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March 13, 2026 32 mins

From rising tensions in the Middle East to shocking developments in artificial intelligence, the conversation dives into the geopolitical, technological, and political forces shaping the future.

Rut covers the latest Iran conflict developments and oil market volatility, a controversial claim that advanced AI may be approaching sentience, and the civil lawsuit in the Netherlands alleging COVID-19 vaccine injuries involving major global figures.

He also examines the SAVE Act, a major legislative proposal aimed at tightening voter registration requirements and election security in the United States.

Plus — a lighter moment at the end celebrating the historic dominance of Penn State wrestling in the Big Ten.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Today on The David Rutherford Show, and I ran update
A I Become Sentient, the COVID civil trial taking place
over in Holland, the Save Act, a UFO general still
missing in Penn State's dominance once again in Big ten wrestling.
Oh yeah, all right, Welcome back everybody to the David

(00:30):
Rutherford Show. It's been a pretty big week so far.
I hope you've all enjoyed what we've been doing. I
really enjoyed the interview with Greg Dozel, who's running for
lieutenant governor, and the election fraud that he's exposing in Georgia,
which I believe is a key component of the midterms
and then the greater twenty twenty eight presidential election. But

(00:51):
today we really want to just dive into some of
the top stories of the week and what's been going on.
But before we do, I just want to give another
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(01:12):
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Speaker 2 (02:17):
All Right, the Iran update.

Speaker 1 (02:20):
So Iran obviously is still going on. One of the
key things that is beginning to emerge in terms of
a leadership perspective is that we're finding out that the
iatolas sun was hit in the initial strike and has
suffered from a major leg wound. Apparently was in a
coma according to some reports. But the key that I

(02:41):
think about this is that if we hope to have
some type of off ramp, we really need to start
drilling in on who is going to take over in
the country of Iran from a religious perspective, because they
are dominated by the Iola Iatolas and the Shia Muslim perspective.

(03:02):
And then also to look for potentially somebody else to
rise up in the Rakes who might be willing to
explore some dialogue with the Golf States who are actively
seeking some of those back channel possibilities.

Speaker 2 (03:15):
All right.

Speaker 1 (03:15):
The other aspect is there were new strikes in the
Straits of Hormuz on a couple different tankers, Jordi, why
don't you pull up one of those strikes that came out?
And obviously this is the big play that's going on.
I think if your Iran and your tactical initiatives are

(03:35):
to really kind of hurt America an American sentiment for
the war, then what you do is you go after
what the ability for oil to come out of Iran
through the Straits of Hormus and all the other Golf
States and really keep that oil trade where it needs
to be. Now, we have seen some interesting aspects in
terms of our strategic oil reserves in the US to

(03:59):
produce one hundred and seventy two million more barrels, and
then the i i e A. The International Energy Agency,
delivered four hundred million new barrels of oil into the system.
And that's probably why we're assuing volatility, you know, kind
of measure out a little bit.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
But as of.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
Just right now and we're delivering there, Jordi, What's what's
the market saying right now?

Speaker 2 (04:28):
Is oil.

Speaker 3 (04:32):
Spot oil price ninety three eighty seven cents a barrel?

Speaker 2 (04:36):
All right?

Speaker 1 (04:37):
Well, and so when you get that flood of reserve
strategic reserves coming out, that's going to keep that price
in a relatively tolerable level for the markets. But again,
how many times can people deliver out of these strategic reserves.
We have seen other countries in the Gulf Coast states
say hey, we're going to reduce output as long as

(04:58):
we're getting striked long as those straits of Horror Mooz
are in a volatile position. So that's all still going on.
It's yet to be the scene on what's taken place.
You know, I thought a really interesting one that popped up,
and Jordy, maybe you could play the quick video of
Larry Fink from Blackrock suggesting essentially that he does not

(05:23):
believe that the war and Iran will afflect long term
oil prices. So let's take a listen to Larry saying.

Speaker 3 (05:30):
That, obviously the global oil market has taken a spike,
there is a sense from the President that that's going.

Speaker 2 (05:36):
To be short lived. How do you look at it
from your seat, Well, it's great to be here.

Speaker 4 (05:42):
Obviously, it creates uncertainty, and uncertainty creates fear. But that
being said, the fourteen and a half trillion dollars of
money we manage, most of it is very long dated.
I don't pay much attention to this, the short term volatility,
but I focus more on these longer term trends. Do

(06:02):
I believe the war is going to be lasting a
long time?

Speaker 5 (06:04):
No?

Speaker 4 (06:05):
Do I believe oil is going to be reverting back
to where it was, maybe even lower. I mean, if
the outcome of the war is a neutralized Iran and
they are allowed to be selling products into the market again,
oil products into the market again, I mean there's probably
a great probability that oil is going to be below fifty,

(06:26):
but once again, that's a short term move and all that.
But I do believe the markets find a way to
balance out.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
Well.

Speaker 1 (06:32):
You know, obviously he sits at the top of the
largest asset management firm in the world. They also have
one of the biggest capital management firms in the world
with majority shareholder stakes and many of the S and
P five hundred and other major publicly traded companies out there,
so you know, when he talks people listen. You know,

(06:55):
it's yet to be seen the long term impacts of
what's going on, but we're certainly going to pay attention.
All right, now, what any other side little notes relative
to AI's influence in all this that are going on
was we just heard Deputy's Defense Secretary Emil Michael come
out and you can play that here in a second, Jordy,

(07:16):
But he basically said Claude anthropics Claude is essentially sentient,
and he says this by describing you can listen here
that you know, it's displayed some anxiety, it's adapting kind
of its actions. And so for this guy to come
out and say, hey, the AI we're using in the

(07:38):
defense industry is now sentient.

Speaker 5 (07:41):
The other really subtle point that I think we're going
to hear a lot about AI in the coming year
insider threats, model poisoning. Remember, their model has a soul
as a constitution that's not.

Speaker 2 (07:54):
The US Constitution.

Speaker 5 (07:56):
The other day their model was anxious, and they believe
it has a twenty percent chance right now of being
sentient and have its own ability to make decisions. So
does the Department of War want something like that in
their supply chain so that it could hallucinate?

Speaker 2 (08:13):
It could corrupt models.

Speaker 5 (08:15):
That are used by defense contractors who are building weapons
systems or airplanes and so on. So the truth of
it is, we can't have a company that has a
different policy preference that is baked into the model through
its constitution, its sole Its policy preferences pollute the supply chain.
So our war fighters are getting ineffective weapons, ineffective body armor,

(08:37):
ineffective protection. And that's really where the supply chain risk
designation came from.

Speaker 1 (08:43):
I don't know about you, but that's dramatically approaching that
terminator level fears that I think are underneath all of us.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
Out there right now. You feel in a little bit
of that on those statements.

Speaker 3 (08:58):
Geordy, Yeah, I mean there was talking about you know,
artificial general Intelligence AGI. When are we going to hit
AGI where the robots are officially sentient conscience, have you know,
their own unique thoughts. It's yet to be seen. The
guy says that it's showing cognition. I tend to think

(09:19):
that it might be mimicking things that look like cognition,
but I don't know if i'd call it sentience. But hey,
what do I know.

Speaker 2 (09:25):
I don't work at Claude, so could be could be.

Speaker 4 (09:29):
Well.

Speaker 1 (09:29):
The other one that that tied along to this statement
that I thought was interesting was open AI.

Speaker 2 (09:36):
Sam Altman was recently heard basically.

Speaker 1 (09:39):
Saying that AI is going to be like a utility
in your house, so, you know, and you're going to
be able to purchase in to certain levels of usage,
right to pay for the offset probably on the power
plants that they're going to be forced to pay into
the state, local, and federal grids out there as well too.

Speaker 6 (10:04):
We have this fundamental belief in abundance of intelligence and
that one of the most important things in the future
is that we make intelligence, you know, to borrow an
old phrase from the energy industry that didn't quite work.

Speaker 2 (10:16):
Too cheap to meter.

Speaker 6 (10:17):
We're going to flood the world with intelligence. We want
people to just use it for everything. We want this
to just be something that the future generation doesn't think about.
They expect everywhere and everybody has access to like geniuses
as many as they need in any area that they need.

Speaker 1 (10:32):
So what I find fascinating is is like I just
think of myself, like what am I going to need
some like nest implant in my brain that measures how
much AI I'm using?

Speaker 2 (10:43):
Or is it going to be Is there going to
be like a meter.

Speaker 1 (10:46):
That sticks on the back of my phone and says
you have used four hundred and twenty BDU credits from
your AI exposure? Right? And then which AI firms is
it going to be capitalistically competitive? Is you know, well,
they'll have like a buy one get too free from
rock or from Gemini right where you're you're and then

(11:08):
it's all tokenized to drive all the usage that you're
gonna have to uh incorporate into your daily routines with
this AI usage. God forbid, once we have uh the
robots in our house every day?

Speaker 2 (11:21):
Right, Uh, you know, right? Your Optimus meter reader, you know, and.

Speaker 1 (11:27):
Then the the the green crazies, the climate change nut
jobs are gonna be in and then they're gonna, uh,
They're gonna say, you've maximized your AI energy output system
shutting down, and your robot in the middle of doing
your laundry or doing your mowing your lawn just shuts
down because you're out of AI credits. I don't even

(11:50):
know how to wrap my mind allround all this, but
it certainly is unsettling to stay the least Jordie, what
do you think, Well.

Speaker 3 (11:57):
The thing is that the AI robots are going to
be trying to reduce carbon, the carbon footprint, and then
they're going to go, wait a minute, do they're analyzing
David Bruthers made of carbon? We need to reduce him.
And then that's when the terminator future comes and it's
all over. But I actually think AI might be a
public utility at some point, there's no doubt. I mean,

(12:20):
you're gonna have to federalize it, in particular if it
becomes sentient, because the dangers of AI running amok in
financial industries, in all these vulnerable places that if AI
gets in there and starts taking over then then we
got some real problems, all right. The next one, and

(12:40):
this was the one that popped up a few days
ago for me. And if you're not familiar, there is
a Dutch court case that was originally filed in twenty
twenty three by seven Dutch citizens who alleged that they
suffered serious injuries or death. One plane of has since
passed away from COVID nineteen vaccines, and the defendants include

(13:03):
Microsoft co founder Bill Gates, pfisor CEO Albert Borla, and
former Dutch Prime Minister Mark Root who's now the Secretary
General of NATO, and some other Dutch officials. And what
this case is saying is that these people knowingly exposed
the population to this bio weapon and as a result

(13:27):
there's been major, major, an infliction of major physiological health
problems onder these seven people, including one dying. Now this
has been trudging through the courts, and what I found fascinating.
The one that really hit me was that basically there's
the most recent hearing in an Answerdam Court of Appeals

(13:50):
basically was going to make the determination on whether or
not they were going to allow pre trial depositions to
take place, which also includes the infusion of facts or
components of the case that they'd be believed relative to
really pushing this thing and what they can introduce into

(14:11):
the main court case, right, And so they want to
have a preliminary hearing that allows evidence to be entered
prior to the main case because one of the things
that typically happens in big cases like this is that
the somehow the court magically decides that, oh, we're not
going to allow that evidence in and that evidence in,

(14:34):
and they basically make it impossible for all the real
evidence that could compel the court that can induce some
major civil consequences as a result result of this case. So,
you know, for all those people who are saying, you know,
these people have gotten away with the greatest travesty in
the history, that this case is positive because you know,

(14:57):
I think if we can get one victory out there,
then that could that could generate a whole sequence of
other countries around or people in other countries following these
civil cases to where we maybe eventually we can get
to a criminal case.

Speaker 2 (15:11):
All right.

Speaker 1 (15:12):
Next, the other huge thing going on right now is
the Save Act, and that's the big one that's really
Republicans are are are are pressing If you're not familiar,
it's the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act, often referred to
as the SAVE Act, and it's this is was put

(15:34):
forth to twenty twenty five twenty six iterations of Congress,
and it's HR twenty two and HR seven to ninety
six aimed at amending the National Voters Voter Registration Act
of nineteen ninety three ninety three doing pick stricter requirements
for voter registration. Now, what that includes is proof of

(15:58):
citizenship right. Individuals must provide documentary evidence of US citizenship
such as a US passport, bursard tip accompanied by a
photo ID, naturalization certificate, or certain military tribal IDs when registering,
when registering or updating voter registration.

Speaker 2 (16:17):
So it's not like when you show up, you got.

Speaker 1 (16:19):
To bring your birth certificate or you got to bring
your Social Security in a card, which, by the way,
every single person in the United States who is a
US citizen has a Social Security card, right, So it's
not like this isn't something that exists. The second part
is voter ID for voting, and voters must present a

(16:41):
valid government issued photo ID when casting ballots. Making it
one of the strictest national voter IDs. Now, again, the
argument against this is many times just racists in nature,
that minorities or whomever can can't figure out how to
get an ID, which is just quantifiably proven to be

(17:04):
an absolute ridiculous. Article argument for this all right, voter
role maintenance and purges, and that states must remove non
citizen from voter rules and run databases through the Department
of Homeland Securities Systemic Alien Verification for Entitlement System, the
SAVE system to verify citizenship. It also mandates error prone

(17:27):
purges of voter lists and imposes criminal penalties.

Speaker 2 (17:31):
This is the key to this one.

Speaker 1 (17:33):
It imposes criminal penalties on election officials, not for registering
non citizens.

Speaker 2 (17:39):
That's the key.

Speaker 1 (17:40):
There's got to be a criminal penalty for this thing
to really have any teeth in it, all right. And
then immediate implementation and enforcement. The bill takes effect immediately
upon enactment, with no phase in period or dedicated funded
for states. And this is critical because why we're in
a midterm election where the control of the House and

(18:01):
the sentiment is up for grabs. And then there's the
last one, the alternative processes. Saint MNS established alternative for
those without immediate access to documents, but critics note this
should still include exclude millions of estimated of twenty one
to one hundred and forty six million lack readiness access

(18:21):
to Patforce and BUR certificates. See that number is seems
ridiculous to me. I mean, I mean, from twenty one
to one hundred and forty six million people don't have
access to a BUR certificate or a Social Security card
or I mean I get the passport maybe because there's

(18:42):
fees involved with that, but the other ones.

Speaker 2 (18:45):
All you got to do is email.

Speaker 1 (18:47):
The the Social Security Administration and request a new Social
Security card and that it's like three four weeks.

Speaker 3 (18:56):
My daughter was born last year, and it wasn't that
hard to get.

Speaker 1 (19:01):
I mean, I just adopted you know, John as two
kids and as mine, and I think we got the
cards within like three weeks of the finalization of the judgment.

Speaker 2 (19:12):
It's it's absurd, it's all bull all right.

Speaker 1 (19:15):
Now. The problem, obviously are the Democrats, and guess what
more importantly, certain House Republicans have basically come up and
I'm not doing this, most notably Lisa Mkowski from Alaska,
saying this is going to disenfranchise a vast majority of
Alaskan voters.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
And that's yeah. I mean she said it just the
other day.

Speaker 1 (19:38):
Someone caught her, some reporter from Lynde l TV caught
her in the hallway and she said, vast Yeah, we.

Speaker 3 (19:44):
Have faith in your fellow Alaskan citizens, you know what
I mean?

Speaker 1 (19:46):
Yeah, exactly. I think there's other people that are holding out.
John Corn's holding out because I think the underlying politics
there is that he wants a Trump endorsement against Pe
and Ken Paxton, who's surgeon. In the polls, I think
they're in a runoff or something like that based on
the primary that just took place.

Speaker 2 (20:09):
And you know, so it's a big deal. Now, the
House did pass.

Speaker 1 (20:13):
This, a rebranded version of it, and now it just
received by the Senate, and it faces a sixty vote
filibuster threshold, which would Republicans lack the numbers, right, And
this is why John Thune is out on the House
floor or the Senate floor advocating. So, Jordy, would you

(20:36):
play a little bit of John Thune's comments here?

Speaker 7 (20:39):
So, miss President, what is the Save America Act? It
is a package of common sense policies the kind of
common sense policies that should get an automatic yes vote
from literally every member of this body. At the core
of the Save America Act is the requirement that individuals
provide proof of citizenship to register to vote and then

(21:00):
show an ID when they go to the polls. In
other words, it would require Americans to demonstrate that they're
eligible to vote and that they are who they say
they are when they go to do so. Not to
keep using the word common sense, but it's pretty common sense, right.
We require photo ID for a whole lot of things

(21:24):
in this country for obvious reasons. Getting on a plane,
show your official government issued photo ID.

Speaker 2 (21:33):
Go to the doctor, same thing.

Speaker 7 (21:36):
Provide your government issued photo ID plus your insurance card.
Get hired for a new job, provide your government issued
photo ID when you start this present. Public libraries ask
for a photo ID. In New York City you have
to provide some type of photo ID to get a
library card. Baltimore, Maryland, same thing, Washington, d C. Again,

(22:04):
photo id's President. I'll stop with the list of libraries,
but I think we can all agree that if you
have to show photo ID improve where you live to
get a library card, it's not too much to ask
forders to show ID to vote in federal elections. It
takes about ten seconds and protects the security of our elections.

Speaker 1 (22:26):
All right, So obviously he realize, you know, this is
a big deal.

Speaker 2 (22:34):
Again, there are people in there.

Speaker 1 (22:36):
One of the people we thought from the Democratic side
we might get was Fetterman, who said he is not
going to vote for the Save Act. Just came out today,
you know, so you know, most Republicans are calling this
common sense.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
It's no joke.

Speaker 1 (22:51):
And after what we've learned, I mean, and what you've
heard on this show. We've been covering massive amounts of
voter fraud and all these different states, you know, this
is common sense and will help secure elections and certainly
reduce cheating, which is if you don't have a voter idea,
there's only reason that to continue the mass voter voter

(23:12):
in a mail in voter scam that's out here with
all these NGOs. And then you know, being able to
prove your US citizen is massive in terms of voter registration,
and how do you do that. We've already known that
during the Biden administration, what social people that receive Social
Security cards that were non citizen went from low two

(23:33):
hundred thousands to two million in the final year. So
that's roughly three million people who have Social Security cards
that are non US citizens, right, And so you know,
how do we confirm who's voting in our elections? And
that's what I believe the Democrats want to protect.

Speaker 3 (23:51):
And that's the point. Did you see sorry, right, but
did you see Chuck Schumer basically say this out loud
where he said you're going to well, he said, you're
going to remove billions from the voter rolls. Yeah, here's
a here's the clip of it really quick. Yeah, I
can call it awesome. Yeah, please, It's just it's just
amazing when they actually just say it, it's about voter registration.

(24:13):
It makes it.

Speaker 8 (24:14):
It allows ICE to kick tens of billions of people.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
Off the rolls, off the rolls.

Speaker 8 (24:23):
And they don't tell them until election day and you
show up and you say you're not registered anymore, you're
not registered here, you're not on the rolls. And they say,
I didn't know that. This is a bill that destroys
the country. And it is not about showing ID when
you show up to vote. It's about the voter registration rolls,
destroying them, purging them, not letting people know, and taking

(24:46):
the rights in a algorithm put together by Ice, put
together by Doge and Musk. It's an outrage and that's
why so many people don't want to pass.

Speaker 1 (24:58):
Yeah, I mean that that that's pretty staggering to me.
You know, I don't understand how Ice kicks people off
voter rolls.

Speaker 3 (25:07):
Billions of people too, he said, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (25:09):
Of course he's been misspeaking a lot lately. He's getting
old for sure now. But but the reality of it,
you know, they're also calling it Jim Crow two point
zero of classic you know, a poison pill that silences
voices really and revives discriminatory practices. And the ACLU and
the League of Women Voters, there was one argument that

(25:32):
they were presenting that women who change their names after
divorce will be impacted on this and again it's.

Speaker 3 (25:40):
Just my wife had a terrible time trying to get
a driver's license after we got married. Yes, yeah, right, grueling,
grueling process.

Speaker 1 (25:48):
Again, it's just more of the same old shenanigans. And
I and I think anybody who's who's got any common
sense realizes that if you impact the Democratic Party, which
is a goose, and I use that term generously, you know,
grouping of these.

Speaker 2 (26:08):
Coalition of radicalized groups.

Speaker 1 (26:10):
You know, if you impact illegal aliens and you impact
that significantly and you tighten up on that, uh, there's
a high probability that they're not going to be able
to win elections anymore. So, thus the open borders for
the last four years. So yeah, anyways, we'll keep an
idea of a review on that. All right, that's the

(26:33):
Save Act.

Speaker 2 (26:34):
And then one of the interesting ones.

Speaker 1 (26:38):
That hit me and then we're gonna get a little
conspiratorial here, So stand.

Speaker 2 (26:42):
By Jeordan, let's go finally.

Speaker 1 (26:44):
So, uh, this we're in the thirteenth day of this
guy being missing and his name is William Neil McCaslin
and he's a former general from the United States Air
Force and UFO expert. Right, that's the kicker to this thing.

(27:07):
He has been missing for thirteen days, just up and disappeared, right,
And for me, that's a little odd, I'm I'm you know,
obviously we've had all the unique bizarre people talking aliens
when the Iran War kicked off as some distracting whatever,
and then right around the same time, this UFO general

(27:31):
who is you know, brilliant, you know this guy and
to make general means you're not a quack, supposedly or allegedly.
But but this guy just up and disappears and burnt
out of what is it Bernellio County. In what the
investigator said is they've contacted more than six hundred homeowners

(27:53):
in the neighborhood near his home to request their security
camp footage, to see where he left, when he left,
in a vehicle direction, to travel, all those things that
are relevant in this investigation. But I just found it
fascinating in the moment where it seems to be where
on the precipice of some cataclysmic h UFO disclosure, like

(28:19):
a top general in the program goes missing for thirteen days.
So again we'll pay we'll pay close attention to that,
all right. And then the last story, which is a
story I just want to finish on a on a
great note, man, is uh, you know, to praise my
alma mater, which is Penn State. You know, I believe

(28:43):
that their wrestling program is the single greatest sports program
in the history of all sports. They just won their
I think it was there two three, Yeah, fourth consecutive
big ten wrestling championship. But they dating back, they won

(29:06):
twenty eleven, twelve, thirteen, fourteen, sixteen, nineteen, twenty three, twenty four,
twenty five, and twenty six. One of the most elite
teams in history. And these are the guys at one
twenty five Luke ledal one forty nine, Shane van Ness
one fifty seven.

Speaker 2 (29:26):
PJ.

Speaker 1 (29:26):
Duke won sixty five, Michael Messenbrink seventy four, Levi Hayes
won eighty four, rock O welsh In one ninety seven,
Josh Barr. So they are basically dominating the sport in
a way no other sport has been dominated. You could
argue back in the late sixties and seventies John woodins
UCLA basketball team with Kareem Abdul Jabbar and some other

(29:52):
greats out of there, but this other you know. They've
won thirteen NCAA team championships, with twelve of those coming
under Kle Sorenson or Sanderson, and Kale is considered to
be the greatest, obviously greatest wrestling, one of the greatest
wrestlers himself never losing while I competed, and then becoming

(30:14):
the greatest wrestling coach.

Speaker 2 (30:15):
We've ever seen.

Speaker 1 (30:17):
And so you know, as we are consumed with all
the madness of all these other things, I always go
back to the beauty of sport being the thing that
can lift us up.

Speaker 2 (30:31):
It can pull us away from.

Speaker 1 (30:35):
AI taking over the world, a collapsing economy, COVID, the
next pandemic, or whatever it might be, and we can
really just look at these young people in these beautiful
programs performing at the highest level in histories and really
just be proud of what sport is and the immense

(30:57):
work and effort that goes in for these young athletes,
as well as just the wonderful sense of pride instilled
with us. And as we get ready to go into
March madness, all these great basketball teams we'll see emerge,
and maybe we'll see some Cinderella story pop out. But
I just wanted to again give props to Penn State

(31:19):
Wrestling and what you're doing as a really inspirational thing
for the country and for people who love sports. So yeah,
all right, Jordy, my man, what do you think next
week's going to look like?

Speaker 3 (31:33):
Well, who knows. We have alien abductions, we have Iran war,
we have oil prices up nine percent today, and so
who knows, Man, it's gonna be crazy, but we'll be
here to cover it.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
That's right, that's right, we will.

Speaker 1 (31:46):
And so we just want to thank you all and again,
which how you really help us out is you know,
link up with our sponsors that are out there.

Speaker 2 (31:54):
Also, you know if you can save, like and share.

Speaker 1 (31:59):
But another big for us is leaving commentary on the
show on audio or subscribing on YouTube. That's massive, Watching
us on x really, or watching the amazing clips and
shorts that Jody's Jordie's producing and share those with your friends,
because that's what allows us to penetrate into the algorithm
to get seen by more people and really promote and

(32:21):
project the show. So we're just incredibly grateful for all
of your support and support of iHeart and Buck and
Clay and just we hope you have a beautiful weekend
and we'll see you next week.

Speaker 2 (32:35):
God bless you, and God bless your families who yuh

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