Ep. 131 - One Big Reason Republicans Are Better People Than Democrats
The Ben Shapiro Show
The Daily Wire
4.4 • 152.4K Ratings
🗓️ 8 June 2016
⏱️ 52 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | Last week, President Obama became the target of mockery when he descended into porky pig protestations at the divisiveness of Republican nominee Donald Trump. |
| 0:09.1 | After tripping over his words while trying to gain his footing, Obama finally settled on a line of attack. |
| 0:13.6 | Here's what he said. He said, quote, if we turn against each other based on divisions of rights or religion, if we fall for a bunch of okey-doke just because it sounds funny |
| 0:21.0 | or the tweets are provocative, then we're not going to build on the progress we started. |
| 0:25.4 | Meanwhile, across the country, likely Obama supporters rioted at a Trump event in San Jose. |
| 0:30.3 | They waved Mexican flags and burned American ones. |
| 0:33.1 | They assaulted Trump supporters and they generally engaged in mayhem. |
| 0:36.2 | All the same day, Donald Trump labeled a judge presiding over his civil trial unfit for his |
| 0:40.0 | job. He said, I'm building a wall. It's an inherent conflict of interest. What, pray tell, |
| 0:44.6 | was the inherent conflict of interest? Trump said that the judge was one of them Mexicans. |
| 0:49.0 | Judge, by the way, was born in Indiana to Mexican parents. Two days later, Trump told |
| 0:53.1 | Fox News's Janine Piro, Barack Obama has been a |
| 0:55.7 | terrible president, but he's been a tremendous divider. He has divided this country from rich and poor, |
| 0:59.9 | black and white. He has divided this country like no president, in my opinion, almost ever. I will |
| 1:04.3 | bring people together. So, who's right? Well, they're both right. Obama, like it or not, |
| 1:09.7 | leads a coalition of tribes. Trump, like it or not, leads a coalition of tribes. Trump, |
| 1:11.6 | like it or not, leads another coalition of tribes. The founding fathers weep in their graves. |
| 1:16.6 | The founders were scholars of both Thomas Hobbs and John Locke. Thomas Hobbs argued that the state of nature, |
| 1:21.5 | primitive society revolves around a war of, quote, every man against every man. In such a state, |
| 1:26.3 | life was awful. He wrote, no arts, no letters, no society, and which is worst of all, continual fear and danger of violent death, the life of man solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short. He learned all this in high school. The solution to such chaos, said Thomas Hobbs, was the Leviathan, the state. He said it was, quote, but an artificial man, though of greater |
| 1:44.4 | stature and strength than the natural, for whose protection and defense it was intended, and in which |
| 1:49.1 | the sovereignty is an artificial soul as giving life and motion to the whole body. So basically, |
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