Harris’ Surrogates, Mexican Cartels, and Political Expediency

In this episode, Victor Davis Hanson and cohost Jack Fowler examine Harris’s entourage of celebrities, how the Left insults their core constituencies, Devin Nunes and the art of selecting a political team, transexual madness and female athletes, Aurora cover-up and Mexican cartels in the US, DEI corrupting the National Institutes of Health, and Daniel Penny’s trial.

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5 thoughts on “Harris' Surrogates, Mexican Cartels, and Political Expediency”

  1. Victor,
    Thank you for being a voice of reason in an increasingly crazy world of wokism, CRT, DEI, and elitism. I anxiously await the release of each new podcast or article on your website, ‘The Blade of Perseus.’ I also want to extend a shout-out to Sami Winc and Jack Fowler as podcast hosts. I especially appreciate your sense of humor and it’s reassuring that I am not corrupted by the insanity of the world. However, I have one question. Why is there a four to five-day lag between recording and posting your podcasts?

  2. Richard Borgquist

    I’m not sure why SacBee hassled Devin Nunes. I figured Devin Nunes’s dairy experiece would help him identify manure.

  3. Victor,

    I’ve recently discovered your site and podcasts. Thank you for your great work! I have a couple of observations on this podcast.

    First, concerning your comments about Nunes intellect and his being a farmer. I grew up in a somewhat rural area and started working for an old farmer when I was 12. The farmers I’ve met over the years are generally very intelligent. I would suggest it’s because farming exposes them to so many disciplines. In farming you use chemistry, biology, physics, economics, just to name a few.

    Second, you ended the podcast talking about a personal incident involving you and a veteran friend that happened years ago. Specifically you commented on citizens acting to protect others and it not being vigilanteism. My grandfather was born about 1898 in South Dakota. I remember as a young person, him teling me that when he was young if there was stealing or some other trouble in the area a few men got together on horseback and took the offender in to the sherriff at the county seat.. He never expressed any vigilante attitude about this, and it was actually quit different from what is depicted in Hollywood movies. I think the people out in the remote rural areas knew that if they wanted a peaceful, safe community they had to, in a limited way, police themselves along with law enforcement.

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