Will Cain Country - Dems Lose It Over Trump’s White House ‘Demolition’ (ft. Ruthless Variety Progrum and Miranda Devine)

Episode Date: October 21, 2025

Story 1: As the New York City mayoral election draws near, self-proclaimed Democratic Socialist Zohran Mamdani has maintained a steady lead in the polls, but are his policies truly representative of n...ative New Yorkers or simply a product of unchecked immigration? Will unpacks exactly where Mamdani’s base lies. Story 2: The Hosts of the 'Ruthless Variety Progrum,' Josh Holmes, Comfortably Smug, Michael Duncan, and John Ashbrook, join Will to decipher the politics of liberal white women, before reacting to former Biden Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre defending former President Biden’s lack of press appearances. Later, they react to media outrage towards the White House ballroom project as well as the President of Columbia’s veiled threat towards President Trump. Story 3: Host of ‘Pod Force One,’ Miranda Devine, featured in FOX Nation's new special 'Cocaine At 1600,' helps Will unravel the mystery behind a bag of cocaine found in the White House back in 2023. Devine breaks down all of the available evidence, including heavily redacted documents, alleged destruction of evidence, and much, much more. In Final Takes, Will and The Crew react to Texas Tech banning the beloved fan tradition: throwing tortillas onto the field. Subscribe to ‘Will Cain Country’ on YouTube here: ⁠⁠Watch Will Cain Country!⁠⁠Follow ‘Will Cain Country’ on X (@willcainshow), Instagram (@willcainshow), TikTok (@willcainshow), and Facebook (@willcainnews)Follow Will on X: ⁠⁠@WillCain Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:01:21 Two, a ballroom's going up at the White House and peanut allergies are going down. We break it down with the hosts of the Ruthless Variety Program. Three, whatever happened to cocaine in the White House, we ask Miranda Devine. It is Wilcane Country on a Tuesday, where we ask what happened to peanut allergies and what happened to cocaine. But in order to get into all of that, we have to start with what is happening in New York City and what is happening with white women. Let's get into it with story number one. No Kings Rally, coast to coast, city to city, one of the images that you would see in one of the worst displays. came from notably white women.
Starting point is 00:02:25 When yesterday I was hosting the Will Kane show on the Fox News channel, showing some of the various videos from the No Kings rally. I got a text from an old friend, an old friend who will remain nameless. And that old friend said to me, thank you. Thank you for telling the truth. Thank you for showing that a lot of this, what we're seeing, is coming from and coming down to white women. At the same time, we're asking what's happening in America.
Starting point is 00:02:51 Most acutely, what's happening in New York City? How are we set to elect the leading candidate for mayor are the most cosmopolitan center of the United States of America, an immigrant Muslim who suggests that we should take down Western civilization? An avowed socialist and obvious communist, Zoramam Dhani. Well, new polling out of New York shows exactly who is into Zoran. Here's what the polling suggests. Breaking it down by Borough, interestingly,
Starting point is 00:03:20 Zoroamandhi performs best in Brooklyn and Manhattan. Where in Manhattan, he has 47% of the vote, and in Brooklyn, he looks to gain 55% of the vote. We could turn that over to the Brooklyn brunch crew, and we could ask two a day's dam, but what that says to me is hipsters. Is it hipster, white women? Let's keep going into the polling.
Starting point is 00:03:45 Breaking it down by religion. Zoroamandani currently has 29% among Catholics. Andrew Cuomo pulling 41%. Zoroamamani has 30% among Jewish. Andrew Cuomo is 63%. But when it comes to Protestants, Zoran Mamdani has 48% compared to Andrew Cuomo's 32%. Hipster Protestants.
Starting point is 00:04:10 Now let's break it down by gender. Zoroamamani, 36% male, 49% female. Andrew Cuomo, 31 and 34, hipster, Protestant, white women from Brooklyn and Manhattan. That seems to be the group supporting Zoramam Dhani, but what is most notable, the most support that he is getting in New York, actually doesn't come from a Protestant, doesn't come from a native New Yorker. The most outstanding support for Zoroamam Dani comes from those born somewhere else than America. Native-born population of New York, Zoroam Dani, 31%. Andrew Cuomo, 40%. Foreign-born population.
Starting point is 00:05:02 Zoroamam Dani, 62%. Andrew Cuomo, 24%. He's simply getting. the vote of people who are not from originally the United States of America. This was broken down further, according to an I-Z-A report, and Patriot polling. Patriot polling from October 18th to October 19th suggests among American-born New Yorkers, Andrew Cuomo leads around Mamdani 40 to 31. Among foreign-born New Yorkers, Mamdani leads Cuomo, 62.
Starting point is 00:05:41 to 24. Douglas Mackey, famously arrested for posting a meme, posted the truth on X. Douglas Mackey wrote, they literally imported a new voter base to vote a Ugandan-born Indian Muslim, naturalized citizen into power. This is New York. Thanks to the Immigration Act of 1965, Reagan Amnesty, and the Immigration Act of 1990 under George H.W. Bush. people not originally from America are voting in a politician that does not represent the values of America. That's just one of the costs, one of the cost of unfettered immigration, not just illegal immigration, but unfettered immigration. When you open your borders and you open your refugee status, when you open your welfare rolls to people across the globe, what happens? Well, we have a new study out of the Netherlands that tells you exactly what happens.
Starting point is 00:06:36 happens. When you import people from across the world, they can be a net drain or a net gain on your economy, on your government services. And it matters. It matters from where they come. It matters their country. It matters their region in this world. Take a look at this breakdown of a now I-ZA study out of the Netherlands from 2024. posted on the end-wokeness X stream, here's the lifetime contribution per immigrant. If that immigrant to the Netherlands comes from North America, they are a net $573,000 increase to government services and the government to the economy. Scandinavian immigrants, 555,000 plus, Oceana, 476,000. Japan, 525, UK, 481.
Starting point is 00:07:36 However, if those immigrants come from Somalia, the Caribbean, the Middle East, and Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa, this is what it looks like. If they come from Central and North Africa, negative $700,000 drain over the course of their lifetime. Sub-Saharan Africa, $730,000 drain. Latin America, negative 271,000. Middle East, negative 624,000. Caribbean, negative 675,000. And Somalia. negative 1.1 million.
Starting point is 00:08:08 It's as though you can't just invite the entire third world into your country without it becoming somewhat representative of the third world. You can't invite in migrants and refugees and expect that they become contributing members of your existing culture and society. And it bears out in the numbers in Netherlands. That's an argument not just to fight illegal immigration, but to have a cohesive policy when it comes to immigration. And that's the way it always was. That was the idea. Yes, quotas. Yes, political debates.
Starting point is 00:08:38 From where? How many? To where? What benefits the United States of America? For some reason, that debate, very serious and real policy debate, but one that has lasting impact on your culture, is one that is dismissed as xenophobic, jingoistic, racist. And yet it's one that every forefather and every forbearer that we had, literally debated. But all of a sudden the Western world says, no, whatever, from wherever.
Starting point is 00:09:12 Tolerance. Even when you vied in intolerance. You invite in people who do not share your values and what happens. They adopt your values or they change your values. What we're seeing in the UK is quite clear. We know what's happening in the UK. And wait. wait to see what happens in New York City
Starting point is 00:09:34 foreign-born population voting for supporting a man who looks to uproot change revolutionize the entire system that he moved into that attracted his parents to immigrate and he wants to change it to what I don't know what we're told is socialism but this is the mystery box this is the grab bag
Starting point is 00:09:53 this will be fun get to see what you get odds are my suggestion is you have some hints simply take a look at the UK and that takes us back to who exactly is asking for this besides the people that bring with them their values and unfortunately it is white women you saw it in the no king's rally you've seen it everywhere you go who's the one taking their sons in to be chemically crasterated to doctors it's white women mothers who is forgiving who is indulging by the way the rhetoric of political violence after the assassination of Charlie Kirk. Look at the videos from the No Kings Rally. It's a school teacher from Chicago mimicking it. It's a lady in designer hat in New York. Looks like she should be walking around the Hamptons, calling him Hitler and saying he has no place in her world. And it is, by the way, those that are willing to forgive Virginia Attorney General candidate Jay Jones, his violent rhetoric and continue to vote him in. We have polling as well. This time,
Starting point is 00:10:58 the polling comes on the Virginia Attorney General's race and who's voting for J. Miaris and who's willing to forgive and vote for J. Jones. Jay Jones, the man who fantasized about killing his political opponent and his children, put it in a text. Who's supporting Jay Jones? Well, let's just take a look really quickly. 94% of Republicans for J. Miaris, 2% for J. Jones. Democrats, 85% for Jones, 4% for Miaris.
Starting point is 00:11:28 All right, let's go further. How about age cohorts? 18 to 34, 50 to 38 in favor of Miaris. Interesting, young people. 35 to 44. 40 to 49, Jones in the lead. 45 to 54. 43 to 46, Jones in the lead.
Starting point is 00:11:49 55 to 64 goes back in favor of Miaris. Moderates, self-described moderates. 52 to 29. moderates in favor of the man who fantasized killing his political opponent, Jay Jones. Black overwhelmingly for Jay Jones, 79 to 5. I don't want to focus in again on this. Male, 57% Miaris, 33% Jones. Female, 37% Miaris, 51% Jones.
Starting point is 00:12:22 There you have it. There again is your women. voting for the man who would fantasize about killing his political opponent. Voting for a man who hopes to and looks to under or uproot this entire society in New York City. You get what you ask for, and it's pretty clear what people are asking for in New York. It's pretty clear what was being asked for by white women. Let's talk about this, plus the new ballroom at the White House and the fact that peanut allergies are on the decline
Starting point is 00:13:01 with the boys from the Ruthless Variety Program. Coming up on Wilcane Country. It's the matcha or the three ensemble Cadocephora of the facts that I've been to denishé who energize so much. It's the ensemble. The form of standard and mini-regrouped. Call-O-Bemn. And the embellage, too beau, who is practically pre-a-donned.
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Starting point is 00:13:35 on c.a or in magazine. Forrestan. com. You know, Michael Michael Knighton,
Starting point is 00:13:42 the Wallitia asks, why haven't I been on Gutfeld? Pretty easy and simple answer to that.
Starting point is 00:13:52 Michael Knight The answer is I live in Texas It is Wilcane Country Streaming live with the Wilcane Country YouTube channel on the Fox News Facebook page But you can always follow along at Spotify or on Apple. You can see during the commercial break and for much of the program we have
Starting point is 00:14:08 your comments up during the show. Keep jumping into the Willisha. We keep bringing you into the show. I love your feedback. I love it when you disagree. I love your commentary and your observation so we invite you into the Willisha. Let's bring in Josh Holmes comfortably smug, Michael Duncan and John Ashbrook. They are the host of the Ruthless Variety Program, and you can catch them at Fox News Podcast on YouTube, wherever you get your digital entertainment.
Starting point is 00:14:35 What's up, fellas? Hey, what's going on, Will? Good to be again. I don't know when you guys might have tuned in if you got to heard what I was talking about, but, you know, I think that we need to address this problem in society, and the problem increasingly is obvious. It's white women. It is the most focused terrorist group in America. There's no question about that. You mix a little tip-topper of chardonnay, and it becomes explosive.
Starting point is 00:15:08 And it is something to keep an eye on. There's no question. I think neighborhoods around this country have dealt with this kind of a problem. And, yeah, it's an issue. I think the entire cottage industry of we believe in this. house we believe signs in a pottery barn is entirely funded by liberal white women in this country. Yeah. Do you know a single dude that would say, baby, I'm headed out front. What are you doing? I'm posting
Starting point is 00:15:33 this in the front yard. I don't know a single dude. Now, they exist, but I don't know a guy's like, hey, have you been on Amazon? Next time you're buying deodorant, would you grab me one of those in this house? Signs because I want to put something in the front yard. And look, I love white women. I love white women. But my point is simply that. I can read the data. I can see what's going on. I see the videos coming out of the No Kings rally. I see the ladies who are just now openly talking about, yeah, Charlie Kirk should have
Starting point is 00:16:03 been murdered and who are continuing to vote for Jay Jones, you know, or who are supportive of Zoramam Dhani. I mean, I'm doing this in a punchy way, kind of to be funny, but I don't, it doesn't mean it's wrong. No, Ashbrook. Not at all. There's a real issue here with the way they're voting. There is.
Starting point is 00:16:22 So there's been a lot of sociological studies done on this. And historically, women, when they're in groups, they work on coming to a consensus. Men, when you have them in groups, they work towards getting to a decision. Frequently, you'll see this, like, in your relationship with your wife or something, where she'll be talking and you're like, so here's what you should do. And she's like, that's not what I was after. I just wanted someone to listen to me. You know what I mean? Meanwhile, you get a group of guys together.
Starting point is 00:16:49 You'll say, okay, who's the best team in the AFC? you're coming to a decision, right? So women along this, how it's developed, this coming to a consensus is kind of like a don't rock the boat. So if you've got, let's say, five women together and one woman has just shown up from one of these rallies and is like, did you guys know that Trump is a fascist? The rest aren't going to try to rock the boat.
Starting point is 00:17:10 But the other problem is when you stewing that all day, you end up with the problem that we have. And on the dudes, on the who's the best team in the AFC, we actually don't want a consensus. We even like that there's going to be disagreement, right? That's what we're looking for. We're not looking for. The female version of that conversation is over in two minutes.
Starting point is 00:17:33 They all get to a nice place and agree somehow, some way, it has ended up the Indianapolis Colts. But the rest of us go, are you kidding me, Daniel Jones? Patrick Mahomes is getting hot. Have you seen the Chiefs? They've got to rash your ice back. I mean, okay, I've, okay, well, well, I have a. I have a bone to pick with you on this.
Starting point is 00:17:53 I actually tweeted at you. I tagged you in this. But I looked on, you know, one of the betting apps on who's favored for NFL comeback player of the year. Currently, it's not Daniel Jones. It's Dak Prescott, which I think is an insane, insane thing. I mean, Daniel Jones is running the most efficient offense this side of this century. And I just think it's bias against a small market team like the Indianapolis Colts and his favoritism for you will lead us down there in Dallas. That is the thing.
Starting point is 00:18:30 I think as a quick sports, I think as a quick sports parenthetical, first of all, I don't think there's any pro-DAC bias anymore. I think if there's any bias anymore, it's anti-DAC. And he's having an, can we reach a consensus, ladies? He's having an incredible season. he's having an incredible season. Like, DAC should be in the MVP conversation. Oh, my God. Hold on, three in one.
Starting point is 00:18:55 Dude, he hasn't thrown an interception in a month. He's thrown three touchdowns every game. They've got like a top five offense in every metric. Dak is basically playing the position perfectly. But he's stained by this past reputation that I think results in this anti-Dak bias. But Duncan, here's what I'd say. And I missed your tweet. Sorry, I've got to get more active on X.
Starting point is 00:19:17 I just, I, it's lost a little of its luster for me. Land of the wolves, dude. I don't check it as much. I know. And I want to see you coming at me, Duncan. I really do. I want to see that. But I, I'm, I less and less want to see everything else.
Starting point is 00:19:30 Come back. I think that what's happened there is too many people think of it as injury comeback and DAC's coming back from injury when the true nature of it should be coming back from anything. And I agree with you. I would not vote DAC comeback player of the year. I'd make it Daniel Jones clearly. I'd vote DAC in BP.
Starting point is 00:19:46 Well, of course, he benefits from the. the tutelage of KOC in Minnesota, who's, of course, a quarterback whisper right up until the Carson Wentz experiment. But nevertheless, all of these guys come out of Minnesota and they become decent quarterbacks. But this entire conversation, Will, is a demonstration of why dudes rock. This is why dudes rock. And this is why we're not going to, like, point to the wall in a live, laugh, love sign and be like, oh, you know what? let's just get this together and talk about it. You know, it's like everybody's allowed to have their opinion.
Starting point is 00:20:20 They're going to be different opinions. Everybody's got a different team. Everybody's for their team. Everybody, you know, it's a very, very interesting topic that you bring up out of the gate here. And I'm really glad you did. Yeah, I do want to have, look, I want to have more conversations that we all know deep down is true, but we're some reason unwilling to talk about it because it'll be called sexist or jingo-wistic or racist. but the truth is, observing the reality and observing the world isn't that.
Starting point is 00:20:48 How you behave and how you react to it is. And no one here is going to take the vote away from the women. It's rather, let's just acknowledge this trend and start addressing what's going on here, right? Let's just figure it out. Like maybe, maybe, like Donald Trump said, maybe should we just pause the voting for a little while until we figure out what's going on? Until we figure out what's happening. Let's just take a break and just pause. That's a joke.
Starting point is 00:21:11 That's a joke. long dead media matters by way there is one lady never envisioned this well let's just take a pause until we can figure out what the hell is going on they're voting for
Starting point is 00:21:26 mom donnie let's put a pause in this there is a lady who's not seeking consensus Karene Jean-Pierre is she is unfrapped to stay give her that man give her that she's she I'm going to give her credit for consistency here she is with the dude
Starting point is 00:21:42 the man in the pearl necklace from the bulwark. Listen. He talked way less to the press than Donald Trump does, way less. And he wasn't out there at all. He wasn't good off the cuff. He wasn't doing press conferences. Let's just be real. Like, he didn't do event.
Starting point is 00:21:57 That's not true. Tim, you're conflating all of it. That's what you're doing. No, first you're telling me he didn't talk well about it. Then you're telling me he didn't talk at all. He didn't do either. He didn't talk very often. And when he did, it wasn't very good.
Starting point is 00:22:09 He sounded very old. Maybe you weren't paying attention to what we were doing at the White House. I paid attention that I'm with you on the policies. I'm talking about his performance. The president, the president spoke to the American people a couple times a week. He traveled and did domestic travel and talked directly to the American people. You hear that? He spoke to the American people a couple of times a week just as much as Donald Trump. He was readily available, Joe Biden. I think it is the case. I got to recheck the math. on this but i think it is the case that in the first calendar week of president trump's administration
Starting point is 00:22:48 he remember he opened it up where he did a tuesday uh what i want to say was like a two-hour open press deal and then by thursday he had another full hour or something of just open press and he had eclipsed by the end of that week the total minutes allowed for open press in the entirety of the four years of the Biden administration? Like what in the bloody hell is she talking about here? She's talking about it over Tim Miller. I think it was Adam Crowler posted when they don't want to hear the truth. They talk over you. I hate that style. She just kept talking over him. She would not shut up. Just listen to his point. And then you can rebut it with your falsehoods about how often Joe Biden made himself available.
Starting point is 00:23:41 Yeah, and could you think of a more friendly audience to her than the bulwark? I mean, the guy literally said, I agree with all of the policies, which is basically what Kamala said, which is what got a rung up in the head of the election. This is Mitt Romney's press secretary who is saying, no, open borders. I love the open borders. No, what you did in Afghanistan, brilliant. I literally just want to know why you didn't do more press conferences, and she wouldn't even have that. Corrine Jean-Pierre, as press secretaries go, is unique because press secretary is a very hard job.
Starting point is 00:24:20 It's even harder when you lie to people for a living every single day. And who was she lying to? She was lying to a friendly press corps, just like the guy she was talking to in that video. Well, the other thing there that I find fascinating about Kareem Jean-Pierre and how she's sort of position. herself post the Biden administration is this some this is a person who was the mouthpiece for the failure of this administration and she still defends Joe Biden to the hilt but she also like has written multiple opeds and promos for these books talking about how now she considers herself an independent and and wants to question the leadership of the democratic party and it's like
Starting point is 00:25:01 but you're defending the biggest failure in modern democratic politics to the hill So where exactly is the positioning of this thing? It makes no sense. I wonder what she wants to do for a living. She got a new hairdo. And I wonder what she's gunning for here. You know, let's just kind of go through this, all right? Let's just go through this really quickly.
Starting point is 00:25:24 Because I didn't know the man in the Pearl Necklace was Mitt Romney's press secretary. He was. He goes into media. He goes into media. Gin Saki goes into media. Kaylee McAney, he goes into media. Dana Perino goes into media. Who am I forgetting?
Starting point is 00:25:39 There's got to be more. Oh, Jay Carney went into be a C-suite guy at Amazon. George Stephanopoulos. Smart. George Stephanopoulos, obviously. Good morning, America. Jay Carney, by the way, let's keep up with career earnings there. I want to know what the C-suite there in Silicon Valley is doing.
Starting point is 00:25:59 I think that could be smart. Lawrence O'Donnell. I bet he is. Bill Moyers. And what was the fact guy, Gibbs? Remember Gibbs was the first Obama press secretary and he went to like McDonald's or something? I think he did some industry groups and then I think he did McDonald's. Yeah, it was a good fit.
Starting point is 00:26:15 But that's the thing. And this is a, Will, you're 100% right is it's very telling because specifically over the past, I'd say like 10 to 15 years, the exit strategy for a lot of Democrats, other than media, was these major corporate gigs that were just insanely high paying. You saw essentially the second Obama campaign, the, the, the, re-election campaign, all of them, that entire campaign was basically then just bought by corporate America. They went to work for Pepsi. You know, you had Carney go off to Amazon.
Starting point is 00:26:45 So they cashed in big time. It was almost like a given that, like, if you work for a Democrat at the presidential level, you're going to get the sickest payday as soon as you're out. The fact that Corinne Jean-Pierre and the Biden folks are left out in the cold is incredibly telling of what a failure that administration was. I heard that, Smug. And you guys are much more plugged into D.C. than I am. But I did hear that. I heard that the Biden people are not finding a welcoming environment in their post-governmental life. They're not getting a lot of offers. Nothing. Nothing. There's nothing out there for them in corporate America. It would look especially bad right now. Where you saw on Trump's reelection, so much of corporate America reoriented themselves as being like, okay, I guess we were lied to. We don't need to be insane. We don't need to have pride flags and BLM flags covering our headquarters all year. reoriented themselves to try to be normal for the first time in like a decade.
Starting point is 00:27:38 So if they hired Biden alum, that would make them look still out of touch. But that's another reason they can't find a job. But the fact of the matter is all of Biden's people were like fifth string, six string Obama people. They needed like four injuries to be able to get in front of a podium to talk. So they never were talented to begin with. A lot of pop list. Yeah, 100%.
Starting point is 00:27:58 Yeah. She's got to end up at MSNBC. I forgot Sean Spicer also in media She's got to end up at MSNBC She has to She has to make too much sense Alright let's work through a couple other things here together Let's start with the
Starting point is 00:28:12 The redoing of the White House ballroom I didn't know this because my algorithm Doesn't give a damn But there's a there's a huge freak out You know what people are gonna walk around in the future And be like, what's your algorithm? They already are Because that's what we're getting
Starting point is 00:28:28 I literally already have this conversation Really? Yeah, We're in the post-viral world. I don't wake up every day, assuming that my show staff has seen the same things that I've seen. In fact, I'd say over 50% of the time they have not. And it's not like, oh, because what I'm seeing is more important or what you're seeing is more important. It's just like it's so tailored to me. So my algorithm, like I said, doesn't care about the White House.
Starting point is 00:28:50 But everyone is telling me it's a huge freak out. Maybe best illustrated by Morning Joe. Here's Morning Joe. This Donald Trump, who promised that he was not going to take a wrecking ball to the existing structure. as taking a wrecking ball to existing structure. I'm going to say, it really is it is hard to watch that. And it's hard to believe that any president could destroy the White House
Starting point is 00:29:15 and take a wrecking ball to an existing structure so historic. That is what's happening. Oh, my gosh. By the way, here's Gavin Newsom saying the same, basically the same thing. He posted on X, ripping apart. the White House, just like he's ripping apart the Constitution with a picture of the demolition of the White House to build the ballroom? It's funny because, you know, and I actually asked somebody that was a part of the White House
Starting point is 00:29:46 Historical Society and basically what their job has been over the, you know, last 20, 30 years, it's just like retouching up paint and making sure that the exact structure looks exactly the same. But it's become antiquated for anybody who's been in the White House at all, either the west wing or the east wing and in not you know like not a lot of people get to get in the residence i don't know exactly what every room in that outfit looks like but it occurred to me long before all this is like is anybody going to try to update this thing because if you walk into just like the west wing offices alone let alone the east wing and it's just not today's culture right it's it's there are offices that don't they were built in 19 what 30 something the east
Starting point is 00:30:30 Some of it was like 1944, I think. Yeah, in 1944 or whatever. It's just not built for today's standards. Right. And of course, you have a developer who's elected president of the United States. He has a look at all this. And he's like, you know what, I can make it better. Imagine complaining about that.
Starting point is 00:30:45 It's insane. It's a real least. Just point out that Holmes was like, for all of us who have been in the White House very frequently. But please continue, Ashbrook. No, he's too good. You know what? Smoke can't get through because of his algorithm. It's a filthy, a filthy mess.
Starting point is 00:31:02 One secret service scan, they'd be like, my God, you're not coming close to this building. Hey, on that really quickly, did you guys see the story? And I haven't done it in depth out of the UK where a bank is now monitoring your CO2 footprint. So the bank, whatever your purchases are, it's got assigned CO2. Yeah, for real. It's like a real thing. At least one bank in England is doing it now. So for every purchase that you make, it's got a CO2 assignment to it.
Starting point is 00:31:24 So you can see what your carbon footprint is. But I can see that totally smug. like I are home for the high score dude to the well I want to everybody knows what's going to happen they're going to do this whole like you know what do they call it carbon uh you know credits and social credit score that's what they're going to do right so but i can totally see like um will you've been invited to go to the white house correspondent center oh awesome you just got to fill out this thing for your your your security check or whatever and by the way we're going to we're to just kind of check out your algorithm.
Starting point is 00:31:57 And I'm like, oh, shit. It's like pressing the search function on your Instagram. Like, you don't want anybody doing it. That's the one. I was getting ready to make that joke, Holmes. That's the joke. I was like, as long as you don't go to Instagram, please don't look at search on Instagram.
Starting point is 00:32:12 Like, it turns out, I'm a heterosexual male who likes, like, big boats and fishing and airplanes and things like that. And then the other stuff, just ignore all of them. Just ignore all that. Don't go anywhere because I want to ask the boys from Ruthless why peanut allergies are on the decline. And with the heist at the Louvre, I'll ask them, what's the best heist movie coming up on Will Kane Country? Okay, look, by the way, here's what, you're talking about updating mixed opinion on what you said. Because I am of this opinion, you know, Tucker Carlson's talked about it.
Starting point is 00:32:49 My guy, tinfoil, Pat's big on it. I'm not into refinement culture. Sometimes I drive around with the new house is being built, and I'm like, they all look the same. And in 10 years, they're all going to look super dated because everybody's so chases whatever the trend is. And I get it. Everybody wants their house to be white now with black, dark trim, and clean modern lines and your house, because I can use them. But here's the flip side. You've got a president who doesn't think that way.
Starting point is 00:33:11 He's kind of got a timeless taste, you know, which the White House should be. And that's an image of the ballroom, the ringerings. It looks sick. It looks awesome. Look at the big windows. There's tons of light coming in. As is Donald Trump, it's got a little French flair, you know, a little rococo flare to it or something like that. But you can see the outside, too.
Starting point is 00:33:31 I think it looks awesome. And you know it's going to have a great speaker system so he can DJ every single night in that room. And everybody's going to love it. I think Holmes really hit the nail in the head. You have a president who is developer. Why don't you take advantage of that? Why don't you take advantage of a guy who has a vision for building? And, you know, it makes an awful lot of sense to have.
Starting point is 00:33:51 have a giant ballroom on the grounds of the White House, whether it's a Republican there or a Democrat there, there's always a lot of security involved. And you bring in for these state dinners, all of these important people from around the world. Why do you have to do that at the Hinkley Hilton? Why do you have to do that somewhere else around town? Do it at the White House where the Secret Service can protect them. Every single president puts their imprint on the White House in their own way. Joe Biden brought a lot of attention to senior citizens in this country and dementia and every other difficulty that people who are getting older. It's 88 compliant.
Starting point is 00:34:28 Everywhere you go, there are ramps. Right, exactly. And Donald Trump is a developer. And I think it's a great asset and we might as well use it while we've got it. But to your point, Ashbrook, let's see. Obama changed the tennis court to a basketball court. Was it Nixon put in a bowling alley? Truman gutted it, gutted the White House and redid the entire entire.
Starting point is 00:34:51 interiors. So this idea that Joe Scarborough suggests it's this timeless piece of American history and how dare he touch it. What about all your other presidents, Joe? Exactly. Scarborough, it is so dumb for him to say that because I guarantee you as soon as a Democrat as elected president, Joe Scarborough is going to be inside of that ballroom toasting his. Oh, the bell of the ball is going to be in there with Mika. They're going to be doing some kind of a dance. They're going to love every single second of it. in the room that Donald Trump built. Yeah. Do you think it doesn't matter? Kamala Harris or Gavin Newsom, should it be the case? Joe Scarborough is on the A-list invite. Probably. Probably for either one of them.
Starting point is 00:35:33 Do it if he's not. What is he doing? Honestly, that's the only thing that matters to him because here's the funny thing is he's still acting up like this. And we reported, we reported first that after Donald Trump's election, Joe Mika actually flew down, met him at Mar-a-Lago, because they were genuinely convinced that Trump was going to have them arrested.
Starting point is 00:35:55 Yeah. So they groveled on that day. Now they're back at it. I think he should just do it. Oh, that's my troll. That's what I do smoke. I got in a big debate with Two A Days Dan yesterday. Give them what they want.
Starting point is 00:36:09 You know, if you're going to call me this, and I'm going to give you what you need here. Bingo. All right. I don't know how we're going to do this. If you're listening on Spotify, Apple, or on radio, forgive me. I don't have a translation here, but I do have a sought of the President of Columbia saying, take Trump out. That's what he said. Just trust me. That's what he says. I'll translate
Starting point is 00:36:31 afterwards. Here's the President of Columbia. The mission is to look the best negotiation possible for the millions of Colombian who depend of those employees. The humanity has a first salida, and is to change to Trump. of diverses can be for the same Trump
Starting point is 00:36:50 the more more if no take the Trump all right he says he says the easiest way
Starting point is 00:37:01 is to change President Trump or that's what has to happen change President Trump and then he says the easiest way is through Trump himself
Starting point is 00:37:07 so so not Trump changing and then he snaps his fingers and he goes or get rid of Trump I mean I don't what I don't know what's lost in translation. I don't know what he means, but a foreign leader saying get rid of Trump,
Starting point is 00:37:21 buckle up, buddy, because it's not going to be pretty from here. Do we have a history of Colombians making violent threats that they follow through on? Yeah, right. Sounds like he wants some of what Vince Will has been getting. Yeah, I don't know a lot, but no bueno is my first. Yeah, there you go. But look, I mean, I think that the American people deserve a little bit of South American beach side. They've seemed like they've got a nice plot of land down there.
Starting point is 00:37:44 And this guy seems like he's interested in us throwing his ass out of there. Well, I mean, like, this is an incredibly stupid thing to say when you've seen the way Secretary Hegsef has been solving problems with drones over the past month. Yeah, yeah. Way to stick your own head out. Totally. Totally all those Venezuelan boats coming north. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:02 Yo no, I'm a marinero. A real tough flush. Don't go fishing, Mr. President. Yeah, all right. No, this is the kind of thing, and honestly, we used to have extreme bipartisan consensus. I remember when Hugo Chavez went to the United Nations, this must have been like 2005, 2006, dictator, communist, the worst of the worst. He shows up the United Nations and he makes a threat towards President Bush. And at the time, there was a handful of extreme leftists under Nancy Pelosi's leadership.
Starting point is 00:38:39 they were looking to take back Congress, and they were just hatcheting on any Republican they could time after time no matter what. All of them stopped at that point in 2005 and said, nope, you're not going to talk about my president. It's our president that you're talking about like that. That's a serious thing. We're all going to stop. And you contrast that with where we're at right now. And you've got a guy who comes out and basically calls for the assassination of Donald Trump as a foreign leader. Where the hell is Chuck Schumer and Akeem Jeffrey's on that?
Starting point is 00:39:09 Do they have anything to say about that? Yeah. Like, where is your American pride in, I don't care if you voted for them or not? At some point, it's your president of your country that this person is threatening. We used to all get together on that. All right, before we go, I want to hit two more topics with you guys. We can do them quickly. One, I just find this incredibly fascinating.
Starting point is 00:39:29 It's in the New York Times, and it reads as follows. Peanut Allergies have plummeted in children's study shows. Subhead reads, doctors have long recommended that infants avoid peanuts. But in 2017, experts officially reversed that guidance and food allergies decreased sharply. I mean, so first of all, common sense, we kind of all knew that. We, we, you know, this fragile thing that we're building, fragile children, fragile world, no, rub some dirt on it. This is the, this is the medical version of rub some dirt on it. Exposure to its peanuts, exposure to whatever is what gets it.
Starting point is 00:40:04 But here, there's another side of this. I'm curious what you guys' take will be on this stuff. And this is like the women thing, to be honest. I respect doctors. I like doctors. I go to doctors. I want their advice. But I don't think that we should be treating doctoral advice and certainly large doctor advice,
Starting point is 00:40:23 meaning like groups and organizations, as though it is religious dogma. Oh, they said it, therefore it is, because the things they say change. And they said this. They said, don't touch peanuts. And then a few, what? In eight years, they reversed course. and we've seen it totally reverse. So that's what this is like takes me back to the RFK, vaccines, what's the latest thing,
Starting point is 00:40:50 the circumcision thing? I don't even know. It's hard for me to keep up. But everybody else laughs at him and makes fun of him. The doctors go, he's insane and we're falling apart. And I'm like, really? Because you haven't been perfect. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:01 I mean, look, I think if you're following history at this point, it seems like avocados and beetroot 10 years from now, everybody's going to say, like, that makes you spontaneously combust by the age of 35, right? I mean, there's been such a reverse course. The one thing that really exposed, and Duncan, you talk about this all the time. COVID really exposed the lack of authority. And we always assumed as a culture and as a society because we value health care, obviously. We value doctors. We always assumed there were answers to these questions.
Starting point is 00:41:32 That there wasn't like three answers. It wasn't like five answers. There's wasn't a difference of opinion on things like whether peanuts should be given to infants. Like there was an answer, a medical answer. And I think what we found out during COVID, not the case. Right. That there's like second order and third order things that happen when your number one decision is avoidance at all costs. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:56 And that's where I think our medical community has really failed the American people and everything from COVID to things like peanut allergies. I mean, there could be like a class action lawsuit from every kid who had to go. through middle school at the at the no peanuts table at lunch because they weren't exposed to peanuts at some point like i like homes we've talked about this but i know my wife did this like did you guys have that oh yeah yeah we have that you guys like we had that in our middle school where the kids like couldn't have peanuts how they eat lunch at a separate table yeah i mean they have it in kindergarten now you can't have peanut or snacks no you have to have a sun sunflower butter tree nuts Tree, treat, no tree nuts.
Starting point is 00:42:37 It's outrageous. And I know my wife, and we've talked about this, like you take that into your own hands. And, you know, you put the kid in the car and you go into the parking lot next to your doctor. And you got a spoon there. And you give him a little bit of that peanut butter. And then we're going to go ahead and find out if he's allergic real quick. Real quick. Real quick.
Starting point is 00:42:54 I mean, that'd be 100% when I did. We, like, showed up in the parking lot. And we're like, here, as soon as he could eat. A spoon full of peanut butter, let's watch him and see what happens. And they're, like, you know, licking their chops. And then they look back at you, like, can I have more peanut butter? And you're like, well, I guess we're good here. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:12 Ashbrook, how old are you? Oh, boy. 73. I'm 44, Will. He was there when George Washington Carver invented this stuff. You're young, too. I thought somebody said that you were closer to my age. I'm the old man.
Starting point is 00:43:29 Didn't grow up with peanut allergy being a thing. And I mean, I don't know how much older than you guys I am. like, I'm 50. Many decades. Many years older than you guys. Many, many decades. I'm 20 years older than us. So in a 10 year time frame, that's how quickly it moved.
Starting point is 00:43:45 I didn't even know it was a thing. We didn't have a peanut table. It wasn't the thing. And by the way, my kids didn't do what you just said you do with your kids. I don't know. We weren't thinking about it. I never even thought about peanuts. There's also a missing piece of the puzzle that has to be addressed.
Starting point is 00:44:00 This is also airlines being cheap skates. They didn't want to pay for peanuts. Because peanuts cost more. We've got those shitty pretzance. During COVID, the pre-flight drink, that's gone. They're like, oh, it's because of COVID. It didn't come back. This was a cost-cutting thing.
Starting point is 00:44:13 So you had the airline lobbyists be like, oh, no, it'll kill the children if you eat the peanuts in first class. It's a good point, smug. Good point. Never misses an opportunity to get away on the airlines. Really quickly on the way out. This is a picture of the cherry picker or the basket ladder. It's a ladder extender in Paris with the dudes who robbed the Louvre in seven minutes, you know, went in and then used some type of saw to get through the glass case,
Starting point is 00:44:45 stole crowns and jewels and all this stuff, in and out in seven minutes. Got to respect these guys. Got to respect them. Really knew their craft. Really got it down. And, I mean, let me do all the necessary. It's awful. It's terrible.
Starting point is 00:45:00 Okay. But pretty awesome, too. and what I would say is so I love a heist movie like love if there's a heist movie, high probability of click for me and so
Starting point is 00:45:16 the question is let's go around the horn best heist movie for me it's a no doubt or it's Goodfellas and the Lufthansa heist and everything that followed with Goodfellas I mean just A1 top three movie of all time
Starting point is 00:45:31 I never turn the channel when I see it. I mean, I would agree with that, but to pick something different, I'd say Gone in 60 Seconds or any Nicholas Cage, the guy is just like the King of the Heist movies. Yeah. Bring of him, National Treasure. All of them are great. Easy answer, Thomas Crown Affair.
Starting point is 00:45:49 Oh, also one of the greatest. Which one? I mean, the new one, Pierce Brosnan because he's so cool. And also it gave us like the best song that, Oh, Sin a man, where you're going to run to? That is a good thing. Great song. Also, Duncan is 73 years old.
Starting point is 00:46:04 I don't know if you knew that. For me, for me, it's hard to beat Oceans 11, or I actually love the movie. It's called The Heist. It was Gene Hackman in it, one of the greatest, greatest actors of all time. I remember. You always got to watch, always got to watch a Hackman movie. Who was the young actor in that? Was it, was it Colin Farrell, or was it, who was the young?
Starting point is 00:46:24 Is Gene Hackman and, yeah, that was a good one. Here's my nomination. Okay, and I think that they may have actually used that same song, Duncan, if I'm, I can't remember. Oh. Inside Man with Denzel Washington and Clive Owen. Very good. Very good. You guys have seen it.
Starting point is 00:46:43 Oh, yeah. So good. And I also watch absolutely anything with Denzel Washington. Yeah, I can't care what it is. If I see his name on the billing, I'm watching 100%. Real quick public service announcement. Me too. Denzel's in, I'm in.
Starting point is 00:47:00 Don't watch the Denzel movie with the Spike Lee movie on Apple TV. It's horrific. It's really bad. The kidnapping movie, I can't remember the name of it, the high and the low or something like that. It's not good. And I'm telling you, I love everything Denzel's in. It's inexplicably bad. It's devastating because I was just looking at that bad boy.
Starting point is 00:47:21 Okay. All right. Well, thanks for the heads up. All right. All right, boys. Always good to see you. Ruthless Variety program. What are you talking about?
Starting point is 00:47:30 What should the audience tune over for? Well, I mean, look, we've got a lot going on. There was still government shutdown. I don't know if anybody cares or knows about it, but that's still happening. We had Trish McLaughlin, the spokesperson over at DHS, talking about ICE, violence against ICE, some immigration-related issues, the challenges that they're facing, interior enforcement on the program today. And then, yucks. I mean, here's the thing, dude, in this particular moment in time, Democrats are providing more content than maybe the ever. have we just sit and play what they say and we laugh our tails off so if you're interested in
Starting point is 00:48:05 having a good laugh a little comedic deal there then join the ruthless variety program there we go spotify apple fox news podcast youtube everywhere check out the boys at the ruthless variety program always good to see you thanks fellas thank you well take care whatever happened to the cocaine in the white house well there's a new documentary about it and we're going to ask the host Miranda Devine. Coming up on Will Cain Country. The Italian job offered up in the Wallyishas, one of the best heist movies, and that was a really good one, liked the Italian job.
Starting point is 00:48:52 Others are asking, like Betty Wheaton, what is with the fourth helmet? We have a new helmet on the desk. One of the guys who works here on Will Cain Country, Jack is a Miami Hurricane fan. We are accepting audience submissions, so we now have a Miami Hurricanes helmet. I have been told that there is a Georgia Bulldog helmet, and Two of Days is promised to Notre Dame helmet. And I do believe it is imminent. We'll see a Hornfrog helmet on the desk.
Starting point is 00:49:17 So I am, I'm open. You can send in who you like. Put it on the table. You don't it be awesome if we had like a little Trump helmet. That would be cool, right, Two of Days? We'll get you a Newsome helmet. Yeah, we'll get right on. I don't want two days.
Starting point is 00:49:31 You want Newsom? Newsom. You think I like Gavin Newsom? You want a Newsom one? Kamala? I'm more of a Pete Buttigieg, Gina Romando type guy. Oh, man. Well, Pete Buttigieg would need one of those ones with the big diaper on top of it that everybody's wearing now.
Starting point is 00:49:46 You know, the... Now, that's just mean. The helmet diaper? What are we calling that thing? The helmet diaper that you're starting to crop up everywhere? You know, just the CTE protector. I have a prediction on that. They're going to get popular.
Starting point is 00:50:00 I was watching a game this weekend, the middle linebacker. I can't remember what game it was, but the middle linebacker had one, and he looks like a video game character because his head is so much bigger than everybody else's, you know? And I got to thinking, I'll bet you that gets in style. I can't predict the style of the kids these days, but like the enlarged head is very video gameish. Yeah, Romeo Dobbs wears one on the Packers. I'll bet you that's going to get in style. Not in style. Answering the question of whatever happened to the Cocaine in the White House.
Starting point is 00:50:32 Seems like it should be an easy mystery to solve, but it has not. But there's a new full special up at Fox Nation. It's called Cocaine at 1600. It features Miranda Devine, New York Post columnist, author of The Big Guy and the laptop from Hell. Also the host of Pod Force One, and Miranda joins us now on Will Kane Country. Hey, Miranda. Hi, Will. So, okay.
Starting point is 00:50:57 Who was it? Who had the Coke? Well, that is something that the FBI is looking at. Cash Patel and Dan Bongina, I've opened up this new investigation, and I think it's well overdue because that was a mystery that was obviously covered up. We were lied to about it, and, you know, Corrine Jean-Pier was trying to tell us that the first family wasn't even in the White House, et cetera. And there's good evidence to show that that little baggie of cocaine,
Starting point is 00:51:30 was moved from somewhere else in the West Wing, in the White House, before it was found in that little cubbyhole where the cell phones go near the Situation Room. And, you know, the fact that the Secret Service was telling us, not just us, but also members of Congress who were inquiring into this, so many stories that just didn't add up, as Donald Trump said, it didn't pass the sniff test. and we need to know.
Starting point is 00:52:01 And there is new evidence. Susan Crabtree from Real Clear Politics tells us in this absolutely riveting special that Fox Nation has put on about the ongoing investigation. Susan Crabtree from her Secret Service sources has said that despite the fact the Secret Service claimed they found no fingerprints and no DNA, there was an amount of DNA found. Now, Secret Services said, oh, it wasn't, you know, enough to do anything. It wasn't substantial. But apparently there was a match, a partial match with DNA that's on the criminal national database. So the plot thickens.
Starting point is 00:52:44 And I believe that it'll be very interesting when Cash Patel and Dan Bongino finally get to the bottom of it. Because the cover-up shows. Do you think they will? Well, I think they might. I mean, the existence of this DNA is pretty significant. And, you know, the fact that the Secret Service, after 11 days, closed their investigation, destroyed that little baggy. And in fact, there was a forensic guy inside the Secret Service
Starting point is 00:53:17 that refused to carry out that destruction because it was so against normal protocol that they had to get someone from the D.C. police to do it. So the whole thing stinks, and it's the cover-up. I mean, as with Watergate, it's the cover-up that gets you into trouble more than, you know, the actual sin of having, you know, snorting cocaine in the White House. So wait a minute, there was DNA recovered, and that DNA you said matches some DNA in the criminal database? That seems like it could be easy then. Okay, we've got a suspect.
Starting point is 00:53:52 Well, it's a partial match, and we're not sure how much. of the DNA there is, but it's enough to have triggered off some sort of a partial match. So this is what Susan Crabtree's sources are telling her, this is not my original reporting, but it sounds pretty significant. And Susan Crabtree is a fantastic reporter who has impeccable sources in the Secret Service. So I would back her, and I think that we will see, especially our after this special comes out and enough people have seen it, I think there will be more pressure on the FBI to tell us what they know.
Starting point is 00:54:35 It can't take it can't take too long to figure it out. It's not that much of a who-done-it. So you gave me a little bit of detail that I don't think I fully understood in the past. So I don't have a lot of experience, the White House, I've been to the Pentagon. So you go through security, I assume this is the case. You go through some measure of security to get into the White House. and then if it's like the Pentagon, then there are areas within the Pentagon, rooms, offices where you're not allowed to take your cell phone, so there's cubbies, there's like almost like dresser drawers or whatever, put it here, leave it in the hallway, then you can come in the room. This sounds, I thought I had always thought this was some kind of cubby before you even enter the White House at the initial security screening, but that sounds like that's not the case.
Starting point is 00:55:22 So this person would have already had the Coke in the White House. It wasn't like at the entrance of the area. It was deep within, and it was one of those cubbies outside of the situation room. 100%. And, I mean, this is the most secure building probably on the planet, and someone has gone through all of that rigid, rigorous security screening, and they're inside the White House. and this is a little kind of vestibule area
Starting point is 00:55:54 that you come to on the ground floor that's under the Oval Office and on your left-hand side there is like a cupboard and when you open the cupboard there are all these little square boxes with numbers on them and keys and it's in one of the and people just, you know,
Starting point is 00:56:11 when you come in and you're meeting with somebody you're not allowed to take your phone and so you just pop it in there and you keep the key in your bag or in your pocket, and then you can retrieve it when you leave. And so what it appears is that this White House baggie was not actually found in that cubby hole. It was found somewhere else.
Starting point is 00:56:34 And in some documents that we unveil on this special, you can see they were obtained, these documents were obtained with freedom of information, but that whole section is redacted as to where the bag was first found. So this little baggie has been discovered, and then somebody has moved it into one of these cubbies, didn't lock the cubby, left the baggie, there's a photograph of it, just mysteriously sort of sitting perched on the edge as if it's been staged there for someone to, oh, look, look what I found, when really it was found somewhere else in the White House. That's suspicious in itself. Do you know where it was originally found in the White House? No, that's the question, but the FBI will know because these documents that were part of the original Secret Service investigation state where it was found. But that that location was redacted in the copies that we have through freedom of information. So, I mean, the investigators of the FBI, they know full well.
Starting point is 00:57:41 So the FBI knows, absolutely. Yeah, okay, they know. Okay. I would assume, Miranda, you may know this, but I would assume the White House is covered up in cameras. Like, I would just assume there's not a hallway you can walk down where you're not on camera. Now, maybe I'm wrong, but that just seems logical to me. So they would have the person who is placing it in the cubby, you know, there to be found on camera doing that. And then be able to backtrack that person all the way to wherever they found the Coke.
Starting point is 00:58:16 no. See, conveniently, that place in the vestibule next to the cubbies is a blind spot. No cameras cover it, right? So very convenient that this is where the baggie was found. However, you know, what police, well, the late Bernie Kerrick actually was very exercised about this story. And he said to me, it's ridiculous, absolutely preposterous that the Secret Service is using. That is an excuse. because if you have a blind spot, you can still see a person walking into the blind spot and walking out of the blind spot at roughly the time when the baggie was, you know,
Starting point is 00:58:55 put there discovered. So it's, the whole thing is preposterous. We were expected to believe a whole bunch of lies. And I remember one very obvious one at the time. Corrine Jean-Pierre was telling us all, oh, you know, the first family wasn't even there. they were gone they were gone all of friday saturday sunday this was the july long weekend july fourth long weekend um in twenty twenty three and yet we knew that hunter was there until six p m or
Starting point is 00:59:27 slightly after six p m when marine one left and took them all to camp david for the weekend so that was on the friday so you know and i mean it's hunter has denied this he went on a podcast recently he said as if i would put a baggie of cocaine into a cubby hole? Well, no one's really, that's not really the allegation. But he has denied it. And so it's kind of unfair to Hunter, if it was not his cocaine, because he's the most famous cocaine user or former crackhead
Starting point is 01:00:00 in the White House ever to set foot in there. And he was spending long periods living with his father and mother and stepmother in that place. So it's sort of unfair to him that. that you don't actually rule him out. You just allow the finger of suspicion to point to him. And what's also, I think, really despicable and shows you how desperate the Biden administration
Starting point is 01:00:24 was at that time to try and hide the truth, they pointed the finger of suspicion at construction workers who were working in the White House at the time. Oh, it could have been them. That's so despicable. And I think it's another good reason why the public should be told. the truth.
Starting point is 01:00:45 Yeah, on one hand, you want to, like, and you should. Logic goes, look at Hunter, look directly at Hunter, start with Hunter. But that doesn't mean it was Hunter. It could have been anybody. And that's why it's even all the more important to figure out. That's right. It could have been exactly. And, you know, he's not the only member of his family to have substance abuse issues and not the only member of his family to live in the White House at times. And I guess not the only person in the Biden White House to use drugs. So let's see. But, you know, it was obviously someone who was so blatant and so arrogant that they thought they would never get caught and so entitled that they thought that they could use cocaine inside the White House. Whoever that
Starting point is 01:01:33 person is should never have been in the White House in the first place. It's very damaging to national security, and it is against the law in Washington, D.C. Well, it's entitled Cocaine at 1600. It features Miranda Devine, among others. It's available at foxnation.com, and we appreciate you jump on all this, Miranda, to tell us about something that I really do hope, and I actually expect that we should be able to get answers on. Thank you, Miranda. Thanks. Thanks, Will. All right, there she goes. Miranda Devine. Check her out as well at Pod Force One and the New York Post. All right, before we go today, let's bring back in two a days, Dan, tinfoil, Pat.
Starting point is 01:02:14 We got our co-host with us today. Saint is wandering around somewhere, hopefully being a good boy in the control room. So you're keeping an eye on him. You know, I got to be careful. I am keeping an eye on him. Saint. He's down there talking to Scott right now. Showing teeth.
Starting point is 01:02:31 Down the hallway. Should I shock him like Hassan Piker? No. Should I get him back? I will end this show so fast if you do that. I've told you I'm not I'm not I mean anti-shot call he's wearing one right now I know I think it's how it was used all right let's do it final takes
Starting point is 01:02:58 final takes all right the most electric man in television here to host an episode of final takes it is tinfoil pat yeah now i'm uh now i'm doubting myself to be uh he doesn't have anything ready no we didn't have to saw it ready um apparently well i was i'm just going to share the story i'm going to share the story so texas tech fans have traditionally thrown tortillas onto the field i don't i don't understand this tradition um i'm not a texas tech fan uh maybe we can ask cody campbell one day uh front of the show but it is now banned so texas
Starting point is 01:03:37 tech fans will face suspension, be kicked out of games, not have their tickets for future events, if they throw tortillas onto the field. What do you think? Hate it. Hate it. I don't know why they do it either, but I love that they do it. It's such a unique thing. I just love unique in college football. I love unique in America, but college football is one of the last holdouts for this you know um i hate pansiness stuff like i hated when the big 12 made it a penalty for horns down you know that's we can handle it you can do horns down it's so stupid but throwing tortillas on tortilla throwing is what they do in lubbock it's what they do at texas tech and um i got to make sure saint's a good boy with herman here earlier um saint
Starting point is 01:04:30 I think he's afraid of you, Herman. I'm watching the interactions. I think you're making him nervous. He's showing Herman his teeth, and I don't know if that's smiling. He does smile or if it's like, get away from me. That's a dangerous line to walk down. I know. It's like a mystery you don't want to solve in the middle of a show.
Starting point is 01:04:52 You know, I love that. Is it the red wings that throw the octopuses on the ice? I love that. I love that. So it takes a little time to clean up the tortillas. Big deal. Yeah, you know who doesn't love that? The janitorial staff.
Starting point is 01:05:05 Who? Oh, Crime your River. They get paid. Well, and they get, that's job security two days. Like, if there's nothing to do, no job. Got to clean up tortillas? There's a job. You know, Connor?
Starting point is 01:05:20 We should make it a tradition where you throw confetti into the studio there for a damn to clean up every day. God, that's like glitter. Yeah. cleaning that out for years. The studio's looking good. By the way, studios looking good up there. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:05:35 Had Bear Grills in there yesterday, I thought it looked pretty good. It's looking great. I was asking for you for a cowboy hat so I could put it in the background, you know? I need a cowboy hat up here somehow. Oh, you want me to send it to New York? No, no, no. I was wondering if you had one in your office here in New York. Oh, no, I don't.
Starting point is 01:05:54 Actually, I do. I do. You can go down there and get one. I think there is one. Because that's one little studio dressing, you know, like, Put it in the back of the shot? Yeah, absolutely. Go down to my office and grab that cowboy hat. Grab the straw hat, not the felt hat.
Starting point is 01:06:10 Sure. That's a family heirloom. Straw hat's good to go. Go ahead and grab that. All right, so keep the tortillas flowing there in Lubbock. Okay, quick and final. Final takes. Good job, tinfoil, Pat.
Starting point is 01:06:25 That's going to do it for us today. We appreciate you hanging out with us. We'll be back again tomorrow. same time, same place. Wilcane Country on YouTube. Spotify, follow us on Spotify, follow us on Apple. We'll see you next time. Listen to ad-free with a Fox News podcast plus subscription on Apple Podcasts. And Amazon Prime members, you can listen to this show, ad-free on the Amazon Music app.

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