Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Remember when it was impossible to misplace the TV remote
because you were the TV remote. Remember when music sounded
like this, Remember when social media was truly social?
Speaker 2 (00:17):
Hey, John, how's it going today?
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Well? This show is all about you. This is fifty
plus with Doug Pike. Helpful information on your finances, good health,
and what to do for fun. Fifty plus brought to
you by the UT Health Houston Institute on Aging, Informed
Decisions for a healthier, happier life.
Speaker 2 (00:42):
And now fifty plus with Doug Pike. All Right, there
we go, let's get this one started. Huh Really, nothing
new to talk about in the weather. There's a little
of this coming, a little of that going, But by
and large we're on a pretty nice run, and maybe
we'll stay that way for a while, hopefully for a
(01:03):
few more days. Some cooler than notse but all of
them looking pretty nice. Go outside, take a walk, get
some vitamin D, and then maybe just maybe reward yourself
with a cookie like I did yesterday. Well, okay, three cookies,
but they weren't that big. They weren't super big, not
(01:23):
like the ones we had on What was the day
we had that gathering here? Will? Was that Wednesday? Maybe? Thursday.
It doesn't matter. We had outstanding barbecue brought in first
of all, and then on top of that, there were
some delicious treats, some dessert treats, including one of my favorites,
(01:43):
the oatmeal raisin cookie. And this oatmeal raisin cookie had
it been much bigger. It wasn't quite Frisbee sized, but
it was not bite sized either. I took one back
to my desk and it it took me a minute.
Took me a hot minute to eat that thing. It
was delicious too. Three smaller cookies yesterday. They don't count.
(02:08):
Little ones don't count nless. You't about a dozen, or
maybe a whole row. If there are two rows in
a bag. Into the stark markets, we crawl all four indicators.
Everything I was looking at just a little while ago
was pretty red. As this whole tech selloff continues to
drag downward, and Vidia lost again. Who else? There was
(02:29):
another one. I can't remember exactly which one it was,
but they're dragging the whole market down with them. Oil
was up a smidge whatever that is, and gold gained
I want to say it was about eleven or twelve bucks.
Last I looked just enough to get it north of
four thousand dollars an ounce again, which is still just
crazy high. I don't even know why I think it's high.
(02:53):
I don't know what I would be comparing it to
except for just the values of the precious metals a
year or two years, three years ago. It's significantly up
since then, and I don't know whether that means that
it's going to continue this meteoric climb or whether it's
about to do what the market just did in the
(03:13):
last week or so. I think if we can train
ourselves to look only at longer term trends, I think
that would be a better investing strategy. Unless you've got
access to all the computer algorithms and all the giant
data banks and everything that the mega investors use, probably
(03:36):
better to just look for things that have a history
of going up over time and let that time pass
and look back and say, wow, that was a good decision.
Speaking of news, we've heard for several years now about
how many people came into our country illegally under President Biden,
and lots of those people actually are pretty bad actors.
(03:57):
What's coming to light now, however, in the wake of
the arrests in New Jersey, of two teenagers, two former
high school athletes, is that young men and their immature brains,
even those raised here in the United States but of
family origins elsewhere. In most cases, they're being groomed to
(04:20):
commit pretty horrible acts right here inside our country. These two,
in particular, are accused of plotting events that would result
in mass casualties and deaths. And they were studying some
of the recent mass shootings. They were really really close.
(04:42):
They were really really close. They bought guns and Ammo
and were just about ready to do their thing. One
of them even talked about voluntarily doing live video beheadings
on television. This kind of guy you want next door? Huh?
And then there was another third guy was arrested up
(05:04):
in the Northwest somewhere, I think in Oregon. Who may
have I think he was tied to these guys. Maybe not,
It doesn't matter. Every one of us, every one of
us ought to thank our lucky stars that the FBI
and any other law enforcement agency involved in watching these
guys and letting them continue to incriminate themselves more and
(05:27):
more and more before they until they had a great
case against those guys. And I don't know how they
decide when to say, Okay, now go get them. I'm
not sure. I'm not sure what indicated to them electronically
or otherwise that we better get them now or things
could go south. But I'm glad they made the decision
(05:48):
when they did, and not a moment too late. There.
The good news for this country is that the FBI
and most of the law enforcement division or agency we
have in this country are working for us again, working
for our safety, and not spending their time fabricating charges
(06:09):
against our current president, which they did for quite some time,
and more and more evidence is coming out to support that.
I just hope our side can stay on top of
this stuff and continue to shut down these plans that
these people come up with. They were using encrypted websites,
they were using every means and method they knew to
(06:30):
avoid detection, and we still got them. That makes me
I'll sleep a little bit better tonight knowing that, and
the bad guys will try to start workarounds that can
get them past our security, and our good guys will
try to find ways to make sure the bad guys
don't do that. By the way, I mentioned yesterday that
(06:53):
the makers of the Oreo cookie have decided they think
it's a great idea for the holidays to offer up
special oreos that taste like turkey and dressing. I was
talking to Kenny Webster in the Hall yesterday morning about that.
I saw the story then I forgot to get it
in yesterday. But I think what we really need more
(07:15):
than oreos that taste like turkey and stuffing are turkeys
that taste like oreos. Would you agree or disagree? No,
you like turkeys that takee. You just want the original,
like I do. Just let a turkey be a turkey,
Let a cookie be a cookie, and then we'll all
get along, just fun. I don't I don't need a
gravy flavored cookie. I don't care whether the shrimp at
(07:40):
TWUFE cookies. What's next boot and cookies? That'd be all right, Yeah,
that'll raise an eyebrow home. Well, all right, on the
way out here, I need to tell you about this
music festival that's coming up in Galveston next week, the thirteenth, fourteenth,
and fifteenth, to be specific. And what you're gonna find
down there in old downtown Galveston at several locations actually
(08:03):
are Texas songwriters and a bunch of their special guests
from all over the country, sharing these relatively small stages
and relatively intimate settings and singing for you, probably mostly
at fairly low volume, maybe acoustically, these elaborate, beautiful, wonderfully
(08:24):
crafted songs that they've written, honky tonk ballads, blues, a
true there's a whole mix of sounds that are just
as unique as in vibrant as Galveston itself. Tickets are
on sale all well, they've been on sale for a while.
You might want to get on in there if you're
planning on going down for the whole three days of
(08:46):
these music festivals, that'd be the way to really really
enjoy it, where you didn't have to worry about tapping
your foot one and if you might miss something you
really wished you'd heard, go down there, grab a friend,
wander around downtown Galveston, and get yourself cocktail and just
soak in all this music that's really so so good.
The Old Quarter Songwriter Festival, that's what it's called, the
(09:09):
Old Quarter Songwriter Festival. To get tickets and find out
more about it, go to Old Quarteracousticcafe dot com. That's
Old Quarteracousticcafe dot com.
Speaker 1 (09:21):
Hell, they sure don't make them like they used to.
That's why every few months we wash him, check his fluids,
and spray on a fresh coat of wax. This is
fifty plus with Doug Pike on yet.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
Another beautiful day. Keep them coming, Keep them coming. I've
got some weeds in my orb by the way, and
I almost went out and put some some high powered
stuff on them to knock them out, some high powered
pre emergent stuff. And that was suggested quite a while back,
actually after we had the first episode of that stuff
being in our yard and in a neighbor's yard by
(09:56):
Skip Richter from over on Guardenline Saturday and Sunday mornings,
and I texted Skip just to be sure that this
was a good time to put that stuff on. And
I'm glad I did, because Skip said, no, this is
not the right time. You need to wait until about
ap April. Excuse me. I get the hiccups in here
for some reason. I don't know why, in any event,
(10:18):
so I stopped. I shut down. And this is powerful stuff.
It says for the for the regular person putting it
on a regular sized yard. Once you're done, you're supposed
to just dispose of the container. Just get it out
of there, take it to the the toxic waste dump
wherever that is. I did find out from a very
(10:41):
reliable source. I never mind, I don't want to get
into all that, so let's get into some shutdown news shallowey.
I found some interesting, some interesting statistics in regard to
how the mainstream media has covered this government shut down
of ours. And I can't remember exactly where it was,
but it was. I do remember vividly that it was
(11:02):
a very trusted source, so I don't have any trouble
telling you about it. And this despite mainstream media being
very grossly mistrusted these days. Nobody thinks they're real anymore.
Nobody thinks they're accurate anymore. They're just spewing lies. But
its ability to move the needle, even with a reputation
(11:23):
for deceit and just telling lies every time they open
their mouths, they still can move the needle, always to
the left. But their ability to still move the needle
is alive and well. And since the shutdown began, mainstream
media has served up only around if I recall the number,
(11:46):
around a dozen stories that cast anything like favorable light
on Republicans and their efforts to stop wasteful spending, whereas
there have been so something like six or seven dozen
mentions to say that the Republicans are the one holding
the hot country hostage and starving little babies, and and
(12:11):
anybody else. Some of these, some of these entitled people
who think Snap benefits are that's just their regular paycheck
for having a bunch of kids, and it should not
be that. It was always intended to be a temporary
fix so that somebody could stay at least healthy while
they searched for a job. I would be willing to
(12:34):
bet that probably close to half of the forty somethingter
million recipients of Snap benefits probably not looking for jobs,
not at least not the ones I've seen on social
media lately. All they care about is getting that getting
that paycheck, coming back in, getting that card loaded up again,
and then, from what I found out yesterday, going and
(12:58):
buying a bunch of junk and having a far greater
chance they and their families a far greater chance of
being obese than people who are not on Snap benefits.
They're buying garbage, and they're eating garbage and expecting us
to pay for it. And then when they get sick
later in life from eating garbage. They're going to expect
(13:18):
us to pay for their health care too, And it
just doesn't seem fair to me that that's what's going on.
But the mainstream media is going to tell you it's okay.
It's it's the Democrats that did this, and there's no
question about it. They want the Congress to print out
another one point four one point five trillion dollars and
(13:42):
then ship those dollars out of our country to fund
some of the most absurdly useless and negligent programs the
world has ever known. They put up the rest of
the world's splinter groups, I'll politely call them ahead of Americans,
and that's not who we are. It's really not. And
(14:04):
if we don't wake up to that fundamental truth really soon,
we may never dig out of the hole that they
put us in. And they just keep right on digging, too,
right on digging. Look up every now and then to
tell us another lie about what they're gonna do with
that money. Oh yeah, this is gonna help poor children.
I'm sorry in what country. Uh, it's the country you've
never heard of, but they need the help. Yeah, and
(14:27):
that's that would be as close to a legitimate program
as anything they have earmarked for that one and a
half trillion dollars to pay for. Guess who's coming to
Texas by the way, the one the only you know him,
you don't love him well really, Uh, Gavin Newsom, current
(14:49):
but on the way out, lame duck governor of California. Uh.
And he's coming here basically to pat himself on the
back and in front of probably a pretty good, pretty
good crowd of Texas Democrats. There are lots of here,
and I'm I'm perfectly happy living alongside of them as
long as they don't turn us into California. And he's
(15:11):
going to be here to tell you all about how
his redistricting efforts in California are going to make that
state somehow bluer than it already is. I'm gonna give
them a few more blue seats in the House. And
rather than keep redistricting big states every two years, I
wish Congress would just someday mandate representation that mirrors the
(15:33):
state's registered voters. If you live in a state that's
sixty percent blue and forty percent red, until that changes,
your representation in the House should be sixty percent forty
percent say the problem we have is that, and the
left always talks about how redistricting has hurt them so badly,
(15:56):
But the truth is that there are I think a
half a dozen maybe more states in this country where
there are actually twenty five thirty thirty five percent Republican
voters in the state. But those same states don't have
a single Republican in the House of Representatives, all blue
because the Dems drew the lines so that conservative voters
(16:19):
would be in the minority in every one of those
districts in every one of those states. And that's that's
hardly what I would describe as we the people. It's them,
those people, and they've well, one by one they're taking over.
At least the country was smart enough not to not
to let this past presidential election go the wrong way,
(16:41):
because I guarantee you by now a lot of bad
things would have already happened. And if you want to
learn how fast things can happen politically and to destroy
a region, just watch New York City. Just watch New
York City. I got some stuff I want to talk about,
a little mom Donni file entry I have here, and
I'll do that when we get back from this break.
(17:03):
On the way out, I'm going to tell you once
more about Country Boy's Roofing. That's John Ekman's company. He's
had it for a very long time, probably the whole
time his son's been growing up. And I'm not so
sure whether Zach was born or not when John started
the company, but I'm glad he did because he has
helped thousands of people around our region make sure that
(17:24):
their roofs don't leak. And that's I would argue that
the roof is probably in the top three most important
things in your house in our climate. It's roof, then
air conditioning, and then something else a heater. Really, if
you've got two blankets in a fireplace, you don't even
need a heater around here. I proved that when we
(17:45):
got through the giant freeze a couple of years ago,
three or four days without power, and we all just
huddled up around the fire. Country Boy's Roofing hands that
roof for you so that you can be nice and
warm and dry in that house even if it's raining
in the wintertime. And right now is a great time
to get them out there, to take a full walk
around your roof. And see if there's any issues, because
(18:08):
if there are, we've got some sunny days coming here
and there that will make sure that they can get
up there and get that job done efficiently and quickly
and professionally and at a very fair price. John is
really good about that. He's helped a lot of people
in a lot of ways. In his most recent move
in that direction was to get in business with a
(18:29):
finance company that will a lending partner who will come
check out this full roof you've got to pay for
and try to help you find a way that makes
it a lot more palatable, a lot easier to make
smaller payments over time than to have to man. Maybe
you can't even write a check for a full roof.
(18:49):
They'll make sure that that roof gets on your house,
and then they'll make sure that you have an option
to pay for it that you can afford if you
are I love this about this company, first responder, educator,
or past or present military. You get a fifteen hundred
dollars discount from country boys on a complete roof. Don't
(19:13):
qualify for any of that. How about a grand It
looks like one thousand dollars off for just mentioning my name.
Great guys, great people, great work. I'm very proud to
be speaking for country boys roofing country with a K,
boys with a Z. That's how the Millennials and the
gen Z's and all those other ones before us spelled it.
(19:36):
For those of us who are boomers, and that my
hand's in the air, just spell it the way you
spelled it. To get out of the fifth or sixth grade,
countryboysroofing dot com.
Speaker 1 (19:47):
Aged to perfection. This is fifty plus with Dougpike.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
Fourth and final segment starts right now. Will and I
are solving every problem of the world, believe it or not.
Three minutes. Third segment. Oh that's all it is, isn't it. Wow.
I'm so fired up because I've had a very good
day so far, and maybe I just got a little
ahead of myself. But in the third segment, I'm gonna
(20:14):
tell you about and this may be a recurring theme, honestly,
since this guy's found his way into office and finally
has a job for the first time in his life.
The mom Donnie files now that he's gonna be the
next mayor of New York City. From that file comes
a look at the and how is his demeanor has
changed since the election. It was very interesting in campaign spots,
(20:36):
and I watched one this morning. He was very soft spoken. Hi,
I'm gonna fix everything that's wrong with this city. I'm
gonna be the man who who changes it for the better.
Everything about this city is gonna be so much better
for all of you who have been mistreated and trampled
(20:56):
for so very long, if you'll just vote for me.
And he lured people into thinking they were going to
get all sorts of benefits from his new policies. And
actually most of the people who voted for him aren't
even native New Yorkers. They're of foreign born families. And
(21:17):
I got nothing. I don't have anything against people coming
to the country the right way, not at all. You
want to come in here and you want to assimilate,
and you want to become an American and not force
your beliefs down our throats and change us, then come
on in. We can we can use the help in
a lot of fields. That's great. But just as soon
(21:41):
as he was elected, as soon as he started into
his acceptance speech, all of a sudden, he's louder, he's bolder,
almost a threatening tone, essentially letting people know they darn
sure better do as he says or they're going to
face some consequences. It's that's exactly how he sounded. He
absolutely flipped a switch one hundred and eighty degrees from
(22:06):
portraying himself as a smooth talking problem solverd who warning
New Yorkers that they can either accept his way or
hit the highway. And interestingly enough, as we all already know,
many if not most, of the really uber wealthy people
in that city that he needs, he needs them to
(22:27):
stay there because he's the one who is He's going
to tax them first and most, and those people don't
want to be taxed. They're already taxed enough, so when
they ski daddle, as we used to say, there's going
to be nobody left to pay for his programs. And
(22:50):
you know he's a socialist. He told him so at
every turn too. They knew, they knew exactly what it
was or what he was, but way too many of
those people didn't bother to look up exactly what socialist means.
And now they're gonna suffer for their mistake. There's no
doubt about it. Every person I've talked to who lives
up there, or who knows someone who lives up there,
(23:12):
or has ever even been there and really gotten a
taste of New York City temporarily says that's it. That
city's done. And I'm not gonna challenge that assertion. I
think they're pretty spot on, and from what a couple
of people have told me, it's not gonna take as
long as we might think. He's gonna start shuttling stuff
(23:36):
in and telling people what they can and can't do,
what they can and can't eat, what they can and
can't buy, and oh, by the way, the taxman's coming
for anybody and everybody there who's still got a nickel
in their pocket. In good news to maintain balance in
the universe, a daycare operation in Finland. In Finland followed
(23:56):
research from four years ago and then that it kind
of followed in to recently, and they finally let their
manicured playground go back, just go feral, just go fallow.
They just quit mowing it, quit edging it, quit doing
anything to it. And what do you know, The kids
(24:20):
are happier, they're not having as many issues with allergies,
they're generally healthier because dirt houses trillions of micro organisms
that a child's body can learn to kill the bad
stuff if it gets a chance earlier in life rather
than later in life. These kids get dirty, which they
absolutely love, and they go home smiling to We have
(24:41):
something very similar, very similar right here in Houston, a
business called the Wild School. It's run by Lindsey that
I can't remember. Her last name is Greek, and I
don't want to mispronounce it, because I would if I'd
tried to do it without seeing it in front of me.
But I interviewed her a while back, and they do
the very same thing. At the Wild School. They offer
(25:03):
outdoors experiences for kids, and starting at a very young age,
mommy and me kind of things with the little bitty ones,
and then as they get older and get potty trained,
it's mommy, drop it off and go play what is
that bunko? Or go get a glass of wine and
a salad somewhere with your friends or whatever. And these
(25:23):
kids have an absolute blast, absolute blasts. They They are
encourage The parents are encouraged when they drop their kids
off to supply at least one complete change of clothing,
cause they're gonna get dirty. They're gonna jump in mud puddles.
They're gonna dig in the dirt. They're gonna look for
bugs and small animals, and they're gonna walk across tiny
(25:44):
little creeks on a log. All these things these kids
are gonna do, and as they get a little older,
they get to take more chances and get to be
a little bit more risky and learn how to problem
solve as a group, and all these wonderful things that
will make them wonderful people when they're old. I can't
emphasize enough how much I like this group, and I'm
trying to get them, trying to get them to let
(26:06):
me speak on behalf of them and have them sponsor
this show, because the grandparents in this audience can do themselves,
their children, and their grandchildren a great favor if they
sign up for this. The Wildschool dot org. That's where
you got to go. Look the Wild School dot org. Okay,
I gotta take a break. All the way out. The
(26:28):
UT Institute on Aging is my It's my favorite collaborative
of more than a thousand providers, the only one I
really know of, honestly, and the only one I really
need to know of as a senior because everybody who's
involved in this as a caregiver, as a care provider,
has gone and gotten education above and beyond their diploma
(26:49):
requirements so that they can apply the knowledge that went
into that diploma, specifically to seniors. They take advantage of
that and the advantage we get from their self teaching
and going back to school and learning more and more
from peers and conferences and whatnot. All of that comes
(27:12):
back to us in better care for whatever might be
ailing us. You got a bad eye, they'll fix it.
You got a bad gut, you gotta bad muscles, bones, whatever,
anything that's bothering you. There is somebody in that UT
Health Institute on Aging who is an expert in that
field and has gotten that additional training to become even
(27:34):
more expert in that field as applicable to seniors. Go
to the website, look around, you'll be amazed. You'll be
there a while, I promise you utch dot ed u
slash aging. And once you finish looking around, start looking
for a provider. They'll help you with that uth dot
edu slash aging.
Speaker 1 (27:54):
Once life without a net, I suggest you go to
sleep it off. Just wait until the ship sleepy. Back
to Doug Pike as fifty plus continues. All right, welcome
back to fifty plus. Now it's the fourth and final segment.
I jumped the gun a little while ago. False start
on number.
Speaker 2 (28:13):
I don't know number, however, old I am five yard penalty?
Will Is that enough? Move me back? Repeat the down?
Okay in good news once again? I where did it go?
And there was there really was something? Oh this is yeah?
I like this right here. So two women who competed
(28:35):
back in May in a competition as high schoolers, and
it's kind of a transitional level of competition track and
field competition from high school to college. They were in
that tweener age and out they were high jumping in
Oregon somewhere, and at the end of the competition, they,
(28:58):
having finished pretty good positions, refused to share the podium
with the fifth place finishure by the way, sidebar, Since
when does a podium include top five finishers for any sport?
Speaker 1 (29:18):
One?
Speaker 2 (29:18):
Two, three, that's all you need, first, second, and third.
Everybody else gets a participation trophy or a ribbon or
a mug if you're running marathons. That's what Joe Doggett
got my old buddy at the newspaper when he ran
his one and only Houston Marathon, and he milked that
for everything it was worth and then some. He got
(29:40):
about one hold it in your face minute for every
ten feet he ran over the years of having that mug.
And if I'm not mistaken, I think it actually fell
off the desk and broke one time. And I think
I heard a whimper when it did, and maybe saw
a tear hit the ground. But he got a he's
(30:00):
a good dude. So I just talked to me the
other day. As a matter of fact, we're plotting in
a fishing and or hunting trip soon, which we've been
doing now for the better part of probably five years.
But I think this time we have a chance of
getting it done. So we go back to the collegiate
level high jump competition in Oregon. These two women who
finished podium finishes said no, we are not getting on
(30:25):
the podium because the fifth place finisher in the women's
high jump, everybody knows what's coming, was a dude. It
was a guy. And last night, Alexa Anderson and Rhese Eckerd,
the two women who said no to that, received Fox
News's Most Valuable Patriot Awards for standing up to just
(30:49):
another attempt to convince girls, quite wrongly by the way
that boys can compete as girls and men can compete
as women in athletics are else in life. I think
that's I don't know exactly when this started, I don't
know exactly why it started, but it has snowballed into
something that basically just tells women they're really not worthy
(31:15):
and not y'all don't need that. Now, We're gonna send
a dude out there, and he's gonna beat every one
of you every time he competes against you. Now, this
poor guy, to his credit, he didn't just turn tail
and walk away when he won fifth place. But my
gut says, after reading a lot of these stories and
seeing a lot of finishing times in races and heights
(31:37):
and height jump and pull vault in all these different
track and field events, I bet he wouldn't even qualified
to be at the meet on the men's side. On
the boy's side, And that's one of the reasons I
guess they compete there. They want to be athletic, but
they can't be among their peers, so they just shift
(31:59):
you and somehow managed to think it's okay to cost
a young woman a scholarship to cost a young woman
even a trophy that she earned, and the two of
them were on TV, I believe it was last night,
and they both said that they do it again in
a heartbeat, that they have no regrets for all the
(32:23):
foul comments they got, and that they were going to
keep fighting for women's rights in sports and in life
just for as long as they're on the planet. Hats
off to them. Hats off to them, not the people
who keep trying to open up these competitions to anybody
who wants to be there. That's just plain simple, not right.
(32:44):
And I don't know why they let it happen. The
Homeland Security Department of Homeland Security said this week that
illegal border crossings are at their lowest level ever for October.
Now that's said the number was thirty thousand, five hundred
and sixty one, which sounds like a lot. It's about
(33:04):
one thousand a day and still seems pretty high to
me actually. But on the bright side, this is the
difference between now and then and then being one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight,
nine ten, a dozen octobers ago. The difference is that
(33:25):
number one, it's a seventy nine percent decrease against October
of twenty four and even more importantly, now that we
have a new procedure for handling these illegal crossers, a
new sheriff in town if you were, if you will,
every single one of those crossers were processed by law,
(33:45):
and not a single one of them was allowed to
stay in the United States. Nope, you go back, Nope,
you go back. Thirty thousand, five hundred and sixty one times,
zero illegal migrant releases. So at least we're not losing
any ground anymore, and at some point we'll get our
country back. Oh. Elizabeth Warren's in the news, so you
(34:09):
know this is gonna be oh by If you haven't
heard yet, and most people probably have, but Nancy Pelosi's
announced her retirement or after next year, I think, well
in the twenty twenty sixth election. Yeah, next next year,
that's right, she'll be out and somebody else will be in.
More power to them, good luck. Elizabeth Warren actually blamed
(34:30):
President Trump for the blackout of Monday Night Football on YouTube.
Now that was just a squabble between Disney and YouTube.
It wasn't the President. Even the Washington Post told her
she was crazy. See you letter, audios,