The Eric Metaxas Show - C.L. Bryant (Encore)
Episode Date: September 13, 2021C.L. Bryant from Freedom Works provides a good look into what's really going on with race relations in America, past and present. (Encore Presentation) ...
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The following program is pre-recorded.
Welcome to the Eric Mettaxas show with your host, Eric Mettaxas.
Hello there, folks.
This is the Eric Metaxe show, or so they tell me.
Part of what I like to do on this show is introduce my audience, which would be you, technically,
to people that I've gotten to know, to new friends, new ideas.
As recently I was in Birmingham, Alabama, with my friend Larry Taunton.
He's with the Fix Point Foundation.
He's been on this program many times.
And we were doing a conference there.
And he brought a few people to the conference as speakers whose work I was unfamiliar with.
One of them is C.L. Bryant.
And I had such a fun time getting to know C.L. Bryant that I said, hey, you know it would be a
nice gesture to let my audience know who C.L. Bryant is and to bless you as I have been blessed.
So my guest for the day, C.L. Welcome to the Eric Metaxia show.
Thank you so much for the invitation. And I'm glad to be here with you, Eric.
Well, we had fun with Larry Taunton in Birmingham. And part of the fun for me was getting to know you.
And so let me tell my audience, you've been a minister for over 35 years. You're in
Treveport, Louisiana. You were the president of the NAACP. I want to ask you about that.
You made a film, an award-winning film called Runaway Slave. I want to talk to you about that. You've written a book called A Race for Freedom.
You're a senior fellow with Freedom Works, and you're the host of the CL Bryant show. So if somebody doesn't know anything about you, I've just listed a bunch of things.
But tell us, I mean, I know a little bit about this, but I want my audience to get to know you.
Where did you grow up?
How did you come to be serious about your faith, about your conservative view of political situation?
What's your story?
Growing up in a middle class black home, upper middle class black home, I was privileged as a child growing up in America.
and many of us don't realize that the middle-class black Americans in this country have indeed benefited from the fruits of liberty.
Only one side of that is shown, and my life story is one that shows a conservative core value rooted and grounded in faith, the church.
I'm a child of the 60s. I was born in the late 50s.
and so I grew up in an era when America was changing.
And, of course, my parents were activists.
They were a part of that change.
My father was in the restaurant business and all of that.
Some people will say that, well, maybe you've never seen the other side of it.
Well, yes, we have.
Because all of our parents and so forth who came to this country, regardless of how we got here, have experienced struggles.
And so have mine.
But it led me through the NAACP and led me also to the Tea Party, this lifestyle,
of mine in this life that I've led in this great land of America. And that's the story that I was
telling when you and I were in Birmingham together. And I do admire your work as well, Eric,
as so many millions of us do. And I'm just so happy to be here to share as much of it as I
possibly can with you of my life. Well, part of what our friend Larry Taunton did in organizing this
conference was help us to get to know each other, not just you and me, but the other folks who were
there. It's important, actually, that we know who is out there, who's working on the same team,
what is their story. When you mentioned growing up in a middle class or upper middle class home,
we're living in a time right now that makes it sound like being middle class or upper middle
class is white. That's how crazy things are. There is a group of people on the pretty
radical left who are redefining everything. And they're defining blackness, not about the color of
your skin, but about an attitude. It's kind of a Marxist attitude. It's a kind of a, you know,
an attitude that's kind of mired in poverty and it's all kinds of bad stuff. But you said that
your father was in the restaurant business. Tell me about your upbringing. Tell me about how you got
to be where you are, how you came into the ministry. My upbringing was one, as I said, centered around
the church. I grew up Baptist, born Catholic, but I grew up Baptist in Shreveport, Louisiana, and I'm
blessed to live in Florida now. But just the same, my ministry began when I got married and as a child
of privilege, many times you get into trouble because there's hardly any trouble you can get into
that your father, who is, you know, a person of influence can't get you out of. And so my ministry
began actually when I got involved with a bad crowd and I realized that this is not the way God
had intended things for me to be and went through a period of rebellion as a lot of teenagers do.
But here in America, if you are able to apply the content of your true character, then God
will bless the rest of it.
And unfortunately here, you set the definitions are being changed.
And you know, Eric, when we talk about the definitions being changed, you also change destinations when you change definitions.
And unfortunately, white Americans in this country are allowing the definition of what those old white men, the Franklins, the Jeffersons, the handcuffs, Alexander's.
When they signed on to this declaration of a new country, they defined something.
They made it a definition.
And even those of us who were in chains at the time could see that freedom was all around them.
And if they could only become a part of that, that is the type of home I grew up in, helping me to understand that freedom is all around you.
And they didn't go through what they went through so that I could be black.
My parents always instilled in me that they went through what they went through for me so that I could be free.
And I am a free man.
And it's because I was raised in a home to help myself look at myself, help me look at myself as a free man.
And so that may be the difference in some of the upbringing of some today and some that were brought up in my ethnicity in years gone by.
Tell us what Freedom Works is.
I mean, I've certainly heard of Freedom Works.
but I realized when I met you in Birmingham, I didn't know too much about it.
Tell my audience what FreedomWorks is.
Freedom Works is the largest, if not, one of the largest, if not the largest,
grassroots organization in the nation.
We boast 6 million activists plus around the country.
And my job as senior fellow Freedom Works, I've been involved with them for 12 years.
It'll be 13, actually, this year.
Since the Tea Party movement began, we're actually one of the fathers of the Tea Party movement.
And we brought 1.5 million activists to Washington, D.C., at least they descended to an event that we put on back in 2009 on 9-11.
And friends, I have to tell you that if you want to get involved, motivated,
and involved in the process of saving our republic, go to freedomworks.org, freedomworks.org.
And of course, you can follow me on Twitter at Rev. C.L. Bryant. Thank you for that, Eric.
Rev. C.L. Bryant. So let's be clear. CL stands for Cleon Lewis. I got a big smile on my face when you said
Cleon because when I was watching the Mets as a kid, one of their home run hitters was Cleon.
Jones and I have not heard that name in a while.
So your name is Cleon Lewis.
You go by C.L.
Bryant.
I want to ask you also about the film Runaway Slave.
Talk about that and where people can watch it.
This is important.
It is because it is a film that was way before its time.
Everyone is in it from Dr. Thomas Sol, Glenn Beck, Herman Kane, Alan West, Star Parker, Alveda
King.
Everyone's in this film.
and even Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson are in it.
You can go to runaway sleep.
But we should watch it anyway, you're telling me?
Absolutely.
Watch it.
And how you can get it off Amazon.
And if we're...
Runaway slave.
Well, tell me, so you came out 10 years ago, won a lot of awards.
Tell folks about it because I know a lot of people won't have seen it.
So we want to make that possible for them to check it out.
So they get to know you, too.
Absolutely.
It's a movie that directs the way for black people.
to recognize the type of tyranny that has been surrounding them for the last 60 years.
C.L. forgive me. I thought we were in a longer segment. Folks, let's put a pin in it. We'll be right back with C.L. Bryant talking about his film,
Runaway Slave.
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Hey there, folks.
I'm talking to C-L-Brient.
I just cut him off.
He was talking about his film Runaway Slave.
C-L, tell us again about the film Runaway Slaves.
because I didn't know about it, and I know that it won tons of awards.
You were just describing it.
Please continue.
Well, it is one that has shown the way for black people to recognize the type of bondage
that has been designed for them over a period of years, starting back in the Johnson
administration in the modern age.
And going all the way back to Bookerty, Washington, and that crowd,
We were, of course, talking about the design being put in place even then.
And so there are certain hustlers that have benefited since the time of Bookerty, Washington, up until this present day, who make a living off of keeping the race is divided.
Runaway Slave is a film that does show how it's necessary now for people of courage to stand up, push back, and run away from a system that has.
has been nothing more than a vehicle of bondage for a demographic of people and has led them actually to what you do see in the inner city, on the reservations, and anywhere you see poverty in large cities that are run by Democrats or those who are of liberal slant.
You'll see this type of bondage that they have people in because the exercising of American freedom is not readily available.
in their minds. It's available, but their minds have been captured by this design that progressive
liberals over the period of time have placed on them. Well, so help us understand. I mean,
I don't think that people like President Johnson and others are really aware of what they're doing.
And there's many of them, they have good intentions, but they have bought into an idea,
which you know and I know, is harmful. It does not help.
people, but it makes you feel good if you think it helps people.
It makes you think like, well, I'm doing something, and the fact is what you're doing is
you're hurting people.
So what is this idea?
When you talk about, it's a modern form of bondage, it's not chattel slavery, but it is
keeping people down.
There's a kind of a system that is keeping people down.
And if they wake up, as you are awake and many people, you mentioned the people in
runaway slave. They understand that this system is not helping. The Democrats have bought into this.
Their cities are in the most just clear failure. It's just astonishing. But what are those ideas,
what are those bad ideas that they keep selling over and over and they keep promising if we could
just do this and do this and finally we're going to get through? It's kind of like the communist talking
about, you know, we're going to have a utopia, you know, right around the corner and decades
pass and we never get anywhere near it. It gets worse.
Black people in this country, Eric, are the only demographic that has become allowed themselves, in many ways become mascots of a governmental system.
And Frederick Douglass once said, if the Negro falls, let him fall.
He'll get up again.
The Irish came here, and yes, they were persecuted, even though they didn't come in chains.
The Italians came.
They were persecuted.
Jews were persecuted as well.
they had their own way of falling, but they got up again on their own without government assistance.
The truth of the matter is, there was a time in this country when the black marriage rate was actually
higher than the white marriage rate. It was a disgrace for a black girl to have a child out of wedlock,
but we didn't kill the child. We'd send the child off to Aunt B or somewhere up in Detroit,
and all of a sudden Sally comes back home, and Aunt B. has a lot of a lot of a sudden,
new baby. We didn't kill our children, is what I'm trying to get across to you. There has become
a culture of death since government has become daddy in the homes of underprivileged and black people.
Government has become the father figure too many times and has driven out the true father figure
of the black community in the inner city in particular. And this is, you can't tell me that this is not
something, even though the road to hell is paved sometimes with good intention. But you can't tell me that this is something that is not by design. When you're looking at the abortion rate in the black community is 43 percent and the population rate of the black community in America is only 12.8. How can that be upside down if there's not a design in elimination of a certain group of people, weeding them out as Margaret Sanger has so historically said?
Well, I mean, we're talking about some basic things.
You just mentioned something.
And this to me is the, you know, the headline in what you just said, because there's so much important stuff.
But you just said that the marriage rate was way up in black communities.
They were black owned businesses on and on and on.
That history, and you know the seal, Brian, has been erased.
No one knows or talks about that.
We act as though blacks have been oppressed.
from slavery, straight up to the present time. And you're saying, well, yeah, there's injustices.
But somehow, black communities were doing amazing things until the 60s. And a narrative took over,
the Johnson administration and others brought in the welfare state. And that's when we began
to see a level of social decay that is just horrifying. It's the grand tragedy of America.
But tell us about that past that.
has been swept under the rug because no one seems to know about this. Nobody talks about it.
Let's talk about it then, Eric. Before integration, and I'm not saying that integration's bad,
okay, don't get me wrong. But I didn't get smarter sitting next to a white kid. And I was in the
first wave in 1968, Lake Shore Junior High, as it was then Shreveport, Louisiana, of kids to integrate
Lake Shore Junior High.
There was obvious tension because not of the kids, but because of the parents who have pretty
much poisoned both sides of these children, both black and white.
But before integration, the black community had its own everything in Shreveport.
We had our own movie theaters.
We had our own dress shops.
And of course, you had your funeral parlors.
You had your restaurants that were visited, of course, by whites as well.
the business end of it was booming. Why? Because it was necessary. You couldn't go to J.C. Pennies. You couldn't go. There was no, you couldn't go to Sears. And if you did, you had to stand in line behind white folks until they were waited on before you got waited on. So out of necessity. And that's what America's all about is taking advantage of the free market. And that's what Freedom Works is all about, showing the way to exercise the free market. And yes,
That wonderful word called capitalism.
That is the host that the socialist parasites ride upon.
That's the back that they ride upon.
And in the black community, we took advantage of that up until we were able to go to J.C.
Pennies, up until we were able to go to Sears or eat at any restaurant that we wanted to eat at.
And the oddest thing is, Eric, is that now that we're able to do all,
all those things. There seem to be people who want to re-segregate and go back to that room of the
past where all of us seem to like to live in that very comfortable room of the past.
Well, it's, I mean, it's amazing. You're talking about so many things. This is so important. But
the history of black people in America, when we talk about, you know, the reconstruction period
and the early parts of the 20th century,
there were thriving black communities,
thriving black businesses,
thriving families and marriages.
And again, that history has effectively been wiped out.
You simply don't hear about that.
It's not part of the narrative.
The left has really said,
we don't want to go there
because it says some things that maybe don't help our cause.
So we will basically suppress that history.
It is by purpose.
There is a purpose in that.
The only thing you ever hear about Black Wall Street in Oklahoma in Tulsa, Oklahoma, is when it was burned down by mad white folks.
But you never hear about how it became Black Wall Street.
You see, they always want you to remember your past where you came from.
They don't ever want you remember how far you came and where you're going.
Because in the past, yes, you were slaves.
In the past, yes, there were.
We're inequities in America, but that's not where we are.
And that's certainly not where we could go if we would unlock ourselves, unchain ourselves from that past.
So you don't believe in systemic racism?
It was a system.
I've written on the back of the bus, Eric.
I've drank from colored and white water fountains.
I've drank from them both.
And I've got to tell everybody who thinks the white water fountains were different, the water was the same.
And so this is something that was systemic in that day and time.
But we have arrived at a place where the color of my skin, whereas it dictated that I sat on the back of the bus back when I was nine, ten years old.
It dictated that I drank from my water fountain or go to my bathroom or Negro Day at the state fair in Louisiana one day out of two weeks.
that was systemic.
But the color of my skin now, and this is the truth of the whole matter, Eric, the color of my skin, now there is nothing in America that I want to do that the color of my skin would stop me from doing.
I want to, we're going to go to a break.
We'll be right back to continue this with C.L. Bryant. Don't go away.
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Hey, folks. I'm talking to C.L. Bryant.
He's the host of the C.L. Bryant show.
Who did you think was going to be the host of the C.L. Bryant show, if not C.L. Bryant.
C. L. Bryant, you were just making an important point about so-called systemic racism.
You said there's nothing in America that the color of your skin will prevent you from being able to accomplish today.
So why do people talk about this thing called systemic racism?
What are they saying and how are they getting that wrong?
Again, I refer back to my fellow citizens in America who happen to be,
white by label in this country. You are allowing the narrative your birthright to be stolen from you.
You are being hoodwinked, swindled and bamboozled by a redefining of who we have been in American
where that has brought us to. The greatest nation on all the earth is America and we were looking
at the fiasco in Afghanistan and all that, but it was in the minds of white.
European men. That's a fact. Don't run from that. And black folks don't run from the idea that we
contributed heavily, even to this present time, in the growth of this nation. If there is a conspiracy
of America being an evil country, then black folks, you have been a co-conspirator in doing that,
even in times when you were told what to do. You are now at a point where you have choices,
All of us do. That's the beauty of America.
Anyone with a great idea, it doesn't matter who your father was, anyone with a great idea in America
can make money. That's what Black Wall Street was all about. There were people making money.
In America today, 2021, heading for 2022 fast, very fast, very quickly. There is nothing, Eric,
McTax is that the color of my skin in this country would stop me from doing.
Stop my grandfather.
I just got to ask you a question here because you sound very optimistic.
Do you think that America will ever overcome its systemic racism enough where someday in the future we might,
the white people in America, might elect a black president?
Do you think that's going to happen?
You know, Eric, that's something that seems so far-fetched, doesn't it?
It doesn't seem possible because the racist whites will never go for that.
You understand that, C.L.
Not the racist white people who could elect the first black president, I guess, if they wanted to.
Those racist white people could elect the first black president in the future, Eric, if in fact, you know, they could ever get their act together.
They're in that racist country called.
I just don't see it happening.
I just think you're being way too up to.
optimistic. So we've had a black president and that black president bought into ideas that you are
outing as anti-black. This is the irony, isn't it? In other words, that we're being told
these are good ideas, these are bad ideas, these are black ideas, these are, well, ironically,
anybody with cultural Marxist view or a leftist view, BLM at the top of the list,
their ideas are harmful to blacks, but somehow because of the way the media goes, they're able to act as though this is what black people say, this is what they want.
Same thing with the women's movement. The women's march, the day after Trump was inaugurated, it was the women's, it was not a women's march.
It was an anti-Trump march. But minority groups in this country, they sort of ally with the left and saying, we speak for,
black people. We speak for women. You know that Al Sharpton doesn't speak for your average black,
but somehow he has been able to get away with pushing that idea. You see, what we need to understand
and realize wake up too, Eric, is this. If Antifa or Black Lives Matter or Al Sharpton, for that
matter is right, then Rosa Parks, Medge Evers, and Dr. Martin Luther King, even Malcolm X,
they have to be wrong. You see, there's a stolen valor that's going on in America today.
One of the things that I really despise and hate is when someone says that they served in our nation's
uniform as a soldier and then is found out that they were not. That's stealing the valor of those
who wear the uniform. And this is what you were seeing in those movements we've just named,
like BLM and Antifa and even the Al Sharpton of this world. They are stealing valor from those
who actually did pay the price. There is some twisted idea that you can relive the civil rights
movement. No, that room of the past that I mentioned in just a moment or two ago. We like to spend
a lot of time in that room of the past. All of us do. We have three rooms that all of us live in,
but that's the one we love to spend time in is that room of the past. And there's not a picture,
there's not a piece of furniture, there's not a moment that you can change in that room of the past.
Why do they want to keep us trapped there? Why do they want us keep us thinking about that?
When you're thinking about that, the pain, you don't think about that child that is yours,
that wife that has born that child or that woman that has born that child.
When you're thinking about how much pain and suffering you've been through to get here,
you feel like you almost deserve to leave them to their own pain and suffering.
And that's where liberals, socialists, Democrats have led the black community.
But there is an awakening that is going on as we speak.
And I thank you that you allow me this opportunity to speak and on this platform.
because it is something that need to be heard, I do believe,
and it is a conversation that need to be had.
We are talking to C.L. Bryant.
The film is runaway slave.
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Hey there, folks.
I am talking to C.L. Bryant, host of the C.L. Bryant show.
The filmmaker behind Runaway Slave and the author of a book, A Race for Freedom.
about that, CL, the book of Race for Freedom, which you wrote, is that pretty much a reprisal
of the ideas that we're talking about today in case somebody wants to hear more about this?
Very much so. You can get it on Amazon or you can go to my, you can go to runaway slavemovie
dot com as well and find it there. It is a book that outlines how America has been established
for a race of people who would understand the value of liberty and freedom.
We are endowed by our creator with certain unalienable rights, and among them is life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
We don't know whose face Jefferson had in mind when he penned those words, but we do know this.
I know this for certain.
When he wrote those words, he guaranteed that the day would come if we were true to those words that
I'd be here speaking with you, Eric, and you'd be speaking with me in a free America.
That is the race for freedom.
That is a race for freedom that has been established on this earth.
And it is a race of people, Americans, who, in fact, have created the greatest nation together
on the face of the planet.
Red, yellow, black, and white, whoever you are in this country, you have been a part of this
great experiment that has worked up to this point.
if we stay true to who we were founded to be, if we don't change the definitions, if we don't
allow people to change the definitions of who we were founded to be, we will remain the greatest
beacon of hope on the world and in the world.
We need to be clear, too, that, you know, when you're talking about the ideas of the founders
who were all white men, the ideas were not white.
Those are American ideas.
I will go even farther. Those ideas don't only belong to America. They belong to God. If anything
is good, it is of God. And it does not have a color. It does not have a nationality. Truth is
truth. And the idea that people would get so pinched and circumscribed by their views that they
would say, well, those are white ideas. And you think, if it's true, it's true for you. And why would
you throw it away. But I mean, we have so much anger that people are saying that just because
I don't like that group of people or I don't like this. I'm going to throw away their good ideas.
Biden has done it with Trump's plan for Afghanistan. They do it with a if Trump talks about
hydroxychloroquine, they go because he said it, I hate it. Instead of thinking about what is right
and what is wrong and what works, people are just animated by emotion. And so when you talk about,
these ideas and it's called a race for freedom, your book, you're saying that it's about
ideas that make us free. It has nothing to do. But you see this going on with the 1619 project
and attempt to redefine everything as though truth is not truth, as though what Thomas Jefferson
wrote isn't true for every person of every color. Absolutely right. You're absolutely right, Eric.
that is not a white idea.
It is an idea given to the creations of the creator, according to Jefferson.
It is a right that is set us free.
And when we talk about 1619 project,
most Americans don't even realize the absurdity of founding this type of argument in 1619
when America did not become a nation until the Constitution in 1789 was actually ratified.
At 1776, we declared our independence.
1789, the Constitution was ratified.
America was a country.
86 years after America became a country, it began to live up to those founding documents
that we all are created equal.
Slavery went away in 86 years, not 400 years.
No, it wasn't 400 years.
It was 86 years after the founding of this nation that we had.
had the war that has never happened in any country, where a country goes to war against itself
in order to free people that are in bondage.
Those white soldiers who march north or march south with their guns in hand, they may have
never even seen a black slave.
They didn't know what this was all about.
They just know that liberation was in order here.
that's how we have become the greatest nation on earth is exercising our freedoms well it's amazing
what we're talking about i mean this country uh when you think about slavery uh slavery is not a
color issue there have been slaves since since the dawn of humanity there has been evil and sin
and humans oppressing humans so the idea that it's a racial thing is just preposterous i mean
when I wrote my book Amazing Grace about Wilberforce and the campaign to end the slave trade
in the British Empire, it was so obvious when you look into it that there were black Africans
selling and enslaving other black Africans. It had nothing to do with color. So it's really
a bizarre racial to the point of racist retelling of American history. 1619 Project is just
it's a wicked fiction. But the left and the left.
And the media who seem to be going out of their way in terms of their ignorance to not simply to not look at facts, they keep promoting this ridiculous idea.
We've just got a minute left, C.L. I don't know if you want to respond to that.
Absolutely. I will. It is, again, time for all of us to stand up and push back. And above all, tell the American story.
Tell the story how this nation has become a great nation, not because of the words written by old white men, but because of the principles that this country, this nation has been built upon.
And Eric, I want to thank you again for having me on the show.
I pray that God will bless and keep you in your work, and whatever you're doing.
I pray that God will order your steps in His Word.
and it's good to be your friend and make your acquaintance and, hey, I believe that we're going to have you on our show real soon.
Eric Mantex, you've got to come on.
I look forward to it.
You know I would.
And one of the further debts that I owe Larry Taunton is introducing us.
Just a pleasure to get to know you, folks.
You can follow C.L. Bryant on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, at Rev.
C.L. Bryant.
The book is a race for freedom.
The film is runaway slave.
God bless you, my friend, C.L. Brian, to be continued.
Everywhere I've been going recently, people have been saying,
Eric, you're so tan.
And I should say that, you know, a lot of people suspect because I'm taking
Neutrametics product, you get a certain glow.
Now, that's true.
And actually, this is the last chance for me to mention that until midnight today,
we have 35% off if you use the country.
code Eric. 20% is our normal discount when you use the code Eric, 20, which is great, because you
want all these products anyway. You don't want to spend your money in places, you know, where we don't
know where the money goes to, the profits. The profits, when you buy stuff at nutrometics.com,
50% of their profit goes to missions organizations. These people are heroes. Trust me, I mean,
well, we've had them on the program. If you've heard those interviews, you know that's true.
So anything you buy today, up to midnight tonight, 35% off if you use the code, Eric.
This is the last chance, folks.
Okay.
So we want to let you know.
Fair warning, okay?
Going once, going twice, midnight.
That's it, 35% off.
Then you go back to 20%, which is great, but it's not 35 in case you didn't know.
So, yes, people think, Eric, you're taking these nutraceuticals, nutrometics.
It's giving you this incredible glow.
And they say, and I believe, Eric, that you are tan for such a time as this.
This is God's timing for your tan because you met with the president and you wanted to be one of your bucket list things, Eric, one of you, everybody knows, was to be more tan than Donald Trump.
And by the grace of God, I've achieved my dream.
I met with him last Thursday at Bedminster at the Trump International Golf Club, country club.
and I was more tan than the president.
But, you know, some might say shadier, but I wouldn't.
No, you wouldn't say that I was shady. Thank you.
But when I shook his hand, there was kind of an electricity.
And I felt that it made me even more tan.
I got an impartation of his tan.
It was a spiritual experience when I met him.
But anyway, we're going to talk about that tomorrow with Sean Foyt.
He was there with me.
We recorded the president's speech.
And we got a lot of time with President Trump.
He was tremendously gracious, you know.
It's so incredible because if you watch the news, they say he's a racist, he's nasty, he's this.
It's so preposterous.
It's so preposterous.
So we met with him.
He was tremendously gracious to us.
He says, you staying for dinner?
Are he staying for dinner?
Oh, please stay for dinner.
I mean, he was so kind.
And we got him to sign some hats.
And I think we're going to auction those hats off.
He signed the hat.
We should have taped.
We should have videotaped him signing the hats.
Did you stay for dinner?
Did you stay for dinner?
We stayed for dinner.
And it was, the whole thing was just incredible.
And I have to say that I'm very encouraged.
He's going to be back, folks.
You hear me?
He's going to be back because the election was a fraudulent election.
You may not have heard that before.
But the evidence is incredible.
increasingly clear. It's going to come out. Oh, you're crazy, they say. Yeah, well, you stay tuned.
You stay tuned to this crazy show and you'll see that there is no, there's no possibility that the
doddering jack and apes known as Joe Biden was elected by the American people. And here's the key.
You maybe didn't know this. The American people choose our leaders. That's right. The deep state and the
the criminals who steal votes and who play that game,
they don't get to choose the leaders.
We the people get to choose.
And we the people chose Trump twice.
And that's going to come out.
And I just want to say be encouraged because if you're watching the news,
they're not even talking about this.
So you think, well, that's just crazy.
No, it's not.
We'll talk about this more.
But anyway, we're just about out of time.
So let me say we're going to have 21 days.
days of prayer. I'm fasting dinner tonight. We're going to pray for the nation. We're at a crucial
tipping point, folks. Pray that the truth come out. Pray for the nation. Pray for the recall election
tomorrow. Very important. Nutrimidics, 35% off only till midnight tonight when you use the
code air. I think we're out of time and we'll see tomorrow and we'll give you an update with
Sean Foyt. It's going to be great.
