minimis. | |
I'm not even going to go there. | |
Al Sharpton is now irrelevant because he is an anachronism from a time that doesn't feed this anymore. | |
It's like an old hippie or it's somebody who... | |
If you've ever seen an old rocker, some guy who doesn't know that the Beatles are over, they're walking around, he has a bald head, but a ponytail wears tie-dye and does peace. | |
He's living from a time that... | |
Now again, no matter how many times I say this, somebody's going to misunderstand me, so I'm going to say it for the last time. | |
Nobody's saying that racism is dead, whatever that means. | |
But it's over as an excuse. | |
And Fannie Willis owes everything to her own big mouth and her arrogance. | |
That's what got her going. | |
It's her big mouth. | |
It's this idea that I don't need. | |
It's a personality disorder. | |
This is what this is really about. | |
Remember, remember what I'm saying? | |
All of this, all of this, in case you did not hear me yesterday, this is important to understand. | |
Had she said, Your Honor, Judge McAfee, just so that you know this, I had sex with and a relationship with Mr. Wade. | |
I hired him because I was having sex with Mr. Wade. | |
He is incompetent, and I hired him in my office. | |
And I hired him because we were having an affair, because we were involved romantically. | |
I hired him because of that. | |
That's why I did it. | |
It's not because... | |
So let me just make sure. | |
There would be no hearing. | |
There would be no Terrence Bradley. | |
There would be no Nathan Wade. | |
There would be nothing. | |
Now, he might have some divorce problems. | |
Sparky says, Henry Louis Skip Gates is a big hero in the genealogy community. | |
Yes. | |
And also, I think, Sparky, one day we're going to find out that that is so bogus. | |
Not necessarily, but how many times do you think people pad They're provenance. | |
Okay? | |
I have no genealogy. | |
None. | |
And I'll leave it at that. | |
Now, let's go through a few things. | |
What is going to happen in this case? | |
Let me try to remind you again of what we have right now. | |
President Donald Trump, president, not ex-president, he's always called president. | |
Always. | |
President Nixon was President Nixon. | |
President Johnson was right. | |
It sticks. | |
You're highest off. | |
They used to call Claude Pepper who died or retired as a Florida congressman. | |
They called him senator because he was a senator before he was a congressman. | |
And I'm sure his congressional buddies loved that because they considered that to be a higher In any event, he is looking at racketeering. | |
The President of the United States is looking at racketeering. | |
And let me tell you something. | |
If you think there is nothing to this case, if you think it is absurd, if you think there is absolutely nothing to fake electors or getting on the phone or working, I mean, it could be the worst case. | |
It could be a dog. | |
But if you think that there's nothing to this, that they just picked... | |
Let me give you an example. | |
Let's assume... | |
Let's assume that somebody charged the president with arson. | |
And you say, arson? | |
Yes, arson. | |
What does arson have to do with anything? | |
Precisely. | |
I mean, he didn't even start, there was no fire. | |
Precisely. | |
That would be a case of absolutely nothing to do with arson. | |
There is no arson. | |
Okay? | |
This isn't like that. | |
If you think that the president has no exposure, that no rational jury... | |
Could not find him guilty of something. | |
And that it could not be upheld on appeal? | |
You don't know what's going on here. | |
You have no idea. | |
That's what they're telling you. | |
I get these people all the time. | |
Joe Concha. | |
Poor Joe Concha. | |
Jonathan Turley. | |
Dershowitz. | |
Who were the others? | |
Greg Jarrett, good guy, but they missed the point. | |
They missed the point. | |
They're saying, you don't understand. | |
This is ridiculous. | |
No, you don't understand. | |
You're on Fox News or Newsmax or whatever these other stations are, and you have to say this to the constituency. | |
See, if I go on and I say, if you think for a moment, If you think for a moment that there's no chance they can convict President Trump or throw him in jail or prison, you're out of your mind. | |
They're not going to have me on anymore because they're going to go, boo! | |
And I see this all the time here, boo! | |
Don't say anything about Tucker, boo! | |
I mean, you don't understand what's going on. | |
I get this all the time with Putin. | |
If you think... | |
If you think, if you honestly do, if you think that Putin's just a bad guy and that he's doing this because he's kind of crazy, you don't understand anything about anything. | |
Boo! | |
Putin supporter, Putin lover. | |
No, this is, no. | |
This is reality. | |
It's realism. | |
I've talked to friends in my grade. | |
I said, they said, what is this business about? | |
Israel being charged with genocide. | |
I said, do you understand what genocide is under the convention? | |
What? | |
Did you read the statute, what genocide means? | |
I don't want to read. | |
That's crazy. | |
What are you? | |
What are you, an anti-Semite? | |
I get that all the time. | |
See how it works? | |
If I don't like what you say, you're a racist, you're an anti-Semite, you're a Putin apologist, whatever it is, you're just, this is where we are today. | |
Nobody wants to know the facts. | |
They just want to hear, like, just tell me something that I agree with. | |
There's this thing about ice cream. | |
Ice cream is a mixture of sweet sugar, salt, and fat that does not exist in nature. | |
It doesn't. | |
Milk is not like that. | |
Cream is not like that. | |
Nothing exists with this salt, Sugar and fat. | |
It doesn't exist. | |
It's created artificially. | |
That's why people love it. | |
It's not either or. | |
No, it's this thing. | |
And other people say, hey, this is great too. | |
Let's take this. | |
Let's take a potato. | |
Let's fry it. | |
Throw salt on it. | |
Can we sweeten it a little bit? | |
Oh, close. | |
And we'll give somebody, say, ooh, I like this. | |
Even though it'll kill you. | |
Even though it's the worst thing, it doesn't exist in nature. | |
And God would say, what are you doing? | |
I'm frying. | |
Why are you frying things? | |
I'm cooking. | |
You don't have to fry. | |
No, no, no, no, no. | |
What do you? | |
No. | |
That's who we are. | |
We do the same thing with our news. | |
Tell me what I want to hear. | |
Don't tell me the truth. | |
Tell me, make fun of Fannie. | |
Make fun of Trump. | |
Support Trump. | |
Support Fanny. | |
Whatever it is. | |
And you tune in to your narrow vision so that you will see what people... | |
This repeats. | |
There was a case... | |
I'm not going to mention names. | |
There was a woman who does a podcast and all she did was make fun of Fanny. | |
That's it. | |
Now, I will tell you things that you will laugh at because it's true. | |
I'm not making fun of her. | |
I'm not saying, oh, she's so stupid. | |
Oh, she's so fat. | |
Oh, she's so ugly. | |
Look at that hair. | |
No, no, no, no, no. | |
And by the way, her dress was not backwards, but it was fun to laugh at. | |
Okay. | |
That's not it. | |
I'm talking about what's happening here. | |
And I'm talking about, if I sat down with, if we had a couple of drinks with Judge McAfee, I'd say, well, here's the story. | |
If you do not disqualify her, you legally will not be making any real mistake. | |
Legally. | |
Legally, you will not. | |
Okay? | |
I'm telling you right now. | |
However, politically, you're dead. | |
You're a Republican. | |
You were appointed by Kemp. | |
I mean, you're dead. | |
You're dead politically. | |
This is why. | |
This is why. | |
They believe that some judges say they should not be subject to the vote. | |
And I disagree with that vehemently. | |
Because everything is subject to the vote. | |
And you can say that about judges, about politicians, about anything else. | |
I like the fact, do you agree? | |
By the way, do you think that judges should be voted? | |
Yes or no? | |
Do you as a person want to say, I want to vote this guy out? | |
I don't want some committee, I don't want some commission, some blue chip, blue white shoe, bunch of professors and eggheads who decide who the judges are, merit retention. | |
Do you believe that you have the right to vote for these judges? | |
Yes or no? | |
Do you believe? | |
Do you believe that you have the right? | |
Yes, you do. | |
Raul says it. | |
Yes. | |
Kim says it. | |
Yes. | |
Of course. | |
I believe in the American way. | |
I believe in you. | |
You may not be perfect. | |
You may not get it right all the time. | |
I believe in you. | |
I believe in the vote. | |
I believe in people getting together and saying, I'm going to say something about this. | |
I'm going to say something about this. | |
I am. | |
Me. | |
I'm going to do this. | |
Pretty soon they're going to say, well, you know, we don't think you should vote for... | |
It should be lifetime appointments. | |
What? | |
People have a hard time with this. | |
Federal court, lifetime. | |
I mean, it's moot at this point. | |
This is something which is a balance. | |
This is a balance. | |
This is something which I can't put into words. | |
This is something which is so good here. | |
I'm going to say this again. | |
This is the most important part. | |
Fannie Willis is demented. | |
She's this weird personality. | |
She's this entitled... | |
I'm not going to use words that I think you could go crazy with it. | |
And people say, oh, you're being misogynist. | |
No, I'm not. | |
Look at this. | |
Our good friend says, watching from Australia. | |
Thanks for the content. | |
Thank you so much. | |
Let me see. | |
It is 1.10. | |
It's about 12.30 at night, right? | |
Roughly? | |
Midnight? | |
It's like... | |
12 plus 2 or something? | |
God bless the Aussies. | |
God bless them. | |
An attitude? | |
Sky News is the best. | |
CBS Australia, excuse me, 60 Minutes Australia is the greatest. | |
It's an attitude. | |
See, they think differently. | |
You ever see Mr. Inbetween? | |
Love that. | |
I think that's right. | |
Mr. Inbetween? | |
Love it. | |
Anyway, so we go back in this. | |
So I would tell Judge McAfee, you're done politically. | |
If you do this, you're through. | |
You're through. | |
Now, legally, you can go either way. | |
Absolutely. | |
By the way, there was a great summation that somebody thought, somebody thought, of a judge who was talking about things that she did that were wrong. | |
No. | |
I love this, T-Mom. | |
You are awesome. | |
Love this channel. | |
That means more than anything else. | |
Thank you for that. | |
I appreciate this. | |
Let me give you an example of this. | |
This is the most important. | |
There was a lawyer who would say, and I would love to be the judge, and I would say, by the way, excuse me, all the arguments, unless you're addressing conflict of interest, conflict of interest, don't tell me where she did something wrong. | |
I know that. | |
This isn't the bar review. | |
This is not a disciplinary court. | |
This is not anything like that. | |
Tell me what she did that would warrant and necessitate removal because of a conflict of interest. | |
Translation, how has she, this is important, how has she basically Does she have a stake in the case? | |
Not where she's made a mistake. | |
It's not my fault. | |
Let's assume that I am a judge and one of the defense lawyers is out and he gets arrested for DUI during the trial. | |
Do I remove him from the case? | |
No. | |
No. | |
What does this have to do with the conflict? | |
Nothing. | |
But he did something wrong. | |
Sparky says, hang on a minute. | |
Sparky says, genealogy is an interesting pastime. | |
Knew little of dad's family. | |
My research revealed they had a network of horse thieves throughout the 12 or 13 colonies who diversified into highway robbery. | |
Ah! | |
Such a wonderful lineage, Sparky. | |
Thank you. | |
I had bootleggers on both sides of my family. | |
On my father's side and my mother's side. | |
And my mother, my great-grandfather was a corrupt cop who was a bootlegger who used to have my grandmother and my great-grandmother deliver booze in the back of cars and they would bring my grandmother and her brother along. | |
As a diversion, as they would deliver booze. | |
So, there you go. | |
Very proud of that. | |
We have no lineage whatsoever, other than whatever it is. | |
Survival, I think, is a lineage. | |
Now, going back to what we're talking about here, which is critical. | |
This thing is going to go, and the judge absolutely... | |
Sparky says, Fannie's mendacity is the main issue, isn't it? | |
No. | |
It's not the main issue. | |
The issue is, has it, well, let me see. | |
Has she shown, does she have a stake in the case? | |
No. | |
I don't think there's any evidence whatsoever. | |
Nothing. | |
Unjust enrichment? | |
No. | |
I don't think the argument's going to be made. | |
Well, she hired him because she wanted to. | |
Well, she may have done something in the past, but how is the case compromised now? | |
If it were to go on, How is President Trump deprived of a fair trial? | |
Or anybody else for the matter? | |
How is he deprived of a fair trial? | |
If this is allowed to proceed? | |
I think he's looking terrific. | |
Because, Sparky and others, I think the name Fannie Willis is synonymous with a joke. | |
A bad joke. | |
I think that the best thing that ever could happen to him is for this case to go on. | |
This is terrific! | |
Every time I get the chance to say Fanny, I would do it. | |
I would make sure this is Fanny. | |
That's the one? | |
Yep. | |
She's ruined. | |
She's through. | |
She's under this delusion. | |
This is what's interesting. | |
This is more of the personality. | |
She thinks that somehow she is just this beloved, you know, I don't want to say, keep saying proud black woman, but when she went to that church, And she basically said that this was about that. | |
I thought to myself, you have got to be kidding me. | |
Stand by for one moment, my dear friends. | |
You know, I want to... | |
Tell you that there are some wonderful, wonderful people and wonderful, wonderful folks and people that have been such a great, great part of our show. | |
Great sponsors like this great American. | |
Well, it is time yet again, my friends, to hail and salute our great friends at MyPillow.com. | |
And if you use promo code Lionel, you'll get a free gift. | |
No purchase necessary. | |
Yes, I know, a free gift. | |
It's a tautology, so sue me. | |
But first, please listen. | |
What are we talking about here? | |
Down comforters, flannel sheets, Giza dream bed sheets, MyPillow 2.0 sheets, slippers, percales, towels, quilts, bedspreads, mattresses, mattress covers, mattress toppers, linens, kitchen towels, bathrobes, name it! | |
Literally name it! | |
Items to help you luxuriate and relax. | |
And their monster sellers? | |
Slippers. | |
My slippers. | |
That's right, slip-ons, moccasins. | |
Think about it. | |
What do they do at MyPillow? | |
They make things real soft and plush and comfrey. | |
How perfect. | |
Here's the link. | |
MyPillow.com promo code LINO or MyPillow.com slash solidus or virgule slash LINO or call 800-645-4965. | |
Watch how fast Mike answers the phone. | |
MyPillow.com promo code Lionel. | |
Promo code Lionel. | |
Simply and absolutely the best. | |
The question that people have to recognize, of course, is how has President Trump been compromised by this? | |
How? | |
Through what machination? | |
Through what? | |
How does this work? | |
Explain that to me. | |
I don't know. | |
I don't know. | |
What has she done? | |
What if Mr. Wade, he's not there anymore, he doesn't work anymore? | |
Why? | |
Let's say he's just gone. | |
Okay, see ya. | |
God forbid he drops dead. | |
God forbid. | |
What happens? | |
What's the point? | |
Nothing. | |
How does this affect anything? | |
I don't know. | |
What's the big deal? | |
I don't know. | |
How is this? | |
What does this do? | |
Now remember, if Fannie Wilson... | |
Well, I keep saying Wilson. | |
Let's say she was having an affair with a defense lawyer. | |
That might be something. | |
Now, that's interesting. | |
That's a conflict of interest. | |
That could have a stake in the outcome. | |
Sparky says, my family would likely have ended up doing business with yours, except mine apparently got religion in the Second Great Awakening. | |
What kind of religion? | |
I appreciate what you're saying. | |
Thank you for that. | |
Were they Muslims? | |
Did they become Zoroastrian? | |
No. | |
No. | |
Now, let me explain something. | |
Here's what happens next. | |
Somebody's going to sit back and explain to Fannie what she did. | |
She doesn't understand this. | |
You do understand, right? | |
She has no idea. | |
She says, these racist, ugly, because I'm a woman, I'm black, I'm successful, I'm beautiful, they're arrogant. | |
It's not me. | |
It's not me. | |
This is almost, this is a behavior, a behavioral problem. | |
This is almost like, it's not psychopathy per se, but it's something very, very similar to it. | |
It's this inability, she thinks she can talk to it. | |
Did you see yesterday, when she was sitting there watching, kind of rocking, watching this with a look of contempt, she exudes contempt. | |
If this was a movie, they would say, let me show you something. | |
Fanny, this is you on video. | |
See what you're doing? | |
Yeah, you can't do this. | |
You come across like an absolute buffoon, like an arrogant people hate you. | |
And let me tell you something. | |
Number one, do you know who hates you more? | |
Let me ask you a question. | |
Who hates? | |
Who hates? | |
Look at this. | |
Sharon from Edinburgh. | |
Welcome, Sharon. | |
Sharon and others, who hates? | |
When I say hate, dislike. | |
Who dislikes and hates Fannie Moore? | |
Men or women? | |
What do you think? | |
Who looks at her and says, men or women? | |
Yes. | |
Yes. | |
And by the way, Bobby, I want to know about how she got her millions too. | |
How did you get $8 million? | |
You've never had a real job. | |
You were a municipal job. | |
How did this happen? | |
I think that's relevant. | |
Who hates women? | |
Women. | |
Sean says women. | |
Who hates women? | |
Women. | |
Look at this. | |
Team mom. | |
Women. | |
Yep. | |
Protected 20. Women. | |
Women. | |
We are super pissed off about this. | |
I guess women. | |
Women. | |
Women. | |
Oh, by the way, I must say this. | |
My friends, I need at least 9,000 likes. | |
I need 9,000 likes. | |
I know that may sound like a little bit too much for you, but I just need 9,000 likes. | |
Thank you very much. | |
It helps tremendously, as you can imagine, this algorithm. | |
They're constantly reminding us about this algorithm. | |
We are not to remind you to the point of being obnoxious, and I certainly understand that. | |
Our good man Okira says, why is MSNBC and CNN framing this case as if Fannie didn't do anything wrong? | |
Is that the case is weak? | |
Oh, oh. | |
Okira, thank you. | |
It's a good question. | |
First of all, the case, number one, I think in some respects is weak as to conflict of interest. | |
As to being DQ'd or disqualified for conflict of interest. | |
That's number one. | |
However, it is not weak when it comes to this other This catastrophe, this judicial cancer that she created out of nowhere. | |
She has so compromised the integrity and the respect of the court. | |
I don't think anybody, I don't think, put it this way, I was a judge, that the people of Fulton County can get a good job, a fair job, a fair trial. | |
Similar to this, you know there's this move always for a change of venue. | |
You know that? | |
Change of venue is never, is never successful. | |
And the reason why is that, where are you going to go when people never heard of this? | |
Especially this case. | |
You can go to Alaska, they've heard about this, by virtue of the internet and everything else. | |
And the reason for this is that, have you so tainted the jury pool? | |
Can the people, remember, it's the people of Georgia, Georgia versus, but particularly Fulton County. | |
Those people, through their elected official, through their DA, their district attorney, Fannie, are they able to get a fair trial? | |
No! | |
I'm not worried about Trump. | |
I'm worried about her. | |
Her office has so contaminated... | |
There is no way. | |
There is no way. | |
If I have a... | |
How do I say this? | |
If I have a lawyer who is in my court and he has showed nothing but contempt and yelled and showed up drunk and just screamed at the jury... | |
In order to maintain the integrity of the court itself and the case, I can bounce in. | |
I can say, you're out of here. | |
You're out of here. | |
You have done, because I'm trying to say, I don't want to declare a mistrial, which could also happen. | |
Now, remember something. | |
Now, listen to me very carefully. | |
And by the way, before I forget, let me get to our good friend Sparky. | |
Sparky who says, Sparky says, I may have mentioned it before. | |
Fannie Wallace has been known as a spoiled, somewhat strange rich kid in the Atlanta legal community before the Trump issue. | |
I think that would certainly not surprise me in the least. | |
In the least. | |
And of course, women are going to have the hardest problem. | |
But let me ask you fine folks this. | |
What if I were to tell the judge? | |
Pardon me, judge. | |
Yes. | |
Nobody knows about this. | |
What? | |
Nobody knows about this. | |
Nobody knows about this matter. | |
The jury, I don't even know if there's been a jury, I don't think there's even been a jury picked. | |
I think this is all pre-trial. | |
I think. | |
I may be wrong. | |
I think there's no trials. | |
This is all pre-trial stuff. | |
But anyway, there's no jury who knows about this. | |
But who will not? | |
Who will not know this? | |
Aaron Fletcher says, is the standard in this case the appearance of a conflict or an actual conflict of case? | |
That's an entirely different consideration for the judge. | |
Aaron, thank you very much. | |
I believe, sir, the issue would be an actual conflict, not the appearance. | |
I believe there must be a real conflict or something where you have shown that somebody has a stake in the case. | |
Something that... | |
It so invalidates, so disrupts, so interferes with this, that it's not just, it's like, well, she looks kind of, well, maybe they're, I don't know. | |
Look, does it make any difference, sir, that Ashley, a merchant, and her husband are working together? | |
Does that make any sense? | |
No. | |
Well, if they can work together, why can't Fannie work with, what's his name? | |
I don't know. | |
So what I'm saying is that it's an interesting case. | |
I do not believe it's the mere appearance of... | |
Because how do you... | |
By what standard do you go to an appellate court and say, Your Honor, we like to appeal this way. | |
There was not an appearance. | |
Well, there was an appearance, but not a big appearance. | |
Well, how big of an appearance is there? | |
I don't know. | |
An appearance? | |
An appearance is very subjective. | |
I like there is a conflict. | |
But here's my question. | |
How can anybody claim that there's going to be anything fair coming up after this? | |
Her name is forever. | |
It's Mudd, to use the Dr. Mudd case. | |
It's gone. | |
It's through. | |
It's, I mean, it is so... | |
Now remember, let me ask you this. | |
Let's say during jury selection. | |
Let's say during a change of venue. | |
That's another one, too. | |
God forbid. | |
A change of venue to go to another county, another part of the state where they've got to get up and go try the case over there where they've got a different jury pool and a different group of people. | |
Do you think anybody anywhere exists who doesn't know about this? | |
No. | |
It comes down to simply this. | |
People hate her. | |
It's this stupid lying. | |
That's the thing which is That's the conflict of interest. | |
People hate her. | |
I don't know if the people of Fulton County could ever get a fair trial with her at the helm. | |
Sparky says, mostly Baptist and Methodist, but one many great uncle was oldest Mormon convert, and his son was a right-hand man of Joseph Smith's. | |
Mormons were a rough crowd in those days, not exactly the Osmonds. | |
Oh, that's true. | |
In fact, Sparky, remember, polygamy, the Mormons were so despised in certain circles, so monumentally despised, that in 1856, | |
don't hold me to that, but the first Republican In 1850, whatever, the position, what they were actually arguing for, was to remove the twin, they called it, quote, the twin pillars of barbarism, slavery and polygamy. | |
That's why when Mitt Romney was talking about Romney, there were people who said, ooh, ooh. | |
Now, I was not raised around any religious antipathy towards the Mormons, but it existed big time. | |
Now, remember, of the three people, who was the most interesting? | |
Fanny, Nathan, or Terrence, in your opinion? | |
Who is the one, the story, you can do a storyline, or you want to be an actor, you want to either that or explain, or who is the most interesting character? | |
Who is the behavior that blows you up? | |
We've got to vote for it. | |
Next, Pharaoh says Terrence. | |
Who? | |
Terrence, Nathan, or Fanny? | |
Who is, to you, the one that fascinates you the most? | |
The one where you say, this is the story. | |
They say beauty is, don't forget, beauty is skin deep and ugly is to the bone. | |
Tony says Fanny. | |
Raul says Bradley. | |
Bob says, dumb question. | |
Terrence, Terrence, Fanny, Fanny. | |
Terrence is the one. | |
Terrence Bradley. | |
Absolutely. | |
The most... | |
It is the story I don't understand. | |
Because I understand everybody else. | |
I understand. | |
Okay, Fanny, I got it. | |
Self-preservation. | |
Okay, fine. | |
And don't think for a moment. | |
Don't think that there is not a sense of... | |
Dare I even say... | |
Can I say this? | |
A sense of... | |
Domination on the part of Fannie. | |
Fannie says, I got this guy. | |
I'm the boss. | |
You work for me. | |
I'm going to throw you some money. | |
We're going to go party. | |
Men have been doing this for years. | |
This is women obviously securing a moment of whatever it is. | |
This is Fannie. | |
She's saying, absolutely. | |
I'm in charge. | |
Not you. | |
I'm in charge. | |
Not you. | |
You want to stay with me? | |
You want to play with me? | |
Fine. | |
Do the right thing. | |
You're mine. | |
And we're going to go over here. | |
He even brought his mother at one particular time. | |
We're going to go here, here, here, and here. | |
And also, I don't care what anybody says. | |
And if you've ever known or been in an office or been, especially at a courthouse, the courthouse used to be It is rumor central. | |
Who's stopping whom? | |
This one's over here. | |
You know everything. | |
Nobody can keep their mouth shut. | |
Nobody. | |
There's a pun there somewhere, but nobody. | |
And what's also interesting in all this nonsense, what's fascinating, is that in this particular case, with all this going on right now, this was the guy that basically did what he had to do. | |
Going through a divorce. | |
He's going here. | |
Quarter to midnight. | |
He's going over there to her place. | |
I don't know where Joyce and the wife is, but goes over to her place. | |
Foodie call. | |
Quarter to 12. Quarter to midnight. | |
Till 4 in the morning. | |
On September the 11th alone and then some other time too. | |
It's just beautiful. | |
And then here's the best part. | |
To show you how depraved Fanny is. | |
She doesn't even have... | |
She's not even smart enough to say, I can't say that. | |
To her motion, it says, these findings, this thing called cell hawk, this particular provision, this application that determines where you are by tracking cell data, this isn't reliable. | |
Excuse me, your office has been doing this. | |
Now you just opened the door for defendants and others to come forward and perhaps do a motion to set aside a trial claiming that this is... | |
You just basically said, what? | |
You said, what? | |
Because she doesn't care. | |
And she says, just because you've got this cell mark or cell hawk data that shows he and his phone went from this area, which could or couldn't have been his home, to this part, which could or couldn't have been where I am, within a particular cell distance, that doesn't mean anything. | |
No, Fanny. | |
In the middle of the night, for reasons we don't understand, almost before midnight, Mr. Wade, using his phone, that is his phone, happened to be around his home. | |
Don't know if it is. | |
Maybe he has another house. | |
Maybe he was sleeping in his car near his home. | |
So he left near his home to go near your home at a quarter to midnight. | |
And stay there until four in the morning. | |
And left near your... | |
Who knows? | |
Maybe there was an all-night laundromat there. | |
Maybe they were playing pickleball late at night. | |
I don't know. | |
Maybe he has another mistress. | |
Maybe he has another booty call. | |
I don't know. | |
You're right about that. | |
No reason to think it's you, even though it's within one... | |
This particular area goes from here to Hapeville or whatever it is. | |
Right there. | |
And then once he gets back home, he calls you. | |
Calls you. | |
What a late night stuff going on here. | |
I'm surprised you're in any shape the next morning. | |
This is how they don't care about insulting you. | |
Because Fanny just says stuff. | |
It's like a child. | |
Sparky says, Hard to believe that such an S-show could have been concocted, even by Intel. | |
But the Fanny Wallace affair has been quite the distraction. | |
From what I'm not sure, maybe everything. | |
Well, I would love to think, dear friend, that This was somehow the concoction of intel deep staters and the like. | |
I do not believe that. | |
I think this has happened. | |
I don't think Ashley Merchant ever knew this would even go this far. | |
I don't think she ever, ever imagined it for a moment. | |
But here's the best part. | |
This is the best part. | |
The guy that I love is Terrence Bradley. | |
And I would love to say, Terrence, did you have any beef with Wade? | |
Nathan Wade? | |
No. | |
I know you were let go. | |
Presumably, we find out, because of a sexual assault allegation in the law firm against some worker. | |
Did you hold a grudge against Wade for that? | |
Well, not really. | |
And isn't it sad that that even came out? | |
That came out by virtue of Anna Cross, who represents Fulton County. | |
Now, here's the best part. | |
Anna Cross says, I am objecting to Mr. Bradley testifying about any conversation he had with Nathan Wade because it's privileged. | |
Wait a minute. | |
What? | |
It's privileged. | |
You care? | |
About a privileged communication? | |
Shouldn't Mr. Bradley be making that objection? | |
Shouldn't Mr. Wade be making it? | |
You're not even a part of this. | |
It's like me objecting. | |
Excuse me. | |
Who are you? | |
I'm in the back. | |
You don't have to answer that. | |
Husband and wife privilege. | |
Excuse me. | |
Do you have standing? | |
No. | |
What are you doing? | |
I'm just watching. | |
You can't invoke an objection. | |
Stop objecting. | |
You're in the audience. | |
You're not a part of this. | |
Well, Anna. | |
Is not a part of this relationship. | |
She can't do this. | |
I'm sorry. | |
So let me get this straight, Ms. Cross. | |
Apparently you don't want Mr. Bradley to say this yet. | |
It's because it's true, isn't it? | |
You're damn right it's true. | |
That's why I want to keep it up. | |
Then she turns around and says, okay. | |
And if that doesn't work... | |
Don't believe this sack of you-know-what anyway because, by the way, this guy was fired because of a sex abuse. | |
Now you're impeaching him. | |
By the way, impeachment in evidence means you are making the person look bad. | |
You are calling into question motivation, reliability. | |
It's called impeaching the witness. | |
Prior and consistent statements, bias, you can do anything. | |
Excuse me, you're the defendant's mother, aren't you? | |
Yes. | |
And you wouldn't want to see anything bad happen to him. | |
No, thank you very much. | |
That's kind of impeachment. | |
It's not that you're lying, but it's your son. | |
It tells the trier of fact, the judge in this case, don't give this guy much credit. | |
Because we're going to show you the bias or whatever he has. | |
So in one minute, she doesn't want him to talk. | |
And the other occasion, she says, but even if he does talk, He's full of shit. | |
Isn't it beautiful? | |
So Anna, you don't want him to testify, Mr. Bradley, because he's telling the truth. | |
That's right. | |
And that's why you're coming up with this crazy objection. | |
Right. | |
But he's full of it because of yes. | |
Okay. | |
Whatever. | |
If that's the way it is, I guess that's the way it is. | |
Interesting. | |
I never thought of it that way, but thank you very much. | |
Then, Mr. Bradley, what were you doing here? | |
Do you not like Mr. Wade? | |
No. | |
Did you hear the latest? | |
Where he said, I haven't talked to Wade. | |
By the way, you've got to understand something. | |
This is the way Terrence Bradley testifies. | |
Have you seen, have you, Mr. Bradley, and I'm paraphrasing. | |
Mr. Bradley, have you spoken to Nathan Wade? | |
No. | |
Yes. | |
One. | |
No, two years ago. | |
He goes from no, yes, one to two. | |
Now, which of those is the answer? | |
They never nail him down. | |
Excuse me. | |
Which one of those four possible? | |
He does this all the time. | |
Yes, no, well, yes, once, no, twice. | |
This isn't an answer. | |
This is the answer. | |
He goes to every conceivable. | |
Mr. Bradley, how do you plead guilty? | |
Not guilty. | |
No contest. | |
Okay, thank you. | |
Wait a minute. | |
Hold it. | |
Which one is it? | |
I've never seen anybody do this. | |
He gives you all of the potential answers and you pick out which one. | |
So technically, is he lying? | |
I don't know. | |
Yes. | |
No. | |
Which one is it? | |
And they don't stop him. | |
They don't nail him. | |
They don't say you can't do this. | |
Anyway. | |
So he said, I haven't talked to him in a couple of years. | |
So supposedly, or supposedly as people say, they get this call from some witness who says, listen, I'm a waiter or something. | |
And I saw these two together. | |
And I heard him say that. | |
I think he called Lift a Voicemail or something on Merchant's... | |
I keep saying Ashley Merchant. | |
I'm so confused. | |
Ashley... | |
Yes, Ashley Merchant on her cell phone. | |
Sparky says, Hapeville is the home of the original Chick-fil-A. | |
The Dwarf House. | |
It's open 24-6, not on Sunday. | |
Maybe made like to eat Chick-fil-A. | |
Interesting. | |
Interesting. | |
You know what? | |
It could very well be. | |
And let me just tell you something. | |
Chick-fil-A in my... | |
I remember when Chick-fil-A first opened. | |
I think it was in high school. | |
It is a fine... | |
And how they're trying to... | |
See this guy from the New York Times? | |
They're trying to say that Chick-fil-A is somehow associated with racism or something. | |
It's absurd. | |
So what says Judge McAfee is young with a young family. | |
I fear the White House may threaten his future. | |
Unless he dismisses the case? | |
Almost is so... | |
America is so corrupt now. | |
Well, put it this way. | |
That's a very good point. | |
And thank you for that. | |
America is beyond corrupt. | |
It's so corrupt, it's really funny. | |
There are always political considerations in this. | |
Here's what they're going to say. | |
First of all, Fannie, you're done. | |
You are done. | |
No future judgeships. | |
She might win re-election, interestingly enough. | |
No future judgeships. | |
No governor. | |
No nothing. | |
No federal judge. | |
Even in this bizarro world of the people that Joe Biden has nominated for the judge. | |
Not even that. | |
Number two. | |
They're going to say to... | |
Judge McAfee, listen, if you DQ this, you are going to be the hero of the Republican Party. | |
Plus, you can hide behind your decision as a judge, your position as a judge. | |
So, you can do this. | |
If you don't, if you don't, and you let her continue with this, You are dead with your Republicans. | |
And the Democrats don't give a damn about you one way or the other. | |
So, there's no threatening here. | |
There's no threat. | |
Okay? | |
Trust me. | |
If you go ahead and you disqualify her, you're hit with the Republicans. | |
The Democrats will hate you. | |
They're going to hate you anyway. | |
Aaron M. Fletcher says, what do you make of Judge McAfee saying he made up his mind already at the start of the closing argument? | |
That is not a good thing to say. | |
You should never say that, even if you believe it. | |
I think, very frankly, I would have my position, and this would be, I am not going to disqualify Willis because of conflict of interest. | |
I'm going to disqualify your entire office because this case is so corrupt. | |
That I am telling you, the court believes nothing any of you says. | |
You have lied to me. | |
Repeatedly. | |
To the point. | |
And this has nothing to do with this. | |
This is me telling you. | |
I am telling you right now. | |
I'm either going to have to recuse myself, and correct me if I'm wrong, he must be the trial judge in this, because I think he's handling it. | |
I don't think he'd be handling this pre-trial motion and not do the case. | |
But anyway. | |
He's got to be able to say, I don't believe anything you've said. | |
The lying you've done, what you have done and said to me, there is no comparison. | |
Nothing can explain the degree of contempt that you've shown this court by virtue of these lies. | |
You have lied about... | |
You have lied about everything. | |
You have attributed this to people hating you, race. | |
What you did, I'm also going to refer you to the Georgia Professional Ethics Committee because what you did was it is clearly written that you cannot utilize, you cannot Propound the notion of racism and the like in a matter that you are handling as district attorney. | |
Leticia James in New York wouldn't have done that. | |
Nobody would do this. | |
Nobody. | |
This is so... | |
I'm not even sure if Tiffany Henyard from Dalton, Illinois would have done that. | |
Nobody does this. | |
This woman has nothing but contempt. | |
You have three people here. | |
Who just don't care. | |
It's like they do, to them, this is like the driver's license bureau or something. | |
This is nothing. | |
Wade doesn't care about the divorce. | |
Wade's hiding assets from his wife. | |
He's lying and swore it doesn't. | |
Swearing means nothing to these people. | |
Nothing. | |
Nothing. | |
Terrence Bradley basically is on the phone with, this is incredible, with Ashley Merchant saying, you go ahead. | |
I'm a little worried about this, Terrence. | |
No, no, don't worry. | |
I got your back. | |
You go ahead. | |
You're doing the right thing. | |
Listen, I may call you as a witness. | |
Don't worry about it. | |
Then when you call them, I don't remember talking to you. | |
That's my favorite. | |
Wouldn't you love this? | |
Mr. Bradley, do you say that you don't remember this yet? | |
Sir Bradley, do you have your phone with you now? | |
Yes. | |
I'm Ashley Merchant. | |
And do you have the phone with you now? | |
Is the last four digits of your, or no, does the last digit number end with the number seven? | |
Let's don't give too much away here. | |
Yes. | |
Do you remember, you look at your phone, do you have your message section? | |
Yeah. | |
Can you scroll through that, please? | |
Yes, right now. | |
By the way, this is all kinds of evidentiary. | |
Is this the best evidence rule? | |
Is this a document? | |
Do I get to see the document? | |
Are we looking at it? | |
We'll get a wrong one. | |
Would you look at your phone? | |
Yes. | |
Do you see a number of permission to approach the witness? | |
He has permission. | |
Can I show you my phone? | |
This is my phone. | |
We can get a shot of this. | |
I'll show this to co-counsel if you like. | |
Or opposing counsel. | |
This is my phone. | |
You see this on this date? | |
It says you. | |
And I say, this scares me. | |
This is an important case. | |
And you, or at least somebody calling from your phone number, says... | |
Go ahead. | |
Is this you? | |
I don't remember. | |
Excuse me. | |
Give me your phone. | |
You still have this. | |
Now, I don't believe he went stupid enough to remove the messages, but he's not stupid enough. | |
Do you still have those? | |
Yes. | |
Hey, look! | |
Look at this, Mr. Bradley. | |
Lo and behold, it's on your phone too. | |
So the number that I was calling and texting, who basically said this, appears to be on your phone. | |
So maybe Martian's got a hold of it. | |
Maybe Maybe some MAGA Trump, I don't know, got a hold of your phone, created historically, you know, time travelers, created conversations in the past completely comporting with my version of the reality, and you don't remember any of that. | |
You don't remember this. | |
And are you an amnesiac? | |
Do you suffer from any kind of neurological problem? | |
Do you remember being here the other day? | |
So you do not remember. | |
Let me get this straight. | |
On your phone, in the biggest case that's ever happened, probably in American jurisprudence, certainly in Fulton County, in a case where you worked with me preparing a motion to disqualify, which now you don't remember. | |
Then you encouraged me to follow. | |
And you gave me other information as far as information, Miss Yerdy's name, other trips. | |
And yet, you're saying now, under oath, before God and the Constitution and Judge McAfee, you're saying you don't remember? | |
Is that what you're saying? | |
Sparky says, an ancestor was jailed and bribed jailer to let him free. | |
In exchange for a horse. | |
Horse was a stolen horse, so jailer was jailed. | |
Ben Franklin related this irony in late 1740s Pennsylvania Gazette. | |
I had no idea, Sparky, that we were amidst someone of such renown. | |
And by the way, the Pennsylvanian, my favorite, if you will, American forefather is Tench Cox, who wrote I think it was the Pennsylvanian. | |
He was the foremost advocate of the militia. | |
So I thank you for that. | |
I did not know I was among such heraldic notables, as it were. | |
This is, please do me a favor, call your children and tell them, this is what happens when you lie. | |
This is what happens when you lie. | |
All of this was unnecessary. | |
Every single bit of this was unnecessary. | |
All of it. | |
She's making a fool out of you and everyone else. | |
It's that simple. | |
Hello, dear friends. | |
We have devoted an hour and almost an hour and five minutes to this. | |
Your interest, your insight, your perspective, It's brilliant. | |
I would want you as a jury. | |
I would want you as a jury. | |
Because what you do is you know common sense. | |
And you're seeing something that we just don't see. | |
Let me just say this. | |
I've never seen this before. | |
I've never seen lawyers who become the case. | |
Not President Trump. | |
Don't you hate when you've got to sneeze and you can't? | |
I hate that. | |
During OJ, never saw this. | |
Never saw this. | |
Where the lawyers... | |
Are engaged in this mini-trial, which becomes the trial. | |
It's just bizarre. | |
And all of this, they're forcing everybody to come forward and to just say, over and over and over. | |
I cannot believe this. | |
Before we go, I want to say something right now. | |
There is our good friend, A great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great person is a fellow by the name of Mike Lindell. | |
And Mike Lindell is the owner, as you know, of this thing, this wonderful place called MyPillow. | |
And MyPillow, right now, is still rocking and still rocking. | |
And if you go to MyPillow.com, promo code Lionel, you get a free gift. | |
And they are going to have a free gift. | |
If it's a gift, it's free. | |
It's redundant. | |
I know, tautological. | |
Anyway, it's wonderful. | |
So do that. | |
Make sure. | |
Make sure you understand it. | |
Make sure you understand and you grasp this. | |
And also, one more thing. | |
Prepare with Lionel.com. | |
I know people don't want to hear this. | |
But one of these days, there is going to be a disaster. | |
A disaster of untold proportion. | |
And you're going to want to need... | |
To have emergency food. | |
And you're going to say to yourself, I wish I had listened to them. | |
I didn't really listen to it before. | |
But now you're going to need it. | |
Preparewithlionel.com. | |
Preparewithlionel.com. | |
Special deal right now. | |
60 bucks you can save on a four-week emergency food kit. | |
This is your introduction to that. | |
Okay? | |
All right. | |
Okay, dear friends. | |
You have a great and a glorious and a wonderful day. | |
Let me thank all of our dear friends, all of our friends, all of our pals, all of our Sparky, thank you so much, White Monkey. | |
Oh, by the way, look at this. | |
White Monkey says, should I assume after looking at these three that the bar exam is no longer a difficult test? | |
You know, one would think that, White Monkey. | |
One would think that. | |
Or... | |
Maybe it's not a tough test, but maybe what passes or what... | |
It's hard to believe that these people ostensibly did this. | |
I don't think there's any kind of reciprocity there. | |
Aaron M. Fletcher, thank you for your kindness. | |
Is that a bow tie I see? | |
I cannot see. | |
These thumbnails are so de minimis in size. | |
So what? | |
Thank you, Sparky, again. | |
Thank you for your incredible insight and for your marvelous genealogy. | |
Okira C., thank you as well. | |
And let me see, who else do we have here? | |
We have, oh, Asaph Zeltzer is a new member here. | |
And I thank you for that. | |
So thank you for that. | |
And thank you for your insight and your perspicacity and your beneficence, as it were. | |
Okay, dear friends. | |
Tonight, I might be starting at 6.30 versus 7. I don't know. | |
It might be. | |
So please, make sure you subscribe and make sure you hit the little bell so you'll know that when we go live, you're alerted to it, okay? | |
Because life is one of these changing little things that always, always move around. | |
In any event, so thank you, dear friends. | |
Have a great and glorious day. | |
Be safe. | |
Again, thank you for honoring me with your presence. | |
We'll see you later. | |
And don't forget these final words. | |
The monkey's dead. | |
The show's over. | |
Sue you. |