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August 2, 2024 53 mins

Today on Financial Fridays with Tony K, He interviews Freddy Foxx aka Freddy Sayegh, Stand-Up Comedian & best known as an American Criminal defense, entertainment attorney, and the managing partner at The Foxx Firm, Inc. Call them now at 310-877-5033 or check out the website at www.thefoxxfirm.com. Be sure to catch his comedic debut at The Ice House Comedy Club™ in Pasadena this Sunday night, August 4th! For tickets or table reservations visit www.icehousecomedy.com or follow them on IG @theicehousecc for more information. Cannabis Talk 101, “The World’s #1 Source For Everything Cannabis”, made global history by becoming the first cannabis show to partner with iHeartMedia, on 4/20/2020. Thank you for listening & watching Cannabis Talk 101 with Christopher Wright, aka "Blue" the CEO and creator of Cannabis Talk 101 and the Cannabis Talk Network. & Joe Grande, former Co-Host on Big Boy’s Neighborhood on Power 106 FM, On-Air with Ryan Seacrest on 102.7 KIIS FM in Los Angeles and The Dog House in the Bay Area on WILD 94.9 KYLD. FOX SPORTS, NBC SPORTS. Financial Fridays with Tony Kassaei, The Inside Investor, 40 TONS TALK, WITH ANTHONY SLIMBURG, CHRONIC HISTORY WITH HISTORY CONNOR V. Toking with the Stars with Chuckie & Marty, & on YouTube, IHeartRadio App, Spotify, & Apple Podcasts.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
After twenty two years of being a Titan on Wall
Street and starting his own firm, Tony kasaik Get is
walking away What this said? The Ugly Side Cooking and
on the inside, We'll interview insiders and other titans of
all types of industries, offering advice and sharing stories of adversity.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
This is another episode the.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
Inside of Show. Welcome to Cannabis Talk one on one's
Financial Fridays with the Inside Investor Tony k. We're the
world's number one source for everything cannabis.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
Yo.

Speaker 4 (00:31):
I don't know where you are, what you're doing, or
what day the week it is for you, But over
here in the CET one on one iHeart studios, ladies
and gentlemen, it is financial Fridays for us. I'm Tony Kay.
You're an Insider investor.

Speaker 5 (00:42):
I'm here.

Speaker 4 (00:42):
Get your mind right and your money game tight. You're
hearing me on the world named the CT one on one,
heard all over the world in over.

Speaker 5 (00:48):
One hundred and eighty countries.

Speaker 4 (00:50):
You'll freely me a financial question anytime at one eight
hundred and four to twenty nineteen eighty.

Speaker 5 (00:54):
You can always find me on Instagram at the Insider
Investor and now You guys know that I created Financial.

Speaker 4 (01:00):
Fridays because I'm the twenty years of being a Wall
Street insider, I got sick and tired of watching the
little guy get screwed over.

Speaker 5 (01:05):
You guys know what I want to do.

Speaker 4 (01:06):
I want to empower you by giving you access to
what's been in my head for over twenty years and
bringing some of my.

Speaker 5 (01:11):
Friends to share their wisdom with you.

Speaker 4 (01:13):
And of course, you guys know that one of my
biggest secrets of money is that there is a misconception
that taxes.

Speaker 5 (01:18):
Are an April problem.

Speaker 4 (01:19):
I see too many business overs, owners and even individuals
just focus on their taxes April if you're a consumer,
and then of course October if you're a corporation or
a LLC. But you, guys, that's the biggest misconception that
I had while I was an advisor on Wall Street
is that taxes should be a year round consideration. In fact,
a good company has a tax strategists that focuses on

(01:39):
your taxes, your cash flow statements, etc. You should be
having that conversation at least once a month so that
it's not so painful when it's April time. Now, you guys,
I have a good group of guys over at Easier Accounting.
It's Easier accounting. Dot com crap. It's in their name, guys,
it's Easier Accounting. They make accounting easy and more importantly,
they've specialized for the canipreneur community. They have platforms to

(02:00):
create your own LLCs, help you with your taxes, your
cash flow, you're bookkeeping. Give him a call. They got
a brick and mortar location out in Utah. Great group
of people again, Easier Accounting. That's eighty eight eight six
two zero zero seven seven zero. Now we're back here
on Financial Fridays. You, guys, I got a special guest
with me again. If you've if you've been a fan
of the show and you're not living on the rock,
you know who this man is. We talk about him

(02:21):
a lot, We reference him a lot.

Speaker 5 (02:23):
He's somebody.

Speaker 4 (02:23):
In fact, he was in the studio today helping us
with a brand new festival. We can't talk about it yet,
but it's coming out sometime in November. We're super excited
to put that together. And this man man, he is
one of the biggest best attorneys out here in California,
and he's become a good friend of the show.

Speaker 5 (02:38):
He also has a stage name today.

Speaker 4 (02:40):
Now that's not because he's an exotic dancer, but I
heard today that he's an entertainer. He's going to be
performing in California in LA and it's gonna be at
a very special venue where I'm gonna get to watch
him put out his comedic talents. You guys, welcome to
the show, mister Freddie Sage aka Freddie Fox.

Speaker 5 (03:00):
Ah, thank you, thank you, thank you. Welcome back, brother,
welcome back. What an introduction.

Speaker 4 (03:06):
Well, you know you are a man of menting mysteries.
Just when I think I've known you, uh, you know,
we've hung out at several events. Now we just have
this big nat Ideas event. We we had good times there.
But then today the guys were like, hey, are you
gonna go watch Freddy perform this weekend? I said, what
what is he performing? And they're like, you tell me
in your own words, what are you doing? You're not
You're not stripping, You're not a Chipendales dancer. That's not

(03:28):
it right.

Speaker 2 (03:28):
You know what? What what what has happened is is.

Speaker 6 (03:33):
I have a lot to say in my my my
social media platform. They people stop listening to me and
nobody wants to hear me. And you know, in the courtrooms,
you're confined to your expression, to the law, to the case,
and to the facts. And I'm very opinionating and I've
got a lot to say, and I think I'm a
funny guy. So I uh encourage myself to take some

(03:59):
comedy CLIs and to get a comedy coach, and I
found an outlet of expression through stand up comedy. So
this will be my debut performance. It's August fourth at
the world famous ice House in Pasadena, Okay, It's at
eight pm. The ice House is the oldest comedy club
in America. Several years ago, it was purchased by Gmmy Buss,

(04:22):
the owner of the Lakers, and they completely remodeled it
and revamped it and it's the ultimate comedy club, uh.

Speaker 2 (04:29):
In the country.

Speaker 4 (04:30):
Now is the Are you the head Obviously you're not
the headliner. It's your debut performance. It's my debut, but
I've been working on the set for a while. I
think it's funny.

Speaker 6 (04:37):
We'll see and then there's a there's about seven to
eight other incredible comedians.

Speaker 5 (04:43):
You know, I got to share.

Speaker 4 (04:44):
I actually through college as a bartender at the improv.
They used to have one down over by Metropolis down
in Irvine, and they've moved it several times. But I
kind of really got a good appreciation of the comedy circuit,
you know, seeing some of these guys that they're owning
their craft and then seeing some of the biggest guys too.
They still have tape recorder trying out different sets. And
most people think these comedians just grab a mic and

(05:04):
just freestyle, which is an art in itself, but even
those freestyle segments, they've tested their lead in questions, they've
tested them out, and it's something that you got to
definitely dedicate some time to. So how much time have
you spent now with the coaches or the mentors in this.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
Well, it's an absolute craft. And you know I run.
Everything that I do is baseball passion.

Speaker 6 (05:24):
You know, when I'm excited about something, you know, and
you find time because I spend a lot of time
driving the court or doing things like that, and I'm
always thinking of funny things. And then when you start
writing it, it becomes an artistic craft, and then you
start honing these jokes. So I said that I started
looks completely different than what it is. And then it's

(05:46):
just a learning process, you know, when it's a creative outlet.
Some people play golf, some people you know, jet ski
or whatever, and I just find creative ways to you know,
express myself.

Speaker 5 (05:58):
How long of the set is it's going to be
a axcimately.

Speaker 2 (06:01):
Less than ten minutes, which is a lot. Once it
is a lot.

Speaker 5 (06:04):
Yeah, no, believe me, I've heard.

Speaker 6 (06:06):
And then and then doing it. You you really get
an appreciation of how hard it is. It's difficult. It's
nerve wracking.

Speaker 7 (06:13):
You know.

Speaker 6 (06:13):
I've given speeches in front of thousands of people, and
I do it as you guys see me like flawless,
so you just no fear. But when it comes down
to getting an immediate reaction and memorizing word for word,
because when I give any other talk, you freestyle and
you get it out. But a joke has a timing

(06:38):
layering of it. If you put the word two or
a by, actually it throws the whole joke. There's the
whole timing is off of the joker dog or fuddy.
So it's a craft and it's just something I expect.
You know, I'm doing it for fun, but it's something
that I expect to take four or five, six, ten
years to get up.

Speaker 4 (06:54):
Hey, Like I said, being a big fan of comedy,
I've been really tapped into not the controversy so much,
but the state of May as we stand. Chappelle's talking
about it, even Seinfeld's talking about it. All the big
guys are like kind of tired of the wokeness in comedy,
if you will, and how anybody can get canceled for
any off color joke now, and some of them are
kind of doing the counter to it, to saying scrit

(07:14):
I'm gonna do what I want and they can get
away with it, whether it's Joe Rogan, et cetera. Are
you kind of going middle of the road since you're
a little bit newer to not not into politics, not
into the woke agenda, or are you kind of keeping
it more attached to the law. What kind of material
are you work?

Speaker 2 (07:29):
Well, you're not gonna like me because I'm completely woke,
and I the reason for this.

Speaker 6 (07:35):
A lot of what I have to say is political,
and I'm woke in a different manner. I'm not the
woke that you probably think of the negative connotations. You know,
I believe in free speech all across the board. I
believe in individual rights. I a person can change their
gender or carry a gun. You know, I'm like a no, no, no,
it's not a hybrid.

Speaker 2 (07:55):
No.

Speaker 6 (07:55):
I have a firm belief in the constitution of rights
to freedom and expression on all levels. Whether it's conservatives
to say and do whatever they want at the church
or if it's the statanic worshipers, I'm good with it all.
My key is no, I want people to do whatever

(08:15):
they want. It's none of my business. It's none of
my business. Right who you sleep with will gun you by?
You know, unless the gun is used to kill kids
and slaughter them, then maybe we should have regulations. But
you know, I I'm just anti judgmental on all levels,
and I think that that's how the world should be.

Speaker 2 (08:32):
I think that's what it's at.

Speaker 6 (08:33):
As to answer your question regarding canceling and stuff like that,
I think in a comedic space, it's the purest.

Speaker 2 (08:40):
Form of expression.

Speaker 6 (08:42):
Comedy is designed to be hard hitting, right, because they
would have canceled George Carlin, or they would have canceled.

Speaker 2 (08:49):
Jackie Gleeson, you know.

Speaker 6 (08:53):
And what society also has to understand is these comedians
were born in different generations and you know, a guy
like Archie Bunker would be probably arrested at this point.
You know, so we must understand what. You know, I
was beaten as a kid and that was fine, like
the wal thing, like you got your ass kick and
that was a thing. So any anyone trying to stop

(09:20):
freedom of expression at any level to me against you
know what I mean. And I don't care what your
expression is. You know, you're some crazy right wing maga guy.

Speaker 5 (09:35):
So be it.

Speaker 4 (09:36):
So you believe in the expression the freedom' as long
as it doesn't encroach upon you, Like if somebody is
not forcing their beliefs on your and vice versa, you
should be able.

Speaker 6 (09:45):
To me it's your belief preventing another person from doing
whatever they want, whether it's an abortion.

Speaker 2 (09:56):
Or things of that nature. Only when.

Speaker 6 (10:00):
That your demand for freedom of expression leaves expression and
can have a significant impact on another. Like you know,
the proliferation of assault rifles. I just don't think that
hunters need assault rifles, not because that they shouldn't have it.
I really would want them to have it. The problem
is is it gets into the wrong hands. And now
we have you know, before when they passed the Second Amendment,

(10:22):
you know, a guy had a musket black powder, put
it in shot one guy, you know, And I don't
want to say I can you know, I can live
with one guy getting shot. It's hard when a shooter
in Las Vegas, let's off, you know, fifteen thousand rounds,
you know, it's it's I think war weapons belonging war.
But that's my probably the only thing that I think.

(10:44):
And I just don't think that's a matter of expression.
I don't think that's a matter of a civil right
to own a specialized have all the guns you want,
but just maybe keep the rounds low or something like that.

Speaker 4 (10:56):
Now, going back to the comedy, but you mentioned some legends,
you know, and some of the names you dropped of
former comedians and living comedians. But what are your top
three inspirations in the comedy world?

Speaker 6 (11:06):
Living David Chappelle, Okay, Number one, Sebastian manascalso the Italian.

Speaker 5 (11:12):
Guy of course, he's hilarious.

Speaker 6 (11:14):
And who who I really like and I just seen
him this week and I just think is an absolute
pure of talent is Maz Drabroni, who is a Persian
comedian who I think he's brilliant.

Speaker 4 (11:28):
Him and Russell Peters, they did. Back during the George
Bush days. They had a circuit where it's called the
Axis of Evil Tour, and I probably saw that show
three times, said, man, it was it. It was hands
down one of the best festival style comedy circuits.

Speaker 6 (11:42):
I think.

Speaker 2 (11:42):
Yeah, but the goat is Dave Chappelle living in Depth.

Speaker 4 (11:46):
Okay, well that's really your guy. For me, it was
probably Chris Rock. I've always enjoyed his his live sets.

Speaker 5 (11:52):
But and then talk to me about a little bit.
You know, on this show we talked a.

Speaker 4 (11:56):
Little bit a lot about entrepreneurs and how they can
kind of get make their vision of reality. Obviously, we
have master mentors for the kentrepreneurs as mentors, and I
imagine in the legal world you've had countless different mentors.
How important has it been for you to have these
classes and their mentorship and you becoming a true student

(12:16):
of comedy as opposed to just kind of trying to
freestyle it.

Speaker 6 (12:20):
Well, you know, I'm a firm believer that there are
you know, I'm older, you know, I'm not eighteen where
I could just sit in a nightclub and you know,
grind it out, and the ability to have a comedy
coach and we write every day, and we perform, and
we perform in front of them, and we work these
things through. Helps shorten that time of getting good, you know.

(12:49):
And you know, if you want to be good at anything,
you have to be a student of the craft.

Speaker 5 (12:56):
You know.

Speaker 6 (12:57):
I want to higher education ten years it too, so
I understand what it takes, the pay dues and work
through it, and you're a shitty lawyer.

Speaker 2 (13:06):
Until ten years later.

Speaker 6 (13:07):
Yeah, you need twenty years between your education and your
law of practice that actually be worth the ship.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
And I just counted a twenty year Yeah. So to
be good at anything, you must pay do you must
appreciate the craft. I mean, I sit there driving as
I'm femine, listening to comedy experts and writing techniques to
do that.

Speaker 5 (13:30):
Nature just to.

Speaker 2 (13:33):
You know, immerse yourself. And that's just how I am. Like,
if I take I'm something, I don't hurt you.

Speaker 5 (13:41):
Well, congratulations first of all, man, And I don't.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
Care this lightly.

Speaker 4 (13:44):
You know, from the public speak and standpoint of people
think it's it's one of the hardest things to do
stage fry, to cetera.

Speaker 5 (13:49):
But the true stand up comedy is one of the
hardest things to do. And anybody that desert cousins.

Speaker 4 (13:53):
Think because they have the courage to be that, and
hopefully God will.

Speaker 5 (13:57):
We'll be there this weekend and I'm looking going a
fording we're gonna take. We're gonna take quick break here.

Speaker 4 (14:02):
When we come back, I'm gonna take off his comedy hat.
We're gonna put on his legal hat. And I got
a bunch of cook questions for you ready. We'll be
back here on Financial Friday.

Speaker 3 (14:09):
We'll be right back with the Financial Friday five on
Cannabis Talk, one on one's Financial Fridays with the Insider
Investor Tony K. Welcome back to Cannabis Talk one on
one's Financial Fridays with the Insider Investor Tony K. It's

(14:30):
now time for the Financial Friday five.

Speaker 4 (14:33):
Master Mentors Live, guys. Master Mentors is coming to a
city near you. In fact, we're coming out to Texas
here pretty soon, along with a handful of other states.

Speaker 5 (14:40):
We're gonna be in total of twenty two states of
this year.

Speaker 4 (14:43):
Lowe.

Speaker 5 (14:43):
Now, this is a.

Speaker 4 (14:44):
Ninety minute free educational workshop that you guys come out
to if you want to learn about cannabis from growing
its owning a dispensary, getting licensed, going legal, or one
of the thousands of ancillary businesses like HVAC development, branding, marketing, logistics.
There's is gonna be a multi billion dollar industry and
growing not just in California, but clear across the United States.

Speaker 5 (15:07):
Guys, give it a check out master mentor is Live.

Speaker 2 (15:10):
We're coming to the city near you.

Speaker 4 (15:12):
Now we're back here with Now he's gonna be mister
Freddy Sage no longer Freddie Fox, because Freddie Fox is
a stage name. You want to see Freddy Fox We'll
see at the Ice House this Sunday.

Speaker 5 (15:21):
But you want to talk to Freddie Sage right now
and here about is Leia and Crown is not ready.

Speaker 4 (15:26):
As soon as I heard that you're going to be
back on the show today, I kind of have this
list that I've been developing that I kind of wanted
to bounce off of you. And these were some of
the laws that California has passed, and we didn't really
rehearse any of these. I just kind of want to
hammer them out to you and just get your opinions
and thoughts just from a legal standpoint, as a human
standpoint as well. I really respect your opinions, and we've

(15:46):
had really good political discourse. I don't identify myself as
left or right. I'm just talking. I'd like to be
just a realist and just common sense.

Speaker 5 (15:54):
I think.

Speaker 4 (15:54):
I think that's what we're missing on both sides of
the aisle right now. But one of the ones that's
that's been passed now, this is in the past year
or two. This is called ABE forty seven. I believe
it is giving free lawyers for illegal immigrants. In the
state budget, Gavin Usom and California Democrats are continuing to
divert billions of dollars in state taxpayer funds to provide

(16:15):
a wider range of free services and benefits for illegal immigrants,
including completely free healthcare. To add insults to injury, California
Democrats are using sixty million state tax regatar funds to
hire free lawyers that illegal immigrants can use to sue
the government as well as fight deportation.

Speaker 5 (16:32):
Your thoughts on that.

Speaker 6 (16:35):
Well, one, I didn't read the entire bill, and sometimes
people not saying you take snippets out of it, chop
it up to what they want and throw the question
at me in a manner that you know anyone says, Oh,
that sounds terrible. So first I need to read the
bill and what it really says. Okay, okay, So what

(17:00):
I will say is you have asylum in United States,
which we recognize we have for many, many years. There
are those who have legitimate asylum claims, and when they
get to the United States, they don't have legal counsel
to adjudicate those issues, similar to a defendant who's arrested

(17:22):
and has a legal rights counsel. Okay, if we have
a strong border bill that we had where we're going
to change the asylum law so we don't have them
here by it while during their asylument only for several months,
so that would drastically reduce it. What I will say

(17:43):
about immigrants is this the reason the United States has
so much success and so much wealth is the fact
that we are an immigrant based country. Absolutely, Okay. Immigrants
are the reason we have the strongest economy because that
immigration has created a diverse nature. That why you could
spend money at a taco store and get some fa

(18:04):
and then get some pizza and get all of these things.
Of all, tech companies worth over one billion dollars have
been created by immigrants.

Speaker 2 (18:15):
Absolutely, and people are going to go.

Speaker 6 (18:17):
Well, that's a legal grimment versus underground immigrants, and I'd
like to address that. Our legal immigration policy takes you
about twenty twenty five years to get here. Most people
who are twenty five become fifty years old.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
So clearly we need to streamline our migration prophecy.

Speaker 6 (18:35):
Second, what we allow immigrants to do is we send
them here on a school visa. We send them to Harvard, Yale, Mit, Caltech.
They are the brightest and the best of those countries,
the brightest minds. And guess what we do after we
give them an education home? We send them back home. Ridiculous. Yeah, okay,
So the question is in what we're doing for immigrants

(18:56):
or legal immigrants, the question is going to be is
what can we do to steal the biggest, the best,
the brightest. You're a gymnast, you want to come from China,
you want to train with us, You stay with us
because they want to stay.

Speaker 2 (19:09):
Well, what do we do, like idiots?

Speaker 6 (19:11):
We send back the best and brights and we keep
maybe the ones who aren't the best and bright.

Speaker 4 (19:16):
And this goes back to the common sense. I mean
everything you said, I don't think anybody could disagree with
the other caveat that's kind of really frustrated me. The past, say,
eight years, even twelve years, has been the definition of asylum.
You know, back when we came into this country, when
I was two years old, the definition of asylum was
a little bit more strict, if.

Speaker 5 (19:34):
You will, and up held differently.

Speaker 4 (19:36):
Now, my understanding is asylum is simply coming in from
certain countries, just making a claim that hey, your life
is in danger back home, and while they figure out
or vet that or have your hearing, you're not pretty
much released into the United States until your asylum asylum
hearing is held. So the standard for claiming asylum is
pretty much just saying that you're a political refuge.

Speaker 6 (19:57):
So immigration is controlled by the federal government. Okay, so
Congress has to enact comprehensive immigration legislation. Do you recall
the past the last time Congress has passed anything, including
redefining immigrants. I'm not one saying open None of us
are saying open border, right, none of us are.

Speaker 5 (20:17):
None of us.

Speaker 2 (20:17):
You can't say we want open borders, none.

Speaker 6 (20:19):
Of that stuff. We have no power. The reason it
takes so long to pass asylum because we don't have
any judges. We need additional border security. We had a
comprehensive border bill that got struck down because of politics.
So when I'm asking you, when was the last time
there's been comprehensive immigration legislation passed in both houses and
signed by the president, can you recall that date?

Speaker 2 (20:39):
Ronald Reagan was president.

Speaker 6 (20:41):
Twenty five years So when we say we have a
broken immigration system, they use it for political purposes.

Speaker 5 (20:47):
They could sit their fucking asses down and fix it.

Speaker 2 (20:50):
Stricten it up. Here's our policy, here's how we do it.

Speaker 6 (20:53):
Because all illegal immigrants want is a policy that's defined.

Speaker 2 (20:57):
Nothing is defined, and it's done so intentionally.

Speaker 6 (20:59):
That next thing I want to issue about legal immigration,
when legal grants grunts come to this country, like Ronald
Reagan knew. The bottom line is this when you when
you you don't see illegal immigrants asking for money or handouts,
they never have. They work and they find ways to
do it. Immigrants, legal and illegal immigrants can't use social Security,

(21:21):
so they pay into all the social Security and they
never collect it. So when they say that they're taking
things down. The next thing is this is our immigrant policy?
Is this you come to this country. You mow my lawns,
you clean my hotel rooms, you wash my dishes, you
make sure our food is cheap, our vegetables are cheap.

(21:45):
And you sacrifice your entire life and your back, and
you get no social Security, and you get no retirement,
and you get no pension. But what the American dream
is is, if you have a child, we will grant
you the opportunity to put that kid through college, and
his and his children can have a different leg And
that's the trade off of America has had as an

(22:06):
unwritten rule. Ronald Reagan knew it. It's an unwritten rule.
If you deport six seven to ten million immigrants under
a new administration, I don't want to hear why you
the price of tomatoes seven dollars a pound. I don't
want to hear it. I don't want to hear that
seven dollars for the tomato and five dollars for ahead

(22:27):
of lettuce, and now my cheeseburger, my dollars is twenty
seven dollars. I don't want to hear it. So you
need to pick one, whether you enjoy inflation and are
ready to take a five ten times fold, or you
pass comprehensive immigration bill and you fix what's here. There

(22:48):
are DACA kids who have come here when they're one
years old. They are now nearing thirty thirty five years old.
We've made a promise to them and we've never upheld it.
Fare enough and out of thirty five they'd gone to
our colleges and they still can't pay taxes in society.

Speaker 2 (23:05):
It's crazy.

Speaker 4 (23:06):
Okay, good, well, see that's what I'm talking about, common
sense conversations that seems to be missing lately. Going in
a different direction, now, this is going to be AB
sixty six y five taking children away from parents. Newsome
specifically passed AB sixty sixty five recently. I know him
and Musk got into a huge entanglement over it in
a Twitter war as well. This basically makes it easier
for children as young as twelve to be taken away

(23:28):
from their parents. Existing state law required child that a
child could only be removed or emancipated if a licensed
therapist or a health professional determined that abuse or neglect
was a curing that posed as a threat to the
child in the parents' home, and that the child was
mature enough to govern their own affairs. However, AB sixty
sixty five removes any need to show abuse, a neglect,

(23:51):
or a threat. It even allows an interim or trainee
to make the decision. One of the most reckless and
anti parent bills as discussed by numerous different health organizations
and education organizations and more specifically, and you and I
kind of touched on this, it is now my understanding
is part of this bill, and this is why Musk
announced that he's moving Tesla and SpaceX completely out of California,

(24:14):
is that it is now child abuse. If if your
kid as young as thirteen wants to have puberty blockers,
who thinks he wants to change his sex, you do
not support that, your spouse can petition the courts to
say that you are abusing that child.

Speaker 5 (24:30):
Well, once again, I haven't read the text of the bill.

Speaker 6 (24:32):
I only got the synopsis, and generally that synopsis, if
I stated it one way coming from the left, it
would sound one way, and if I stated it one
way coming from the right, it would sound another way,
And I would agree with both based upon who'saying it.
What I can say is a child is under the
control and discretion and responsibility of the parent until they're

(24:53):
eighteen years old. Both legally, your son gets in car accident,
you're responsible. Your son missed school, you go to jail.
So that's the law that I believe in.

Speaker 2 (25:04):
Okay.

Speaker 6 (25:05):
However, under the law also, a child can get emancipated, correct,
and they can get their rights to be emancipated and
no longer under the custody and responsibility of that parent.

Speaker 2 (25:19):
Okay.

Speaker 4 (25:21):
Do you feel that that emancipation age minimum should be
as young as twelve thirteen or is there still an
age where their brains are forming And you're like, listen,
I know better than you, and you should not be
able to petition the state to kind of make a
judgment that a parent should be making for that twelve
year old or eleven year old or thirteen year old.

Speaker 2 (25:45):
I'll re restate my position.

Speaker 6 (25:48):
My position is the parent is responsible for the child
until that child reaches eighteen years old, and that's the
parent's responsibility. So what I can address, it's hard for
me to address that law specifically because it doesn't sound right.
But what I can address is a certain segment of

(26:15):
our population believe that people choose to be gay or
people choose to have an identity issue and I do
understand their position where the normalization and or poliphization of
cross stressing or gender identity issues seems as if it's

(26:36):
a trend or something common. But I can tell you this,
very few people want to change their sexual identity because
it's cool. Many of them have struggled with pain and depression, anxiety,
disappointment to their parents, and things of that nature. I

(26:58):
don't believe it's a thing. I think the argument and
the challenges that you raised is at such a minor,
minor level where that decision has to come up, where
a child may have a very conservative father or mother
and that child was born a set way, because you

(27:20):
could see it when they're You see it in them, yep,
and it just you know, there's something different about your child.
They're just not all super manly and playing football and
chase a girl. The one day watch a video of
the Olympics, and all of a sudden they want to
cut their private parts off.

Speaker 5 (27:38):
You know that.

Speaker 4 (27:39):
I would challenge you a little bit, and by no
means am I an expert, because unlike you, I don't
have children, and so I would automatically default to your judgment.
A little bit more of that However, I have a
lot of friends have kids, my girlfriends in the education,
my sister's vice principal, and I do see that I
don't remember well as kids, we didn't have YouTube and
social media, et cetera. But I don't remember there being

(28:01):
cartoons specifically geared towards three, four and five year olds
where the characters are playing these roles constantly reinforcing the
acceptance the openness. You're okay if you want to be this,
if you want to be that, and I'm I completely
agree with you. There's some kids that as birth you
can tell, well is something got mixed up along the
way there, and Jane should have been a Jimmy, and

(28:22):
vice versa. However, I do feel the statistics that it
is that eight times right now people who identify as
bisexual or tran etc. Or misgender all the different new pronouns.
It's like an eight hundred percent increase that was ever before.
And I don't think there's that many more being open.
But I think as when your formative years, my five

(28:43):
year old niece wanted to be a cat, you know,
and so if it's constantly being reinforced that that's okay.

Speaker 5 (28:48):
Now all of a.

Speaker 4 (28:49):
Sudden, it becomes this cool. Hey, I think I am,
and if your friends are, then maybe I want to
do it too.

Speaker 5 (28:54):
So I have no issue with it.

Speaker 4 (28:55):
But I completely adhere to what you said earlier, especially
with the sex change stuff, and they blockers. You know
right now, it's weird that the agenda is being forced
to acceptance that, yes, you're almost abusing this child if
you don't agree for it to take puberty.

Speaker 2 (29:09):
Broad I agree with you on.

Speaker 6 (29:15):
Children don't need to be exposed to it being pushed
on them or placed into their formative years. I'm in
full agreement of that, so long as it's not hindering
you know what I mean, So long as being anti
trans I agree with you, and I'll explain to you

(29:36):
why you have a correction in that I was saying.
The difference between the person who wants to go through
a physical change, it's a real serious situation. So my son,
who's the toughest five year old dude on earth, goes, oh,
I want to paint my nails. I'll blown away. Clearly

(29:57):
just came out of something somewhere, and I know that
he's like, fucking, I just know, no, you don't, you know?
So I believe in their formative years it should be
neutral on that, it should be neutral.

Speaker 2 (30:13):
On dating and love and all that. It should just be.

Speaker 5 (30:17):
Yeah, you know, toys and bubbles and like that.

Speaker 6 (30:22):
I'm an agreement there, there's you know, I also agree
that they know.

Speaker 2 (30:31):
As long as those LGBTQ rights exist.

Speaker 6 (30:39):
And no one's hindering them, we maybe don't need to
see that at the opening of the Olympics. Nothing that
is wrong with it, but do we need to you
know what I mean? Is it hurting them because it
was a backlash against them. They didn't win, They didn't
advance their.

Speaker 2 (30:53):
Cause by doing that, you know what I mean?

Speaker 6 (30:55):
It hurt their cause, the backlash and protest like you
could have, but no one.

Speaker 4 (31:00):
Said, it's interesting, Freddy, Like even with this stuff about
men competing in women's sports, it's and everybody says, oh,
it's such a minute percentage. However, the nc double A,
the Olympics, the collegiate athletes and people women losing scholarships.

Speaker 5 (31:15):
But when you talk to most LGBTQ people, they're like.

Speaker 4 (31:19):
We didn't ask for that, so we didn't want that,
and now it's being shoved jammed. Why would the NCUBA
agree with that. Why would all these huge organizations all
of a sudden swing to these handful of far left
activists that are and a lot of those people don't
even have experience or family members in this, in that
in that category, if you will.

Speaker 5 (31:37):
Right, So that's when I get go down. Why wise
this coming in?

Speaker 4 (31:42):
And it is hurting the lgbt I would say eighty
percent of LGBTQ community does not agree with men participating
in women's sports.

Speaker 6 (31:50):
You're correct, they don't and and my objection is only
from a competitive nature. I just think it's unfair because
why would you have the NBA and WNBA will clearly
you know there's an athletic different If you look all
across with the Olympics, there are almost very few that
have to have women's volleyball, men's volleyball. It's it's we
cannot deny that men are built differently. We were evolved

(32:13):
differently to go out and hunt and things of that nature.
Were taller and bigger, faster, stun That's just nature. And
it's unfair competition.

Speaker 5 (32:21):
And I'll leave it on this too.

Speaker 4 (32:22):
And I don't have any daughters of no kids, but
if I did have a little girl One of my
biggest frustrations now is then the messaging it's sending, because
outside of sports, then you have biological men winning Miss
Universe contents.

Speaker 5 (32:36):
Right, So now it's like, all right, well, how hard
do you have to try as.

Speaker 2 (32:39):
A woman to just be the top woman?

Speaker 5 (32:41):
And now you're allowing men to compete in those women's categories,
and then.

Speaker 2 (32:45):
You have a little five year old girls.

Speaker 5 (32:46):
That's it's you know, maybe I need to become a
Troy girl.

Speaker 2 (32:50):
I don't know that that's one right mess Here's the thing.

Speaker 5 (32:53):
I think that you've pushed it across the line by
entangling one thing and then pushing it over the sign.

Speaker 6 (33:00):
The bottom line is unless someone has a serious mental
health disease, nobody.

Speaker 5 (33:10):
Change Deir Sack, I'm pleasure, okay here, all right, all right, guys,
we're gonna take a quick break.

Speaker 4 (33:24):
I got a handful of other questions for Freddy, and
then we'll close out today's show. We'll be right back
here on Financial Friday.

Speaker 3 (33:29):
We'll be right back with more Financial Fridays with the
Inside Investor Tony Ka.

Speaker 2 (33:34):
Make sure you follow Tony at.

Speaker 3 (33:36):
The Insider Investor. Welcome back to Cannabis Talk one on
ones Financial Fridays with the Inside Investor Tony Ka. Make
sure you like, follow and subscribe to the show now.

Speaker 5 (33:54):
Or I'm sitting here with Freddy, says Freddy. How do
we get a hold of you?

Speaker 4 (33:58):
If somebody's sitting at home right now and needs to
goe to turn myself call it self and this self
one is three.

Speaker 5 (34:04):
One zero eight seven seven five zero three three. I
pick up all clins, but they need myself one point clouds.

Speaker 4 (34:11):
And guys, it's the Fox Sperm, that's the Fox Firm
with two axes. Like I said before, one of the
few attorneys that I have on speed out. Anything you need,
He's got you covered. We're now back here on Financial Fridays.
We're just talking about some hot button topics and laws that.

Speaker 5 (34:24):
Have been past year.

Speaker 4 (34:25):
In the past year, and some of these may seem political,
but some of them are just common sends. But I'd
love to hear your viewpoint on it.

Speaker 5 (34:31):
Give us call anytime in one a hundred four twenty
nineteen eighty let me know what your thoughts are.

Speaker 4 (34:35):
And of guys, a lot of this stuff is coming
from just common sense, the different opinions.

Speaker 6 (34:39):
Different viewpoints.

Speaker 4 (34:40):
That's one of the biggest things in PSTE right now
is what Freddy and I are doing. It's just have
a normal health discourse. He has some positions but I
may not agree on, and vice versa. But that's missing
in the political landscape right now. Everybody is so defined
by just these polar opposite positions that are keep going
further and further and further. Freddie, I'll share with you
a quick story I think I've shared another time. But

(35:01):
back in my investor days, when I would go to
these investment conferences, one of the keynote guys and at
the time I was I was similar to you. I
think I identified more towards further left and really did
wasn't a big fan of anybody affiliated with the right
and the old. This was during Trump's first term, and
I think it was in a second year, and the

(35:21):
keynote address was being delivered by the campaign manager, that
dude with the long beard that ended up having some domestic.

Speaker 5 (35:27):
Violence issues, et cetera.

Speaker 4 (35:29):
So that guy's got on stage he said something that
always stuck to me, and at first I was kind
of anti him. By then I kind of was like
a big fan of what he was saying, because he
said man, I wasn't political when I first got into here.
I'd never been to Washington in my life. He made websites.
He made a website for Ivanka. She liked it, and
somehow they put her in touch with campaign. He went
from being a website builder to run in a campaign.

(35:50):
Goes to show you the qualifications they had in that one. So,
but the point was, he said something he said when
I first got to walt to Washington, he said, I
realized something quickly, is that the left And he puts
his hang on to the left. He says, the left
is way out here and the right is right out here.

Speaker 5 (36:06):
And he said, he.

Speaker 4 (36:06):
Goes, after looking at the statistics on our donations and
our contributions, ninety percent of every dollar that they were
coming was from the extreme far left right, the people
who are just completely take away all gones, the ones
that are like your Warrens, if you will, and just
as far extreme left as you want to say. And
he says, the other ninety percent of the dollars from

(36:27):
the right is coming from the extreme far right that
just want to ban all things and blah blah blah.
So he said, where do you think the politicians are.

Speaker 5 (36:34):
Going to continue going.

Speaker 4 (36:35):
They're going where the money is, and unfortunately that's why
politics has become more and more polarized. And looking back
when I first heard him say that, which is now
about ten years ago, it literally has happened through different
administrations now through different even local politicians, and that some
of the laws and some of the things we see
here in California are so just mind numbing and mind

(36:56):
blowing that you really do realize that they are. And
I'm sure and right State same thing where they're completely
going to the far right. And unfortunately, I don't see
that much of an end insight in this polarization. Do
you have a little bit more hope for US politics
or what's what's your take on that.

Speaker 6 (37:11):
I don't have hope for US politics, but I have
hope for the American people. Of the American people sit
within center left and center right. That's where the real
elect word exists. That's where the real elect word exists.
It's not on extreme fringe right and it's not on
extreme fringe left.

Speaker 4 (37:30):
But why is the money coming from the far extremes there?
Would you say, is that just where the power is
concentrated or why is that statistic?

Speaker 5 (37:38):
There that the majority of the money's coming from the
far left and far right.

Speaker 6 (37:42):
Well, if they have an extreme agenda, then they have
an extreme desire to push their agenda either far right
or far left, where middle of the road people want
middle road things to occur.

Speaker 2 (37:58):
The electorate.

Speaker 6 (38:05):
Is, you might think, is gone more towards the right,
like our left isn't as left as it used to be,
you know what I mean.

Speaker 2 (38:15):
Yep. You know.

Speaker 6 (38:21):
There are these extremists which are very fringe, you know,
which should be that everyone should get a sex change,
and you know, really extreme things. But the true left
is we want high quality education. We want it to

(38:42):
be affordable for everyone. We want clean air, clean water,
we want a sustainable earth for our future generations. We
think that taxation should be fair. You know, anyone who
earns less than a half a million dollars should not
be more than someone.

Speaker 2 (39:01):
Who earns millions and millions of dollars.

Speaker 6 (39:05):
Corporations and lobbyists have extreme amount of power. They have
dollars and they use those dollars to lobby and buy politicians.
You could buy a bitcoin president, yeah, right, right, You
can buy a TikTok president before and then be against it.

Speaker 2 (39:23):
Just depends on how much money you put into that project.

Speaker 6 (39:25):
What liberals want is their children to be able to
go to school without the fear of being shot. Liberals
want those who work their hard forty hours should be
paid their forty hours to Really, if a person gets
up every morning and bust their ass, whether they're sweeping

(39:49):
the floors or in the boardroom, that person should earn
a living wage. A living wage. We can't sit there
and say, well, you know, these are footstep jobs. You know,
sometimes if you go to Middle America, if you drive
through Indio or blythe there is nothing but sixty fast
food restaurant.

Speaker 2 (40:09):
People got to live there.

Speaker 6 (40:11):
There is no other career or opportunity that guy should
be able.

Speaker 2 (40:16):
If I'm working on.

Speaker 6 (40:16):
You know how hard is working in and out or
in a McDonald's. It's really hard, work up on your
back all day, grinding it out.

Speaker 4 (40:25):
So but as a as a self described label, now
would you do you have that frustration because everything you
just described I look at it as the Democrats of
the late eighties early nineties. I don't see the Democrat
Party putting or highlighting half of what you just said
as their top three agendas. It's more these extreme cultural
fights that they're hitting into or or things that aren't

(40:47):
fair for both sides, or that are kind of alienating
one group.

Speaker 6 (40:50):
Well, I think you're wrong. Okay, Okay, have you ever
listened to speech from Barack Obama? Everything I just said
is right out of his playbook.

Speaker 2 (40:59):
Okay.

Speaker 6 (41:00):
What had happened is politics got hijacked by the extreme right.
I was born as my father is a conservative Republican.
All my cousins are conservative Republicans. But guess what type
of Republicans they are. They're Reagan Republicans, which is things
that I also believe in. And I'll explain to you
For those on the right, I'm gonna say some shocking

(41:21):
things about what real conservatism is coming from a hardcore liberal.
Number one, limited government power to the people. Shrink the government,
give more power to the people. The conservatism is deregulation
and allow the free markets to control things.

Speaker 2 (41:36):
Okay, good or bad? Kindn't know how free markets go.

Speaker 6 (41:39):
Okay, these are what conservative values mean. The Reagan was
called supply side economics with some said aka trickle down economics,
which is reduced tax brackets for the highest give the
most incentives for the highest corporations. Those corporates will grow

(42:01):
and they will hire people. Those people will get hired,
and then that will have jobs that are trickling down
whether or not they work. That was what compassionate aka
George Bush conservatism meant. We are conservative in our ways,
but we're compassionate our ways. We're compassionate to social things.
The far right, through Christian evangelicals, took it to a

(42:23):
whole other level. And they're the ones who play power politics. Okay,
you have knocked out abortion, and then you have thirty
states that have abortion regulation on the book, and most
of those states do not allow for rape, do not
allow for incests, do not allow for safety of the mother.
Like how far right did this aspect? Now, I'll explain

(42:48):
to you when the senator whose daughter goes to University
of Kentucky and gets banged by the football team and
gets pregnant by big Boy Bubba, guess where he's going
to California to get a an abortion and then come
right back and say, oh, we're banning abortion. They're full
of shit and they are liars. As a matter of fact,
abortion was never a Christian issue until the evangelicals. Only

(43:10):
ten fifteen twenty years ago made it an issue.

Speaker 4 (43:14):
Well, shit, Freddie, you know this was this. This conversation
actually got me excited because I brought up a couple
of and that's.

Speaker 6 (43:23):
What real conservatism is, not this new age this, no,
this Okay. What Donald Trump did is he ushered in
a whole new error. Okay, all the Mitt Romney's, Like,
the left wouldn't freak out if we're losing a Mitt Romney.

Speaker 2 (43:37):
Where John McCain that was normal things, balance of power.

Speaker 6 (43:42):
We go a little too far to the left, we
bring in a conservative to the right, but we always
played within the middle. Donald Trump changed every thing works,
and that's why the left is freaked the fuck out.

Speaker 2 (43:56):
Period. He doesn't get up there and talk about policy
and global policy. It's insults.

Speaker 6 (44:02):
It's a tax my new tack line, Lion Harris, that's this.
We don't we don't have any discourse.

Speaker 2 (44:08):
Like me and you. We're discussing it. Hey, you like tramps, Well,
here's my position on tramp. Here's my purchaser on the border,
here's the I gave you.

Speaker 6 (44:14):
Actually policy opinions on how we should run a border,
how we should.

Speaker 4 (44:17):
Have But unfortunately that doesn't sell right, and he's he
came in from an entertainer world, and he quickly The
one thing we can say about him is he knows
how to draw a crowd, He knows how to control
about his audience, and he knows how to fan certain
flames of just discourse.

Speaker 5 (44:32):
And I think.

Speaker 4 (44:33):
He's he's identified something in the in the political landscape
that no other politician right or left has ever been
able to do before. And he's now Unfortunately, there is
a segment of his uh electorate, if you all, that
is definitely racist, race baiting, this and that. But I
also think he's tapped into people that are just sick
of politics to begin with, and even though if they

(44:54):
don't agree with fifty percent of the things that come
out of his mouth, they are okay with him just
blowing up the system.

Speaker 5 (44:59):
To your point, the Mitt Romneys are just as pissed.

Speaker 4 (45:01):
The George Bushes are just as pissed as the Clinton
set up right now. And so both of those sads
just say, we'd rather not vote than have to buy
into buying to the system. And I think that's the
thing that nobody can figure out. I don't think they
fill I have the answer for it.

Speaker 6 (45:15):
Yeah, that ain't that ain't the whole answer, the true answer,
the fundamental answer is this. This is my opinion, and
I think it is the true answer. What in the
end if you scrape off all the bullshit and all
the sucker shit and even abortion and even the board, well.

Speaker 2 (45:33):
Not the border.

Speaker 6 (45:33):
It's it's it's it's about the borderknocks plain why United
States has had a majority. That majority was white Anglo Saxon. Okay,
white Anglo Saxon, including the immigrants from Italy turned white
Anglo Irish turned white Anglo. Their early America was a

(45:54):
majority of white America. White America has the power, has
the money, and has run this country tree for many, many, many, many,
many many many years, runs most of the corporations, run
most of everything. Now what we have is less propriation
by White America having less children. You need at least
two children just to keep the status of level of

(46:15):
white majority.

Speaker 2 (46:18):
You need three to increase white majority.

Speaker 6 (46:20):
Most white families can't afford or are not having three kids.

Speaker 2 (46:25):
You're lucky to get two. Okay.

Speaker 6 (46:28):
So now what's happening is we have a population that
is non white that is now becoming the majority.

Speaker 2 (46:36):
And when you.

Speaker 6 (46:37):
Scrape off all of it. It's really coming down to
the power of majorities. No longer want to lose that majority.
And I'll explain to you why you can't sit here
and tell me that a Manhattan billionaire knows the struggle
of a farmer in Iowa. You can't tell me a

(46:59):
kid who went to Yale, their vice president who was
a venture capitalist.

Speaker 7 (47:03):
Knows the struggle of Detroit, Michigan. This is not it
because he has never ever hung out with them, never
hung out with the farmers, and never hung out with.

Speaker 4 (47:19):
The past five presidents. Could you say the same about it?
I mean, all of them are kind of pretend like.

Speaker 6 (47:23):
That because we hollowed out we hollowed out Middle America.
What the powerful people did is they decided the corporations
that we keep giving power to says, oh, we can
build this cheaper and have more profit if we send
those Middle America jobs to foreign countries. Okay, And so

(47:45):
that begins to hollow out things. So what does America become.
We become a nation of ideas and management, Like we
create an invent the iPhone, but we haven't built somewhere else.
And then we manage people who manage things. If you
walk around his room, everybody's managing somebody, right, Okay, if

(48:05):
you really want to talk about Biden's record, the largest
growth of manufacturing jobs in American history since the Industrial Revolution.
Our Infrastructure Bill are dollars that go directly into United
States jobs and infrastructure into this country. Bringing back the
Chips act of the most powerful thing because we give
up control of Korea and China on allowing those ships

(48:26):
to develop and that put power out to them. Okay,
the largest investment in climate change in history. If people
can play ore so hot outside, you know what we're
having the Florida coast ripped and ravaged, or New Jersey
coast ripped and ravage, or wildfires across California.

Speaker 2 (48:46):
This isn't a joke about all of something things.

Speaker 6 (48:48):
No, no fossil fuse of creators, and your children are
not gonna be a believed. There are already parts of
this world that are uninhabitable for humans. Already already we
have climate change migrants. Okay, so we have. When we
look back, Biden's four years will be looked at as
an FDR and his accomplishments and a bipartisan the most
a in a Senate with just a vice president who

(49:12):
is the final veto vote, and a three to five
person majority in the House. So so if you if
you look at those things, you're gonna really look at
who a guy from Scranton who took the train from
Pennsylvania to Washington was really a man for the people.

Speaker 4 (49:31):
Yeah, I you know, I think we've covered a lot
on today's show. I think one of my favorite parts
about this is we can have these healthy conversations. I
can't tell you how much I disagree on some of
the stuff you say, but a lot of things I
thought we would disagree on, we actually agreed on. One
of the things that excites me. I don't like to
talk about politics financial friend, we can talk about nothing
about finance, but there is a money component to all
of this, because I think even I mean, if we're

(49:53):
gonna we're gonna run this back several other times. And
I'm even thinking of maybe doing an election night special
and having a couple of you know, just a posing
viewpoints and people that can have healthy debate, because I
think that's what's missing. I've kind of hesitated to talk
about politics too much, but sometimes if you can have
healthy ideas expressed in a healthy way. Maybe you're just
making the world a little bit at least the United
States a little bit better. Are supposed to get people

(50:13):
constantly fighting, So I think it'd be great to have
you back on and just really dive into these I
know I threw a couple of just different laws at you.
I think next time I'm gonna actually let you digest
in to them. And I'd love for you to throw
me a couple to be like, hey, tee, I know
this is your viewpoint. You dive into this, you give
me three, I'm gonna give you three, and let's kind
of have that debate with both of us doing some research,
because then we can actually either change each other's minds

(50:35):
or maybe agree in the middle.

Speaker 6 (50:36):
See and if you can give me two more minutes,
go ahead. This is what it's about. See is a
healthy discourse because policy is very deep and it has
multiple layers. America has gotten such a lack of being
able to keep someone's attention that we have to wind

(50:58):
I have to wind every them to a meme or
to a three second video. And the border policy is
not a three second video.

Speaker 5 (51:11):
Abortion is not a three second It's not a.

Speaker 8 (51:14):
Three second video gender qualities, not three second video, and
I don't have This is the reason why I'm doing
some comedy even though i'm is because the only place
where you can have an opportunity to speak, like I
want to speak to people because one I want to

(51:35):
hear your side, and two I understand your side, and three.

Speaker 2 (51:41):
Two sides can be right.

Speaker 6 (51:43):
There isn't okay, Freddy wan Tony one, No, it's not.
It's like, wait up, I think I'm not left right.
I think we're back to what I said before.

Speaker 5 (51:57):
America.

Speaker 2 (51:58):
We want a reasonable border policy.

Speaker 6 (52:01):
We don't want to give up rights to our children
to decide because I'm an agreement out of twelve year olds,
like get a face tattoo.

Speaker 5 (52:09):
You know, bro, you might change your mind. Yeah, you
know what I mean.

Speaker 2 (52:12):
So I'm with you on you know, like we come.

Speaker 6 (52:15):
Back to this ninety percent because once you start to
hear that I actually was a hardcore understanding of Reagan
amics and Reagan policy coded or George Bush.

Speaker 4 (52:29):
Well, you're lucky you didn't pissed me off today, Freddy,
because I'm gonna come help with you on Sunday.

Speaker 5 (52:33):
And if you don't agree with this few points it
doesn't matter.

Speaker 4 (52:35):
Come check out his show this weekend over at the
Ice House this Sunday, Pasadena, California. We'll be there.

Speaker 5 (52:40):
What's time the show start.

Speaker 6 (52:42):
The show starts at APM the ice House, Pasadena. There's
twenty twenty four. Excellent guy.

Speaker 5 (52:48):
He slaid that in there.

Speaker 4 (52:49):
I do not endorse that political comment. Well, thanks so
much for coming back on the show.

Speaker 7 (52:54):
Brother.

Speaker 4 (52:54):
We'll see you this weekend and I'm sure I'll have
you back on the show. I hope you guys enjoyed
the sessional political edition the Financial Fridays, the Freddy.

Speaker 5 (53:02):
Fox edition of Financial Priday.

Speaker 4 (53:04):
Guys, thank you for listening to Finance Fridays one on one.
I'm Toty Kate. You can always find me on Instagram
at the Inside Investor. And remember keep that wall height
keep in mind.

Speaker 5 (53:12):
Right, We're see next Friday on Financial Fridays. I'm out.

Speaker 3 (53:16):
Thank you for listening to Financial Fridays with the Insider
Investor Tony Ka on Cannabis Talk one oh one, the
world's number one source for everything cannabis.
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