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Jack Armstrong
Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio at the George Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty. Armstrong and Getty. And now here's Armstrong and Getty.
Joe Getty
It's very clearly a cognitive decline. That's what I'm referring to. It makes me uncomfortable.
Jake Tapper
You are.
Unnamed Speaker
No, that's so amazing. It's so amazing to me that.
Joe Getty
Try and figure out an answer.
Unnamed Speaker
A cognitive decline.
Joe Getty
You're trying to tell me that what I was suggesting was.
Unnamed Speaker
I think you were mocking his stutter. I think you were mocking his stutter. And I think you have absolutely no standing to diagnose somebody's cognitive decline. I would think that somebody in the Trump family would be more sensitive to people who do not have medical licenses, diagnosing politicians from afar. Plenty of people have diagnosed your father from afar, and I'm sure it offends you.
Jake Tapper
So that's Jake Tapper on CNN at the height of mainstream media pretending Joe Biden wasn't senile up until the moment of that debate when everybody flipped and.
Jack Armstrong
Aghast that anybody would suggest that he's losing it cognitively, while at the time 74% of Americans said he was too soon to be 88% or whatever it was. And once again, what a great illustration of how nutty our media class is.
Jake Tapper
All right. And once again, leaning on the. He's got a stutter. Quit acting like he's senile. He has a stutter. Anyway, that same Jack, Jake Tapper has a new book coming out next week called Original Sin, President Biden's decline, its cover up and his disastrous choice to run again. So it's kind of funny, given that clip we just played, that he's gonna be hindsight source on the Original Sin. And the book cover is Joe Biden looking very old with hands over his eyes in the famous, you know, monkey see, monkey do sort of, you know, hiding reality thing with.
Jack Armstrong
Come on.
Jake Tapper
So you, you, as part of the media that was covering this up, are going to go with that cover.
Jack Armstrong
Well, covering it up and aggressively attacking anybody who suggested that. Which was plainly true. Was true.
Jake Tapper
Well, and that, and this picture is, to me indicates the whole, you know, we were all covering our eyes, hiding reality. Somebody was hiding. Somebody was hiding reality from themselves with their own hands. Yeah, you were.
Jack Armstrong
It's too much.
Jake Tapper
Unless his book, unless his book lays out in detail how, I can't believe I did this. I got so far down the road of Trump derangement syndrome that I didn't admit what was before my own eyes, that Joe Biden was cognitively, you know, declining and rapidly and. But I doubt that that's what he's going to say.
Jack Armstrong
Well, right. And I have long advocated the position that when your dog finally comes, you don't kick it. Okay. If somebody comes over ideologically or realizes your arguments were right, you welcome them and you work together. On the other hand, there are some transitions that are so egregious and they were so savage about attacking us earlier. You've got to explain yourself. I mean, it's just. That's the only decent thing to do. No, I'm not going to pretend that. Only months ago, you were suggesting it was a vicious and inappropriate thing to say. The president seems to be losing it. Come on, Jake.
Jake Tapper
Here's my favorite funny thing of the day. So Elon Musk is gonna sit in on the first Cabinet meeting, which is kind of interesting. It's usually only for official Cabinet members. And Mark Halpern writes, it's an opportunity to see where Musk is seated at today's Cabinet meeting, how Trump treats him and if he gets a speaking role. I mean, is he. Is he situated in such a way that he gets as much speaking time as the Secretary of Defense or Health and Human Services or whatever? I don't know. It's kind of interesting, but we all know about Elon putting out the directive that you had. You got to come up with five things you did last week to justify your job. And if you don't do that, I'll consider this your resignation or something like that. So somebody had replied to it, oh, I'm working from home because I'm ill, and my iPad just fell. Luckily, did not fall all the way to be around and break because that would have made me very unhappy. Somebody replied to Elon because you're supposed to, like, originally, you're supposed to tweet back at him like he was going to read 2 million tweets about what you did last week and determined whether or not that was good enough. Then it's. Then it became, I guess, yesterday, you're supposed to send that information to your department head and then they're supposed to work it out anyhow.
Jack Armstrong
And Trump's statements on the topic have been funny. I mean, just. He doesn't care.
Jake Tapper
I can't actually read this because it's way too filthy. I probably should have saved it for the podcast because it's very, very filthy. But I'll give you the gist of it. Somebody responded to Elon, I wanted to email you what I did last week in Detail. Please let me know if you need any more information. I asked a giant D. I mean, that sort of stuff. I got blanked by a blank. Oh, no, I blanked someone else's blank. And this is really, really, really filthy.
Jack Armstrong
Congratulations. But we're thinking more work related.
Jake Tapper
And then the last one being, I decided to blank myself with your BS and it worked. Sincerely, go F yourself. So they sent that to Elon. Elon's reply was, I said five items. That's only four. Oh, God.
Jack Armstrong
Oh. And you know, the, one of the interesting, not like crazy important subplots doll lists is how long will those two alpha dogs, Trump and, and Musk, continue to get along and work together? And I was sure they'd have a crack up fairly quickly. But this is a great, you know, glimpse into the relationship. Elon uncorks this. You gotta have five things you did or you're fired. And Trump asked about it, is given all sorts of silly answers like, well, I, I guess you need to, or you're, well, in effect, if you don't, you, you might be fired. Ob Obviously there's no enforcement mechanism. He didn't approve this. But either behind the scenes, he's telling Elon, hey, rein it in or run it by me or something first. Or he kind of likes the chaos. Well, attention.
Jake Tapper
Yeah. I think in general, Trump loves chaos and attention.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, there's some theory out there.
Jake Tapper
I think we got a clip about it. But somebody, somebody's got the theory that it's brilliant that Trump has made Elon the lightning rod for, you know, oh my God, what has Elon done now? Every day instead of oh my God, what has Trump done now? And there is a lot of that. I, I, I been mentioning this for a couple of weeks. I feel like I now hear Elon's name more than Trump's name every single day.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. Whether it was intentional or not, I don't know. But that seems to be the effect it's having. Speaking of the comings and goings of Joe Biden and others in politics, I was going to call this featurette something like, do you remember why we voted them out? But I'll just hit at least one or two of the stories. In the final weeks of the Biden administration, the EPA awarded a lucrative environmental justice grant to a left wing nonprofit whose CEO, Latricia Adams, personally applied for the taxpayer funding while simultaneously serving as a member of a top White House advisory council on the environment. The Biden EPA announced in December on the way out the door, it had selected Young, Gifted and Green to receive a $20 million grant under its so called environmental and climate justice Community change program. And the beauty, horror, but beauty of the green energy scam and the whole climate change scam is you tell me if you can think of anything that would not fall under the environmental and climate justice Community Change program.
Jake Tapper
Man, this fits in perfectly with what I was saying a while back about how if I could relive my life, I would dedicate it to trying to figure out how to get in on this government money. Just as like a game, you come up with stuff like that. There's so much money sloshing around, you know, you go full green energy, climate change, you know, whatever the hot thing is, and just, I don't know, come up with a project or a commission or a board.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, yeah, you got to have a. An organization with a name like Young, Gifted and Green.
Jake Tapper
Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
And then they just hand you taxpayer monies. The EPA dished out 105 grants totaling $1.6 billion as part of the program nationwide. You got that? Kamala Harris signs with top Hollywood talent agency caa. That's the Creative Artists Agency, caa. I know you're listening. Beautiful. Los Angeles. Or perhaps via podcast. You signed her for what? Well, they're going to represent Harris in all areas, focusing on speaking engagements and publishing for which of her talents. You know what, though? It's funny. I'm going to undermine myself if I found out that dope was speaking somewhere near me. I'd go, how could you not to go see her, you know? World's biggest word salad bar in action. How could you resist that? That'd be fun. I love this story. They're calling it poetic justice. The Obama library is being seriously delayed building this thing over discrimination, lawsuits, environmental injunctions, allegations of enrichment and double dealing. The fact that there are great complaints that there's not enough racial equity in the contracting, they're disrupting too many trees and migratory bird paths along Lake Michigan. And I was gonna say, where is it?
Jake Tapper
It's in Chicago.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. Yeah. I don't know precisely where I should. Oh, Hyde Park, Harold. Anyway, it's a nice location in Chicago, but yeah, it's all being held up by the very sort of woke crap that Obama ushered so much into the American, you know, political slash economic system.
Jake Tapper
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Jack Armstrong
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Jake Tapper
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Jack Armstrong
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Jake Tapper
I love that guy blasting Elon with the filth. And he says that was only four things.
Jack Armstrong
I asked for five.
Jake Tapper
We got more on the way. Stay here.
Jack Armstrong
Armstrong and Getty. Well guys, due to the bird flu, egg production has hit a nine year low. Yep, thankfully. I just saw an ad for a new product that I think should help. Take a look at this.
Jake Tapper
Bird flu got you gooped up this winter. Introducing the only medicine on the market made especially for birds, Thera flu. Just listen to some HAC happy customers.
Jack Armstrong
It cleared up my sinuses and stopped my runny beak. I've never flown higher. And my wife says I've stopped snoring.
Jake Tapper
For birds or people, whatever.
Jack Armstrong
The FDA is gone.
Jake Tapper
Like they're mocking the importance of bird flu there, which I may have, suggesting.
Jack Armstrong
That the recent Doge efforts have ended any regulation of medications. That's not true, right?
Jake Tapper
Exactly. My 13 year old got his physical or checkup or I don't remember to call it, some sort of mandatory thing you have to get at roughly that age.
Jack Armstrong
Make sure they code it right or you'll have to go back and do it again.
Jake Tapper
Right? And I don't even remember if it's mandatory for the school or mandatory for your insurance. It's one of the two. Probably the school perhaps. Anyway, it was mostly questions, mostly talking to your kid more than like physically measuring you. Isn't a physical supposed to be measuring various things?
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. Some, I suppose. Heart, lungs are working all right. The rest is details, right?
Jake Tapper
Blood pressure, weight, you know, all that sort of stuff. Maybe some blood samples. What's with the whole Asking you about your home life thing. What is that? Physical?
Jack Armstrong
Well, yeah, that's an interesting other question. I've never heard of them doing just routine blood work on kids.
Jake Tapper
No, no, they didn't do blood work, but okay, so the physical should be very short. You're 13 years old. This is what you weigh, is your blood pressure. Let's check your reflexes. Okay? What's with all the questions? I don't like that. None of your freaking business. None of your freaking business.
Jack Armstrong
What are some of the questions?
Jake Tapper
I remember I meant originally and I don't know if this changed or if they just know me, but I mean, when I was there with his brother was, do you have any guns in the home? Like. No, no, no, no, no, no, no. You don't ask that question. That is none of your business. What are you doing?
Jack Armstrong
Yep. How many hours, Jack?
Jake Tapper
How many hours of TV do you watch?
Jack Armstrong
What?
Jake Tapper
I don't. What. What are you asking my kid? And they don't want you in the room, by the way. They take your kid away and ask them all these questions. What is that? That's not a physical. That is some sort of something else. Maybe you think it's okay, but it's not a physical.
Jack Armstrong
All right, well, they would answer. We're looking out for the kids health. Overall health. That's an important factor, screen time. Science has shown that, Jack. Science.
Jake Tapper
I don't like it. I don't like it at all. I don't like the government coming up with guidelines for a bunch of these things. And then you asking my kid about it away from me and then making determinations. F you do not like it a bit, you measure his height, his weight, his blood pressure, his reflexes. I'll deal with the rest of it. It fits in with the thing we were talking about last hour. There's more and more attempting to separate parents from children going on in our nation. Top to bottom, left to right, all around for some reason.
Jack Armstrong
Well, I know as I mentioned earlier, 1st Circuit just came out with a ruling said, no, the parents have no right to know about their 11 year old changing gender at school. Horrifying ruling. Can't wait to see it overturned. It had better be.
Jake Tapper
It's also some of the. And I've never liked this. You take the worst possible situations out there and assume that could be everybody, see? Deal with everybody, like the worst possible situations. So if you got some kid who's being beaten by their parents, you're trying to figure that out, but you treat everybody else the same way. It's like when. Well, when the kids were born. When they were very born. And they made me leave the room so they can talk to mom about whether or not she's free to talk with not, you know, that sort of thing. At one of the best moments of your life, you're treating us like that. It's just.
Jack Armstrong
What the hell? Wow.
Jake Tapper
I hate that sort of thing.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, it's troubling. It's intrusive. It was unimagined history of mankind not very long ago. Right, right. Don't you love progressivism?
Jake Tapper
Well, and most people, I guess, are just so compliant. It's just. Well, they ask. I suppose I better answer. No, you don't have to answer those questions.
Jack Armstrong
What are they gonna do? The automatic submission to authority is absolutely a pretty serious issue in modern America, especially because the authorities have realized that you're submissive to them and have rubbed their hands together with glee and thought, what can we accomplish to usher. Usher in the brave new world?
Jake Tapper
Well, I think, as you know, if you listen to the podcast yesterday, I think a lot of modern technology and screen time and all that sort of stuff is awful. And I have stricter rules than most of my kids friends do, but I don't think the school needs to ask about it. I'll make those determinations.
Jack Armstrong
Sure.
Jake Tapper
I don't like that a bit. Do you agree or disagree? Text line 415295KFTC.
Jack Armstrong
Does your dad yell at you a lot? No, but he yells on the radio all the time.
Jake Tapper
He's scary. That's probably true.
Jack Armstrong
Armstrong and Getty.
Tulsi Gabbard
There are over 100 people from across the intelligence community that they all will be terminated and their security clearances will be revoked when you see what these people were saying. And thanks to Chris Ruffo for putting it all out online. They were brazen in using an NSA platform intended for professional use to conduct this kind of really, really horrific behavior. And they were brazen in doing this because when was the last time anyone was really held accountable?
Jack Armstrong
That is Tulsi Gabbard talking about the fact that 100 or so NSA employees were engaged in extremely sexually graphic talk, especially about being transgender and their new parts and what they like to do to each other and have done to them and just. Just craziness. Anyway, speaking of strong brunette cuties in American government, I give you Secretary of Homeland Security. Is that what Kristi Noem is?
Jake Tapper
Yeah. Dhs.
Jack Armstrong
Yes, indeed. Hide your dogs. Here comes Kristi Noem.
Joe Getty
We are putting in place and enforcing the Alien Registration Act. Which is using every single tool that we have at our disposal to do exactly what President Trump promised the American people. The Alien Registration act says that within 30 days of being in this country illegally, someone must register with the federal government. They will be fingerprinted. They must announce that they are here. And if they do so, they can avoid criminal charges and fines, and we will help them relocate right back to their home country. And what this does is provide them an opportunity to come back someday and to be a part of the American dream. If they don't register, they're breaking the federal law, which has always been in place. We're just going to start enforcing it to make sure that these aliens go back home. And when they want to be an American, then they can come and visit us again.
Jake Tapper
I like her throwing in the law that has always been in place. We're just going to start enforcing it.
Jack Armstrong
Right, Right. And I can already hear the left bellowing that this is unprecedented. Actually, it is precedented. Number one, the law is in place. And number two, this sort of thing has been done multiple times through our history. Where? Okay, if you're in the country, you got to register. We want to know who you are, where you came from, where you live, get your fingerprints, and then we're going to figure out what to do with you. Because maybe you've just committed a civil offense, but if you fail to register now, you've committ criminal offense. Enforcement. I'll be damned. No, I live long enough to see it.
Jake Tapper
Nobody runs on. I want to change the laws. I want to change the law so that people can come here. Practically anybody can walk into this country and stay here. That's what I want the law to be. Nobody runs on that. Because it'd be so incredibly unpopular.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, no, no. You'd be hooted out of the process. Yeah. And yet that's what we have. So getting from Bizarro Land, where we are, to Saneville, where I'd love to live, it's gonna be, you know, a little uncomfortable for some people, but hallelujah, it's being done. Speaking of immigration type stuff, let's see. What order do we want to do this in? Why don't we hit the Gold card clip number 70? This is Lucas Tomlinson on Fox News.
Lucas Tomlinson
President Trump is introducing the Gold Card. And we're not talking about Amex here, but a potential opportunity for wealthy foreign investors to get visas to buy their way into American citizenship. And as you mentioned, Ainsley, it comes with a hefty price tag.
Unnamed Speaker
We're going to be selling a gold card. You have a green card. This is a gold card. We're going to be putting a price on that card of about $5 million. And that's going to give you green card privileges. Plus it's going to be a route to citizenship. And wealthy people will be coming into our country by buying this car. They'll be wealthy and they'll be successful and they'll be spending a lot of money and paying a lot of taxes and employing a lot of people.
Lucas Tomlinson
Now Trump's plan will replace the EB5 program. The President's Commerce Secretary, Howard Lupnick called the EB5 program full of nonsense, make believe and fraud.
Jake Tapper
Do other countries do that? Can I become a citizen of France if I pony up a certain number of millions of dollars?
Jack Armstrong
I don't know that, but the first part of the question, yes, yeah, absolutely. There are countries that say, look, if you can invest in the country and you know, pay a fee to cover, blah, blah, blah. Yeah, absolutely, you're welcome. This the EB5 he's talking about. I'm not an expert on this, but this sort of thing has always existed. If you are going to come to the country and invest a certain amount, then you are welcome. Trump's just raising it to $5 million and as they said, gotten rid of a lot of the dumb crap in the, in the rules, but you get to be citizen.
Jake Tapper
And he said other benefits like Trump.
Jack Armstrong
Shoes, maybe Trump steaks, Trump water, all of it.
Jake Tapper
Maybe some of those cards. Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
Gift basket. NFT.
Jake Tapper
NFTs.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, yeah. So, you know, I could look into the particulars, but who knows? There's probably some wacky stuff in there, but I don't care much more concerned about 9 million people flooding into the country during the godforsaken four years of the Biden administration, including many gang members and that sort of thing. Tom Holman, who's in charge of a lot of this stuff for the administration, has been talking about immigration, obviously, and he's exactly the right man for the job. He's talking about the, the far left objecting to what's been going on. And there's a report on, I think it was Fox News last night, about how activists in la, for instance, are actively interfering with ice, is doing what they're trying to do. They are warning illegals, they are shouting through bullhorns, don't open the door, don't open the door. When the ICE goes to raid a hotel, for instance. Just unbelievable. But again, this is a huge percentage of Americans agree with what's going on. Here's Tolman. Tom Holman rather talking about the crazy Left in clip 73.
Tom Holman
Michael Look, I know about dachshunds. I got a state Governor Youngkin has assigned a state trooper to my home 24 7. I have a marked car outside my door right now. I got a security detail. The left has lost their minds. It's all of a sudden the ones who enforce the law, the bad guys, the one who break the law, the victims.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, well said. Next clip.
Tom Holman
MICHAEL we are prioritizing public safety threats, child predators, rapists, murderers. These are the worst of the worst walking around your communities. And you would any elected mayor, any elected governor, any elected city councilwoman would want public safety threats removed from their communities, their number one responsibility of the taxpayers, the voters. They expect a safe community. So I hope people are waking up to these far left nuts who want to push back against ICE and what we're doing.
Jack Armstrong
Amen to that.
Jake Tapper
TOM well, you are a nut. If you're, if you're trying to protect known criminals who are here illegally, you're nuts. I mean you're, you, you're, you're, whatever your ideology is, is so blinded you to just common sense. I, I don't know how, how to have a conversation with you.
Jack Armstrong
And, and if you're just against rounding up non criminal illegal aliens because you think, you know, I'll, I'll steal man the argument, as they say these days, because we have sent the message as a country over and over again, come in, we need the workers and we will get you a job and, and sign you on to public benefits and also, don't worry, sneak across the border if you can. Therefore, we shouldn't be rounding these people up because we invited them. You've got to make that case. But that's acting like it's abhorrent to round up rapists. Right.
Jake Tapper
Well that's a policy decision. It gets back to what I was saying earlier. Then, then argue we need to change the law.
Jack Armstrong
Yes.
Jake Tapper
Have Congress change a law that if you've been here X number of days, years, whatever, doing whatever job you don't have, there's no kicking you out, change the law, but there's not public opinion on your side for that.
Jack Armstrong
Right? Right. Speaking of public opinion and immigration, that sort of thing, Jason Riley with a really interesting column recently. I don't think we're going to get rid of the anchor baby thing. And he goes into depth on a lot of the precedents, the court precedents. It might take the Supreme Court ruling on it. But in looking through the history of the 14th Amendment, I hadn't heard some of this stuff about not only Supreme Court decisions, but laws adopted by Congress. And it had to do with. Well, it's generally agreed that the birthright citizenship rule excludes the children of foreign ambassadors and foreign enemies who are occupying the country. And it used to include Indian children, too, Native American children. And the Trump administration, some of its supporters, say that Congress never intended for the children of people here illegal to illegally to be on the list of automatic citizens. But lawmakers living in the late 1800s may have disagreed. Then they go into the 14th amendment, slaves and their offspring. That's easy. Everybody gets that. But not all slaves were here legally. Although the US banned the importation of slaves in 1808, an illegal international slave trade continued for decades. A lot of people.
Jake Tapper
What's that got to do with whether or not it's a good idea, though, now for a, you know, some citizen of some country to fly here to have their baby and their baby's a citizen?
Jack Armstrong
Well, again, you would have to specifically either clarify the Constitution or pass a law that passes the Supreme Court, because people on my side of things lean on the. Under the jurisdiction of the United States or its territories in the 14th Amendment. And somebody who sneaks into the country, we don't know who they are, but that is like, that really matches the illegally imported under the table slaves. And the courts rule that, no, it doesn't matter what their legal status was. If they were born here, they are citizens, whether they were secret or imported for labor or whatever, and they would have to overturn that tradition. And, and Jason Gay, who's a terrific conservative, common sense guy, smart guy, says he just thinks it's unlikely because of the whole history of the thing. Now, I'm not saying he's right necessarily, or that's the way it ought to go, but it's going to be a heavier lift than I'd realized.
Jake Tapper
It being a heavier lift is different than whether it's a good idea or not.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, yeah, exactly.
Jake Tapper
And it seems like a good idea.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, yeah, I would agree. I mean, you'd think we could clarify this sort of thing fairly easily. As we've mentioned before, Tim Sandifer, a good friend of the Armstrong and Getty show, constitutional attorney, lawyer, advocate, et cetera, thinks we should amend the Constitution more if it needs it. It's funny, we're all super hesitant to do that, which on the one hand, I kind of appreciate because it speaks to our valuing of the Constitution as something.
Jake Tapper
I don't think that's it.
Jack Armstrong
Permanent and great.
Jake Tapper
I don't think that's why we do it. I think. I think we resist it the same way we resist changing the tax code. We just resist changing things that have been a certain way. Yeah, I wish it was reverence for the Constitution. I think it's just. But the tax code's always been this way, so.
Jack Armstrong
And yet the radicals who are willing to change will teach your 11 year old that they're a different sex and then keep it secret from you. Yeah. So I don't know, maybe conservatives have to embrace more change. I don't know.
Jake Tapper
We got a ton of texts about the conversation I had about doctors asking your kids questions and all that sort of stuff. Might get to that in our 4. Revisit the conversation later this hour, which.
Jack Armstrong
Is like next America's hottest sports controversy.
Jake Tapper
Oh, boy.
Jack Armstrong
You're a sports fan or not. You should weigh in. You should have a hot take. Then you should clap back. Then you should own somebody.
Jake Tapper
I will. I will weigh in strongly.
Jack Armstrong
Yes.
Jake Tapper
And emotionally. All that's on the way.
Jack Armstrong
Armstrong and Getty.
Jake Tapper
Boy, I really touched a nerve with my little rant about how a physical for your kid is really just a series of questions prying into your home life and not what we thought a physical was. We'll get to some of those texts in hour four.
Jack Armstrong
I love that idea. We ought to bring back that proposed new outrageous rule in California about protecting your home, too, because it's, you know, it's a. It's a similar awful, awful philosophy. Stay tuned for our four. If you don't get our four, grab it via podcast. Subscribe to Armstrong and Getty on Demand. Can't wait to hear that. Hottest controversy in sports. We're gonna get into it like this. Michael, hit it. Oh, yeah. You know, baby, there's a special play, a play I use when I can't get to wait. Can't wait to get into your end zone. What? Oh, yeah. I'm one yard away from your. Love you. And there's only one way to get there. Snap me the ball. Snap me the ball. You know what we're doing. Do the Tush push. Do the Tush push. That's right, the Tush push. The Philadelphia Eagles invented it and perfected it. It's that play where they snapped the quarterback the ball. Then the behemoths in front line up with giants behemoths with their giant asses. And the behemoths who are normally over there and over there, get behind the quarterback and they just all shove him into the end zone. And all the rest of the teams are like, you can turn off the music. All the rest of the team is like, hey, this, this, this sucks. There's no way to stop this. And, and, and, and, and they're trying to say people might get hurt, you know, that there could be more injuries, but it's not that at all. The problem with it, and I don't know if it's a problem or not, is that if you're on the one yard line, you have scored a touchdown with the tush bush because it's practically.
Jake Tapper
Impossible to start if you need a first down.
Jack Armstrong
Well. Right. Yeah, exactly. So in a weird way, it distorts the field. The only way you can stop it is if you start the defense simultaneously or slightly before the offense. The only problem being is the offense knows when they're going to snap the ball, so they're always going to get off the ball faster than you.
Jake Tapper
Well, if you had.
Jack Armstrong
Can't. Yeah.
Jake Tapper
Wouldn't Newton say that if you had bigger asses, it wouldn't make any difference if they got your asses can't be moved by their asses.
Jack Armstrong
Newton, great physicist, terrible football coach. What he fails to consider is that the minute a defense like clustered all of their B BMs in the middle, they would fake the tush push and toss it outside and they would waltz into the end zone.
Jake Tapper
Oh, there you go.
Jack Armstrong
And for a cup of coffee, and I'm not an expert on this, but I remember it as a kid, for, for a cup of coffee, you could not push your own player into the end zone. You could be in front of them blocking, but you couldn't be behind them pushing. And so the other NFL coaches are trying to get this squashed. I don't know if they will or not. I don't actually care.
Jake Tapper
No.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, the other part that's a problem is the referees find it almost completely impossible to figure out when a guy is down the ball. Kansas City chiefs, Buffalo Bills, please.
Jake Tapper
Yeah, that's what I wondered about the whole.
Jack Armstrong
The infamous call. Yeah, yeah. Anyway, so that's the hot controversy. Controversy in sports. The charmingly named tush push.
Jake Tapper
But that's not what they call it themselves. It's the jam it up there something or other.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, stop it. What are you with the nsa? You're on some NSA chatboard with your explicit sex talk. I won't have it. One more topic that I think we have time to squeeze in barely is the ass kissing of Trump has gotten hilarious. There are Congress people who are quite literally sponsoring bills in the House of Representative to carve Trump's face on Mount Rushmore.
Jake Tapper
No, they aren't.
Jack Armstrong
To rename. Yes, they are actually on the floor of Congress. Rename Dulles Airport, Trump Airport. Turn the President's birthday into a new federal holiday. There's this guy, Randy Ogles in Tennessee who's like the king of this. They're called messaging bills. They have little chance of becoming law, but they score political points, whether with your constituents or the president. And let's see what is some of the other ones. But it's really, really funny because it's just clearly kissing Trump's ass. And the other one I wanted to mention is Trump has shared an AI generated video depicting his resort like Vision for the future of Gaza, featuring a gigantic golden statue of himself, as well as images of him lounging shirtless poolside with Benjamin Netanyahu.
Jake Tapper
I saw that. I can't believe he put that out on his own. Truth.
Jack Armstrong
Trump is doing it himself. Yeah, that was something unprecedented.
Jake Tapper
If you miss an hour, get the podcast Armstrong and Getty on Demand.
Jack Armstrong
Armstrong and Gettysburg.
Armstrong & Getty On Demand: Episode Summary – "With Their Giant Asses"
Release Date: February 26, 2025
Hosted by Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty, this episode of the Armstrong & Getty On Demand podcast delves into a range of pressing political and social issues, blending sharp commentary with engaging discussions. Below is a comprehensive summary capturing the key points, insights, and notable quotes from the episode.
The episode opens with a heated discussion surrounding claims of cognitive decline in President Joe Biden. Joe Getty expresses discomfort with these allegations, highlighting the sensitivity required when diagnosing a public figure's mental health without medical credentials.
Joe Getty [00:23]: "It's very clearly a cognitive decline. That's what I'm referring to. It makes me uncomfortable."
Jake Tapper [02:13]: References his upcoming book, Original Sin, President Biden's Decline, Its Cover-Up and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again, critiquing the media's role in shaping perceptions of Biden’s cognitive state.
Jack Armstrong counters the media's stance, emphasizing that a significant majority of Americans find it premature to label Biden as senile.
A substantial portion of the episode examines Elon Musk’s involvement in Trump’s Cabinet meetings. The hosts discuss the implications of Musk’s presence and his directive for employees to justify their roles or face potential dismissal.
Jake Tapper [03:48]: "Elon putting out the directive that you had to come up with five things you did last week to justify your job."
Jack Armstrong [06:09]: Highlights the chaotic dynamic between Trump and Musk, pondering whether their relationship will endure or falter due to Musk’s stringent management style.
The conversation underscores Trump’s affinity for chaos and how it amplifies Musk’s prominence in the media.
Armstrong and Getty scrutinize the Biden administration’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) activities, particularly the allocation of substantial grants to left-leaning nonprofits. They argue that such grants often lack stringent oversight, leading to misallocation of taxpayer funds.
Jack Armstrong [08:53]: "The Biden EPA announced in December on the way out the door, it had selected Young, Gifted and Green to receive a $20 million grant..."
Jake Tapper [09:20]: Describes the absurdity of grant applications, suggesting they are more about naming than genuine environmental impact.
The hosts criticize the broad and vague criteria of the EPA’s Community Change Program, implying it facilitates green energy scams under the guise of environmental justice.
A significant segment addresses the increasing intrusiveness of medical physicals for children, where schools and authorities are probing deeply into personal aspects of students' lives under the pretext of health assessments.
Jake Tapper [14:58]: "They ask you a bunch of questions about your home life... none of your freaking business."
Jack Armstrong [16:11]: Discusses recent court rulings that undermine parental rights, expressing concern over the erosion of familial privacy.
The discussion highlights the tension between safeguarding child welfare and respecting family boundaries, criticizing the government's overreach in personal matters.
The conversation shifts to immigration, focusing on the implementation of the Alien Registration Act. This policy mandates that individuals residing illegally in the U.S. must register within 30 days, face fines, and potentially be deported if they fail to comply.
Joe Getty [19:28]: "We are putting in place and enforcing the Alien Registration Act... they must announce that they are here."
Jake Tapper [20:21]: Critiques the feasibility of changing immigration laws to allow unchecked entry, emphasizing its unpopularity among the public.
Armstrong underscores the historical precedents of such laws, arguing that current enforcement is merely a revival of established protocols rather than unprecedented measures.
A focal point of the episode is the introduction of Trump’s Gold Card initiative, which offers wealthy foreign investors a pathway to American citizenship in exchange for substantial financial contributions.
Lucas Tomlinson [21:41]: "We're going to be selling a gold card... priced at about $5 million."
Jake Tapper [22:32]: Questions the uniqueness of this proposal by comparing it to similar programs in other countries.
Jack Armstrong clarifies that while investment-based citizenship isn’t new, Trump's proposal elevates the financial threshold and simplifies the process, aiming to attract affluent individuals who contribute significantly to the economy.
Shifting to lighter topics, the hosts delve into a controversial NFL play known as the "Tush Push," critiquing its fairness and impact on the game.
Jack Armstrong [33:32]: Explains the mechanics of the Tush Push and its strategic advantages for teams needing to score in critical moments.
Jake Tapper [34:20]: Humorously references the physics of the play, suggesting it's more about spectacle than skill.
The discussion highlights the challenges referees face in regulating such unconventional plays and the potential for increased injuries, sparking debate among sports enthusiasts.
The episode concludes with commentary on the political theater surrounding former President Trump, including legislative efforts to honor him post-presidency and AI-generated media portrayals.
Jack Armstrong [35:19]: Details bills sponsored by Congress members aimed at immortalizing Trump, such as carving his face on Mount Rushmore.
Jake Tapper [36:13]: Criticizes Trump’s release of an AI-generated video depicting an idealized future involving himself and Benjamin Netanyahu, questioning its authenticity and intent.
The hosts mock the absurdity of these gestures, portraying them as exaggerated attempts to maintain Trump’s legacy and influence within political discourse.
Jake Tapper [02:13]: "He's gonna be hindsight source on the Original Sin."
Joe Getty [19:28]: "The Alien Registration act says that within 30 days of being in this country illegally, someone must register with the federal government."
Jack Armstrong [26:34]: "It's like when the kids were born... treating us like that is just."
Jake Tapper [34:22]: "Newton, great physicist, terrible football coach."
Jack Armstrong [35:19]: "They are actually on the floor of Congress... carving Trump's face on Mount Rushmore."
This episode of Armstrong & Getty On Demand navigates a spectrum of topics from political accusations and media critique to immigration policies and sports controversies. Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty provide unfiltered commentary, interspersed with humor and pointed critiques of current events and public figures. Their discussion underscores a deep skepticism of governmental actions, media narratives, and the intertwining of politics with personal liberties.
For listeners seeking candid and comprehensive analysis of contemporary issues, this episode offers a detailed exploration of the complexities shaping American socio-political landscapes.