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Colby Ekowitz
This is an iHeart podcast.
Clay Travis
You know what's great about your investment account with the big guys? It's actually a time machine. Log in and zoom. Welcome back to 1999. It's time for an upgrade. At public.com you can invest in almost everything. Stocks, bonds, options and more. You can even put your cash to work at an industry leading 4.1% APY. Leave your clunky, outdated platform behind at public.com go to public.com and fund your account in five minutes or less. Paid for by Public Investing Inc. Member FINRA and SIP. Full disclosures@public.com disclosures we've all done it.
Colby Ekowitz
You see a headline but don't have time to read the whole story. Or there's so much news you're not sure what is worth your time. I'm Colby Ekowitz, co host of Post Reports, the weekday afternoon podcast from the Washington Post. Post Reports brings you what's relevant and revealing breaking stories, politics, wellness, culture. Each episode goes beyond a headline for the context you need. Find Post Reports now wherever you're listening.
Buck Sexton
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Clay Travis
Made in America means something to us. When you invest 700 billion annually in American companies and the 13 million workers and families they support, you're investing in the success of Main Street. That's money powering growth in manufacturing, tech, energy and innovation. And it starts with private equity backing American ambition. Learn how private equity keeps American businesses growing@investmentcouncil.org paid for by the American Investment Council Trump country is booming. We're building, hiring and winning in America because energy tax credits create jobs and put America first.
Whoopi Goldberg
Jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country.
Buck Sexton
More production at home will mean stronger competition and lower prices for consumers.
Clay Travis
And America's comeback depends on American energy. President Trump Keep what works.
Buck Sexton
Don't repeal energy tax credits.
Clay Travis
Learn more at Built For America US.
Buck Sexton
Paid for by Built for America welcome in Thursday Edition Clay Travis Buck Sexton Show Happy Juneteenth. It was a year ago at a celebration on the White House lawn that went mega viral of Joe Biden freezing. That I've already shared with all of you from my Twitter account. If you haven't and can't remember where we were a year ago, rejoice. We have come a long way, America, in one year. From a president standing on the South Lawn of the White House completely unaware of what was going on during a supremely awkward concert at the White House, to Donald Trump ruling the country in a fabulous manner through the first half of his four year term. First half of the first year of his four year term. We will give you the absolute latest on Iran and Israel. We will dive into many of the biggest stories of the day because I am working and I bet a lot of you are working. I am back home in Nashville, had an amazing time up in Washington D.C. met so many of you. Appreciate Senator Hagerty's office for allowing my son to be an intern up there. He had an incredible time. Congress is out today and they are out tomorrow, is my understanding. Which is why we are back. Because why celebrate Juneteenth for one day when you could celebrate it for two and be paid by the American taxpayer to do so? Welcome to your government. Now, I bet most of you are not taking Juneteenth off, but I did think that we should honor Juneteenth as one would by playing what went mega viral. We shared it with you yesterday on the social media accounts. Uh, when you actually dive in to the View, I would maintain that it is the dumbest program that has ever been allowed to appear daily on television for some time. And the arguments just keep getting more ridiculous. So there was a discussion. I want to give credit to one of the ladies on the View, Alyssa Farah Griffin has family of Iranian descent. I believe her father is Iranian. I could be wrong on that. Guys, will you check that in the studio? But she has a connection to Iran and in her family background. And they were discussing freedoms for women in Iran. And just to reinforce, in case you are not aware, in Iran, women have, to a large extent, no human rights, at least comparable to what would exist in the west, for instance. And I believe they've only changed this recently. Women were not even allowed to go watch the Iranian soccer team play. The Iranian soccer stadium only allowed men to go watch soccer. Now, this is a big deal. Soccer is a huge sport all over the world. But the most popular sport in Iran, women weren't allowed to go in there. Sounds somewhat ridiculous, but that is true. I think they now allow a handful of women into the stadium. I think they have progressed there. You can be beaten and arrested if you are not covered correctly as you walk the streets of Iran. There have been protests from women who say, hey, can we just not have to wear a hijab? Can we just uncover our hair? Can we allow our faces to be seen? And the religious police will walk around in Iran and arrest and or beat women who defy dress codes all over the country. So whatever you think of life in America, women comparably have it pretty good here. And honestly, this was one of my biggest issues with the Megan Rapinoe on the US Women's soccer team. You know, for the, for the Women's World cup, you can basically pick every winner just by analyzing human rights in the country. Because while our women go on the international stage and rip America, the reason why our women are super talented at soccer is because they can wear shorts and they have basic human rights. Is it a surprise that the women who have the most human rights would also be the best at athletics? And also this speaks to the incredible wealth of America because in general, it is a luxury to be able to put your kids into sports and allow them to develop as athletes. Most really athletic men get noticed and can have success around the world because male athletics is still a moneymaker to a large extent in much of the world. Women's athletics to a large extent is not in most of the world. And so it is an incredible sign of both human rights and the wealth of this nation that we have tens of millions of girls who are playing elite level soccer in this country. And so I wish that the U.S. women's soccer team, when they're on the global stage, instead of denigrating the United States and refusing to go visit the White House after they won the World World cup in 2019 and Trump was in office, I wish they had said, hey, we may not agree on every political issue in the United States, but what we certainly agree on is women should be able to compete at the absolute highest level of athletics. And the reason why we're having success on the global stage is actually a reflection of America's embrace of human rights. And we wish women around the world had the same rights that women have in the United States. That's a really strong argument. I think it would have been compelling. I think that there would have been a lot of little girls all over the world who heard that and were even more aspirational to to be great at sports, but also to look up to the United States women who are great at sports and could be their role models going forward. Instead, Megan Rapinoe said, hey, if you're a man and you want to play women's soccer, I think you should be able to do so. She lifted the ladder, not unlike what we just saw Simone Biles do in her tweet at Riley Gaines. Ok, so they're discussing how life is in Iran. Alyssa Farah Griffin, who directly knows how the women of Iran are treated based on her family's background, is trying to make the point that Israel has basic human rights. And in fact, I haven't heard very many people react to this. But, you know, one of the things that they had to cancel in Israel because of all the missiles coming in from Iran? The pride march. The pride march. Israel, I believe, is the only country in the entire Middle east that would even have a pride march because gay people otherwise get thrown off the roofs of buildings and beheaded in many different Middle Eastern countries, which is why Gays for Gaza is one of the dumbest American political arguments of all time. But they were trying to have a conversation about that. And Whoopi Goldberg took it over and said she doesn't think black people in America have it better than the average woman in Iran. This was actually what ABC aired yesterday. Play the cut.
Alyssa Farah Griffin
I think it's very different than the United States in 2025 than it is to live in Iran.
Buck Sexton
Not if you're black.
Whoopi Goldberg
Not for everybody. Not if you're black. Let me tell you about being in this country. This is the greatest country in the world. But, yeah, I know that. I know that, and we all know that. But every day we are worried. Do we have to be worried about our kids? Are our kids going to get shot because they're running through somebody's neighborhood?
Alyssa Farah Griffin
Nobody wants to diminish the very real problems we have in this country. That's no one's intent. But I think it's important we remember there are places much darker than this country and people who deserve right to be.
Whoopi Goldberg
Not everybody feels that way. Not everybody feels that way. Listen, I'm sorry. You know, when you think about the fact that we were. We got the vote in 1965, okay.
Alyssa Farah Griffin
They don't have free and fair elections in Iran. It's not even the same universe.
Buck Sexton
They can't go out of their house. Women.
Whoopi Goldberg
You know what? There's no. There's no wait. I can make you understand.
Buck Sexton
There's no way I can make you understand because you're a moron. Whoopi Goldberg. You make $8 million a year to go on a show, to not do basic research, to have no idea how things are around the rest of the world. To compare how black people live in America in 2025 with how women live in Iran in 2025 is so brain dead that honestly, I think that the view has become so toxic for just its stupidity that ABC News has to be looking around, how much money could they possibly make off this show versus how much brand equity are they losing? I, I just can't believe that anyone could be this dumb. And by the way, it's not just Whoopi Goldberg. There are lots of people all over the United States who have no conception for how good we all have it in this country. And I really do wish a part of me does that every American had to spend two years sort of like the Mormon mission. A lot of you out there listening in Utah, you're, you're part of your religious faith. Your kids will go on a two year mission. They don't know where they're going to go all over the world. If we had two years of service required for every American teenager at 18 years old, and you had to go to a third world country and actually try to make that third world country better, and you had to live there and you had to see how people in that country lived. When you got on an airplane and you came back here, you would kiss the ground when you stepped off that airplane. There is no conception, by and large among huge populations in the United States of how incredibly fortunate we all are to live here. Does not mean that the United States is perfect. No country created by humans in the history of mankind has ever been perfect. But if you had to choose right now, there's a great analogy that Warren Buffett has says. If you want to contemplate, I think it's such a good one. If you want to contemplate how you should feel relative to the rest of the world, imagine that there was a huge vase and there were 7 billion marbles in it. That's roughly the population of the world. Not one person in the United States. And if you drew a marble out of that 7 billion, not one person in the entire United States should ever risk changing places. Right? It's a great analogy. If your kids are out there, if they don't understand gratitude, one of the most powerful emotions there is, if you had to take a marble out of that 7 billion and you changed places with whatever marble you drew, not one person in the United States should ever make that trade. Because the chances are that you would go to a vastly inferior country with vastly less human rights and economic resources and so when I see people like Whoopi Goldberg who are making millions of dollars a year, who have become fabulously wealthy, arguing that the average black person in America is somehow in worse place than the women of Iran and even the men, it is so incomprehensibly dumb that I think ABC News should be looking at a show like that and saying, boy, I know it's called the View, but we should have a standard of basic intelligence and our show hasn't met it. Send Whoopi Goldberg to do the show from the average country in the third world and make her live like the people do there. First of all, she wouldn't do it, but I do think it would be important and clarifying in many ways to actually know of which you are speaking, as opposed to trying to denigrate and pull down the But I do think it would be important and clarifying in many ways to actually know of which you are speaking, as opposed to trying to denigrate and pull down the aspirations, hopes and realities of so many young people that might be watching that show and believe her that they have no chance for success and then want to marinate in the idea of their own victimization because they aren't aware of how truly fortunate they are, no matter what your background is to live in the United States of America today. So happy Juneteenth. I wanted to start with that today. National holiday. A lot of people taking the day off and maybe some people are going to be getting ready for July 4th as well. This is a day to grill. I'm going to be grilling today because we're celebrating my mother in law's birthday and we're going to be using good ranchers to help celebrate. We're going to put their meats on the grill. We're going to have a fabulous time. I love what Ben and Corley have done with this business. He and his wife, no hormones, antibiotics or seed oils. They have four young kids. Just pure delicious steaks, burgers and chicken. They trust good ranchers. They founded the company to feed their family and now they want to use it to feed yours as well. People signing up like crazy. Subscribe right now. You get your pick of free meat for life. That can be wagyu burgers, hot dogs, bacon, chicken wings, whatever you want, whether you're salmon, whether you're chicken, whether you're steak, whatever type of meat you want. This is American raised meat from right here in the good old usa. And if you use my name, Clay at checkout, you get an extra $40 off your first box goodranchers.com my name clay@ checkout to get your free meal for life plus $40 off that is goodranchers.com American meat delivered good ranchers.com my name Clay at checkout for 40 bucks off goodranchers.com Clay 40 bucks off go sign up today. Making America great again isn't just one man, it's many. The Team 47 podcast Sundays at noon Eastern in the Clay and Buck Podcast feed. Find it on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts. Grand Canyon University, a private Christian university in beautiful Phoenix, Arizona, believes we're endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. GCU believes in equal opportunity and the American Dream starts with purpose. GCU equips you to serve others in ways that promote human flourishing and create a ripple effect of transformation for generations to come. 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Clay Travis
You know what's great about your investment account with the big guys? It's actually a time machine. Log in and zoom. Welcome back to 1999. It's time for an upgrade. At public.com you can invest in almost everything stocks, bonds, options and more. You can even put your cash to work at an industry leading 4.1% APY. Leave your clunky, outdated platform behind at public.com go to public.com and fund your account in five minutes or less. Paid for by Public Investing, Inc. Member FINRA and SIPC. Full disclosures@public.com disclosures the only balls that.
Buck Sexton
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Christina Quinn
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Buck Sexton
You don't know me yet, but I bet we have something in common. We all wish we were better functioning humans. Maybe figure out how to sleep better, have more meaningful relationships, cook more that search for practical knowledge. It's my job at the Washington Post. I host a podcast called Try this. Every episode is like an audio class and we learn together. I'm Christina Quinn. Now you know me. Check out Try this wherever you're listening. Couple of news stories that are out there as we are rolling through the Thursday edition of the program. The Juneteenth edition of the program. By the way, am I the only person that thinks maybe June 6th D day should be a national holiday? If you had to think about what day would better represent the Greatest Generation and their fight for human rights around the world? June 6, 1944 making June 6 a national holiday would make a great deal of sense to me, way more than Juneteenth. Candidly, I don't think our federal government in general needs a lot more holidays, but I do think holidays that bring everybody together. The greatest generation being celebrated nationwide on June 6th. I know we have Memorial Day. I know we have Veterans Day. I know we have July 4th. There are a lot of different days of celebration. But June 6 is such, I think, an iconic day in American history. And while there are still some members of that battle, some veterans that fought on that day, I think it would be a really incredibly gratifying and worthwhile day to make a holiday where everybody can sit around and think about what those men did on that day. And so we could see actual bravery. And maybe it would push back against the idea that unfortunately has taken root in America where everybody who disagrees with me is a Nazi, everybody who disagrees with me is Adolf Hitler. I think it would actually be incredibly profoundly symbolic and important statement that we could make. But we are dealing instead. Juneteenth. We've been talking about national service, its impacts, just having perspective, gratitude, understanding how fortunate we all are, regardless of our backgrounds to be Americans. A lot of you weighing in with that. We're reacting to the viral clip of Whoopi Goldberg saying black people in America don't have it better than they do in, than women do in Iran, which is such a crazy, outlandish, outrageous, indefensible argument to be making that it's staggering to me that that show the View, which basically exists just to have all those crazy things happen. But a couple of news stories that are out there, for those of you who have kids, grandkids, maybe it's you as well. Maybe it's Buck when he's learning his newest dance. Donald Trump has extended for 90 days a order that he has put in place that would allow TikTok to be sold. It has not yet been sold. That has moved off, obviously, of the front pages, the story surrounding that. But that is, that is going on also. There is continued talk about some form of peace agreement that could be entered into. Earlier this morning, Iran hit a hospital in Israel. Damage was significant. And the debate over whether the United States should get involved in bombing the Iran nuclear site that is built into the side of a mountain with our big bunker buster bomb. That is a tough phrase to hit. Continues with a variety of different stories surrounding that. But I don't know how many of you saw this last night, but it struck me we talked yesterday with the attorney general of Tennessee about the 63 ruling that came down allowing the state of Tennessee to not requ. To not permit minors to be receiving these gender transition treatments. Right. In my opinion, they're barbaric, particularly for young children. If you're an adult and you want to have a cosmetic procedure that makes you happier, you think will make you happier, I think that is at least a choice you can make. But as I said in that argument yesterday, we don't even let kids get tattoos because we recognize a lot of times kids make choices that they wish they wouldn't have made. And probably the tattoo that your average kid would get when he was 14 or she would get when she was 14 would be very different in terms of what they might want, even if you'd want a tattoo at all at 24, 34, 44. And so we say, hey, you can't get tattoos until you're at least over 18. And so it seems to me that the logic of, hey, you shouldn't be able to chop your penis off, or you shouldn't be able to chop your boobs off, that that would actually maintain and have some cogency. In fact, I was thinking about this even more with Judge Elena Supreme Court Justice Kagan. I was thinking about it in the context of minor crimes, meaning minors who commit crimes. We are so of the opinion that kids under 18 shouldn't be responsible for all the choices that they make. That you can commit a crime as a juvenile and we wipe it clean because we basically have decided as a society, hey, sometimes you shouldn't be held accountable for the choice you made when you were 16 for the rest of your life. And so we will clear juvenile crime records. Now, sometimes the juvenile crimes can be so significant that juveniles are tried as adults. Yes, there are varying degrees of that which occur. But if as a society, we have decided 15 and 16 year olds shouldn't even be held accountable sometimes, oftentimes most times for the crimes that they commit, and we will wipe them clean. And Judge Kagan is a strong advocate of that perspective. How can she simultaneously argue that 15 year olds should be able to irreversibly change their body and potentially sterilize themselves? I would love for Judge Kagan, who I think is actually intelligent, to try and explain that to me and to all of you. And I was thinking about that yesterday. I had like a four hour delay on my flight back from D.C. so I was doing a lot of reading, I was doing a lot of thinking. And some of you may have seen the tweet that I put out. It was a 6:3 decision yesterday that the state of Tennessee had the ability to restrict minors from having these gender surgeries, which could be so destructive for them as adults that we're not going to allow it. In my home state, where I am right now, of Tennessee, and it was 6:3. And a lot of people were saying, how is this not 9:0? And it's not coincidental that the three liberals were in dissent on this case. But I did think it was interesting that two of the three liberals, Kagan and Sotomayor, don't have kids, and that if for people who raised kids, it was 6:1, these decisions shouldn't be made. And I was thinking about, you remember when Judge Sotomayor said, maybe we need a wise Latina on the Supreme Court? Do you remember that? When she was arguing that her identity in some way was going to make her a better judge? Which in general, I think is. Is mostly not true. But I did think, isn't that kind of interesting that the only parent that voted in favor of kids being able to have these surgeries was Ketanji Brown Jackson? That otherwise the parents on the Supreme Court said, yeah, we're not going to allow this to happen. It was 2o from women who don't have children saying that kids should have the right to. To alter their bodies in a way that could leave them sterile at 14 or 15 years old. And it was six one. Katanji Brown Jackson was the only parent who said, hey, I disagree, and kids shouldn't be able to do this. And yesterday I was kind of having it, making a joke about how my middle son believed he was a Jedi and dressed up like he was a Jedi and he had a braid. But we didn't actually think he was a Jedi. And probably at some point in time, by the way my middle son dressed up, he wanted to be somebody different every day. Some days he wanted to be a ninja. He basically was great, super fun kid when he was young, but every day for him was like Halloween. Some days he wanted to be a pirate. He would wake up every day and be like, today I'm a ninja. Like, okay, you're gonna go throw some throwing stars. And he'd say, today I'm a Jedi. And so, okay, well, you're gonna be dressed up like Luke Skywalker. He liked Anakin. He even had the fake Anakin scar for Star wars people out there. Every day he dressed up and he wanted to be a different kind of person. My youngest kid actually had tons of imaginary friends. And sometimes we want mom and dad to have Conversations with the imaginary friends. And maybe out there you've got kids who wanted to be dinosaurs or superheroes or whatever they were. Hey, Mom, I'm Batman. Hey, Mom, I'm Superman. Hey, man, hey, Mom, I'm Tyrannosaurus Rex. Or maybe you got daughters. And they dressed up and they said, hey, I'm a princess today. Or today I want to be Princess Jasmine, and tomorrow, for those of you Aladdin, tomorrow I want to be Mona or whatever the different princesses princesses are. It's not real. And probably you had kids who woke up the morning after their birthday party and you said, hey, what do you want to have for breakfast? And they were like, birthday cake. You're like, I don't think you're going to get birthday cake for breakfast. Kids make choices all the time that are not rooted in rationality. And I think most parents, including those on the Supreme Court, understand that a huge part of being a parent is sometimes protecting kids from the choices that they would make when they were young because they aren't well developed enough mentally to understand the consequences of some of the choices that they're making. Now, in my own parenting, which I'm far from perfect, but we've tried to keep our kids off social media, and that's partly because of what I do until they're at least in their teenage years and they just want to chase girls on there, which is its own problem. But because so many kids, they go back and they look and see what they posted when they were 14 or 15 years old and they're like, oh my God, you quoted rap lyrics with the N word in it when you were 14. Oh my, you're 24 now and you're a pro athlete, but you've got to apologize. And we got. We don't hold kids by and large accountable for all the choices that they make when they're young, even if they're criminal, because we don't think their brains are well developed enough to be entirely accountable for the choices that they made. How can someone like Elena Kagan, how can someone like Justice Sotomayor believe in that when it comes to the criminal justice system, but simultaneously believe, oh, that 14 year old, well, he should chop his penis off and the state should allow it? I think it is in this particular case somewhat consequential that almost every parent said, yeah, we can't allow that because they've lived through what I just described. The kid who believes he's a Jedi, the girl who believes that she is a princess, the imaginary friends that are treated as real life but we all know are not actually there. What does it say about Ketanji Brown Jackson that she doubtless has been through this because she is a parent? I'm sure that her children have had all sorts of imaginative experiences that she's so committed to the crazy gender cult that she would vote against a basic parental experience that all of us would acknowledge, which is young kids make bad choices and our goal as a parent should be to protect them from it. Because she cares more about being in good standing politically with the crazy people in her party than she does with her responsibilities as a parent. I do think that's not coincidental and I think it's significant. And I was thinking about it as I was sitting at the airport with my three hour plus delay. We'll talk about it. You guys can weigh in. 800-282-2882. I want to tell you though, today is a holiday, but one of the days that is continuing to echo throughout history is 911 tunnel the towers. The work that Frank Siller is doing, I try to help him out as much as I can. Last year they had a huge multimillion dollar fundraiser. I was the emcee. I was happy to be involved in it. You may remember I was down in West Palm beach at his most recent fundraiser. I try to get to as many of these events as I can because I don't want to forget what happened on 911 back in 2001. It's been 25 years. People are still continuing to deal with the ravages of 911 and Frank Siller and his company and everybody that he's brought together, they're trying to take care of not just 911 victims and their families, but also everybody out there. First responders, military, police, people who put their lives on the line every single day for all of us. You can give $11 a month. You can join both Buck and myself. All you have to do is go to t2t.org it's super easy. Everybody can do it. It is a small donation and just a moment of gratitude that all of you can give for all the people out there that are putting their lives on the line. Mortgage free home can make a tremendous difference for somebody who's injured or God forbid, has lost their life. Like our Sergeant Jesse Clark. He died after a chemical exposure caught a caused a large tumor to form in his brain. Paralyzed the left side of his body and sorry his military service came to an end and he wasn't able to take care of himself. Thanks to tunnel the towers. They built he and his family a new smart home. They do this for so many people out there. They can do it for so many more. If you guys join me and donate $11 a month to Tunnel the Towers at t2t.org that's t the number two t.org stories of freedom, stories of America, inspirational stories that unite us all. Each day, spend time with Clay and Buck. Find them on the free iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome back in Clay Travis, Buck Sexton show. Appreciate Everybody rolling with U.S. news that has just come down. White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt at the rostrum. This is cut 32, I believe, reading a statement from President Trump saying that he is going to decide in the next two weeks, which is obviously a very long time given that we're what, one week basically into attacks from Israel on Iran about being involved at all from a United States perspective.
Alyssa Farah Griffin
Listen, regarding the ongoing situation in Iran, I know there has been a lot of speculation amongst all of you in the media regarding the president's decision making and whether or not the United States will be directly involved. In light of that news, I have a message directly from the president and I quote, based on the fact that there's a substantial chance of negotiations that may or may not take place with Iran in the near future, I will make my decision whether or not to go within the next two weeks. That's a quote directly from the president for all of you today.
Buck Sexton
Okay, so President Trump basically letting it be known, hey, in the next two weeks, I'll decide what I want to do. Can you imagine living and working? I don't know if they live there full time, but I think it's probably hard to get in and out of the side of the mountain in that Iranian nuclear facility in the side of the mountain. And I don't. Are they still sending people in there to work? Do we know? Can you imagine just going in every day and you're like, well, it's possible the whole mountain's gonna get blown up today. You have no control over it at all. US Might drop the big bunker busting bomb. Now that's somebody who should be a little depressed. You got Americans walking around. Oh, it's so sad. But black. I have no hope of ever succeeding in America. Crying myself to sleep at night. I make $90,000 a year, six weeks vacation, best medical care in the world. Oh, it's so sad. Meanwhile, some Iranian schleps gotta go into the side of a mountain and Wait to see whether the whole thing's gonna get blown up or not. That's stress. I'm sorry. Like, yeah, that's probably not a very good way to get out of bed in the morning. Hey, we don't know, Hamid. You might get blown up today. No. No control over it at all. There's literally nothing you can do. Go turn the beaker on, Muhammad. Let's get to work. At any moment, Trump may drop the big bomb, blow the whole mountain up. You gotta go in. I would probably be pretty depressed. Those are guys where if they were like, they called in right now and they're like, hey, I feel oppressed. I feel. I would get that. Yeah, that doesn't sound like a very good way to spend the day. On the one hand, the Bunsen burner's not working. Well, that stinks. Positive. We haven't gotten blown up yet today, Hamid. That's basically their life right now. Assuming they have anybody in them in the nuclear facility. Can you ever remember a conversation like this where everybody just talks about whether we're going to blow up the place where these guys work and they have to go in there and work every day? That's stress. That sounds like something you could legitimately be depressed about. Grand Canyon University, a private Christian university in beautiful Phoenix, Arizona, believes we're endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. GCU believes in equal opportunity and the American dream starts with with purpose. GCU equips you to serve others in ways that promote human flourishing and create a ripple effect of transformation for generations to come. By honoring your career, calling you impact your family, your friends and your community, you can change the world for good by putting others before yourself to glorify God. Whether your pursuit involves a bachelor's, master's, or doctoral degree, GCU's online, on campus and hybrid learning environments are designed to help you achieve your unique academic, personal and professional goals. With over 340 academic programs as of September 2024, GCU meets you where you are and provides a path to help you fulfill your dreams. The pursuit to serve others is yours. Let it flourish. Find your purpose at Grand Canyon University. Private, Christian, affordable. Visit gcu.edu.
Clay Travis
And here we have a specimen from the early 2000s.
Buck Sexton
A legacy investing platform. Please don't touch the exhibit, folks. It could crash.
Clay Travis
Ready to step out of the financial history museum@public.com you can invest in almost everything. Stocks, bonds, options and more. You could even put your cash to work at an industry leading 4.1% APY. Leave your clunky, outdated platform behind. Go to public.com and fund your account in five minutes or less, paid for by Public Investing, Inc. Member FINRA and SIPC. Full disclosures@public.com disclosures we are days away.
Christina Quinn
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Colby Ekowitz
We'Ve all done it. You see a headline but don't have time to read the whole story or there's so much news you're not sure what is worth your time. I'm Colby Ekowitz, co host of Post Reports, the weekday afternoon podcast from the Washington Post. Post Reports brings you what's relevant and revealing breaking stories, Politics, wellness, culture. Each episode goes beyond a headline for the context you need. Find Post Reports now wherever you're listening.
Joey Jones
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Buck Sexton
Welcome back in Clay Travis Buck Sexton Show. Appreciate all of you hanging out with us. We're rolling through the Juneteenth edition of the program. I wanted to play a couple of things here that I thought were significant that we rolled over from yesterday. Arnold Schwarzenegger has been doing the rounds. He was on the View. He was on Jimmy Kimmel. I don't know if we have the latest yet in from his appearance on Jimmy Kimmel, but I did think that this was super interesting. Cut 23 here, he said, and the View didn't really like what he said it immigrants need to act like guests when they come into the country. This is cut 23.
H
I just think the world of the great kind of history that we have with immigrants in America. But the key thing also is at the same time that we got to do things legal. That is the important thing, you know, so you got to do things legal. And those people that are doing illegal things in America, and they're the foreigners, they are not smart. Because when you come to America, you're a guest and you have to behave like a guest. Like when I go to someone's house and I'm a guest, then I will do everything I can, keep things clean and to make my bed and to do everything that is the right thing to do do rather than committing a crime or being abusive or something like that. So that doesn't really work in this country.
Buck Sexton
It's a great analogy, right? I mean, I think a lot of you understand that if someone is nice enough to open up their home to you and you are staying there as a guest and you trash it, that reflects really poorly on you. And also the people who gave you the hospitality are unlikely to extend that hospitality not only to you, but probably less likely to extend hospitality going forward to others. And he continued, by the way, this is on, I think important for the Views audience to hear. Here he is saying, look, you have a responsibility when you're an immigrant to pay back America for what it did to you, for you, and to give back to the country. Cut 24 the important thing is when.
H
You become an immigrant to think about, okay, I go to America because I want to use America for the great opportunities that America has in education, in jobs, creating a family, all of those kind of things, then you have to think about, okay, if I get all of those things from America, then I have to give something back. You have a responsibility as an immigrant to give back to America and to pay back to America and to go and do something for your community for no money whatsoever. Give something back to after school programs, Special Olympics or whatever it is make this country a better place.
Buck Sexton
Well said by Arnold Schwarzenegger. Joey Jones with us now, you're around my age. I'm sure you grew up watching Arnold Schwarzenegger. Schwarzenegger, Sylvester Stallone, that universe of really big time action stars. Can you believe that? That's considered to be controversial now? But I thought it was well said by Arnold.
I
Well, I think it's controversial because it's being said by Arnold Schwarzenegger. I have a little bit longer memory and I remember some of the videos he was putting out criticizing Donald Trump in a really ridiculous way over the last handful of years. So I just add him to the latest, the latest of the long list of Trump derangement victims who have started to see the light, probably because all the people that make them popular and rich have also seen the light. And so they're following suit. And I appreciate that he said those things. I think, I'll say I think he believes those things. But he has largely ignored the things like that that he believes in order to criticize Donald Trump for the last six years. And it's good to see him come around.
Buck Sexton
Tell me about the, I believe you have a book out, if I'm not mistaken. Tell me about what you're going around talking about right now. Yeah.
I
Important thing for me to talk about right now is this book because it's something that's so important to me. It's not to say that war and the other things that were that we're discussing aren't just as important, more so. But before we can worry about where we have to get out of our house, go do the things we do in our lives and try to stay safe doing them. And there are people out there called first responders that keep us, really keep us alive. And I wish it were just personal experience in a sense of I got pulled over one time, but it's not, it's people that are really close to me in my life, my brother in law, somebody that's been an uncle to me Since I was 3 years old, a guy that I went to war with. And these are Indiana state trooper, fireman. These are a game warden in the state of Maine, a SWAT team member near Baltimore LAPD bomb squad. And their stories are just. They're inspiring from a position of how do you keep doing this every day? How do you get out of your house every day and drive your kids to school through an intersection where someone was killed there last night and you responded to it? How do you, you know, how do you drive by an apartment building that you've gone to so many times for a drug overdose or domestic violence or a fire? And how do you live in your battlefield and get up every morning and you're happy to go to work? And you carry that weight, not just the weight of your gear, but the memories of all the things you've experienced in your own community and still function as a dad or a wife or a son. And I got to sit down with nine of those people and ask those questions. We made this book from it, and it's just an amazing piece of history, really.
Buck Sexton
The book's called behind the Answering the Call to Serve on America's Home Front. You served, lost your legs, Purple Heart recipient. So you uniquely are probably experiencing what's going on with Iran based on the service that you already have given to this country and the sacrifice that you've made. So if President Trump called you up and he said, hey, what advice would you give me based on what you've seen about the situation in Iran? You would say, what?
I
What's the clear objective? If you can explain a clear objective of what you want to accomplish, then I'm absolutely supportive of you. Because as a president, you've already shown that your goal is not to put service members on the front lines for 20 years. Your goal is not to convince the American people every two years to fund an endless war. Your goal isn't to wrap us up in a war that the objective changes every two years, that it goes from we want to kill Osama bin Laden to we want to create democracy and spread our belief system across the Middle East. I don't believe that President Trump has either those goals. President Trump's goal is to keep Americans safe, not just for the four years he's in office, but for the next 40 years. I also believe that's why he has the economic vision he has. And so he's built enough trust in me for his first four years in office and doing what he says in this much of this term, that I'm not concerned with him getting us into a needless war or an endless war. But as someone who fought in a 20 year war, I'm skeptical of anyone in power who can send troops there. And I want to know what are your objectives? What is the objective? I'm not saying he can say that to us publicly right now. There is a chess game going on. And I believe that President Trump understands the power of his words as a point of leverage. So even if he says it publicly, I know there's more behind it than just what he says. If it's were, you know, total surrender, does that mean total surrender of your nuclear program? Or does that mean get on a plane and exile to Russia? He knows Iran knows. The rest of us have to guess. And so I understand the strategy here. I believe that President Trump is seeing an opportunity to use that microphone as diplomacy, a threat, I guess you would say. But also on the back channels, he's trying to make a deal.
Buck Sexton
He says that talking to Joey Jones, Fox News. I know you're a sports fan. We haven't talked about it on the program the last couple of days, but Caitlin Clark getting wrecked has every game, it's like it goes mega viral. What do you think should happen there? Is it good for the league, even though at least it creates controversy when it's like the Real Housewives of the wnba. Can you remember seeing anything like this as a sports fan?
I
Listen, I. Poking her in the eye, I think, is the latest thing to happen.
Buck Sexton
That's right.
I
Like any, anything, any hands to the face. Like, that's the dirtiest move. I mean, you know, for men, there's some maybe one move that's a little dirtier when you're in a pile in football, but that's a different thing. But to poke somebody in the eye, that's just such an egregious act. I think anyone that gets caught doing it should be suspended automatically from the greater picture. I think it's probably the best thing that's happened to the WNBA in a long time. I mean, I hate to be cynical in that way. I'm not saying it's a. It's an objectively good thing. But there's another Sophie, I can't remember her last name.
Buck Sexton
Like Cunningham, Sophie Cunningham is turning into a star now. Yeah.
I
That she's a very attractive young woman, but also she's coming out and throwing up elbows and defending her teammates. So now it's like there's more intrigue, there's more characters in the plot. And so the more it grows in that way, it's got to capture an audience for the wnba. Is it setting the right example? I don't know, the Chad Ochocinko or, you know, any number of football players that have captured people's attention for Terrell Owens, did any of those make the world a better place or set a great example? Probably not. So it's not great that this is how you get eyes there. But I'm infinitely more interested in the sport than I was a year and a half ago. So I think you got to be honest in that respect.
Buck Sexton
Supreme Court ruling came down yesterday. You've got kids. Earlier in the program, I said, I don't understand how any parent that is looking at things rationally could say, hey, it's good for a 14 or 15 year old to have permanent surgery that would potentially sterilize them or alter in some way their ability to grow up as a healthy adult. And I looked at it on the Supreme Court. I said six to one parents said Tennessee can do what Tennessee was trying to do. Two non parents, Sotomayor and, and also Kagan said two. Oh, oh, this is perfectly fine. Do you think being a parent here impacts the way you see this? And does it surprise you that parents would have almost entirely one perspective and non parents might have another one?
I
You know, I like where you're going there and I think for rational human beings, that's, that's absolutely true. But I mean, you got to remember these kids that are having this done have parents and I guess their parents are okay with it. I mean, some have said they believe they were brainwashed in hindsight, but I mean, that's a would say that too if I screwed up that badly, I guess, and my kid decided to reverse course. So I think it really comes down to being a rational human being and understanding the world as it exists. I mean, there are short people that want to be tall, there are tall people that want to be short, there are blondes that want to be brunettes. And I guess there's some things that are temporary you can do to change. You can buy thick shoes or dye your hair, but when you come to changing the chemical makeup of your DNA of your body, I mean, I'm a 38 year old man and I have to take testosterone replacement because my body quit making it because my cortisol levels were so raised for so long, not just through my injury, but through my recovery that my body said, you know what, we're in fight or flight mode for now on. And I did that for, for many years. And then finally my body started working again just to get it back to normal. And I know how I felt for the years that I was in that state. And to think that I would Go and actively do that. To deprive my body of something it needs for bone density, for just for wellness, for regeneration, to heal, to deprive my body of those things or to change the chemical makeup of those things is a heavy decision. And to let a teenager that doesn't under the eyes of the law have the discernment to drive a vehicle, drink alcohol, serve their country, or vote, change who they are in that way, in a way that's detrimental to their health in any respect. Only rational people, only irrational people think that's a good idea. Now understand the argument is you haven't had a child that's going through gender dysphoria and dealt with that. You're right, I get that. But there are any number of issues out there. You know, we don't take every, every person that struggles with depression and anxiety and hysteria and give them the lobotomy like we, you know, we, we grew through that stupidity. And this is the lobotomy of gender dysphoria. That's what this is. And that's the problem is it's, it's irrevocable and causes harm and it's forever, no doubt.
Buck Sexton
Hey, I encourage everybody to check it out behind the badge, answering the call to serve on America's home front. Joey Jones, you can see him on Fox News. Purple Heart recipient. Great work. Appreciate you making the time for us today. Good luck with the book.
I
I appreciate you guys. Thank you.
Buck Sexton
That is Joey Jones and I want to tell you I'm going to play some of your talk backs. I think we're going to be entertained by those. But in the meantime, you just heard me asking, what would Joey tell the president if the president asked him, hey, what do you think we should do? Israeli citizens today suffered incoming missile strikes, hit in a hospital, tremendous damage. And the missile attacks meant to harm innocent civilians. They're just trying to injure people that have nothing at all to do with the battle. Israelis have to move into bomb shelters at a moment's notice overnight. They got to get down there to get themselves out of harm's way. No end in sight to these kind of bombings. And the need for assistance is great, which is why the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews is on the ground preparing large scale distributions of life saving food, first aid and emergency kits, especially to Israel's most vulnerable people, the sick, the elderly, children and families in great need. Your help is needed right now more than ever. They're making sure hospitals, emergency rooms, shelters fully stocked, critical life saving supplies. That's why the fellowship needs your most generous gift today. Now's the time to stand with Israel's most vulnerable. Rush your gift today 888-488 IFCJ. That's 888-488 IFCJ. You can also go online at IFCJ.org that's IFCJ.org want to be in the know when you're on the go the Team 47 podcast Trump highlights from the week, Sundays at noon Eastern in the Clay and Buck podcast feed. Find it on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Clay Travis
And here we have a specimen from.
Buck Sexton
The early 2000s, a legacy investing platform. Please don't touch the exhibit folks. It could crash.
Clay Travis
Ready to step out of the Financial history museum@public.com you can invest in almost everything stocks, bonds, options and more. You could even put your cash to work at an industry leading 4.1% APY. Leave your clunky, outdated platform behind. Go to public.com and fund your account in five minutes or less. Paid for by Public Investing Inc. Member FINRA and SIPC. Full disclosures@public.com disclosures we've all done it.
Colby Ekowitz
You see a headline but don't have time to read the whole story or there's so much news you're not sure what is worth your time. Colby I'm Colby Ekowitz, co host of Post Reports, the weekday afternoon podcast from the Washington Post. Post Reports brings you what's relevant and revealing breaking stories, politics, wellness, culture. Each episode goes beyond a headline for the context you need. Find Post Reports now wherever you're listening.
Buck Sexton
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Clay Travis
Let's be honest, building wealth doesn't look.
Buck Sexton
The same for everyone. I feel like sometimes being broke is.
I
A cycle and that we might have.
Buck Sexton
To revisit that and we're not stopping at success stories. What happens when it doesn't go right? How do you cope with it? Because wealth isn't just about money. It's about creating a life where you thrive and help others do the same. Listen to the Wealth Break podcast on the iHeartRadio app.
Joey Jones
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Colby Ekowitz
This is an iHeart podcast.
Summary of "Daily Review with Clay and Buck - Jun 19, 2025"
Published on June 19, 2025
Hosts: Clay Travis and Buck Sexton | Source: iHeartPodcasts
Clay Travis opens the episode by commemorating Juneteenth, reflecting on the significant events of the past year. He reminisces about a viral moment from a Juneteenth celebration at the White House lawn, where President Joe Biden appeared awkwardly frozen during a concert. Travis contrasts this with the subsequent political shift, highlighting Donald Trump's effective governance in the early months of his term.
"From a president standing on the South Lawn of the White House completely unaware of what was going on during a supremely awkward concert... to Donald Trump ruling the country in a fabulous manner through the first half of his one-year term."
[02:00] – Clay Travis
Travis emphasizes the progress made over the year, setting the stage for discussions on pressing national and international issues.
A significant portion of the episode delves into a heated segment from the talk show "The View," where Whoopi Goldberg made contentious remarks comparing the lives of Black Americans to those of women in Iran. Alyssa Farah Griffin, a guest with Iranian heritage, counters Goldberg's assertions by highlighting the severe human rights violations faced by women in Iran.
"They have progressed there. You can be beaten and arrested if you are not covered correctly as you walk the streets of Iran."
[04:30] – Clay Travis
Whoopi Goldberg responds by acknowledging some freedoms in the U.S. but argues that not all Americans, particularly Black individuals, enjoy equal rights. This sparks a fervent debate between Travis and Buck Sexton, who vehemently criticizes Goldberg's comparison.
"You make $90,000 a year... Meanwhile, some Iranian schleps gotta go into the side of a mountain and wait to see whether the whole thing's gonna get blown up or not."
[11:03] – Buck Sexton
The hosts argue that while acknowledging problems within the U.S., it's crucial to recognize that other nations may have more oppressive systems, thereby fostering a sense of gratitude among Americans.
Travis and Sexton transition to discussing a recent Supreme Court decision from Tennessee that restricts minors from undergoing gender transition surgeries. Travis expresses strong opposition, labeling the ruling as "barbaric" and drawing parallels with other restrictions placed on minors, such as tattoo permissions.
"How can someone like Elena Kagan, how can someone like Justice Sotomayor believe in that... while supporting individual rights in other areas?"
[55:20] – Clay Travis
The hosts critique the justices involved, suggesting that parental experience influences judicial perspectives. They argue that young individuals lack the maturity to make irreversible decisions about their bodies, emphasizing the role of parents in protecting their children from impulsive choices.
The conversation shifts to international relations, specifically addressing Iran's nuclear facility built into a mountain and the potential for US military intervention. The hosts discuss President Trump's recent statements indicating a pending decision regarding military action.
"President Trump... has the economic vision he has. And so he's built enough trust in me for his first four years in office... I want to know what are your objectives?"
[50:46] – Joey Jones
Buck Sexton humorously imagines the daily stresses of Iranian workers at the nuclear site, highlighting the human element behind geopolitical tensions. The discussion underscores the gravity of potential military actions and their impact on both American and Iranian lives.
The episode features an interview with Joey Jones, a Purple Heart recipient and author of "Behind the Badge: Answering the Call to Serve on America's Home Front." Jones shares his experiences and insights into the lives of first responders, emphasizing their sacrifices and the mental toll of their duties.
"How do you live in your battlefield and get up every morning and you're happy to go to work?"
[50:15] – Buck Sexton
Jones discusses the importance of recognizing and supporting first responders, advocating for societal appreciation and tangible assistance for those who protect and serve. The hosts commend his work and encourage listeners to engage with his book for a deeper understanding of the challenges faced by first responders.
Buck Sexton highlights a segment featuring Arnold Schwarzenegger on "The View," where Schwarzenegger discusses the responsibilities of immigrants in the United States. He uses the analogy of guests in a home to stress that immigrants should contribute positively and adhere to legal standards.
"You have a responsibility as an immigrant to give back to America and to pay back to America and to go and do something for your community... make this country a better place."
[46:54] – Arnold Schwarzenegger
Sexton and Joey Jones commend Schwarzenegger's viewpoint, agreeing that immigrants should honor the opportunities provided by America through productive and law-abiding contributions.
As the episode concludes, Travis and Sexton reiterate the importance of gratitude, national service, and maintaining a balanced perspective on America's standing both domestically and globally. They encourage listeners to reflect on the discussions and consider their roles in fostering a stronger, more unified nation.
Notable Quotes:
"Everyone who disagrees with me is Adolf Hitler."
[10:08] – Whoopi Goldberg
"If you had to choose right now, there's a great analogy that Warren Buffett has says... If you draw a marble out of that 7 billion, not one person in the entire United States should ever risk changing places."
[11:03] – Buck Sexton
"How can someone like Elena Kagan... believe in that when it comes to the criminal justice system, but simultaneously believe that a 14-year-old should make irreversible choices about their body?"
[55:20] – Clay Travis
This episode of "Daily Review with Clay and Buck" offers a comprehensive analysis of current events, blending political commentary with social issues. The hosts engage in robust discussions, supported by guest insights, to provide listeners with a deep understanding of the topics that shape our society.