Moore: Project 2025 Is About Trump’s Desire for Revenge and His Belief in an America We Don’t Believe In
RUSH EXCERPT:
MOORE: "No, but your network has. Thank you for that. It is 900 pages, so I don’t expect many people are going to read it, but just leafed through it and it is a frightening document of what they are planning to do and Trump says I don’t know anything about this, which may be slightly true. Ultimately for him it is not whatever the policymakers are writing. It is about his desire for revenge and his belief in an America that we don’t believe in. Not his America. So yes I think that it is a critical thing. I am worried that nobody is going to take President Biden to the doctor. That we go so far I think right now and if that is not the case, I think, look. One of the things he will be remembered for is he gave us our first woman in the Oval Office. Another great example of his values, of who he is. The foresight he had in picking her, so if that is where we end up. Not only not the end of the world, Trump is diff eatable. You’ve got to ask the 10 million who didn’t vote for him four years ago, they changed their mind. No they haven’t. You have people on this network say they would vote for a dead cat over Trump. They would vote weekend at bernie’s, you know where they tried to keep bernie alive in the movie. And in Missouri a few years ago, do you remember this? The election for the Senate race and the candidate died? Nobody wanted the Republican, John Ashcroft. And so the dead guy one. The Democrat. And the governor of Missouri decided the only fair thing to do, if people wanted the dead guy over the all love — the alive guy. He appointed his wife, his widow from Missouri. So we have a history of voting for the dead guy over the bad guy. People, don’t give up hope. Do not despair. We are the majority. The Republicans have only won the popular vote once since 1988. That is the last time. From 1988 to now, what is that? 36 years. I’m sorry for the math. Which should solve this problem. I’m just saying, Democrats of 17 of the last eight elections by the popular vote."




