The David Knight Show - INTERVIEW Eric Peters - Meet the New Boss, Has Trump Changed?
Episode Date: November 8, 2024Eric Peters, EricPetersAutos.comThe lesser of two evils…we'll seeDon't Deport…DefundHelmet Laws and why electric motorcycles won't be accepted even if mandated as Newsom has doneJeremy Clarkson an...d why today's faster, more reliable cars…are garbageIf you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-show Or you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7 Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silver For 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, and joining us now is Eric Peters of ericpetersautos.com.
And I wanted to get Eric on because he's posted several things about the election and, of course, also about cars.
I always love to talk about cars and transportation because that is a very important component today of freedom.
And that's what they want to take away from us.
Good to have you on, Eric.
Thank you for joining us.
Oh, likewise, David. Thank you for having me me i'm not sure whether to be relieved or nervous and i'd like to show the audience something uh in the way of the historical
remembrance you guys remember this this is bush okio that's bush what bush okio oh bush okio okay
i see the i see the nose i couldn't say it was straight
on i couldn't see the like a pinocchio thing yeah he's a real naval aviator but the reason that i
wanted to bring him up people might recall when conservatives republicans not so much libertarians
but conservatives and republicans were just ecstatic that george w bush beat al gore you
know we had saved all the danger of Al Gore.
And when he became the war president,
he had something like a 90-plus percent approval rating
and essentially was able to rule as a dictator.
And he called himself essentially that.
I am the decider.
Remember that?
We got into great trouble because of that.
And then worse trouble followed on his heels
because I believe that it was on account of everything that Georgeorge w bush did that we ended up with barack obama which in
turn gave us trump and biden and all the rest of it so these things do have consequences and i think
it's important that while you know i'm very much relieved that the overt communists didn't win this
particular selection i'm still kind of of nervous about what the orange man might
actually do once he's inaugurated two months from now.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I saw, you know, I've been talking about these pronouncements from a lot of Christian leaders
saying, well, you know, you just got to vote.
There's no question about you.
You can't vote for her.
So you got to vote for him, that type of thing.
And one guy has stood out and he has caught a lot of grief and he said
this because you got the lesser two evils he said the presidential election results having delivered
us from one evil god now tests us with another right and i thought that was pretty good he's
testing you to see because the price of liberty is eternal vigilance and the key thing about trump
is that he puts people to sleep and he puts a pacifier in their mouth. Everybody in this club is afraid to speak out.
Just like if you were at a drag queen festival, you don't want to point out that the lady up on stage or the man up on stage isn't wearing any clothes.
Right. Because then everybody's going to hop on you.
You don't want to point out that the emperor is engaging in naked tyranny if you're part of the MAGA cult, because then they're all going to hop on you as well. Absolutely. A lot of people are rightly, in my view, concerned with
regard to what might happen vis-a-vis Israel and what's going on there. And I share that concern.
But another concern that I have, I think is more subtle, or at least it hasn't been commented on
very much that I'm aware of. One of the planks, I think, that got Trump elected was that he's
going to promise to do something about this flood of illegal know, one of the planks, I think, that got Trump elected was that he's going
to promise to do something about this flood of illegal aliens, migrants into the country. Well,
what exactly is he going to do? And what are people going to be willing to accept, particularly
on, you know, so to speak, our side of the fence? What if he institutes a regime of your papers,
please, you know, on us, you know and of course our side largely i
think would probably go along with that because after all we got to get it under control you know
we got to catch all these illegal aliens and do something about them but what may end up happening
is something is done to us and i'm very much concerned about that oh i agree as well we were
just talking about that earlier had a listener who pointed that out and i said yeah that's right
be immigration and several of these voters voter fraud and that type of stuff but it'll also be you know a lot of people jump on
and say well uh you know we got uh porn being given to kids so we need to have an id to get
on the internet and all this other kind of stuff right because they're already saying in australia
that you gotta you can't use social media they're introducing a bill so you can't use social media
if you're not 16 years old how are they going to know that well that means that everybody's got to register right that's obviously
the situation so if you want government to fix everything like that you're going to have to give
it total totalitarian power and that is a very dangerous thing and i've played the clip of trump
saying we're going to stop them by the air by the land by the sea you know all the rest of this
stuff the technocracy would love to do this uh with ids digital ids as
you point out your identity papers please right the very uh the the hallmark of an occupied
totalitarian government is to have to have identity papers to go everywhere including
internally i don't think trump is a stupid man i think it's silly to suggest that he's stupid but
i do think that he can be thoughtless and reactionary and very glib sometimes in terms of the things that he
advocates. You know, the classic one example of that might be, you know, do process later,
take the guns now, things like that, instead of stopping for a little bit to think about it before
he shoots off at the mouth or acts. and i wish that he were a little bit more
reflective and thoughtful but we'll see you know the die has been cast as caesar said before he
crossed the rubicon uh and it's now essentially a fate a complete we're going to see what he does
and it's going to get very interesting i think i think we crossed the rubicon four years ago
if that wasn't a rubicon i don't know what is but you know this is this is you know and
and people use the word consequential perhaps too often but i do think this is a consequential
election uh in that if he does not do anything i don't think it's going to wear well so he's
probably going to do something and then the question becomes okay exactly what and how is
that going to affect america America and Americans you know and it
may affect America and Americans in a very negative manner that they're right now completely
blissfully unaware of as they bask in the orange glow yep that's right well I fully expect him to
to really energize the base and see them go absolutely crazy if he de-escalates or ends this
Ukraine war right this is wearing on everybody
is sick of that as well sick of the money every zelinski's become this comic little clown that's
grifting everybody so you know he could end that but i think at the same time what he would do is
escalate the war with iran because you got lindsey graham and all these other people
and lindsey graham was saying yeah they got this. I forget what he was. It's like they got $17 trillion worth of resources in Ukraine.
We don't want Russia getting all that.
We want it for ourselves.
You know what I mean?
This is like neocolonialism.
It's crazy.
And he's actually saying this kind of stuff out loud.
It's apocalyptic and dangerous.
You probably, this goes back a few weeks before the election, but Scott Ritter, you know,
the UN, the inspector of weapons of mass destruction, who I take as a very credible person, published an interesting article about what appears to have been an underground nuclear test in Iraq.
There was seismic evidence that something happened out there that wasn't an earthquake.
It's not yet been verified, but the possibility that they have acquired a nuclear weapons capability is something that really ought to be thought about. You know, if Trump decides to lob bombs on them, they might just lob back a different kind of bomb and start something altogether horrible.
You know, that could be absolutely cataclysm for all of us.
And I pray that saner, calmer heads prevail over this thing.
Well, I think that, you know, certainly they would have to do something asymmetric.
They would not be able to launch a transcontinental ballistic at the United States and hit us.
What they would wind up doing, maybe smuggling something, you know, across the open border.
And then that would be the excuse to clamp everything down.
And now everybody is clamoring for complete biometric control and ID and all because we don't want to have another one of these attacks. So, yeah, I think something like that easily could happen. But, you know, you talk about
how Trump can change earlier in the program as I was talking about Elon Musk. And of course,
I said, you're going to be coming on. I said the first time I talked to you, we talked about Elon
Musk as the king of crony capitalism. That was your article at the time. Now, I guess he's going
to be the president of crony capitalism.
And it's just amazing to me to see this guy who's become the world's richest man put out as somebody who is going to make government, eliminate government waste.
He is government waste.
I wonder whether Trump, now that Elon Musk is apparently his best friend, is going to do anything to end this pushing of the electric vehicles
that have made Elon Musk a billionaire.
Most people outside of the business don't understand
that the reason Musk is a billionaire is because he's managed to leverage
these zero emissions requirements and these carbon credits
into this vast empire that's funded his electric car grift.
Now, one thing I would like to see Trump do,
and I hope that he does do this,
is tackles the issue of the permanent bureaucracy,
the regulatory state,
which is serving now as a de facto legislature.
You know, they'll issue a regulation
and the regulation has to be complied with.
So it has the force of law, and yet it's not a law.
And it's not constitutional.
The Constitution says that Congress must write the laws. Congress has abrogated that and has given it over to this
unelected regulatory apparat for a number of reasons. One, they're lazy. But two, I think,
more importantly, they do not want to be held accountable. You know, congressmen can say,
well, it's not my fault. It's the bureaucracy. You know, the reason that you have to spend a
fortune to get your home's air conditioner replaced now, it's not my fault. It's the bureaucracy. You know, the reason that you, you know, you have to spend a fortune to get your home's air conditioner replaced now.
It's not because of me. You know, these bureaucrats did it, these awful bureaucrats.
And of course, you can vote the bureaucrats out. So they're utterly unaccountable once they get
in there. So, you know, Trump has a constitutional argument, first of all, and even has a juridical
one in regard to the Chevron decision, which says that, you know, the Supreme Court ruled
that these bureaucrats can't just summarily issue decrees like that that have the force of law.
And then there's just the moral argument is wrong.
You know, who are these people?
Why do they get to run a shot over our lives?
So I hope he'll do that.
Unfortunately, I don't think he'll do that.
Everything that he has said thus far indicates that he's not so much opposed to regulations.
He's just opposed to the way the regulations have been used by the other side so in that sense he's sort of a typical republican and that he's not opposed to big government he
just wants big government to be used in the way that he'd like the government to be used oh i
agree i agree and you know if we go back and we look and i've talked about this many times you've
got civil asset forfeiture for example right people have their property stolen as you well know you know on the name of the war on drugs
they steal people's uh property they call it asset forfeiture it's theft uh and they don't find you
guilty first they don't even charge you with a crime they charge the property with a crime so
it's the u.s government versus uh nine thousand000 cash or the U.S. government versus Learjet serial numbers,
such and such.
And they say that they don't have to follow the Constitution because they say that rules
are different.
And so they not only have to find, they don't have to find you guilty.
You don't have a presumption of innocence.
They don't have to have an indictment, a trial, a finding of guilt, and they are also not required to obey the
prohibition against excessive fines and punishment because they say it's a rule, not a law. So if it
was done by Congress, it would be a law, and they'd have to follow the Constitution. But if they create
this as a rule, none of the Constitution applies. That's one of the most amazing things, and both
Republicans and Democrats go along with it
because you pointed out if things go wrong, they don't want the responsibility for it.
And they can always, if things go wrong, they can always blame it on that regulatory agency and they
can come in and rescue everybody and look like the good guys by putting the regulatory agency
back in its place. And so it allows allows them plausible deniability from all this
stuff. They love to abdicate their authority over to it. And I'll give you an example of Trump doing
this in his first term, the dreamer thing, right? The idea that you had DACA, the Deferred Action
on Childhood Arrivals, that was an executive order from the Obamaama administration it wasn't a law coming from
congress and so they just put this thing out as an executive order now trump comes along and he
says well um i um uh i'm gonna change that i'm gonna get rid of that but i've got to ask permission
from the supreme court to do that it's like how do you have to ask them permission to as for an
executive order from the previous president you can just do it but he played that game and then the uh supreme court came back and said no you can't do it and
so he said oh okay i can't do it and so it allows these guys to escape from their campaign promises
and all the rest of the stuff and and that whole regulatory rule regime is is awful and we saw it
in spades when all the pandemic stuff came, didn't we?
Yeah, it's as greasy as it is tyrannical. They call it an administrative procedure,
and it goes all the way down in a number of states to traffic infractions. It used to be
that you'd actually have a day in court. If a cop pulled you over for something, speeding,
whatever it might be, you had a legal right to your day in court and to present your case to
a judge and even a jury
if you wanted to in some cases uh well what they did was to make it into an administrative matter
and in some cases handed over to a private company uh to deal with and you had the only thing that
you were allowed to do was to submit in writing not in person you know your your supposed
explanation and or excuse or defense or whatever it was. And that was totally performa.
You know, you're going to pay regardless. You know, if you didn't pay, then they'd go after you with the credit card, credit bureaus and slam your credit. You know, if you didn't if you didn't
hand over the money. And it's a really subtle thing. And it's just sort of leached out and
pervaded the whole system. And I do think the one positive thing I think we can we can take away
from this election, I do think there is an awakening going on.
I think by and large, a lot of people are beginning to realize the maliciousness that just saturates the system now and how the deck is stacked.
And granted, you know, Trump has has leveraged and used that.
But that doesn't mean it's not real. And that doesn't mean that it is going to be sated by non-action. I think people are going to demand that things get better.
And that is something that makes me feel good about the election results.
Well, I think, you know, when we're talking about the red light cameras and speed cameras and things like that,
where you've got a corporation that is accusing you of something and you don't have a right to confront your accuser,
sometimes that's been overturned.
In Texas, and I don't know how it is in virginia i don't know how it is in tennessee either but in texas it was in the state constitution
that uh if you got a speeding ticket you could demand a jury trial and i've used that demand
for a couple of tickets that i got in texas to basically negotiate away the ticket uh and you
know to make it disappear and because they don't want to do a jury trial so it's
a great negotiating tool I didn't I didn't have the time where I could go do it you know I've
traveled to some speed trap town in east Texas and fight this thing in a small hit but I hung
tough on it and made the thing go away but that that's a key thing and you can put that in my
point is is that you can put that in at the state level, local level, things like that to stop red light cameras, to stop speed
cameras, to have a day in court. Those are the types of things that you can do at the local level
that Trump isn't necessarily going to do anything for you or the Congress. We need to start
redirecting, I think, everybody's focus back to the local level. I think that's where it's really
important. Well, I agree. But at the same time, there is absolutely now a mandate.
And it's not just Trump's.
It operates in the House and the Senate.
The Republicans have been handed this victory.
And I think one of the things that they will hold their feet to the fire to with regard
to these regulations and the regulatory apparatus that going forward, if we're going to even
have to have these things, that they be subjected to a cost benefit analysis minimally with public hearings before they are uh enacted
and imposed on on people so you don't have some bureaucrat in the epa or the dot who just
summarily decrease something that's going to end up costing everybody who buys a car another 500
bucks up front and god knows how much money down the road when the thing fails. On the basis of some speculative, hypothesized game that is literally like contemplating
how many angels can dance on the head of a pin.
You've got to show that there's going to be a meaningful and justifiable benefit before
that regulation is imposed on people.
I think that's an extremely reasonable and fair position to take.
Oh, I agree.
I think the problem that we face, you and I, is that there's not any corresponding organization for cars like there is for guns, right?
You've got the NRA.
You've got Gun Owners of America and a lot of others, National Association for Gun Rights.
There's several of them that are out there.
And they're all focused on a single issue.
And you can say the same thing about the pro-life issue or whatever.
And there's other ones that are out there as well. you could look at on the left side you could look at
marijuana prohibition and stuff normal and a bunch of others who are successful and nullifying the
un i've talked about this this week you know even though you had um you had in three conservative
states florida north and south dakota you had a an issue on the ballot to legalize recreational use of marijuana,
not just medical marijuana, because medical marijuana is now nullified by two-thirds of
the states, actually more than that. And so if that had passed in those states, you would have
had more than half of the states would have nullified even recreational use of marijuana.
And yet, according to the War on drugs, it is a schedule one drug.
My point being is that if we do things at the state level, we can nullify this tyranny.
And if we start to, and I think really the only way that we ever make any traction
is if we've got an organization that is a single issue organization that's going to
push on that single issue, because the politicians are this grocery cart full of garbage and uh some of the stuff in there is good and some of the
stuff in there is bad most of it's bad but you can't really uh get anything done instead if you
focus on a local on a specific issue and you attack it at the state level that's what we're
missing maybe that's what you should do uh you should start an organization that's going to fight against car regulations.
Well, actually, there is such an organization.
It already exists.
Yeah.
And I'm affiliated with it.
It's the National Motorist Association.
Yes, I've interviewed them.
It's been a while, but yeah.
And I think they advertise on your website.
They do.
And a lot of people are not aware of the existence of the NMA, but the NMA played a critical role back in the 90s
in securing the repeal of what was called the NMSL,
the National Maximum Speed Limit Law,
which plagued the country for 20 years, from 74 up to about 94,
which required a 55-mile-an-hour speed limit on the highways.
You remember it, I remember it.
A Republican president.
It was miserable. it was absolutely miserable it made driving anywhere just such a hassle yeah and an expense you know millions of people were malted of millions of dollars for
driving at speeds that were legal and so presumably safe before drive 55 came along anyway and it made
it all did yeoman's work uh lobbying congress you know I was involved in that when I was at the Washington Times back at the
nine in the 90s to get rid of the NMSL and they are really a fantastic
organization lobbying specifically on these issues that affect motorists
driving your freedom to buy the kind of car that you want and so on so if people
are interested in that I recommend they check out the site.
It's motorists.org.
Good people.
I've known them personally.
I've worked with them for 30 years.
Good.
Yes.
And that is the key thing.
You have to have those kinds of single issue organizations.
And for the most part, most of these things have to be done at the local level.
You know, for example, the 55 mile an hour speed limit that could have been nullified at the local level.
It's good to repeal it nationally.
OK, I'm not saying it's not a bad thing, but I'm saying that individual states could refuse to do that.
They would have lost highway funds.
They were being blackmailed by money.
And that's what we've got to get people to understand is how the federal government gets around the Constitution, gets around the 10th amendment specifically by
handing out money that's what people can't understand about what trump did in 2020 but
it's the same thing that nixon did with a 55 mile an hour speed limit if you do this 55 mile an hour
speed limit i'll give you money and so everybody gets upset with the state government or the local
law enforcement or the highway patrol or whatever who is enforcing it but it's also being driven by federal money well it's even worse than that because first
they extract the money from the states yeah they take the money and then they say well the feds say
well we'll give you some of it back you know provided provided you do what we want you to do
you know and it really it's paralyzing so i think you're going to have to go one step farther back
and somehow perhaps just stop giving the money you know that that day has got to come
yeah we've got to stand up to that and and resurrect the principle that if it's not yours
you don't have a right to it from the individual all the way on up you know as tom soul once said
what exactly is a fair share of somebody else's money that you didn't work for
that's absolutely right.
Yeah, well, it's kind of interesting when we look at Musk.
He's going to be able to exert the kind of control that all these different industries dream of.
And yet he doesn't even have to take a cabinet position with Trump.
He can stay as CEO.
Earlier in the program, Eric, I talked about the fact that the two of them were throwing
shade at each other earlier this year. Trump was talking about EVs and Biden and about Tesla and
everything in a derogatory way. Musk was saying that Trump just needs to put on a cowboy hat or
whatever and ride off into the sunset. But then when Musk perceptively realized that everything was turning in Trump's direction
and started channeling money to him, then it became a love fest.
And in August, Trump said, well, I have to like EVs because Elon gave me a lot of money.
I mean, he just says the quiet part out loud.
You know, what's interesting about Musk, you're absolutely right. He's cunning.
He knows where his ears lie. And I think it's important to judge him according to actions and
not what he says. And I'll give you two specific examples, one of which I know you're aware of.
You know, at first, when the thug government in Brazil ordered him to suppress the posts of some politicians and people in the country that the ruling Quinta did not like.
Initially, Elon publicly opposed that.
But when he counted the shekels and realized he was potentially going to lose a lot of money if the thugs in Brazil shut down X in Brazil, he kowtowed and caved.
So if he kowtowed and caved to the thugs in Brazil, what makes anybody think
that he's not going to do the same here? And he already is. As you know, and I know, X suppresses
speech by suppressing reach. You know, unless you pay Musk an ongoing fee to be verified each and
every month. And in addition to that, don't post anything wrong thankful. Your post gets sent to
the timeout room. It's very clever. You know, it's not that you can't post. wrong thankful uh your post gets sent to the timeout room it's very clever you know it's not that you can't post sure you can post the problem is half
the time nobody sees what you posted that's right which has the same effect as that so it didn't
even change anything for me when i paid the eight bucks you know it's it's like it's still i'm not
uh i'm not saying the stuff that he wants to hear, but you're absolutely right. He literally bowed and scraped to Theory Breton, the guy from the EU saying, well, we got this DSA thing that's going to come in here and you're going to have to obey that.
Right. Oh, yes, yes. I'll do that. Yes, yes.
And then what happened was that Theory Breton, I call him conspiracy theory, conspiracy theory, tried to uh censor speech about the within the election
and in america and that was a bridge too far for him he jumped the shark at that point and they
kicked him out but it wasn't like elon musk um resisted this and and yet what you see is uh all
these all these people who it's the same people who support Trump that support Musk.
So if any governor goes to Davos, like Brian Kemp or like Glenn Youngkin or whatever, or anybody else, they rightfully are suspicious of that.
And yet when Trump goes there and he does it just a couple of weeks before he locks the world down, they make excuses uh they make excuses for it and they talk about how
look it he told them uh told them off and he told them you know uh that we're not going to be a part
of this and he stood up to these people and so they see the same thing as you point out they they
trumpet the fact that musk is there pushing back against brazil but then all of the conservative
and alternative media is silent when he caves
into them and does exactly what he wants this bizarre wheeling around and it occurs on on both
sides of the same point you know you've got uh if you went back what a year or two ago uh musk was
the hero of the left he was the darling of the left you know and then when he started to kind
of come around to the trumpian point of view all of a sudden the left hates him. And now the right loves him.
And nothing has really changed.
He's the same guy.
And he's playing them both.
And it just astounds me that people on both sides don't see that.
Yes.
Oh, yes.
Absolutely true.
Let's talk a little bit about, well, you mentioned the internal passport regime.
That's one of the things that we're very concerned about.
And I really liked what you just put up yesterday.
Don't deport, defund.
Tell people about that.
Yeah, essentially, you know, there are all these calls now that Trump has been elected.
Okay, we're going to have these deportations.
We're going to round up all these people who came into the country illegally,
which has a very strong superficial appeal because so many people are so tired, citizens I mean, of having to pay taxes
that go to finance things like hotel rooms in New York City and debit cards that are filled up with
thousands of dollars of the money that they had to work for. People are understandably
outraged about that. So clearly something does have to be done. But I think the
most effective thing that could be done to deal with the problem of the people who are already
here, as well as the people who might come here, is simply to make it unlawful for any public
official to dispense or disburse any public money, any taxpayer money, that will go to benefit
anybody who isn't an American citizen. It's entirely reasonable. If I travel to Mexico, I don't have a right to the benefits that are afforded to Mexican citizens because I'm not Mexican.
I agree.
You know, I didn't get into the system.
I'm not supposed to be in that country.
I agree.
I've said for the longest time, I said the issue is the welfare magnet.
And we've got such a big magnet that we're pulling people around the wall, over the
wall, under the wall, through the wall. If you've got a big enough welfare magnet, you're going to
get people to come in and they're going to do it. Even if you set up some kind of a slave ID system
that Trump has talked about doing, even if you set up some kind of a horrendous internal biometric
ID system, you're still going to get people to come in if the financial
rewards are enough.
And these financial rewards are unbelievable.
We have provided for these people in poor countries.
This is the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
And if we don't stop that, that's the essence of it.
And that's the one thing that they could stop very easily, but they won't do it.
I absolutely agree with you.
Defund it.
You don't have to worry about deporting these people. Just defund it. Well, there's a humane aspect of it, too,
I think. You know, if you say, look, if you're willing to work and you're willing to provide
for your family and meet your needs and so on, I don't really have an issue with that myself.
If somebody wants to get up on a roof and hammer shingles all day long and earn money,
that's cool. i'm okay with that
that's a that's a a positive contribution to our society uh you know i don't i don't have any desire
to have a guy who's up on the roof putting shingles down rounded up and and thrown back
across the border so you know you can put into some detention uh camp or something a concentration
camp the optics i don't think you'll ever do do that because I think the optics on it are so bad.
And in his second term, I think he's going to want to be remembered in a fond and positive
way.
So I don't think they will do that.
But I also don't think that they'll stop the welfare stuff either.
And that would be the obvious thing.
As you point out, people who want to come across and work, hard workers, I'm fine with that.
Yeah, there's competition with people who are here and depressing wages, but maybe what you do is something else.
Maybe you organize, maybe you learn Spanish and you organize these people and you've got your company and whatever.
There's a lot of different ways that we could go with that.
But as long as they're working, I don't have that much of a problem with it.
But what I have a problem with is the welfare thing.
As you're pointing out, it's bad enough to take money from a citizen and give it to another one.
But it's even worse when you give it to somebody who's not a citizen.
Yeah, I mean, interestingly, you know, Trump made great inroads with Hispanic people in this election.
Yes.
Citizens, I mean, because they also are tired of this.
Yes.
You know, so it's not about being mean to people
which is the way it's framed and portrayed by the left it's about not being mean to americans
you know constantly saddling them with bills for other people literally the limitless number of
them you know nobody's ever said okay we're going to have a maximum of let's say five million people
coming into the country every year it's literally literally limitless, you know, according to these open borders people,
which is a recipe for national suicide, culturally and economically.
Oh, I agree.
I've said for the longest time that we're not going to have an American dream of owning a home,
which we pretty much don't have now because of regulatory costs and everything.
We're not going to have that as long as we've got the dreamers,
because they can come here and get a free education and many other benefits,
and they will continue to keep coming. And it'll be funded with property taxes,
so you're not going to be able to afford a home, or you're not going to be able to afford much of
a rental place either, because the property taxes are embedded in that. People just don't seem to
think about the real cost of this stuff. I would pay money to keep my kids out of the government
schools, but they're coming for financial reasons.
That, I think, is you get to the root of it and pull it out of the ground and destroy it.
And you're right.
This whole idea of having government schools, parents ought to be the ones that are responsible directly.
And that's not a burden.
That's a good thing because you have control over your kids' education.
If you're hiring a tutor or a teacher, you're the one who's paying the bill. And if you discover that the person that you hired to
teach your kids is incompetent or in any other way, somebody that you don't want to be teaching
your kids, you can fire them. What happens when the kid is in the government school? How much
power do you have over what your kid is being taught and by whom? And the answer is absolutely
none. You're paying through the nose and property tax,
and your kids aren't even being educated.
That's right.
And in New Jersey, they just came up with a law that, you know,
anybody else would go to jail, but if you show obscene material to a minor,
that's fine as long as you're a teacher, right?
Exactly.
Here's some obscene.
If I hire a tutor, and the tutor is showing obscene material to my child
and saying, don't tell your parents that person is
going to go to jail or worse uh if you catch them but um you know with the government schools it's
okay that's why i talked about this earlier this week i said i'm going to call them from here on
out instead of public schools i'm going to call them pubic schools because it seems to be they're
interested in they're not interested in reading writing and arithmetic they're interested in
sexualization of children and that's really what they have focused on it's insane that we have
to pay for this as well it's not insane from their point of view you know by stupidizing kids by
rendering them uh cognitive cripples making them illiterate and innumerate and then also uh warping
them with all this depraved stuff. What do you end up with?
Well, you end up with these screeching, emotionally incontinent, blue-haired people who are exactly
what Lenin referred to when he called them useful idiots.
Yeah, that's right.
They're useful because they are very vulnerable.
You know, they're not able to think clearly.
They feel, and they react, and they erupt, and they stamp their feet.
And they're exactly the kind of fodder that you need if you want to create an authoritarian police state.
Yeah, that's right.
You have a good article about the roots of Marxism, the neighborliness of communists.
And you've got all these different planks of the Karl Marx, the different goals that he wanted to have.
You know, of course, one of them compulsory uh state education paid for by um by
taxes and that type of thing but all these different things that are part of it that is
what they have been able to impose upon us i've talked to shivan fleet who grew up in china
she knows what a struggle session is she says all of this stuff about being you know anti-racism
and all the rest of the stuff she said that's that's just a struggle session with a different name all this woke stuff it's it's the same tactics that
they've been using for the longest time and the same goals that they have been using for the
longest time well they've gotten a little bit more clever though you know if you read if you read
marx and even if you read lenin uh they were rather honest and open about what they intended to do you know lenin spoke of
imposing terror and using terror to to foment his his political ends and marx was very direct if you
read the communist manifesto and read the planks of the communist manifesto and it's appalling to
anybody who's not out of their minds when they when they hear and read this stuff so they don't
generally talk about that stuff anymore uh they they put it in this sort of sitting around the campfire holding hands, kumbaya kind of language, you know, or neighborly. Waltz used that in the
campaign. Neighborly. I mean, it's an inversion of reality and it's a psychological technique.
You know, they want you to think of it in terms of, yeah, I'm just going to go over to my neighbor's
house and ask him whether I can borrow something, you know, but you're not being asked. You're
having a bayonet shoved in your back,
and you're being made to hand it over.
And it's not even your neighbor, per se, who's doing it.
It's some government thug.
That's the kind of neighborliness that they mean.
And it's so much of this verbiage.
They won't just say, hand over your money.
They'll say, we're asking you to pay your fair share.
There's no asking.
If you can't say no without repercussions, you're not being asked.
You're being told.
That's right.
That's right.
And that's one of the things that we see.
You know, you talk about how they used to be more upfront about it.
And it was really Antonio Gramsci, the founder of the Italian Communist Party, who said, yeah, we don't want to be upfront about this.
We don't want to have a violent revolution.
Let's do it by marching through the institutions. And that was where Pete Boudigie's
dad spent his entire career as a college professor at Notre Dame studying the life work of Antonio
Gramsci in order to march through the institutions. And then he sends Pete Boudigie to Harvard where
he studied under a guy who loved the Italian communists so much,
Sacco and Vanzetti, that he changed his name to Sack Van Berkovich. And everything that he wrote
was saying, America based on the principles of the pilgrims and Puritanism, and that's the problem
for all of the, you know, everything that we have in society is all based on that, and we've got to eliminate that. And that's really where all of the Democrats are coming from now,
by taking over the institutions very subtly, and they have taken them all over. And so that's why
I think, you know, if we don't realize that the institutions have been taken over, like the
schools especially, that is the most obvious case. The schools, the media, entertainment,
we don't realize that those things have been taken over
uh you know voting for a president in washington is completely meaningless yep yeah they did it
piece by piece and they began with government school system you know the frank school going
all the way back to the the 20s and the 30s and infiltrating that had consequences because what
they did was they were able to mold the minds of the next generation.
And those people ended up going into the corporations and into the media and into law.
And it propagates.
And that's why now all of a sudden we find ourselves dealing with a company like Anheuser-Busch, having Dylan Mulvaney as their mascot.
How did that happen?
Such a thing would have been inconceivable 30 years ago because the people who were running a major corporation like that, they would have regarded that as sick and alien.
Whatever their greed-headed interests, they wouldn't have done that.
But now this rising generation of woke people.
I disagree with Elon Musk about a lot of things, but he refers to this woke mind virus, and he's absolutely correct.
And it's sort of the latest strain or variant of Marxism.
It's just the
same thing repackaged yeah well of course the people who are taking over the corporations
and everything have been trained in all this in the schools but they're also having um a lot of
economic pressure put on them by blackrock and these other corporations to do that very thing
and if they're publicly traded corporations they have a great deal of leverage over them
if you do what they you know if they like your company, you can, it's basically a license to print money.
But if they don't like your company, they can pretty much drive you out of business.
And so they're more beholden to the Black Rocks than they are to the customers.
And so everything is turned upside down with this stuff.
This ESG stuff that almost nobody knew about until about a year or so ago,
it is what drove Akio Toyota out of the leadership role at Toyota,
notwithstanding that he is the grandson of the founder of the company,
because the people on the board wield that kind of power
and that they were very interested in pushing this ESG agenda.
In the case of Toyota, particularly with regard to this electric vehicle thing. Actio Toyota was opposed to it. You know, he was one
of the few big wig people within the car business who said more than a year ago, this is a bad idea.
This is going to cause massive dislocation, even bankruptcy across the industry. You know,
this is not going to work well. We shouldn't do this. You know, and for having the audacity to say that
and for not toying the line and going along,
he was summarily removed,
and they installed a more pliable person in his place.
And, of course, Toyota has understood that, you know,
that this is unworkable.
It's an unworkable solution.
And so they put their engineers into,
oh, let's try something else.
Maybe we try fuel cells or something. It's like, no like no no it's got to be tied to the electric grid because
that's going to be our control grid you know no other solutions are going to be allowed that's a
real tell just like the vaccine thing was well we got a problem here okay i'll believe your problem
i believe that we've got some kind of mysterious covid virus out there but how about if we try this
or try that no no you can't try that.
You're only going to have this solution, and that's it.
That's another tell that there's not a real problem.
Yeah, and you know, it's really sad to me as somebody who has a great emotional attachment to cars
and loves the industry to see the damage that has been caused, particularly to Toyota.
You know, Toyota has had had and deservedly so a reputation
for building outstanding vehicles for years and outstandingly durable and long-lived engines for
years that's been shattered just recently they had to recall more than 100 000 of their new turbo
hybrid v6 engines that have replaced the v8 uh in in the toyota tundra pickup uh because the thing
had a catastrophic problem that resulted
in catastrophic failure. So can you imagine what that has done to Toyota's reputation?
Imagine if you bought a brand new $60,000 Tundra, brand new, and within a month, the engine,
total failure, and you have to have the engine replaced. It's egregious.
Yeah. Oh, yeah.
And they're having problems with the new tacoma you know the tacoma
was one of the best vehicles in that class of vehicle mid-sized pickup truck um they got rid
of the v6 as bulletproof you know that's a 300 000 mile engine they got rid of it in favor of
a turbo hybrid four-cylinder engine and they're having all sorts of problems with the things now
yeah yeah there's no market demand for this the market didn didn't say, we don't want a V6. We don't want a V8.
We crave tiny turbocharged four-cylinder engines with hybrid systems attached to them.
There's absolutely nothing driving this other than the pressure to comply with the regulatory regime.
That's right.
And this has been building for a very long time.
You go back and you look at the Toyota Hilux.
It was legendary.
You've got Top Gear guys. long time you go back and you look at the toyota hylux you know it was legendary uh you got um uh
top top gear guys you know the the little toyota hylux that uh they they tried everything they
could to kill it and they couldn't kill finally i think they put it in salt water and left it or
something like that and then they hung it from the ceiling of the of the set there but it was
legendary in terms of its ability to keep going but because it had i think it was it was a diesel
engine or something like that they wouldn't let that come into the us because of the epa the epa
yes and now uh this year 2024 or toyota brought out a a stripped down version of the hylux called
the champ and it has a gas engine and it doesn't pollute nothing's polluted since the 90s if you
you know want to get into that topic but you can't have it and guess how much a hylux costs uh in other markets how much 13 000 bucks to start what that's crazy yeah i
mean if people are interested i've got a couple of articles on the site about that yeah it is it's
designed to be configurable it's basically the cab and then the back where the bed would be is
whatever you want it to be toyota has partnered with a number of aftermarket suppliers so if you
want to make it into a jitney bus uh if you want to make it into a jitney bus,
if you want to make it into a food truck,
or if you just want a conventional bed on the back of it,
well, you can specify what you want.
It's got all the pre-drilled attachment points.
It's modular.
So it's designed to be able to do
all of those different things really easily
and really inexpensively.
The point is, it's a $13,000 truck.
You know, if you looked at the price of a new truck
in this country, what we're allowed to buy, I mean, the least expensive of them are $30,000 and up.
Yes.
And it's not just the cars.
It's the homes.
It's the appliances.
It's everything that we've got.
And they are trying to strangle us with every one of these things.
I was talking about the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation, TSMC, that's got this big thing that they're
bringing into Phoenix, this big factory town that they're bringing in. One of the things they were
talking about was the fact that housing in the United States is four to five times the cost of
housing in Taiwan. Why is that? They don't have nice houses there? Well, actually, they do.
It's just arbitrary regulations on about everything that raises the
cost and they're doing that to everything that we have to make us artificially poor just to rob us
and they're specifically targeting uh targeting the rising generation of young people i came across
some history that's astounding i don't know whether you saw this but guess what the average
age of a first-time home buyer is is in the United States as of 2024?
Oh, yeah, I saw that.
It was, what, 50-something or something like that?
Yeah.
I know.
It's for people who are past the age at which most people start raising families, you know.
And what are you supposed to do if you're 24, 25, you know, and you want to get your first house?
It's impossible the average cost of a new single
family house in this country i think is about 420 000 bucks which means you've got to come come up
with 10 cash on that i mean how many people in their 20s are ever going to be able to do that
so what they're doing and i think this is part of the maliciousness that i'd like to talk about
don't like to talk about it but it's a it's an important thing to talk about uh is to alienate
the young to antagonize and annoy the young,
and make them feel that they haven't got a shot, they haven't got a chance. There's no hope that
the government will help you. We've got the answer. You know, Harris did this during the
campaign. She tried to bribe young people and say, well, we'll give you $25,000 in assistance,
you know, to get your first home. Well, what would really help, one thing that would help
is getting rid of these zoning requirements. You in most places in this country you can't put up a modest sized single family home anymore
that would be affordable to a first-time buyer you have to put up some gigantic mcmansion because the
zoning laws specify that the house that you put here has to be essentially similar to the one
that's next door and the one that's on the other side that's why you see all these cookie cutter
neighborhoods with all essentially the same houses everywhere. Yeah. And it goes to the appliances. Look at all the appliances. Oh, you got to,
you can't have a gas appliance. You can't have this or that. You got to have this electric
appliance and we're going to dictate H and everything that you can have and how it's going
to operate. And of course, we've seen this type of thing as well in the UK. I remember a few years
ago, they were talking about how the prices of houses had rapidly grown up very quickly in the UK. I remember a few years ago they were talking about how the prices of houses had rapidly
gone up very quickly in the UK and priced younger people out of the market completely.
And now it's come here.
And what typically happens is they kind of use the UK as a test bed.
And then it goes from the UK, it goes to California, and then it goes to the rest of America.
And so that's really kind of what we're seeing with a lot of this stuff now.
They've run this game.
They know how to manipulate it so we can't afford anything.
Electricity costs in the U.K. right now are four to five times the cost of electricity in America.
And we're about to have an explosion in all that as they're going to build these offshore windmill farms off the coast of Long
Island.
They're going to, the profits that these European companies that are making this wind farm are
going to make, their profits are going to be somewhere in $50 per megawatt hour wholesale.
Their profits are going to be something like $50.
But the entire cost today off of the existing power
structure is in the 30s. And so just their profits alone are going to be that much. So it's going to
be four or five times the cost of what people on Long Island are paying right now for electricity,
if not more. And so this is the way that they are, you know, we're going to require that you
do this. And by the way, speaking of California um you just put up a um a uh an article about helmet laws but did you see and i want to talk
about that but did you see that um newsom has now put up a requirement for electric bikes they're
going to have to have like 50 by 2030 or something like that motorcycles yeah yeah motorcycles yeah
they're gonna have to have electric motorcycles and it's got to be like 50 by such and such a date and then after that it's
going to be eventually it's got to be 100 electric motorcycles that will get absolutely nowhere
and the reason for that is it's one thing to try to push that on car buyers because a lot of car
buyers are they view the car as a necessary appliance you know they're not necessarily enthusiast people like you and i are who have an emotional attachment to
driving into cars they just want to get from a to b so you might be able assuming cost isn't an
issue to persuade them to drive an electric car maybe people who ride motorcycles and i'm one
want to ride a motorcycle they don't want to ride something that looks like a motorcycle but isn't
one you know and that's what we're talking about ride something that looks like a motorcycle but isn't one you
know and that's what we're talking about here something that doesn't have an engine that doesn't
have a transmission because it's electric you know it's just a direct drive so you don't shift
anything just sit on this thing it's a scooter it's a fast scooter but that's what a scooter is
yeah it's not going to work they're not going to be able to sell that to people now they can try to
legislate old motorcycles off the road and i have no doubt they're going to try to do that, probably, and they'll do the same with cars, but they're never
going to succeed. It's going to put companies like Harley-Davidson out of business, and Harley-Davidson
is already almost out of business, precisely because they've got this German CEO who's a
big-time woke DEI guy, and who has completely alienated people, most people, from wanting to
buy a Harley-Davidson motorcycle. Yeah, yeah oh yeah absolutely uh talk about the helmet laws a little bit because that's been
uh you got an article that uh says um why helmet laws are silly and tyrannical well they're silly
in the first place because they're arbitrary you know we're told i'm told that i have to wear a
helmet in order to be able to legally ride my motorcycle,
but I'm able to wear flip-flops, I'm able to wear shorts and a t-shirt if I want to,
so I guess my head will look good in my coffin.
I mean, if the argument is that the thing is about safety, well, it doesn't make any sense.
That's not really a rational position to take.
And as far as the tyrannical stuff, I think it sort of explains itself.
It's nobody else's business
what risks i choose to assume of course the predicate is this socialist argument that well
if you get into an accident society will be made to pay the cost but that presumes that society
you know that we have this socialist system in which what i choose to do somehow imposes
an obligation on you and other people to be responsible for it. And that's outrageous.
You know, if I choose to ride a motorcycle and flip flops in a short and shorts and without a helmet and I wreck, well, that's on me, you know, morally, and it should be legally. It's nobody
else's responsibility that I do those things. Just the same as, look, I choose to go to the gym and
work out and run because I, you know, I want to try to keep myself in good shape and not die
prematurely. But I don't think people who are overweight and who don't exercise should be fined.
I mean, we want to have cops walking down the street, and if they notice you've got a big gut,
they roll up to you and give you a ticket for imposing costs on society.
You can make exactly the same argument.
It could happen.
You know, they've got religious police in Saudi Arabia and Iran, so we could have obesity police.
Why not?
They'd be a source of revenue for them you know you point out if you question um why we should have to have a license
ask yourself why george washington did not need a license to operate his horse on the public
right away um and so uh yeah exactly uh that you know there's another there's another argument that
is interesting and again i speak as somebody who's been riding for decades, so I feel I have some standing to say this.
And Dawn and I, when we go out riding, oftentimes we do a freedom ride and we take our helmets off on the back roads.
And I am always amazed by how much my peripheral vision increases when I don't have the stupid helmet on.
When I have the helmet on, I'm sort of blinkered.
I can see what's ahead of me, but in order to see what's on either side of me, I have to rotate my head left or right in order
to be able to see it. Whereas I can look straight ahead and have a panoramic view of the road ahead.
Also, I can hear things much better because my ears aren't stuffed up by the helmet.
Yeah.
And finally, unless you spend a lot of money on an extremely expensive, lightweight helmet,
you know know your typical
moderately priced helmet which will cost about 150 bucks or so you wear that thing for an hour
and your neck will start to hurt because believe it or not that slight amount of weight that you
have added to your head strings your neck and when you when your neck is strained and your shoulders
are stiff you're not in as good a position to be a competent and safe rider because that's
distracting as you would be if you were in full command of all your senses.
So you can make a very persuasive argument, in my view,
that the actual effect of helmets is less safe than the hypothetical benefit of wearing the helmet.
That's right.
And I've known people, motorcycle riders, I'm not a motorcycle rider myself,
but who said that some of these
helmets, they can add weight, and if you don't have something to keep it from going forward,
it can snap your neck if you get into a bad accident, too. It can increase the chances of
that happening. Yeah. Sure. And, you know, at the end of the day, the thing I guess I object to the
most is this obnoxious, busybody, condescending parent of adults. know i'm a grown man i can make my own decisions
i don't need somebody else trying to hold my hand like a good little boy or a bad little boy
and telling me what i'm allowed to do and what i'm not allowed to do we should be living in a
free country where adults are free to make cost benefit choices uh risk reward analysis and and
be held accountable for that absolutely but be left free to make
those decisions for themselves. Well, yeah, and we also had all the people out there demanding
masks, and you remember what they said, and I just, like, are you kidding me? That's your argument?
Said, well, we can tell you to wear a mask because we tell you to wear seatbelts, and we tell you to
wear motorcycle helmets and all the rest of the stuff, and I said, oh, okay, so my seatbelt protects
you, my helmet protects you that's why i
have to wear it and what claim do you have on that and of course uh my mask doesn't protect you
either uh if you've been told that uh you've believed a lie here uh but that was a kind of
insanity it's like well we can and it didn't have anything to do with whether any of the stuff was
safe or affected it just had to do well i've got the authority to tell you that you got to, well, I've got the authority to tell you that you've got to wear a helmet.
I've got the authority to tell you you've got to wear a seatbelt, so I can tell you
that you've got to wear a mask.
But, you know, they actually did have a point in that if you accept the idea, the principle,
that it's legitimate for the government to tell you that you have to have a car with
a seatbelt and then you have to wear a seatbelt, well, doesn't everything else follow?
You know, nothing has to be rejected at the root.
You know, it's not the government's business to tell you that you have to buy a car with a seatbelt or wear one.
And if you go down that road, then, well, yeah, the government doesn't have any business telling you
you have to wear a mask or a helmet or get a jab from some pharmaceutical company either.
Yeah.
I remember my dad started talking about the license that
George Washington didn't even have. My dad started driving a car when he was eight years old,
because back then there weren't that many cars. And a lot of it was off-road stuff because they
didn't have a lot of roads. And if you could find somebody that was willing to turn their car over
to you, that was the key thing, right? If they could trust you with a car not to wreck it,
you could drive it. And in my generation, I started driving motorboats because we lived in Florida.
I was driving motorboats when I was eight.
And then when we went to Virginia to cover a story, at one point we wanted to rent a
boat so we could get a better angle at what we were shooting and um uh i was able to do it
because of my age they had a grandfather clause there and this is actually even before i became
a grandfather um but i was old enough they were calling me a grandfather uh because they knew that
people our age had been driving boats for a long time and we're going to put up with this licensing
stuff right so they put that requirement on the younger people to get them in line but they say well if you're over a certain
age you don't need to have a license to drive a boat it's crazy stuff well the really incredible
thing is that it even doesn't even have anything to do with confidence as far as that's right it's
purely a government issued id and it's another obedience training session.
That's all it is.
A pilot, at least, who gets a license to fly a private airplane or a commercial airplane
actually has to demonstrate that he's got the confidence to fly the airplane.
Nobody has to demonstrate any particular confidence to get a driver's license,
so the whole thing is absurd.
You're absolutely right.
Talk about Clarkson, Jeremy Clarkson you got a an article there he's had an interesting uh life after uh cars are no more
interesting um so now he's doing pubs and he did a farm and all the rest of this stuff right uh but
his comment about cars what did he say well he used to he used an expletive which we all know
yeah he's right you know clarkson is one of the old guys, the old guard guys.
And, you know, I admired him when I was coming up and also guys like Brock Yates, you might remember from the Cannonball Run days.
And that was back in the days when car journalists actually liked cars.
It seems like most of the ones that are doing car journalism today actively dislike cars you know they cheerlead everything that makes cars
unpleasant and unwanted by people who actually do like cars you know uh clarkson was a gearhead and
an enthusiast and so that clicked and resonated with you know guys like me when i was coming up
who loved cars you know and he's what he meant by the expletive was that they're all just these
homogenous appliances now that try to parent you, that try to data mine you, correct you.
And anybody who enjoys driving will hate these things.
And he's absolutely right.
And, you know, me as an active journalist who reviews cars, you can't believe how difficult it is for me sometimes to sit down and come up with something positive to say about these new cars.
Or at least I should phrase it differently.
Something different.
Like what makes this appliance different than that appliance?
Well, let's see.
This appliance has a 9-inch LCD touchscreen,
and this one over here has a 12-inch touchscreen.
That's right.
You said for the longest time it just turned into mobile cell phones that you're right inside of.
And Rowan Atkinson played uh played mr bean a lot of
other things a black outer uh he's um he's an engineer by trade and uh became an actor but he's
and he's got these very expensive cars and he's had them for a long time and years ago
he said you don't really drive these cars you manage them and and that's really one of the
things that you're talking about. When you go back in the
article, you talk about when you're in high school and how the cars had their own idiosyncrasies,
their own failures, leaking roofs and rusty floor pans and all the rest of the stuff.
But it was fun. And I had the same kind of experience. We all had that experience. We
could get a cheap car and it was a lot of fun uh even with all those flaws yeah you know this brings up something i wrote about a few days ago
uh you know volkswagen has acquired the rights to these scout name the old international scout
remember that oh yeah and they're bringing that thing back now as a as another battery-powered
device that's exorbitantly expensive and yada yada but in researching the article i came across some interesting comments by the guy who's in charge of this operation uh and he he had the audacity i
think to refer to this thing as a connection machine now there's nothing at all in this thing
that connects you to anything except sensors and actuators you know they tried to make the interior
look like the old scout in that it has levers and so on, but those levers don't connect to anything.
In the old International Scout, you had a mechanical lever that connected to the four-wheel drive and the transfer case.
And you maybe had to get out and manually lock.
That was connection.
Rolling down a window, that's physical mechanical connection.
Now you sit inside your rolling app and you tap a screen and you push a button and the computer then you know registers
whatever the data input is and then it decides to do something it is the it is the antithesis
of being connected in my opinion oh yeah yeah yeah you're wired and that's it you know it's all
numbing it's a real numbing experience absolutely is always great to talk to you thank you so much
eric ericpetersautos.com. Always about liberty and about mobility.
Thank you so much, and everyone have a great weekend,
and hopefully we will see you next week.
And... The David Knight Show is a critical thinking super spreader.
If you've been exposed to logic by listening to The David Knight Show,
please do your part and try not to spread it.
Financial support or simply telling others about the show causes this dangerous information to spread farther.
People have to trust me.
I mean, trust the science.
Wear your mask.
Take your vaccine.
Don't ask questions.
Using free speech to free minds.
It's the David Knight Show.