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April 18, 2025 • 38 mins
Mark as Played
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Six seven two six six sixty eight sixty eight is
the number. Okay, I got this on X. Actually, so Lisa,
who you know, a fan of the show UH, lives
in Florida part time. She just messaged me on X
and I think she made an absolutely, really really good point.

(00:22):
Good morning, Jeff, Oh, good morning to you, Lisa. As
you know, I'm in Florida right now, my second home,
and the shooting story at FSU is all over the news.
I'm not sure if back up in Boston, but the
mother of the shooter is a school deputy. The father

(00:47):
is also in law enforcement. But the problem with that
person walking by with the coffee, Jeff, we have lost
all empathy in this country. I saw that video yesterday
and that made me very sad. Well, it made me

(01:07):
sad too, and honestly I found it very disturbing and
in a way, let me put this on the table
and thank you again for that, Lisa. Look, obviously, what
Ickner did was worse. I mean, you kill two people,
you put six others in the hospital. The man is
an absolute monster. He's a murderer. But what in a

(01:29):
way scares you more the fact that this guy would
kill people in cold blood randomly at point blank range,
or that a student would watch another student die or
dying bleeding with a gunshot wound, and be so cold

(01:54):
and so uncaring and so callous that they video it.
It's not even if they just walked by and I
don't care, No, no, they stopped to videotape it for
entertainment value, sipping their coffee as they stand there a

(02:16):
couple of minutes casually at at a Oh, it's like, oh, boy,
listen to hunt tem she may die, yeah, and then
just walk away, Like really almost? What do you find
more disturbing? That's I'm like, I mean, both have no conscience,

(02:37):
Both are sick, twisted and evil. One committed a crime,
the other one didn't. One definitely took human life, which
is infinitely worse, obviously, But I don't know why that
second one is bothering me so much. And maybe it's
because I'm thinking, how many other students are like that?

(03:00):
That they would murder someone? But did they have such
little feeling and regard for their fellow human being or
they have so much hate for their fellow students that
they wouldn't do a thing to help them six one
seven two six six sixty eight sixty eight is the number. Uh. Look,

(03:20):
I'm telling you something has changed in our culture. No, no,
I'm me. You know I'm not doing a whole I'm
a middle aged man, now right, I'm not doing a
whole middle aged fogie backing my day.

Speaker 2 (03:31):
No.

Speaker 1 (03:32):
Really, there's something wrong. There's no question there's something wrong.
Six one seven two six six sixty eight sixty eight. Agree, disagree?
Jim in North Reading, Thanks for holding Jim, and welcome.

Speaker 3 (03:50):
Good morning, Jeff.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
How are you very good? How are you, Jim?

Speaker 3 (03:54):
Uh, happy Easter to you and your family. We're so
lucky to have you, Jeff. Honestly, thank you, Thank.

Speaker 1 (03:59):
You, A happy blessed Easter to you and your whole family.

Speaker 3 (04:07):
About them both briefly for you give me a chance.
But the I think what's really happened is it's just
a total end of what used to be called the
nuclear family. You know, I'm with the same age, Jeff.
I'm fifty five. I grew up in a home with
a brother and sister, two parents on the one roof.
They were engaged in our lives. They knew what we

(04:29):
were doing, they knew what we weren't doing, and so
there was accountability, and I feared the punishment of my
parents more than authority of law or breaking a law.

Speaker 1 (04:44):
So but about thirty years.

Speaker 3 (04:46):
Ago, you know, both parents had to leave the house.
They go to work in the dark, they come home
in the dark. They don't know where the kids have
been doing, what they've been doing, and so they the
kids were they learned other things from from things outside
the home. It was a total desensitation, if you will,

(05:08):
desensitized to responsibility. But with that came guilty parenting. In
other words, the parents never said no to anything, never
said no, So then became the you know, it was
the sense of entitlement. So I think without a nuclear
family and without parents being engaged in the children's lives,

(05:32):
these things will inevitably happen. And since they happen so frequently,
they've just become part of society. And it's you know,
the news cycle is only eighteen hours and then you're
onto the next Like this, this level life cycle will
be onto the next thing come tomorrow morning or Monday
or whatever it is, be a different subject will move on.
I think it's the end of the nuclear family. I

(05:53):
think it's real. By the way, the initial Black Lives
Matter website on the front page. Stead one of their
goals was the end of the nuclear family.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
Yes, no, no, you're right, you're completely You're one thousand percent correct, Jim,
You're not one hundred one thousand percent correct. Black Lives
Matter on their website when they first began to riot
and rampage and you know, murder and plunder and burn.
So they want to overthrow the family. That was one
of their key goals. Okay, but let that go to
the heart of the issue. You are right, the breakdown

(06:27):
of the family is what's causing all of these social pathologies. Okay,
many of you again, outstanding job by the audience, by
all you listeners out there, Cooner Country. Many of you
are talking about, Jeff. Yes, it's the breakdown of the family. Yes,

(06:48):
it's social media, the internet. How these kids are being
reared and raised on the Internet and iPads and iPhones,
and it's basically replaced the parents. But there's a an
element here about parenting and how parenting has changed. And
I want to read this. It's again from Mark on messenger. Jeff,

(07:11):
I believe it's the parents of all of these gen
Z kids that are afraid to raise their kids like
they were raised because they're afraid that their curve, that
their kids will turn on them. Look you see how
kids talk to their parents today. They feel entitled to everything,

(07:35):
and if they don't get what they want, they pull
a temper tantrum and the parents give in because they're
afraid of their own kids. You know, I gotta tell you, Mark,
I agree with you. I completely and utterly agree with you.
I am shocked because you know, I hang out with

(07:56):
Ashton and Ava. We go to the park and all
kinds of activity and anyway, long story short, interact with
other kids and with their parents. I'm telling you, if
I said one tenth to my father or my mother
what these kids tell their child tell their parents, my
father would have smacked me or my mother smacked me.

(08:18):
I mean right in the face. I mean we wouldn't
even do it because we knew we were gonna get
smacked in the face. You just it's just like, like,
what are you nuts? You want to commit suicide? No,
just shut up, don't say whatever you're thinking. Don't say it.
If you you're not my boss. You know, this is

(08:41):
I can't say it. This is bull you know, crap
like you know, Okay, come on whatever, Hey Jimmy, come
on now, we got to go home. Oh this says
bull crap. I'm not taking this bull crap. You know, Bravo, Sierra,
I'm not taking this BS. No, no, you're not my boss.
This says again, I'm not like this is effing bull crap.

(09:03):
I'm like what I'm looking at this like this is
how you talk to your mother. And it's not you know,
one here or one there. It's so common and here, look,
I'll just give you an example. Okay, Ava had some
friends over. She's a very gregarious kid. She's very social,

(09:25):
loves to play with you know, a lot of friends,
people on the street. Look, it's not the end of
the world. I'm just explaining. I'm like, I just, I
just I can't believe all these kids talk forget to
their parents. There's a kid, nice kid, or at least
he was a nice kid, and he's playing with Ava,
and so I, you know, I tease him a little bit,
you know, I I you know, Hey, how are you whatever?

Speaker 3 (09:48):
You know?

Speaker 1 (09:48):
And I'm like, hey, are you a Yankees fan? Are
you a Yankees fan? Because apparently had a Yankee shirt
one time, but he's a big Red Sox fan. This
is him. You better effing shut up or I'll come
over there and kick your fing ass. He's like any
year old kid. I'm like, whoa, hey, what is wrong

(10:10):
with you?

Speaker 3 (10:13):
Like?

Speaker 1 (10:13):
This is how you talk to an adult and you
a neighbor. And I mean, I really, I mean it's
a very and I was teasing on a very fun, cute,
you know, innocent way, you know, and the way children
talk to authority, the way kids talk to their parents,

(10:35):
and a lot of it. You can tell it with
this kid. He just watches a lot of videos, so
he's watching other kids use the F bomb, say I'm
going to come there and kick your fing ass, you know,
and that sort of stuff, that kind of crude, vulgar language.
So they think it's okay, it's acceptable and that it's cool,

(10:55):
and obviously mommy and daddy aren't punishing them. Now. I'm
not going to run to the you know, child's house
and say you don't your kid call me. I'm just
giving you an example how I look at the way
children behave towards adults in general, and I'm like, ay ya,
yay ay yea yay. So no, there's a big parenting issue.

(11:21):
The kids are allowed to run wild. They're entitled. There's
no sense of right and wrong, there's no fear, there's
no fear, there's no respect for authority whatsoever. So they
think they can do whatever they want and get away
with whatever they want, and God forbid, if you take
anything away from them, they throw the mother of all tantrums,

(11:45):
as if somehow they're owed it. It's the generation. Everybody
gets a trophy, everybody has to get an award, and
if they don't get a trophy and don't get an award,
then all hell breaks loose that they think they're justified
to do anything they want, lash out however they want.

(12:06):
So in the name of being talerant and compassionate and
have respect for diversity, what you're really doing is you're
creating monsters children who feel so entitled that you know,

(12:27):
how do you handle Look, Look, that's just life. You're
gonna have ups and downs, You're gonna have failures things doing,
You're gonna face rejection. It's not always gonna be winning, winning, winning,
It's just not not everything is gonna go your way.
They can't handle it. They just they go they go crazy.

(12:50):
They start to melt down. They go apoplectic, and they
start to rage and fume and have this sense of utter.
You know, they're completely an utter, you know, the the
the indignity of the whole thing. And they're like, you know,
how dare I whatever not get an A on this exam?
How dare this girl turn me down? Or this boy
turned me down? Whatever it may be? And so what

(13:14):
do you do pick up a gun and start shooting people.
It's it's there's a lot, it's complex, it's complicated. It's
not just one thing. But I think Mark is right.
Parents have stopped parenting. They're not your friend. I keep
saying that to people. Your kids are not your friends.

(13:39):
You're the mother, you're the father. You know, as I
always tell my kids here, not that they listen to
me all the time, but let that go. This is
not a democracy. This is a dictatorship, a benelevant in,
a benevolent dictatorship. Yes, it's not an iron fisted, brutal dictatorship.

(13:59):
We don't abuse our children, obviously, but what mommy and
daddy say that that's what goes. That's it. I'm sorry.
You may think you have a vote, you don't have
a vote. Now, when you're older and you're you know,
you got your own home and your own responsibilities, and
you're all grown up. You run your house, so you

(14:19):
want to run your house. But mommy and daddy make
the ultimate decisions. And that's the problem. Too many parents
today raise their kids. I swear to you like you're
their best friends, like they're all co equals. They're not

(14:40):
agree disagree six one seven two six six sixty eight
sixty eight. Heather in Rockland. Thanks for holding Heather, and welcome.

Speaker 4 (14:52):
Hi, Jeffrey, Thank you for taking my call.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
On my pleasure, Heather.

Speaker 4 (14:57):
I wanted to comment on that last call you had.
I cannot agree with him. He's a hundred thousand as
you always say, one thousand percent right. I think it's
definitely the breakdown of the family system, the nuclear family,
and I have said this for years and at fast
I talked to my mother about this all the time.

(15:19):
Now granted, now, let me just say something. My parents
were divorced when I was five. However, both my parents,
you know, like they co parented, you know, pretty pretty good.
Like if I got in trouble at school and I
was at my mother's, my father.

Speaker 2 (15:35):
Would hear about it.

Speaker 4 (15:36):
I wouldn't get in trouble just by my mother. I
would get in trouble by my father, you know, like
even though they were divorced, there was still like rules
and regulations that I had to follow, do you know
what you know? You know what I mean, like and
I feel, yeah, it wasn't like you know, like like
I said, like because I would be at my mother's

(15:56):
during the week and my father's on the weekend, and
I would worry, Oh my god, I'm going to get
And I was more worried about my father because he
was a little more strict. But my mother told the line,
believe me, and I see that all the time. I mean,
if if I talk to parents the way I see
kids talk to parents, I wouldn't have a mouth left

(16:17):
on my face. And I had a mouth. I tend
to I do have a mouth, and I always got
in trouble for it, you know, you know. And I
don't see parents correcting their kids the way they talk
to them now. And it's all about respect. You have
to have respect for your parents. That's how they raise me.

Speaker 1 (16:36):
And I believe it. And Heather, you're dead on You're
absolutely dead on. If you don't respect your parents, think
about it, how are you going to respect strangers? Like
just I mean, it just makes sense. So if it's
f you and f off to your parents, well, how
do you think you're going to street? You know you're
gonna get friends or strangers or people you meet on

(16:56):
the street. And my parents exactly what you're just describing.
That's my mom and dad. I feared my mother. I
feared my father even worse. Six one seven two six
six sixty eight sixty eight. Okay, everybody now is weighing
in on this. So my sister out in Tucson, Arizona,
texted me on my phone, and here's what she told me,
or what she wrote to me. Jeff, this happened to

(17:20):
me once when the boys were young, A neighbor down
the street came over to play with Matthew and Andrew.
Those are my two nephews. This kid used foul language
while talking to me. I walked the kid back home
to his parents and told them what their kid said.

(17:43):
I said, if he apologizes and watches his tongue, he
can come back to play. But I told the parents
I am sorry, but we do not use that language
in our home. Especially with parents. Yes, so I texted
her back. This was off air, just during the break

(18:05):
two minutes ago. Jen, What did the parents do? This
is what she wrote back. The mother and the stepfather
told the kid to apologize, but in all honesty, they
just did it to say face in front of me.
These kids were left on their own. They never They
don't really parent, and that's why I did not let

(18:28):
my kids play with them. Now, that's another thing I've noticed.
Parents don't parent their kids over and over and over
and over again. And okay, you know, you think, well,
it's just temper tantrums and swearing when they're young and disrespectful,

(18:50):
disobedient behavior. But when they become teenagers or college students
or whatever in their twenties, then you start getting you know,
let me videotape someone being shot and you know, bleeding
to death. Ha ha ha. That's that's what it ends
up creating six one seven two six six sixty eight

(19:13):
sixty eight agree, disagree. Okay, This is from uh Craig
who messaged me just a couple of minutes ago. Jeff,
my friend who is a cop here in Massachusetts. This
is unbelievable, isn't it this went to a call for

(19:34):
an out of control seven year old Why because they
took his Xbox away and he threw a temper tantrum
and then took a crap on the parent's bed. Holy mackerel,
Now this is what I mean. Okay, you got a

(19:56):
seven year old kid. Just to use this example that Craig,
that Craig just sent me, You've got a seven year
old kid.

Speaker 3 (20:03):
W w we.

Speaker 1 (20:05):
No going absolutely berserk because you know, whatever, whatever he did,
you punish him. By the way, that's what I do
to my kids. I take the video games away and
or the the iPad away, and ah, man, they don't
like it. They're not happy. And then I just sent
him to their room. Not only are getting no video games,

(20:26):
no electronics, no internet, no iPad and both of you
which they hate. Go to your room and they hate it.
Oh my god, do they hate it. And then, you know,
I let him stew for a couple of hours, you know,
and then ask him to apologize and that usually fixes
the situation. But let that go. It's a seven year

(20:47):
old kid. So the kid acts out to such an
extent that he goes to the parents' room and then
crops on the bed. Now, you spank the child. If
this was my dad, it's the belt, okay. And I
don't use the belt. I've never used the belt. But
what I'm saying is with my dad, that's the belt.

(21:07):
The belt, Gary, And what a belt? I mean that
rear raand would be black and blue. Okay. That's either
where you spank the child or I'm talking about the
mother of all timeouts. In other words, you're going to
your room and no dinner and see you tomorrow morning.

(21:28):
You crap on my bed because I took away your xbox.
God knows what that child had done to punish you.
Are you freaking kidding me? That's the problem. Your answer,
your solution is to call the police. So what you're

(21:48):
saying you can't discipline your seven year old boy, that's
exactly the problem. So what is the cops supposed to do?
What arrest them? I'm sorry, this is pathetic parenting. Now,
if it's a seventeen year old who's on drugs or high,

(22:09):
you're in a gang or out of control, or that's
something different, because a seventeen year old, as you know,
can do a tremendous amount of damage physically. They're as
strong as you. If not stronger, they may have access
to weapons. That's something different. Okay, Jeff, you know my
son was so out of control seventeen eighteen you have
to call the police. That I get. But a seven

(22:30):
year old, no way, no way, Come on? Are you serious?
The hair in a nutshell? That story? That's it? Now?
What do you think that kid's gonna grow up into?
If he's already crapping on a bed, on your parents's
bed and you know, going absolutely berserk because you took

(22:50):
away the xbox. What's gonna happen if a girlfriend dumps him.
What's gonna happen if he doesn't get to the school
of his choice. What happens if he fails an exam?
What happens if he gets I don't know, let go
from work. Can you see him ten fifteen, twenty years
down the road with a gun boom boom boom. I

(23:13):
can see it, can't you? That's the problem? Agree, disagree?
Six one seven two six six sixty eight sixty eight.
John in New Hampshire, Thanks for holding John and welcome.

Speaker 2 (23:30):
Hey, good morning Jeff, happy uh it was good Friday,
and good morning, Happy.

Speaker 1 (23:37):
Easter, Happy blessed Easter to you and your whole family.

Speaker 2 (23:41):
I appreciate that, my friend. I want to start yourself
with just a chat of humor because it's been so serious. Mike,
You're you're a sound guy. I think he's got a
case of premature preamplification.

Speaker 1 (23:59):
Now, Mike, Mike, is that you know talk about want
to be dictators? That's Mike.

Speaker 2 (24:05):
Okay, I'm going to say that the people choose for Ravis.

Speaker 1 (24:19):
John? What what? Sorry, Mike, why did you cut John off?
Just a message?

Speaker 3 (24:24):
Look?

Speaker 1 (24:25):
Look at the fuck did you want to talk about
creating a monster?

Speaker 4 (24:28):
Look at this?

Speaker 1 (24:29):
Look at this? And by the way, John, I'm I
want to come back to you. I was asking Mike
off air. I swear, I said, Mike, were your parents
strict on you? No? Not really, I said, Well, for example,
when you got in trouble at school, what happened? Well,
I wouldn't want them to tell my parents. Obviously I
tried to work it out at school. But you know,

(24:51):
my parents would take away my electronics, my video games.
But that's okay because then they would let me go
out and play. So I played back basketball or baseball
with my friends. So it was all okay. Look, look
Look at his John, look at his Look what we've created?
So he cuts you off. All I heard was you know,

(25:12):
we want Barabbas. And suddenly I'm like what happened to John?
And Mike goes, well I cut him off? I go,
what'd you cut him off? Just to mess with him?
Look you see what I'm talking about, John, This is
what I'm talking about. John, Please start again where you
know we want barabbas. Please pick it up where you
left off there, John.

Speaker 2 (25:34):
Thank you, I said, the people chose barabbas. They we
have fallen as a society where Luigi Mangioni and Carmelo
are victims and glorified. But people like this and the
one who's filming the person dying, they're empty vessels. Their souls,
their souls are dark. They preferred old welly and dystopia.
What are your calls? Even hits hit the nail on

(25:56):
the head and said this the legacy media and the
demo crats social media. You said, and lastly, and I
believe this because that's what I studied in school religion,
that there's a lack of God and that's why you're
seeing this and the unmitigated hatred that we're getting from
the left is stunning to me. It's stunning to me,

(26:20):
and we just we follow that up. But you know,
it's the difference to start this when you start on
gender and race with their great reset because they knew
money wouldn't do it. Because Americans like the money. This
is what they're going to run on. And that's why
AOC and Bernie Sanders are leading to the hard left wingers.
But I mean for a chance to be president in
twenty twenty eight. But I think that that's even more

(26:42):
false because these guys, these people are not gonna win.
People see what's happening, and in four to six months,
people are going to see how much this country is
going to turn around. But it's gonna take a little
time because we will left the train wreck, if you
recall when Biden left. That's why I got to say, well,
you hit.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
On many points, and John I agree with practically every
single one. And I think the root of it all,
if you want to go right to the root, root
cause is the lack of God, the determination to get
rid of God. And they've the left to give them
their due, to give the devil his due. They've succeeded

(27:20):
for all you know, not everybody, not all, not everywhere,
but for the most part, he's out of the schools,
he's out of the public square, he's pretty much out
of our culture. He's out of many homes. And this
is what happens. This is literally what is happening in
front of our eyes, and so it leads to the
breakdown of the family, which eventually leads to societal breakdown,

(27:43):
the breakdown of society. Look, to put it crudely, these
are savages. These are savages. The Luigi Mangioni is a savage.
And by the way, you know, you got Taylor Lorenz
and others who are glorified eyeing him. It's disgusting. This

(28:04):
Carmelo kid out in Texas who stabbed that white boy
right in the chest, right in the chest and killed
him on the spot over a stupid seat at a
track meet. You stab somebody in the chest and kill
him over a freaking seat. Are you normal that? That's

(28:29):
a savage. This shooter down in Florida State, he is
Phoenix Sickner. It's a savage. The girl that's filming the
poor you know, the other woman that's been shot and dying,
that's a savage. And so we're becoming a society, slowly
but surely of savages. You see, it's all it's everything

(28:53):
what you said, we're being desensitized, it's all of that.
But really what we're being is we're being civilized. That's
really what it is here. Go back to that child.
Think of this. You rant and rave and yell and
scream to the point that you're driving your parents so

(29:17):
crazy they feel the need to call the police. And
then because you don't get what you want, you go
to your parents's bed. Think about this, and you crap
all over the bed. That's a savage's that's a savage.
That's pure savagery. That's you know, ten thousand years ago.

(29:40):
That's what it is. And what you know, many people
have said this not an original point. We take many
things for granted. Civilization is very thin. The cords of
civilization are very fragile, very thin, and it takes generation

(30:02):
after generation after generation to build it up. But it's
very easy to destroy. And that's what you're seeing. It's
destruction everywhere we go. It's destruction. And that's why we've
got to say enough is enough. And you know what
I find most disgusting of all is to the left.

(30:22):
It's all about the guns. Whenever there's a shooting, all
they want are those guns. They want to blame the guns,
band the guns, confiscate the guns. They're not interested in
actually solving this because they're the reason why we're in
this mess to begin with. It's not about the guns.

(30:45):
It's not people have had weapons, deadly weapons since the
beginning of time. It's not the weapon, it's the person
wielding the weapon. Anyway, thank you very much for that call,
really really good call. John six one seven two six
six sixty eight sixty eight is the number part of me. Mike,

(31:08):
all right, So now, Mike, what are you now? Like
the uh not really? What are you now? The grand
producer Mike like, say, boy, Mike, I think I'm gonna
start calling you king Mike. No, really, so Mike, Now
is now just what he said in my ear Jeff.
We have to pivot now to the alien's story. Look

(31:28):
at Mike, what's next?

Speaker 3 (31:30):
No?

Speaker 1 (31:31):
Really, what you want to what? What take my kids?
Or what's next? Mike? No, really, you wanta what you wanna?
You wanna take blood out of my veins? I mean, wait,
what's next? Mike? All right? That's Mike cue. Okay, we're
gonna continue to take your calls. However, as we've been
teasing all show, it is Friday. Let's have a little

(31:52):
bit of fun. Uh. It's a big story. Uh, it's
a big international story, and I'd love for everybody to
weigh in on this as well. Uh. That's the theme
song from the X Files and it's our pole question
of the day. You're right, Mike, So okay, so listen
now to this. According now to scientists at Cambridge University,

(32:18):
in collaboration with other astronomers and scientists around the world, Okay,
listen to this now, they believe for the first time
that they have come as close as possible to detecting
extraterrestrial life now here it is. Daily Mail was the

(32:43):
first to break the story, but the New York Times
has picked it up. I mean everybody now, it's just
every paper in the world has now picked up this story.
So apparently, now a team of astronomers now claim that
they have found the strongest indication yet for extra terrestrial life. Now,
you may be saying, Jeff, Jeff, Jeff, well, where when

(33:09):
I first heard of something like but Mars or No,
it's not even in our Solar system. So apparently the
location in question is a giant planet never heard of
this one before, known as K to eighteen B. So
again the planet is K to eighteen B. It apparently

(33:32):
orbits a star. Listen to this one hundred and twenty
light years away. So, as I told Sandy and Mike earlier,
I said, well, even like if you were, like, you know,
if you watch Star Trek, you basically need warp nine
a star Trek to make it there from planet Earth.

(33:54):
It's very very far away. But the point is they
say that according now to these astronomers and scientists, they
have found a high concentration of a molecule that on
Earth is produced exclusively by living organisms like marine algae.

(34:19):
Now they say that these are huge they call biosignatures
that are typically produced by life on Earth. And so
what this astronomy scientific team at Cambridge University said is
that it's in. They claim now that they have come
as close to possible as is possible to detecting possible

(34:44):
marine life, biological life on another planet. They believe that
K two eighteen B is covered their words, not mine,
with a warm ocean that brimming with life.

Speaker 3 (35:03):
Quote.

Speaker 1 (35:04):
This is what they said in their report or in
their study. This is a revolutionary moment. It is the
first time humanity has seen potential biosignatures on a habitable planet.
And apparently this study was just published in the Astrophysical

(35:26):
Journal Letters. So the scientists now everywhere they're very excited.
They're saying they're very intrigued by this. They're saying this,
this now could be the closest we've ever come that
there is extraterrestrial life. There's a lot of water. They

(35:50):
believe there's a lot of marine or biological activity or organisms.
However they want to you know, you need a space
probe or a role over or really powerful telescopes if
you're going to actually try to get conclusive proof. But anyway,
long story short, they think there could be something out there.

(36:11):
The truth is out there. Now. Let me ask all
of you, do you believe we are alone in the universe.
That's been the standard belief for thousands and thousands and
thousands of years for the most part, that we are alone,

(36:31):
That there is no alien life out there, there is
no extraterrestrial life whatsoever, that we are the only ones
human beings, We are the only ones what this study
is at least suggesting. Yes, it's a different solar system. Yes,
it's one hundred and twenty four like years away, which

(36:53):
is you know, very far, extremely far. But they say
that it looks like there's ocean on this planet. There's
some kind of biological or marine life on this planet,
and they're sayingtors even it's it's it's a habitable zone,
it has oxygen, it has certain scientific components that you

(37:20):
need for life to exist, for life to grow, for
life to expand and evolve. So my question to you,
do you believe there is extra terrestrial life or do
you think we're alone? Are there space aliens out there?

(37:43):
And if there is life out there outside of us,
are you upset by that? Do you feel that it
makes human beings a little bit less special? Maybe we
aren't the center of the universe as we thought we were.
I'm just curious now my view. Take it for what

(38:04):
it's worth. I think there is life out there. To me,
I look at all these people citing UFOs, spaceships, alien encounters.
They can't all be crazy. These can't all be drones,
they can't all be military advanced military technology. So do
I think we're alone. No, I don't. I personally don't.

(38:28):
I think there are extra I think there is extra
terrestrial life. I think there are aliens out there, good bad.
Do they mean us well or not? I don't know.
I hope they mean us well, so I'm not shocked
by this finding. But that's me. I want to hear
from you.
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